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debson

v1.12.0

Published

DeBSON is the simplest, fastest JSON Database you could think of

Downloads

17

Readme

DeBSON

DeBSON is the simplest, fastest JSON Database you could think of

How it works

DeBSON uses Categories which store many Objects. An Object stores one specific Value, either a String, Numer, Array or Object. It works like a simple Key-Value Pair. Usally corresponding Objects are stored in the same category. If more objects are stored in a category, the category takes longer to read.

Usage

const deb = require('debson')
deb.mode('sync') // Optional

// Reading a value
val = deb.cat('MyCategory').obj('MyObject').read()

// Writing a value
deb.cat('MyCategory').obj('MyObject').write({MyValue: 123}) // You can write Strings, Objects, Numbers & Arrays to an Object

// Deleting a value
deb.cat('MyCategory').obj('MyObject').delete()

// Watching a value
deb.cat('MyCategory').obj('MyObject').watch((val) => {
    console.log('Value changed to ' + val)
})

Remote

DeBSON supports a remote connection using socket.io to interact with your database. NOTE! This isn't encrypted or secured. Attackers can and will access all of your files and write to them.

First you have to bind your sockets to your DeBSON client serverside like this:

const io = requrie('socket.io')
const deb = require('debson')

io.on('connection', (socket) => {
    deb.bind(socket)
})

Then, add this to your HTML:

<script src="https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/npm/debson@1/remote.min.js"></script>

Now you can use following commands in your clients javascript:

const socket = io()
const deb = new DeBSON(socket)

// Reading a value
val = await deb.cat('MyCategory').obj('MyObject').read()

// Writing a value
await deb.cat('MyCategory').obj('MyObject').write({MyValue: 123}) // You can write Strings, Objects, Numbers & Arrays to an Object

// Deleting a value
await deb.cat('MyCategory').obj('MyObject').delete()

// Watching a value
await deb.cat('MyCategory').obj('MyObject').watch((val) => {
    console.log('Value changed to ' + val)
})