telodendria/man/man3/Db.3

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.Dd $Mdocdate: March 6 2023 $
.Dt DB 3
.Os Telodendria Project
.Sh NAME
.Nm Db
.Nd A minimal flat-file database with object locking and an efficient cache.
.Sh SYNOPSIS
.In Db.h
.Ft Db *
.Fn DbOpen "char *" "size_t"
.Ft void
.Fn DbClose "Db *"
.Ft DbRef *
.Fn DbCreate "Db *" "size_t" "..."
.Ft int
.Fn DbDelete "Db *" "size_t" "..."
.Ft DbRef *
.Fn DbLock "Db *" "size_t" "..."
.Ft int
.Fn DbUnlock "Db *" "DbRef *"
.Ft int
.Fn DbExists "Db *" "size_t" "..."
.Ft Array *
.Fn DbList "Db *" "size_t" "..."
.Ft void
.Fn DbListFree "Array *"
.Ft HashMap *
.Fn DbJson "DbRef *"
.Sh DESCRIPTION
.Pp
Telodendria operates on a flat-file database instead of a traditional relational
database. This greatly simplifies the persistent storage code, and creates a
relatively basic API, described by this page.
.Pp
.Fn DbOpen
and
.Fn DbClose
open and close a data directory.
.Fn DbOpen
takes the path to open, and a cache size in bytes. This API relies heavily on
caching, so the cache must be greater than the DB_MIN_CACHE preprocessor
constant.
.Pp
.Fn DbCreate
and
.Fn DbLock
load data objects from the database, with the notable difference being that
.Fn DbCreate
will fail if an object already exists, and
.Fn DbLock
will fail if an object does not exist. These are both variadic functions that
take a variable number of C strings, with the exact number being specified by
the second paramter. These C strings are used to generate a filesystem path from
which an object is loaded, unless it is already in the cache.
.Pp
Objects, when loaded, are locked both in memory and on disk, so that other threads
or processes cannot access them while they are locked. This is to ensure data
integrity.
.Pp
.Fn DbUnlock
unlocks an object and returns it back to the database, which syncs it to the
filesystem and caches it, if it isn't in the cache already.
.Pp
.Fn DbExists
checks the existence of the given database object in a more efficient
manner than attempting to lock it with
.Fn DbLock .
.Fn DbExists
does not lock the object, nor does it load it into memory if it exists. It
takes the same arguments as
.Fn DbLock
and
.Fn DbUnlock .
.Pp
.Fn DbJson
converts a database reference into JSON. At this time, the database actually
stores objects as JSON, so this just returns an internal pointer, but in the
future it may have to be generated by decompressing a binary blob, or something
of that nature.
.Pp
.Fn DbDelete
completely removes an object from the database. It purges it from both the
cache and the disk as soon as no more references to it are open.
.Pp
.Fn DbList
lists all of the objects at a given path. Unlike the other varargs
functions, it does not take a path to a specific object; it takes
a directory to be iterated. Note that the resulting list only contains
the objects in that directory, not subdirectories.
.Fn DbListFree
frees the list returned by this function.
.Sh RETURN VALUES
.Pp
.Fn DbOpen
returns a reference to a database pointer, or NULL if there was an error
allocating memory, or opening the given directory with the given cache size.
.Pp
.Fn DbCreate
and
.Fn DbLock
return a database reference, or NULL if there was an error obtaining a reference
to the specified object.
.Pp
.Fn DbUnlock
returns a boolean value indicating whether or not the reference was successfully
unlocked. If the unlock is successful, then a non-zero value is returned. If it
isn't, 0 is returned, and it is up to the caller to decide how to proceed.
.Pp
.Fn DbDelete
follows the same return value conventions as
.Fn DbUnlock ;
it reports the status of the deletion operation as a boolean value.
.Pp
.Fn DbList
returns an array of strings, or NULL if there was a memory or
filesystem error.
.Pp
.Fn DbJson
returns a JSON object. Consult
.Xr Json 3
for the API used to manipulate this object.