Persistenceedit

The elasticsearch-persistence Rubygem provides persistence layer for Ruby domain objects.

It supports the repository design patterns. Versions before 6.0 also supported the active record design pattern.

Repositoryedit

The Elasticsearch::Persistence::Repository module provides an implementation of the repository pattern and allows to save, delete, find and search objects stored in Elasticsearch, as well as configure mappings and settings for the index.

Featuresedit
  • Access to the Elasticsearch client
  • Setting the index name, document type, and object class for deserialization
  • Composing mappings and settings for the index
  • Creating, deleting or refreshing the index
  • Finding or searching for documents
  • Providing access both to domain objects and hits for search results
  • Providing access to the Elasticsearch response for search results
  • Defining the methods for serialization and deserialization
Usageedit

Let’s have a simple plain old Ruby object (PORO):

class Note
  attr_reader :attributes

  def initialize(attributes={})
    @attributes = attributes
  end

  def to_hash
    @attributes
  end
end

Create a default, "dumb" repository, as a first step:

require 'elasticsearch/persistence'
class MyRepository; include Elasticsearch::Persistence::Repository; end
repository = MyRepository.new

Save a Note instance into the repository:

note = Note.new id: 1, text: 'Test'

repository.save(note)
# PUT http://localhost:9200/repository/_doc/1 [status:201, request:0.210s, query:n/a]
# > {"id":1,"text":"Test"}
# < {"_index":"repository","_type":"note","_id":"1","_version":1,"created":true}

Find it:

n = repository.find(1)
# GET http://localhost:9200/repository/_doc/1 [status:200, request:0.003s, query:n/a]
# < {"_index":"repository","_type":"note","_id":"1","_version":2,"found":true, "_source" : {"id":1,"text":"Test"}}
=> <Note:0x007fcbfc0c4980 @attributes={"id"=>1, "text"=>"Test"}>

Search for it:

repository.search(query: { match: { text: 'test' } }).first
# GET http://localhost:9200/repository/_search [status:200, request:0.005s, query:0.002s]
# > {"query":{"match":{"text":"test"}}}
# < {"took":2, ... "hits":{"total":1, ... "hits":[{ ... "_source" : {"id":1,"text":"Test"}}]}}
=> <Note:0x007fcbfc1c7b70 @attributes={"id"=>1, "text"=>"Test"}>

Delete it:

repository.delete(note)
# DELETE http://localhost:9200/repository/_doc/1 [status:200, request:0.014s, query:n/a]
# < {"found":true,"_index":"repository","_type":"note","_id":"1","_version":3}
=> {"found"=>true, "_index"=>"repository", "_type"=>"note", "_id"=>"1", "_version"=>2}

The repository module provides a number of features and facilities to configure and customize the behaviour, as well as support for extending your own, custom repository class.

Please refer to the documentation for more information.

Also, check out the example application which demonstrates the usage patterns of the repository approach to persistence.