Skip to content

ballerina-platform/module-ballerina-persist

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

Ballerina Persist Library

Build codecov Trivy GraalVM Check GitHub Last Commit GitHub Issues

This library provides Ballerina persist features, which provides functionality to store and query data conveniently through a data model.

The persist tools provides following functionalities,

  1. Define and validate the entity data model definitions in the persist folder
  2. Initialize the Ballerina Persistence Layer for every model definitions in the persist folder
  3. Generate persistence derived entity types and clients
  4. Push persistence schema to the data store (only with supported data sources)
  5. Migration support for supported data stores (experimental feature)

Data Model Definitions

Within a Ballerina project, the data model should be defined in a separate bal file under the persist directory. This file is not considered part of the Ballerina project and is used only for data model definition.

The Ballerina persist library defines a mechanism to express the application's data model using Ballerina record types. All record types will be an entity in the model.

Entity Type Definition

An EntityType is defined using SimpleType and EntityType fields.

   // These are the type definitions for the data model when using MySQL
    type SimpleType ()|boolean|int|float|decimal|string|byte[]|time:Date|time:TimeOfDay|time:Utc|time:Civil;
    type EntityType record {|
       SimpleType|EntityType|EntityType[]...;
    |};

Note: The data types for SimpleType supported by persist will vary by data source. For example, the byte type is not supported by MySQL.

This design use fields of type EntityType or EntityType[] to define associations between two entities.

Here are some examples of entity type definitions:

// Valid with MySQL, in-memory and Google Sheets
type Employee record {|
   int id;
   string fname;
   string lname;
   Department department; // EntityType
|};

// Valid with MySQL and in-memory
type Department record {|
   int id;
   string name;
   byte[] logo; // Google Sheets does not support array types
   Employee[] employees; // EntityType
|};

// Valid with in-memory only
type Department record {|
   int id;
   string name;
   int[] integerArray; // MySQL only supports `byte[]` array type and Google Sheets does not support array types
   Employee[] employees; // EntityType
|};

// Invalid with all data sources
 Employee record {|
   int|string id;  // Persist does not support union data types
   string fname;
   string lname;
   Department department; // EntityType
|};

Entity Attributes Definition

Ballerina record fields are used to model the attributes of an entity. The type of the field should be a subtype of SimpleType.

Identity Field(s)

The entity must contain at least one identity field. The field's value is used to identify each record uniquely. The identity field(s) is indicated readonly flag.

Note: Only int, string, float, boolean, and decimal types are supported as identity fields.

type EntityType record {|
    readonly T <fieldName>;
|} 

The identity field can be a single field or a combination of multiple fields.

type EntityType record {|
    readonly T <fieldName1>;
    readonly T <fieldName2>;
|} 

Nullable Field(s)

Say type T is a subtype of SimpleType, and T does not contain (),

Field definition Semantics Examples
T field Mapped to a non-nullable type in the datastore (if supported) int id;
T? field Mapped to a nullable type in the datastore (if supported) string? description;
T field? Not allowed -
T? field? Not allowed -

Relationship Definition

Ballerina record fields are used to model a connection between two entities. The type of the field should be a subtype of EntityType|EntityType?|EntityType[].

This design supports the following cardinalities:

  1. One-to-one (1-1)
  2. One-to-many (1-n)

The relation field is mandatory in both entities.

One-to-one (1-1)

A 1-1 relationship is defined by a field of type EntityType in one entity and EntityType? in the other.

type Car record {|
   readonly int id;
   string name;
   User owner;
|};

type User record {|
   readonly int id;
   string name;
   Car? car;
|};

The above entities explains the following,

  • A Car must have a User as the owner.
  • A User may own a Car or do not own one.

The first record, Car, which holds the EntityType field owner is taken as the owner in the 1-1 relationship and will include the foreign key of the second record, User.

The default foreign key field name will be ownerId in the Car table, which refers to the identity field of the User table by default. (<lowercasedRelatedFieldName><First-LetterCapitalizedIdentityFieldName>)

One-to-Many (1-n)

A 1-n relationship is defined by a field of type EntityType in one entity and EntityType[] in the other.

type Car record {|
   readonly int id;
   string name;
   User owner;
|};

type User record {|
   int id;
   string name;
   Car[] cars;
|};

The above entities explains the following,

  • A Car must have a User as the owner.
  • A User may own multiple Cars or do not own one. (Represented with empty array [])

The entity that contains the field of type EntityType is taken as the owner in the 1-n relationship.

Issues and projects

Issues and Projects tabs are disabled for this repository as this is part of the Ballerina standard library. To report bugs, request new features, start new discussions, view project boards, etc. please visit Ballerina standard library parent repository.

This repository only contains the source code for the package.

Building from the source

Set up the prerequisites

  1. Download and install Java SE Development Kit (JDK) version 21 (from one of the following locations).

  2. Export your GitHub personal access token with the read package permissions as follows.

     export packageUser=<Username>
     export packagePAT=<Personal access token>
    

Building the source

Execute the commands below to build from source.

  1. To build the library:

     ./gradlew clean build
    
  2. Publish ZIP artifact to the local .m2 repository:

     ./gradlew clean build publishToMavenLocal
    
  3. Publish the generated artifacts to the local Ballerina central repository:

     ./gradlew clean build -PpublishToLocalCentral=true
    
  4. Publish the generated artifacts to the Ballerina central repository:

     ./gradlew clean build -PpublishToCentral=true
    

Contributing to Ballerina

As an open source project, Ballerina welcomes contributions from the community.

For more information, go to the contribution guidelines.

Code of conduct

All contributors are encouraged to read the Ballerina code of conduct.

Useful links