#####Overview:
- Powerful & Simple set of Operations:
Put
,Get
,Delete
- API for Humans: Type Safety, Immutability & Thread-Safety
- Convenient builders with compile-time guarantees for required params. Forget about 6-7
null
in queries - Optional Type-Safe Object Mapping, if you don't want to work with
Cursor
andContentValues
you don't have to - No reflection in Operations and no annotations in the core, also
StorIO
is not ORM - Every Operation over
StorIO
can be executed as blocking call or asrx.Observable
RxJava
as first class citizen, but it's not required dependency!- Reactive:
rx.Observable
fromGet
Operation can observe changes inStorIO
and receive updates automatically StorIO
is replacements forSQLiteDatabase
andContentResolver
APIsStorIO
+RxJava
is replacement forLoaders
API- We are working on
MockStorIO
(similar to MockWebServer) for easy unit testing
#####Why StorIO?
- Open Source -> less bugs
- Documentation, Sample app and Design tests -> less bugs
StorIO
has unit and integration tests -> less bugs- Simple concept of just three main Operations:
Put
,Get
,Delete
-> less bugs - Almost everything is immutable and thread-safe -> less bugs
- Builders for everything make code much, much more readable and obvious -> less bugs
- Less bugs -> less bugs
####Documentation:
Easy ways to learn how to use StorIO
-> check out Documentation
, Design Tests
and Sample App
:
####Download:
// If you need StorIO for SQLite
compile 'com.pushtorefresh.storio:sqlite:1.0.0'
// If you need StorIO for ContentResolver
compile 'com.pushtorefresh.storio:content-resolver:1.0.0'
// Notice that RxJava is optional dependency for StorIO,
// So if you need it -> please add it manually.
You can find all releases on Maven Central.
####Some examples
#####Get list of objects from SQLiteDatabase
List<Tweet> tweets = storIOSQLite
.get()
.listOfObjects(Tweet.class) // Type safety
.withQuery(Query.builder() // Query builder
.table("tweets")
.where("author = ?")
.whereArgs("artem_zin") // Varargs Object..., no more new String[] {"I", "am", "tired", "of", "this", "shit"}
.build()) // Query is immutable — you can save it and share without worries
.prepare() // Operation builder
.executeAsBlocking(); // Control flow is readable from top to bottom, just like with RxJava
#####Put something to SQLiteDatabase
storIOSQLite
.put() // Insert or Update
.objects(someTweets) // Type mapping!
.prepare()
.executeAsBlocking();
#####Delete something from SQLiteDatabase
storIOSQLite
.delete()
.byQuery(DeleteQuery.builder()
.table("tweets")
.where("timestamp <= ?")
.whereArgs(System.currentTimeMillis() - 86400) // No need to write String.valueOf()
.build())
.prepare()
.executeAsBlocking();
####Reactive? Observable.just(true)!
#####Get something as rx.Observable and receive updates!
storIOSQLite
.get()
.listOfObjects(Tweet.class)
.withQuery(Query.builder()
.table("tweets")
.build())
.prepare()
.createObservable() // Get Result as rx.Observable and subscribe to further updates of tables from Query!
.observeOn(mainThread()) // All Rx operations work on Schedulers.io()
.subscribe(tweets -> { // Please don't forget to unsubscribe
// Will be called with first result and then after each change of tables from Query
// Several changes in transaction -> one notification
adapter.setData(tweets);
}
);
#####Want to work with plain Cursor, no problems
Cursor cursor = storIOSQLite
.get()
.cursor()
.withQuery(Query.builder() // Or RawQuery
.table("tweets")
.where("who_cares = ?")
.whereArgs("nobody")
.build())
.prepare()
.executeAsBlocking();
####How object mapping works?
#####You can set default type mappings when you build instance of StorIOSQLite
or StorIOContentResolver
StorIOSQLite storIOSQLite = DefaultStorIOSQLite.builder()
.sqliteOpenHelper(someSQLiteOpenHelper)
.addTypeMapping(Tweet.class, SQLiteTypeMapping.<Tweet>builder()
.putResolver(new TweetPutResolver()) // object that knows how to perform Put Operation (insert or update)
.getResolver(new TweetGetResolver()) // object that knows how to perform Get Operation
.deleteResolver(new TweetDeleteResolver()) // object that knows how to perform Delete Operation
.build())
.addTypeMapping(...)
