Giter Club home page Giter Club logo

level-browserify's Introduction

level

Universal abstract-level database for Node.js and browsers. This is a convenience package that exports classic-level in Node.js and browser-level in browsers, making it an ideal entry point to start creating lexicographically sorted key-value databases.

📌 Which module should I use? What is abstract-level? Head over to the FAQ.

level badge npm Node version Test Coverage Standard Common Changelog Community Donate

Table of Contents

Click to expand

Usage

If you are upgrading: please see UPGRADING.md.

const { Level } = require('level')

// Create a database
const db = new Level('example', { valueEncoding: 'json' })

// Add an entry with key 'a' and value 1
await db.put('a', 1)

// Add multiple entries
await db.batch([{ type: 'put', key: 'b', value: 2 }])

// Get value of key 'a': 1
const value = await db.get('a')

// Iterate entries with keys that are greater than 'a'
for await (const [key, value] of db.iterator({ gt: 'a' })) {
  console.log(value) // 2
}

All asynchronous methods also support callbacks.

Callback example
db.put('a', { x: 123 }, function (err) {
  if (err) throw err

  db.get('a', function (err, value) {
    console.log(value) // { x: 123 }
  })
})

TypeScript type declarations are included and cover the methods that are common between classic-level and browser-level. Usage from TypeScript requires generic type parameters.

TypeScript example
// Specify types of keys and values (any, in the case of json).
// The generic type parameters default to Level<string, string>.
const db = new Level<string, any>('./db', { valueEncoding: 'json' })

// All relevant methods then use those types
await db.put('a', { x: 123 })

// Specify different types when overriding encoding per operation
await db.get<string, string>('a', { valueEncoding: 'utf8' })

// Though in some cases TypeScript can infer them
await db.get('a', { valueEncoding: db.valueEncoding('utf8') })

// It works the same for sublevels
const abc = db.sublevel('abc')
const xyz = db.sublevel<string, any>('xyz', { valueEncoding: 'json' })

Install

With npm do:

npm install level

For use in browsers, this package is best used with browserify, webpack, rollup or similar bundlers. For a quick start, visit browserify-starter or webpack-starter.

Supported Platforms

At the time of writing, level works in Node.js 12+ and Electron 5+ on Linux, Mac OS, Windows and FreeBSD, including any future Node.js and Electron release thanks to Node-API, including ARM platforms like Raspberry Pi and Android, as well as in Chrome, Firefox, Edge, Safari, iOS Safari and Chrome for Android. For details, see Supported Platforms of classic-level and Browser Support of browser-level.

Binary keys and values are supported across the board.

API

The API of level follows that of abstract-level. The documentation below covers it all except for Encodings, Events and Errors which are exclusively documented in abstract-level. For options and additional methods specific to classic-level and browser-level, please see their respective READMEs.

An abstract-level and thus level database is at its core a key-value database. A key-value pair is referred to as an entry here and typically returned as an array, comparable to Object.entries().

db = new Level(location[, options])

Create a new database or open an existing database. The location argument must be a directory path (relative or absolute) where LevelDB will store its files, or in browsers, the name of the IDBDatabase to be opened.

The optional options object may contain:

  • keyEncoding (string or object, default 'utf8'): encoding to use for keys
  • valueEncoding (string or object, default 'utf8'): encoding to use for values.

See Encodings for a full description of these options. Other options (except passive) are forwarded to db.open() which is automatically called in a next tick after the constructor returns. Any read & write operations are queued internally until the database has finished opening. If opening fails, those queued operations will yield errors.

db.status

Read-only getter that returns a string reflecting the current state of the database:

  • 'opening' - waiting for the database to be opened
  • 'open' - successfully opened the database
  • 'closing' - waiting for the database to be closed
  • 'closed' - successfully closed the database.

db.open([callback])

Open the database. The callback function will be called with no arguments when successfully opened, or with a single error argument if opening failed. If no callback is provided, a promise is returned. Options passed to open() take precedence over options passed to the database constructor. The createIfMissing and errorIfExists options are not supported by browser-level.

