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cachetree

v3.0.0

Published

A scoped, fluent API for easily interacting with hierarchical, key-value data

Downloads

28

Readme

Cachetree Build Status

Cachetree provides a scoped, fluent API for easily interacting with hierarchical, key-value data. Cachetree was developed to provide an API for hierarchical data caching (hence the name), but can be used to interact with any hash data that can be organized into a tree-like structure.

Installation

npm install cachetree

Storage Backends

The original implementation of Cachtree has a single storage backend, Redis, and was designed to provide a wrapper API around Redis hashes. Redis hashes are simply key-value collections, accessible by a key. Within a Redis hash, an individual value is accessible by its key, which is referred to a field. The current implementation of Cachetree has been refactored to allow for pluggable storage backends, but the language still mirrors its Redis-specific ancestry.

The following storage backends are available:

  • Memory store (via the included MemoryStore)
  • Redis (via cachetree-redis module)

Developing Additional Backends

Storage backends extend EventEmitter and expose the following functions:

  • get(key, field, [field …], cb): Get the values of all the given hash fields
  • set(key, field, value, [field, value …], cb): Set the values of given hash fields
  • keys(pattern, cb): Find all keys matching the given pattern
  • exists(key, field, cb): Determine if a hash field exists
  • del(key, field, [field …], cb): Delete one or more hash fields
  • flush(key, [key …], cb): Delete one or more hashes
  • fields(key, cb): List fields in a hash

Usage

To create a new Cachetree instance:

var cachetree = require('cachetree'),
    cache = cachetree();

The Cachetree module export a single contstructor function that accepts two optional arguments and returns a Cachtree instance.

cachetree(store, key, useProperties)

  • store: Storage backend instance
  • key: Root cache key, defaults to cache
  • options: An object containing the following configuration options:
    • useProperties: Use properties (and not functions) for explicit scope, defaults to false

Running Tests

Cachetree tests require Mocha and can be run with either npm test or make test. You can specify Mocha options, such as the reporter, by adding a mocha.opts file, which is ignored by git, to the test directory.