// other options
.build(); // This instance of StorIOSQLite will know how to work with Tweet objects
You can override Operation Resolver per each individual Operation, it can be useful for working with SQL JOIN
.
To save you from coding boilerplate classes we created Annotation Processor which will generate PutResolver
, GetResolver
and DeleteResolver
at compile time, you just need to use generated classes
dependencies {
// At the moment there is annotation processor only for StorIOSQLite
compile 'com.pushtorefresh.storio:sqlite-annotations:insert-latest-version-here'
// We recommend to use Android Gradle Apt plugin: https://bitbucket.org/hvisser/android-apt
apt 'com.pushtorefresh.storio:sqlite-annotation-processors:insert-latest-version-here'
}
@StorIOSQLiteType(table = "tweets")
public class Tweet {
// annotated fields should have package-level visibility
@StorIOSQLiteColumn(name = "author")
String author;
@StorIOSQLiteColumn(name = "content")
String content;
// please leave default constructor with package-level visibility
Tweet() {}
}
Annotation Processor will generate three classes in same package as annotated class during compilation:
TweetStorIOSQLitePutResolver
TweetStorIOSQLiteGetResolver
TweetStorIOSQLiteDeleteResolver
You just need to apply them:
StorIOSQLite storIOSQLite = DefaultStorIOSQLite.builder()
.sqliteOpenHelper(someSQLiteOpenHelper)
.addTypeMapping(Tweet.class, SQLiteTypeMapping.<Tweet>builder()
.putResolver(new TweetStorIOSQLitePutResolver()) // object that knows how to perform Put Operation (insert or update)
.getResolver(new TweetStorIOSQLiteGetResolver()) // object that knows how to perform Get Operation
.deleteResolver(new TweetStorIOSQLiteDeleteResolver()) // object that knows how to perform Delete Operation
.build())
.addTypeMapping(...)
// other options
.build(); // This instance of StorIOSQLite will know how to work with Tweet objects
Few tips about Operation Resolvers:
- If your entities are immutable or they have builders or they use AutoValue/AutoParcel -> write your own Operation Resolvers
- If you want to write your own Operation Resolver -> take a look at Default Operation resolvers, they can fit your needs
- Via custom Operation Resolvers you can implement any Operation as you want -> store one object in multiple tables, use custom sql things and so on
API of StorIOContentResolver
is same.
####Documentation:
Easy ways to learn how to use StorIO
-> check out Design Tests
and Sample App
:
####Architecture:
StorIOSQLite
and StorIOContentResolver
— are abstractions with default implementations: DefaultStorIOSQLite
and DefaultStorIOContentResolver
.
It means, that you can have your own implementation of StorIOSQLite
and StorIOContentResolver
with custom behavior, such as memory caching, verbose logging and so on or mock implementation for unit testing (we are working on MockStorIO
).
One of the main goals of StorIO
— clean API for Humans which will be easy to use and understand, that's why StorIOSQLite
and StorIOContentResolver
have just several methods, but we understand that sometimes you need to go under the hood and StorIO
allows you to do it: StorIOSQLite.Internal
and StorIOContentResolver.Internal
encapsulates low-level methods, you can use them if you need, but please try to avoid it.
####Queries
All Query
objects are immutable, you can share them safely.
####Concept of Prepared Operations
You may notice that each Operation (Get, Put, Delete) should be prepared with prepare()
. StorIO
has an entity called PreparedOperation<T>
, and you can use them to perform group execution of several Prepared Operations or provide PreparedOperation<T>
as a return type of your API (for example in Model layer) and client will decide how to execute it: executeAsBlocking()
or createObservable()
. Also, Prepared Operations might be useful for ORMs based on StorIO
.
You can customize behavior of every Operation via Resolvers
: GetResolver
, PutResolver
, DeleteResolver
.
####Rx Support Design
Every Operation can be executed as rx.Observable. Get Operations will be automatically subscribed to the updates of the data.
Every Observable runs on Schedulers.io()
by default, currently we don't offer overloads to pass your Scheduler
, feel free to send PRs!
Made with love in Pushtorefresh.com by @artem_zin and @nikitin-da