The optional options object may contain:

  • createIfMissing (boolean, default: true): If true, create an empty database if one doesn't already exist. If false and the database doesn't exist, opening will fail.
  • errorIfExists (boolean, default: false): If true and the database already exists, opening will fail.
  • passive (boolean, default: false): Wait for, but do not initiate, opening of the database.

It's generally not necessary to call open() because it's automatically called by the database constructor. It may however be useful to capture an error from failure to open, that would otherwise not surface until another method like db.get() is called. It's also possible to reopen the database after it has been closed with close(). Once open() has then been called, any read & write operations will again be queued internally until opening has finished.

The open() and close() methods are idempotent. If the database is already open, the callback will be called in a next tick. If opening is already in progress, the callback will be called when that has finished. If closing is in progress, the database will be reopened once closing has finished. Likewise, if close() is called after open(), the database will be closed once opening has finished and the prior open() call will receive an error.

db.close([callback])

Close the database. The callback function will be called with no arguments if closing succeeded or with a single error argument if closing failed. If no callback is provided, a promise is returned.

A database may have associated resources like file handles and locks. When the database is no longer needed (for the remainder of a program) it's recommended to call db.close() to free up resources.

After db.close() has been called, no further read & write operations are allowed unless and until db.open() is called again. For example, db.get(key) will yield an error with code LEVEL_DATABASE_NOT_OPEN. Any unclosed iterators or chained batches will be closed by db.close() and can then no longer be used even when db.open() is called again.

db.supports

A manifest describing the features supported by this database. Might be used like so:

if (!db.supports.permanence) {
  throw new Error('Persistent storage is required')
}

db.get(key[, options][, callback])

Get a value from the database by key. The optional options object may contain:

  • keyEncoding: custom key encoding for this operation, used to encode the key.
  • valueEncoding: custom value encoding for this operation, used to decode the value.

The callback function will be called with an error if the operation failed. If the key was not found, the error will have code LEVEL_NOT_FOUND. If successful the first argument will be null and the second argument will be the value. If no callback is provided, a promise is returned.

db.getMany(keys[, options][, callback])

Get multiple values from the database by an array of keys. The optional options object may contain:

  • keyEncoding: custom key encoding for this operation, used to encode the keys.
  • valueEncoding: custom value encoding for this operation, used to decode values.

The callback function will be called with an error if the operation failed. If successful the first argument will be null and the second argument will be an array of values with the same order as keys. If a key was not found, the relevant value will be undefined. If no callback is provided, a promise is returned.

db.put(key, value[, options][, callback])

Add a new entry or overwrite an existing entry. The optional options object may contain:

  • keyEncoding: custom key encoding for this operation, used to encode the key.
  • valueEncoding: custom value encoding for this operation, used to encode the value.

The callback function will be called with no arguments if the operation was successful or with an error if it failed. If no callback is provided, a promise is returned.

db.del(key[, options][, callback])

Delete an entry by key. The optional options object may contain:

  • keyEncoding: custom key encoding for this operation, used to encode the key.

The callback function will be called with no arguments if the operation was successful or with an error if it failed. If no callback is provided, a promise is returned.

db.batch(operations[, options][, callback])

Perform multiple put and/or del operations in bulk. The operations argument must be an array containing a list of operations to be executed sequentially, although as a whole they are performed as an atomic operation.

Each operation must be an object with at least a type property set to either 'put' or 'del'. If the type is 'put', the operation must have key and value properties. It may optionally have keyEncoding and / or valueEncoding properties to encode keys or values with a custom encoding for just that operation. If the type is 'del', the operation must have a key property and may optionally have a keyEncoding property.

