The agraph gem provides a client for the RESTful interface of AllegroGraph RDF graph database version 4.x. This document should give you overview, how the client can be used. To get familiar with the database server, this documentation is strongly recommended.
The features that are exposed by this client are…
-
simple repository management
-
add / remove statements (aka triples) to / from the store
-
searching for statements by subject, predicate or object (or any combination of them)
-
searching for statements by geo-spatial queries
-
transactions
-
performing SparQL and Prolog queries
-
mapping of data type
<img src=“http://travis-ci.org/phifty/agraph.png” />
There are no special dependencies. Just type
gem install agraph
A repository can be created by simply typing the following.
require 'allegro_graph' server = AllegroGraph::Server.new :username => "user", :password => "pass" repository = AllegroGraph::Repository.new server, "test_repository" repository.create_if_missing!
The code will try to connect to a AllegroGraph server running at localhost:10035
with the credentials user
and pass
, and creates a repository named test_repository
if it’s not already existing.
Once a repository is created, statements can be added.
repository.statements.create "<a_subject>", "<a_predicate>", "<an_object>", "<context>"
The last argument is optional and defines a context for the given triple. This context can be used to define named graphs inside the repository.
To delete statements, matching options can be passed to the delete method.
repository.statements.delete :predicate => "<a_predicate>"
This will delete all statements with the predicate <a_predicate>
.
The find
method provides an easy way to find specified statements.
repository.statements.find :subject => "<a_subject>"
The result will be an array that holds arrays of all matching statements.
[ [ "<a_subject>", "<a_predicate>", "<a_object>" ], [ "<a_subject>", "<another_predicate>", "<another_object>" ] ]
Before coordinates can be added, a fitting type has to be requested from the database. Coordinates can have the cartesian (x and y) or spherical (latitude and longitude) type. When creating the type, also a range has to be defined.
cartesian_type = repository.geometric.cartesian_type :strip_width => 1, :x_min => 0, :y_min => 0, :x_max => 100, :y_max => 100
The first argument specifies the strip width and the last four the top-left and bottom-right corner of the rectangle that represent the boundaries for any coordinate.
Afterwards, the return type can be used add geometric nodes (subjects or objects) to the database.
repository.statements.create "<a_subject>", "<a_predicate>", "\"+20+20\"^^#{cartesian_type}"
To find statements by thier assigned coordinates, the following methods are provided.
repository.statements.find_inside_box repository.statements.find_inside_circle repository.statements.find_inside_haversine repository.statements.find_inside_polygon
The previously create statement will be returned by
repository.statements.find_inside_box :type => cartesian_type, :predicate => "<a_predicate>", :x_min => 10, :y_min => 10, :x_max => 30, :y_max => 30
agraph also allows you to perform transaction. All operations performed within a transaction will committed at once. If an error occurs during the transaction, all operations will be rolled back.
repository.transaction do statements.create "<a_subject>", "<a_predicate>", "<an_object>" statements.create "<a_subject>", "<a_predicate>", "<another_object>" # ... if an error is raised here, no operation will be committed end # ... if no error has occured, all operations will be committed
The perform a SparQL or Prolog query, simply set the language that the query is written in and pass the query string to the following method.
repository.query.language = :sparql repository.query.perform "SELECT ?s WHERE { ?s ?p ?o . }"
At the moment only :sparql
and :prolog
queries are supported.
The result will look like this.
{ "names" => [ "s" ], "values" => [ [ "<a_subject>" ], [ "<another_subject>" ] ] }
To add and remove mapping between types and it’s encodings, the following methods can be used.
repository.mapping.create "<time>", "<http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema#dateTime>" repository.mapping.delete "<time>"
With such a type defined, it’s possible to perform range queries like
repository.statements.create "<event_one>", "<occurs>", "\"2010-03-29T11:40:00\"^^<time>" repository.statements.create "<event_two>", "<occurs>", "\"2010-03-29T17:40:00\"^^<time>" repository.statements.find :predicate => "<occurs>", :object => [ "\"2010-03-29T11:00:00\"^^<time>", "\"2010-03-29T12:00:00\"^^<time>" ]
Only the second event would be returned.
More examples can be found in the integration specs (spec/integration)
Any contribution - especially bug reports - is welcome.
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