This repo contains example uses of CockroachDB with popular ORMs. Each example will implement the sample application spec presented below.
See the CockroachDB ORM Compatibility Plan for a roadmap towards supporting various ORMs.
Clone this repo into your $GOPATH
manually, e.g.,
$ cd ~/go/src/github.com/cockroachdb
$ git clone https://github.com/cockroachdb/examples-orms
This is required because this project uses Go to drive the automated tests, so it will look for things in your $GOPATH
. If you try to clone it to a non-$GOPATH
directory, it will fail roughly as follows:
$ cd ~/some/random/dir/examples-orms
$ make test
go test -v -i ./testing
testing/api_handler.go:13:2: cannot find package "github.com/cockroachdb/examples-orms/go/gorm/model" in any of:
/usr/local/Cellar/go/1.10/libexec/src/github.com/cockroachdb/examples-orms/go/gorm/model (from $GOROOT)
/Users/rloveland/go/src/github.com/cockroachdb/examples-orms/go/gorm/model (from $GOPATH)
testing/api_handler.go:11:2: cannot find package "github.com/pkg/errors" in any of:
/usr/local/Cellar/go/1.10/libexec/src/github.com/pkg/errors (from $GOROOT)
/Users/rloveland/go/src/github.com/pkg/errors (from $GOPATH)
make: *** [test] Error 1
However, this is not actually a Go project, so go get -d
will also fail (hence the need to manually clone).
$ go get -d github.com/cockroachdb/examples-orms
package github.com/cockroachdb/examples-orms: no Go files in /Users/rloveland/go/src/github.com/cockroachdb/examples-orms
To run automated testing against all ORMs using the latest binary of CockroachDB, run:
$ make test
To run automated testing against all ORMs using a custom CockroachDB binary, run:
$ make test COCKROACH_BINARY=/path/to/binary/cockroach
The repository contains a set of directories named after programming languages. Beneath these language directories are sub-directories named after specific ORM used for example application implementations.
Each ORM example uses whatever build tool is standard for the language,
but provides a standardized Makefile with a start
rule, which will
start an instance of the sample application.
For instance, the directory structure for an example application of the Hibernate ORM will look like:
java
└── hibernate
├── Makefile
└── example_source
The sample application which each example implements is a JSON REST API modeling a company with customers, products, and orders. The API exposes access to the management of this company.
The purpose of the example application is to test common data access patterns so that we can stress various features and implementation details of each language/ORM.
An ideal schema diagram for the sample application looks like:
Customer
|
v
Order <-> Product
The schema is implemented by each application using ORM-specific constructs to look as close as possible to:
CREATE DATABASE IF NOT EXISTS company_{language}_{ORM};
CREATE TABLE IF NOT EXISTS customers (
id SERIAL PRIMARY KEY,
name STRING
);
CREATE TABLE IF NOT EXISTS orders (
id SERIAL PRIMARY KEY,
subtotal DECIMAL(18,2)
customer_id INT REFERENCES customers(id),
);
CREATE TABLE IF NOT EXISTS products (
id SERIAL PRIMARY KEY,
name STRING,
price DECIMAL(18,2)
);
CREATE TABLE IF NOT EXISTS product_orders (
id SERIAL PRIMARY KEY,
product_id INT REFERENCES products(id),
order_id INT REFERENCES orders(id) ON DELETE CASCADE
);
Each example will expose a RESTful JSON API. The endpoints and example curl
command lines are:
GET /customer
curl http://localhost:6543/customer
GET /customer/:id
curl http://localhost:6543/customer/1
POST /customer
curl -X POST -d '{"id": 1, "name": "bob"}' http://localhost:6543/customer
PUT /customer/:id
curl -X PUT -d '{"id": 2, "name": "robert"}' http://localhost:6543/customer/1
DELETE /customer
curl -X DELETE http://localhost:6543/customer/1
GET /product
curl http://localhost:6543/product
GET /product/:id
curl http://localhost:6543/product/1
POST /product
curl -X POST -d '{"id": 1, "name": "apple", "price": 0.30}' http://localhost:6543/product
PUT /product
DELETE /product
GET /order
curl http://localhost:6543/order
GET /order/:id
curl http://localhost:6543/order/1
POST /order
curl -X POST -d '{"id": 1, "subtotal": 18.2, "customer": {"id": 1}}' http://localhost:6543/order
PUT /order
DELETE /order
The semantics of each endpoint will be fleshed out when necessary.
- Can the schema be completely standardized across ORMs without too much of a hassle with overriding default type and naming conventions?