An operation of either type may also have a sublevel property, to prefix the key of the operation with the prefix of that sublevel. This allows atomically committing data to multiple sublevels. Keys and values will be encoded by the sublevel, to the same effect as a sublevel.batch(..) call. In the following example, the first value will be encoded with 'json' rather than the default encoding of db:

const people = db.sublevel('people', { valueEncoding: 'json' })
const nameIndex = db.sublevel('names')

await db.batch([{
  type: 'put',
  sublevel: people,
  key: '123',
  value: {
    name: 'Alice'
  }
}, {
  type: 'put',
  sublevel: nameIndex,
  key: 'Alice',
  value: '123'
}])

The optional options object may contain:

  • keyEncoding: custom key encoding for this batch, used to encode keys.
  • valueEncoding: custom value encoding for this batch, used to encode values.

Encoding properties on individual operations take precedence. In the following example, the first value will be encoded with the 'utf8' encoding and the second with 'json'.

await db.batch([
  { type: 'put', key: 'a', value: 'foo' },
  { type: 'put', key: 'b', value: 123, valueEncoding: 'json' }
], { valueEncoding: 'utf8' })

The callback function will be called with no arguments if the batch was successful or with an error if it failed. If no callback is provided, a promise is returned.

chainedBatch = db.batch()

Create a chained batch, when batch() is called with zero arguments. A chained batch can be used to build and eventually commit an atomic batch of operations. Depending on how it's used, it is possible to obtain greater performance with this form of batch(). On browser-level however, it is just sugar.

await db.batch()
  .del('bob')
  .put('alice', 361)
  .put('kim', 220)
  .write()

iterator = db.iterator([options])

Create an iterator. The optional options object may contain the following range options to control the range of entries to be iterated:

  • gt (greater than) or gte (greater than or equal): define the lower bound of the range to be iterated. Only entries where the key is greater than (or equal to) this option will be included in the range. When reverse is true the order will be reversed, but the entries iterated will be the same.
  • lt (less than) or lte (less than or equal): define the higher bound of the range to be iterated. Only entries where the key is less than (or equal to) this option will be included in the range. When reverse is true the order will be reversed, but the entries iterated will be the same.
  • reverse (boolean, default: false): iterate entries in reverse order. Beware that a reverse seek can be slower than a forward seek.
  • limit (number, default: Infinity): limit the number of entries yielded. This number represents a maximum number of entries and will not be reached if the end of the range is reached first. A value of Infinity or -1 means there is no limit. When reverse is true the entries with the highest keys will be returned instead of the lowest keys.

The gte and lte range options take precedence over gt and lt respectively. If no range options are provided, the iterator will visit all entries of the database, starting at the lowest key and ending at the highest key (unless reverse is true). In addition to range options, the options object may contain:

  • keys (boolean, default: true): whether to return the key of each entry. If set to false, the iterator will yield keys that are undefined. Prefer to use db.keys() instead.
  • values (boolean, default: true): whether to return the value of each entry. If set to false, the iterator will yield values that are undefined. Prefer to use db.values() instead.
  • keyEncoding: custom key encoding for this iterator, used to encode range options, to encode seek() targets and to decode keys.
  • valueEncoding: custom value encoding for this iterator, used to decode values.

📌 To instead consume data using streams, see level-read-stream and level-web-stream.

keyIterator = db.keys([options])

Create a key iterator, having the same interface as db.iterator() except that it yields keys instead of entries. If only keys are needed, using db.keys() may increase performance because values won't have to fetched, copied or decoded. Options are the same as for db.iterator() except that db.keys() does not take keys, values and valueEncoding options.

// Iterate lazily
for await (const key of db.keys({ gt: 'a' })) {
  console.log(key)
}

// Get all at once. Setting a limit is recommended.
const keys = await db.keys({ gt: 'a', limit: 10 }).all()

valueIterator = db.values([options])

Create a value iterator, having the same interface as db.iterator() except that it yields values instead of entries. If only values are needed, using db.values() may increase performance because keys won't have to fetched, copied or decoded. Options are the same as for db.iterator() except that db.values() does not take keys and values options. Note that it does take a keyEncoding option, relevant for the encoding of range options.

