Wrapper around GunDB to provide alternative syntax, promise support, utility modules, and easy Gun adapter events.
var gun = Gun();
gun.get('mark').put({
name: "Mark",
email: "[email protected]",
});
gun.get('mark').on(function(data, key){
console.log("update:", data);
});
var bullet = new Bullet()
bullet.mark = {
name: "Mark",
email: "[email protected]",
}
bullet.mark.on(data => {
console.log("update:", data);
})
var cat = {name: "Fluffy", species: "kitty"};
var mark = {boss: cat};
cat.slave = mark;
// partial updates merge with existing data!
gun.get('mark').put(mark);
// access the data as if it is a document.
gun.get('mark').get('boss').get('name').once(function(data, key){
// `val` grabs the data once, no subscriptions.
console.log("Mark's boss is", data);
});
// traverse a graph of circular references!
gun.get('mark').get('boss').get('slave').once(function(data, key){
console.log("Mark is the slave!", data);
});
// add both of them to a table!
gun.get('list').set(gun.get('mark').get('boss'));
gun.get('list').set(gun.get('mark'));
// grab each item once from the table, continuously:
gun.get('list').map().once(function(data, key){
console.log("Item:", data);
});
// live update the table!
gun.get('list').set({type: "cucumber", goal: "scare cat"});
var cat = { name: 'Fluffy', species: 'kitty' }
var mark = { boss: cat }
cat.slave = mark
// partial updates merge with existing data!
bullet.mark = mark
// access the data as if it is a document.
let marksBoss = await bullet.mark.boss.name.value
console.log("Mark's boss is", marksBoss)
// add both of them to a table!
bullet.list.set(bullet.mark.boss)
bullet.list.set(bullet.mark)
// grab each item once from the table, continuously:
bullet.list.map().once(data => {
console.log("Item:", data)
})
// live update the table!
bullet.list.set({ type: "cucumber", goal: "scare cat" })
It's simple really. Bullet wraps the Gun instance with a Proxy. Each property lookup (using dot notation or bracket) calls a gun.get()
and returns the Proxy to be used for chaining. Any call to bullet.value
will return a promise getter of gun.once()
.
.value
- Promise getter for.once()
;let cats = await bullet.cats.value
.remove()
-bullet.cats.remove()
One of the best features of Bullet is to write Gun adapters without having to know too much about the Gun constructor, proper placement to initialize your adapter, and bugs caused by not forwarding the events. Bullet takes care of all of this for you! Simply define a Function
or Class
, return an object that contains the events you want to hook into, and the rest is up to you.
Example class:
class gunAdapter {
constructor(bullet, opts, context) {
return {
events : {
// Storage
get: function(...),
put: function(...),
// Wire
in: function(...),
out: function(...),
}
}
}
}
Example function:
function gunAdapter(bullet, opts, context) {
return {
events: {
// Storage
get: function(...),
put: function(...),
// Wire
in: function(...),
out: function(...),
}
}
}
To use your adapter, include it in your project then:
bullet.extend(gunAdapter)
Bullet expects to be a wrapper for other utility functions, offering an easy way to extend either bullet or gun via Proxies or directly. This will allow you to create custom bullet methods for wrapping verbose syntaxes.
Some utility proposals have already emerged, such as handling arrays in a more suitable fashion.
bullet.cats.sparky = { color: 'orange' }
bullet.cats.howie = { color: 'white' }
bullet.mark.cats = [bullet.cats.sparky, bullet.cats.howie]
Another utility proposal was RPC
// local
bullet.rpc.host('peerName')
bullet.rpc.register('procName', function(data) {})
// Remote
bullet.rpc.exec('procName', { some: 'data' })
// or
bullet.rpc.select('peerName').exec('procName')