Project

neo4j-http

0.0
No release in over a year
Allows exeucting arbitrary cypher commands and simplifies creating nodes and relationships
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 Dependencies
 Project Readme

Neo4j::Http

The Neo4j::Http gem provides `a thin wrapper around the Neo4j HTTP API (not the legacy REST api which was removed in 4.0). It works with Neo4j 3.5 through the latest release (at the time of this writing is 4.4)

Why a new gem?

The available gems to interact with Neo4j are generally: out of date relying on legacy APIs removed in 4.x, require the use of JRuby, or out of date C bindings.

The goal of this gem is to provide a dependency free Ruby implementation that provides a simple wrapper to the Neo4j HTTP API to do most of what applications may need in order to leverage the power Neo4j provides.

Installation

Add this line to your application's Gemfile:

gem 'neo4j-http'

And then execute:

$ bundle install

Or install it yourself as:

$ gem install neo4j-http

Configuration

The client is configured by default via a set of environment variables from Neo4j::Http::Configuration:

  • NEO4J_URL - The base URL to connect to Neo4j at - defaults to "http://localhost:7474"
  • NEO4J_USER - The user name to use when authenticating to neo4j - defaults to ""
  • NEO4J_PASSWORD - The password of the user to be used for authentication - defaults to ""
  • NEO4J_DATABASE - The database name to be used when connecting. By default this will be nil.
  • NEO4J_HTTP_USER_AGENT - The user agent name provided in the request - defaults to "Ruby Neo4j Http Client"
  • NEO4J_REQUEST_TIMEOUT_IN_SECONDS - The number of seconds for the http request to time out if provided - defaults to nil
  • ACCESS_MODE - "WRITE", or "READ" for read only instances of Neo4j clients - defaults to "WRITE"

These configuration values can also be set during initalization, and take precedence over the environment variables:

Neo4j::Http.configure do |config|
  config.uri = "http://localhost:7474"
  config.user = ""
  config.password = ""
  config.database_name = nil
  config.user_agent = "Ruby Neo4j Http Client"
  config.request_timeout_in_seconds = nil
  config.access_mode = "WRITE"
end

Multiple databases

The HTTP API endpoints follow the pattern /db/<NEO4J_DATABASE>/tx

To route to a different database, set a value for NEO4J_DATABASE. If no value is supplied, or this ENV is unset, the URI defaults to /db/data/transaction/commit

This can be used for testing by setting up a test environment only variable using a gem like dotenv-rails:

# .env.testing
NEO4J_DATABASE=test

All testing operations are now routed to the URI /db/test/tx/commit.

Usage

The core interface can be directly accessed on Neo4::Http::Client -

Execute arbitrary cypher commands

Neo4j::Http::Client.execute_cypher('MATCH (n:User{id: $id}) return n LIMIT 25', id: 42)

Upsert, find and delete nodes

node = Neo4j::Http::Node.new(label: "User", uuid: SecureRandom.uuid)
Neo4j::Http::Client.upsert_node(node)
Neo4j::Http::Client.find_node_by(label: "User", uuid: node.uuid)
Neo4j::Http::Client.find_nodes_by(label: "User", name: "Testing")
Neo4j::Http::Client.delete_node(node)

Create a new relationship, also creating the nodes if they do not exist

user1 = Neo4j::Http::Node.new(label: "User", uuid: SecureRandom.uuid)
user2 = Neo4j::Http::Node.new(label: "User", uuid: SecureRandom.uuid)
relationship = Neo4j::Http::Relationship.new(label: "KNOWS")
Neo4j::Http::Client.upsert_relationship(relationship: relationship, from: user1, to: user2, create_nodes: true)

Find an existing relationship

Neo4j::Http::Client.find_relationship(relationship: relationship, from: user1, to: user2)

Delete the relationship if it exists

Neo4j::Http::Client.delete_relationship(relationship: relationship, from: user1, to: user2)

Each of the methods exposed on Neo4j::Http::Client above are provided by instances of each of the following adapters:

  • Neo4j::Http::CypherClient - provides an execute_cypher method which sends raw cypher commands to neo4j
  • Neo4j::Http::NodeClient - provides a higher level API for upserting and deleting Nodes
  • Neo4j::Http::RelationshipClient - provides a higher level API for upserting and deleting Relationships

The Node and Relationship clients use the CypherClient under the hood. Each of these provides simple access via a default class method, which uses the default Neo4j::Http.config for creating the connections. For example

Neo4j::Http::NodeClient.default

is equivalent to:

config = Neo4j::Http.config
cypher_client = Neo4j::Http::CypherClient.new(config)
node_client = Neo4j::Http::NodeClient.new(cypher_client)

to connect to a different Neo4j database, you can create a custom configuration like:

config = Neo4j::Http::Configuration.new({ database_name: 'test' })
cypher_client = Neo4j::Http::CypherClient.new(config)
node_client = Neo4j::Http::NodeClient.new(cypher_client)

Versioning

This project follows semantic versioning.

Development

After checking out the repo, run bin/setup to install dependencies.

To run specs, you'll need a running neo4j instance available at localhost:7474. If you have Docker installed, this is easily done by using the provided docker-file - simply run docker-compose up within the project directory, and once running, you can then, run rake spec to run the tests in another terminal.

You can also run bin/console for an interactive prompt that will allow you to experiment.

To install this gem onto your local machine, run bundle exec rake install.

To release a new version, update the version number in version.rb, issue a pull request, and once merged with passing CI, the new gem version will be pushed automatically.

Contributing

  1. Fork it
  2. Create your feature branch (git switch -c my-new-feature)
  3. Commit your changes (git commit -am 'Add some feature')
  4. Push to the branch (git push origin my-new-feature)
  5. Create a new Pull Request
  6. Sign the CLA if you haven't yet. See CONTRIBUTING.md

License

The gem is licensed under an Apache 2 license. Contributors are required to sign an contributor license agreement. See LICENSE.txt and CONTRIBUTING.md for more information.