// Iterate lazily
for await (const value of db.values({ gt: 'a' })) {
  console.log(value)
}

// Get all at once. Setting a limit is recommended.
const values = await db.values({ gt: 'a', limit: 10 }).all()

db.clear([options][, callback])

Delete all entries or a range. Not guaranteed to be atomic. Accepts the following options (with the same rules as on iterators):

  • gt (greater than) or gte (greater than or equal): define the lower bound of the range to be deleted. Only entries where the key is greater than (or equal to) this option will be included in the range. When reverse is true the order will be reversed, but the entries deleted will be the same.
  • lt (less than) or lte (less than or equal): define the higher bound of the range to be deleted. Only entries where the key is less than (or equal to) this option will be included in the range. When reverse is true the order will be reversed, but the entries deleted will be the same.
  • reverse (boolean, default: false): delete entries in reverse order. Only effective in combination with limit, to delete the last N entries.
  • limit (number, default: Infinity): limit the number of entries to be deleted. This number represents a maximum number of entries and will not be reached if the end of the range is reached first. A value of Infinity or -1 means there is no limit. When reverse is true the entries with the highest keys will be deleted instead of the lowest keys.
  • keyEncoding: custom key encoding for this operation, used to encode range options.

The gte and lte range options take precedence over gt and lt respectively. If no options are provided, all entries will be deleted. The callback function will be called with no arguments if the operation was successful or with an error if it failed. If no callback is provided, a promise is returned.

sublevel = db.sublevel(name[, options])

Create a sublevel that has the same interface as db (except for additional methods specific to classic-level or browser-level) and prefixes the keys of operations before passing them on to db. The name argument is required and must be a string.

const example = db.sublevel('example')

await example.put('hello', 'world')
await db.put('a', '1')

// Prints ['hello', 'world']
for await (const [key, value] of example.iterator()) {
  console.log([key, value])
}

Sublevels effectively separate a database into sections. Think SQL tables, but evented, ranged and real-time! Each sublevel is an AbstractLevel instance with its own keyspace, events and encodings. For example, it's possible to have one sublevel with 'buffer' keys and another with 'utf8' keys. The same goes for values. Like so:

db.sublevel('one', { valueEncoding: 'json' })
db.sublevel('two', { keyEncoding: 'buffer' })

An own keyspace means that sublevel.iterator() only includes entries of that sublevel, sublevel.clear() will only delete entries of that sublevel, and so forth. Range options get prefixed too.

Fully qualified keys (as seen from the parent database) take the form of prefix + key where prefix is separator + name + separator. If name is empty, the effective prefix is two separators. Sublevels can be nested: if db is itself a sublevel then the effective prefix is a combined prefix, e.g. '!one!!two!'. Note that a parent database will see its own keys as well as keys of any nested sublevels:

// Prints ['!example!hello', 'world'] and ['a', '1']
for await (const [key, value] of db.iterator()) {
  console.log([key, value])
}

📌 The key structure is equal to that of subleveldown which offered sublevels before they were built-in to abstract-level. This means that an abstract-level sublevel can read sublevels previously created with (and populated by) subleveldown.

Internally, sublevels operate on keys that are either a string, Buffer or Uint8Array, depending on parent database and choice of encoding. Which is to say: binary keys are fully supported. The name must however always be a string and can only contain ASCII characters.

The optional options object may contain:

  • separator (string, default: '!'): Character for separating sublevel names from user keys and each other. Must sort before characters used in name. An error will be thrown if that's not the case.
  • keyEncoding (string or object, default 'utf8'): encoding to use for keys
  • valueEncoding (string or object, default 'utf8'): encoding to use for values.

The keyEncoding and valueEncoding options are forwarded to the AbstractLevel constructor and work the same, as if a new, separate database was created. They default to 'utf8' regardless of the encodings configured on db. Other options are forwarded too but abstract-level (and therefor level) has no relevant options at the time of writing. For example, setting the createIfMissing option will have no effect. Why is that?

Like regular databases, sublevels open themselves but they do not affect the state of the parent database. This means a sublevel can be individually closed and (re)opened. If the sublevel is created while the parent database is opening, it will wait for that to finish. If the parent database is closed, then opening the sublevel will fail and subsequent operations on the sublevel will yield errors with code LEVEL_DATABASE_NOT_OPEN.

chainedBatch

chainedBatch.put(key, value[, options])

Queue a put operation on this batch, not committed until write() is called. This will throw a LEVEL_INVALID_KEY or LEVEL_INVALID_VALUE error if key or value is invalid. The optional options object may contain:

  • keyEncoding: custom key encoding for this operation, used to encode the key.
  • valueEncoding: custom value encoding for this operation, used to encode the value.
  • sublevel (sublevel instance): act as though the put operation is performed on the given sublevel, to similar effect as sublevel.batch().put(key, value). This allows atomically committing data to multiple sublevels. The key will be prefixed with the prefix of the sublevel, and the key and value will be encoded by the sublevel (using the default encodings of the sublevel unless keyEncoding and / or valueEncoding are provided).

chainedBatch.del(key[, options])

Queue a del operation on this batch, not committed until write() is called. This will throw a LEVEL_INVALID_KEY error if key is invalid. The optional options object may contain:

  • keyEncoding: custom key encoding for this operation, used to encode the key.
  • sublevel (sublevel instance): act as though the del operation is performed on the given sublevel, to similar effect as sublevel.batch().del(key). This allows atomically committing data to multiple sublevels. The key will be prefixed with the prefix of the sublevel, and the key will be encoded by the sublevel (using the default key encoding of the sublevel unless keyEncoding is provided).

chainedBatch.clear()

Clear all queued operations on this batch.

chainedBatch.write([options][, callback])

Commit the queued operations for this batch. All operations will be written atomically, that is, they will either all succeed or fail with no partial commits.

There are no options (that are common between classic-level and browser-level). Note that write() does not take encoding options. Those can only be set on put() and del().

The callback function will be called with no arguments if the batch was successful or with an error if it failed. If no callback is provided, a promise is returned.

After write() or close() has been called, no further operations are allowed.

chainedBatch.close([callback])

Free up underlying resources. This should be done even if the chained batch has zero queued operations. Automatically called by write() so normally not necessary to call, unless the intent is to discard a chained batch without committing it. The callback function will be called with no arguments. If no callback is provided, a promise is returned. Closing the batch is an idempotent operation, such that calling close() more than once is allowed and makes no difference.

chainedBatch.length

The number of queued operations on the current batch.

chainedBatch.db

A reference to the database that created this chained batch.

iterator

An iterator allows one to lazily read a range of entries stored in the database. The entries will be sorted by keys in lexicographic order (in other words: byte order) which in short means key 'a' comes before 'b' and key '10' comes before '2'.

A classic-level iterator reads from a snapshot of the database, created at the time db.iterator() was called. This means the iterator will not see the data of simultaneous write operations. A browser-level iterator does not offer such guarantees, as is indicated by db.supports.snapshots. That property will be true in Node.js and false in browsers.

Iterators can be consumed with for await...of and iterator.all(), or by manually calling iterator.next() or nextv() in succession. In the latter case, iterator.close() must always be called. In contrast, finishing, throwing, breaking or returning from a for await...of loop automatically calls iterator.close(), as does iterator.all().

An iterator reaches its natural end in the following situations:

  • The end of the database has been reached
  • The end of the range has been reached
  • The last iterator.seek() was out of range.

An iterator keeps track of calls that are in progress. It doesn't allow concurrent next(), nextv() or all() calls (including a combination thereof) and will throw an error with code LEVEL_ITERATOR_BUSY if that happens:

// Not awaited and no callback provided
iterator.next()

try {
  // Which means next() is still in progress here
  iterator.all()
} catch (err) {
  console.log(err.code) // 'LEVEL_ITERATOR_BUSY'
}

for await...of iterator

Yields entries, which are arrays containing a key and value. The type of key and value depends on the options passed to db.iterator().

try {
  for await (const [key, value] of db.iterator()) {
    console.log(key)
  }
} catch (err) {
  console.error(err)
}

iterator.next([callback])

Advance to the next entry and yield that entry. If an error occurs, the callback function will be called with an error. Otherwise, the callback receives null, a key and a value. The type of key and value depends on the options passed to db.iterator(). If the iterator has reached its natural end, both key and value will be undefined.

If no callback is provided, a promise is returned for either an entry array (containing a key and value) or undefined if the iterator reached its natural end.

Note: iterator.close() must always be called once there's no intention to call next() or nextv() again. Even if such calls yielded an error and even if the iterator reached its natural end. Not closing the iterator will result in memory leaks and may also affect performance of other operations if many iterators are unclosed and each is holding a snapshot of the database.

iterator.nextv(size[, options][, callback])

Advance repeatedly and get at most size amount of entries in a single call. Can be faster than repeated next() calls. The size argument must be an integer and has a soft minimum of 1. There are no options at the moment.

If an error occurs, the callback function will be called with an error. Otherwise, the callback receives null and an array of entries, where each entry is an array containing a key and value. The natural end of the iterator will be signaled by yielding an empty array. If no callback is provided, a promise is returned.

const iterator = db.iterator()

while (true) {
  const entries = await iterator.nextv(100)

  if (entries.length === 0) {
    break
  }

  for (const [key, value] of entries) {
    // ..
  }
}

await iterator.close()

iterator.all([options][, callback])

Advance repeatedly and get all (remaining) entries as an array, automatically closing the iterator. Assumes that those entries fit in memory. If that's not the case, instead use next(), nextv() or for await...of. There are no options at the moment. If an error occurs, the callback function will be called with an error. Otherwise, the callback receives null and an array of entries, where each entry is an array containing a key and value. If no callback is provided, a promise is returned.

const entries = await db.iterator({ limit: 100 }).all()

for (const [key, value] of entries) {
  // ..
}

iterator.seek(target[, options])

Seek to the key closest to target. Subsequent calls to iterator.next(), nextv() or all() (including implicit calls in a for await...of loop) will yield entries with keys equal to or larger than target, or equal to or smaller than target if the reverse option passed to db.iterator() was true.

The optional options object may contain:

  • keyEncoding: custom key encoding, used to encode the target. By default the keyEncoding option of the iterator is used or (if that wasn't set) the keyEncoding of the database.

If range options like gt were passed to db.iterator() and target does not fall within that range, the iterator will reach its natural end.

iterator.close([callback])

Free up underlying resources. The callback function will be called with no arguments. If no callback is provided, a promise is returned. Closing the iterator is an idempotent operation, such that calling close() more than once is allowed and makes no difference.

If a next() ,nextv() or all() call is in progress, closing will wait for that to finish. After close() has been called, further calls to next() ,nextv() or all() will yield an error with code LEVEL_ITERATOR_NOT_OPEN.

iterator.db

A reference to the database that created this iterator.

iterator.count

Read-only getter that indicates how many keys have been yielded so far (by any method) excluding calls that errored or yielded undefined.

iterator.limit

Read-only getter that reflects the limit that was set in options. Greater than or equal to zero. Equals Infinity if no limit, which allows for easy math:

const hasMore = iterator.count < iterator.limit
const remaining = iterator.limit - iterator.count

keyIterator

A key iterator has the same interface as iterator except that its methods yield keys instead of entries. For the keyIterator.next(callback) method, this means that the callback will receive two arguments (an error and key) instead of three. Usage is otherwise the same.

valueIterator

A value iterator has the same interface as iterator except that its methods yield values instead of entries. For the valueIterator.next(callback) method, this means that the callback will receive two arguments (an error and value) instead of three. Usage is otherwise the same.

sublevel

A sublevel is an instance of the AbstractSublevel class, which extends AbstractLevel and thus has the same API as documented above. Sublevels have a few additional properties.

sublevel.prefix

Prefix of the sublevel. A read-only string property.

const example = db.sublevel('example')
const nested = example.sublevel('nested')

console.log(example.prefix) // '!example!'
console.log(nested.prefix) // '!example!!nested!'

sublevel.db

Parent database. A read-only property.

const example = db.sublevel('example')
const nested = example.sublevel('nested')

console.log(example.db === db) // true
console.log(nested.db === db) // true

Contributing

Level/level is an OPEN Open Source Project. This means that:

Individuals making significant and valuable contributions are given commit-access to the project to contribute as they see fit. This project is more like an open wiki than a standard guarded open source project.

See the Contribution Guide for more details.

Donate

Support us with a monthly donation on Open Collective and help us continue our work.

License

MIT

level-browserify's People

Contributors

greenkeeper[bot] avatar jameskyburz avatar jimkang avatar juliangruber avatar mafintosh avatar mcollina avatar ralphtheninja avatar rh0 avatar rvagg avatar vweevers avatar

Stargazers

 avatar  avatar  avatar  avatar  avatar  avatar  avatar  avatar  avatar  avatar  avatar  avatar  avatar  avatar  avatar  avatar  avatar  avatar  avatar  avatar  avatar  avatar  avatar  avatar  avatar  avatar  avatar  avatar  avatar  avatar  avatar  avatar  avatar  avatar  avatar  avatar  avatar  avatar  avatar  avatar  avatar  avatar  avatar  avatar  avatar  avatar  avatar  avatar  avatar  avatar  avatar  avatar  avatar  avatar  avatar  avatar  avatar  avatar  avatar  avatar  avatar  avatar  avatar

Watchers

 avatar  avatar  avatar  avatar  avatar  avatar  avatar  avatar  avatar  avatar  avatar  avatar  avatar

level-browserify's Issues

Update README

  • License section
  • update badges
  • LevelDOWN -> leveldown etc
  • Steal api docs from level

Quickstart

Build the browser distribution

npm install --g browserify
git clone https://github.com/Level/level-browserify.git
cd level-browserify
npm install .
browserify browser.js --standalone level > level-browserify.js

Include level-browserify.js using a script tag in your html page

<script type="text/javascript" src="level-browserify.js"></script>

Run the following code in your app

var database = level('./test_database');
database.put('key', 'value', function(error) {
	database.get('key', function(error, value) {
		console.log('value:', value)
	});
});

Version 10 of node.js has been released

Version 10 of Node.js (code name Dubnium) has been released! 🎊

To see what happens to your code in Node.js 10, Greenkeeper has created a branch with the following changes:

  • Added the new Node.js version to your .travis.yml

If you’re interested in upgrading this repo to Node.js 10, you can open a PR with these changes. Please note that this issue is just intended as a friendly reminder and the PR as a possible starting point for getting your code running on Node.js 10.

More information on this issue

Greenkeeper has checked the engines key in any package.json file, the .nvmrc file, and the .travis.yml file, if present.

  • engines was only updated if it defined a single version, not a range.
  • .nvmrc was updated to Node.js 10
  • .travis.yml was only changed if there was a root-level node_js that didn’t already include Node.js 10, such as node or lts/*. In this case, the new version was appended to the list. We didn’t touch job or matrix configurations because these tend to be quite specific and complex, and it’s difficult to infer what the intentions were.

For many simpler .travis.yml configurations, this PR should suffice as-is, but depending on what you’re doing it may require additional work or may not be applicable at all. We’re also aware that you may have good reasons to not update to Node.js 10, which is why this was sent as an issue and not a pull request. Feel free to delete it without comment, I’m a humble robot and won’t feel rejected 🤖


FAQ and help

There is a collection of frequently asked questions. If those don’t help, you can always ask the humans behind Greenkeeper.


Your Greenkeeper Bot 🌴

Browserify seems to load leveldown

Apologies if I am misunderstinding something basic here, however I cannot seem to get level-browserify to load level-js when using browserify. As a simple test I was using something like:

var level = require('level-browserify')

if(typeof level.destroy !== 'function') {
  console.log('Bummer, level.destroy is not a function')
}
else {
  console.log('Huzzah!')
}

After compilation with browserify, .destroy is never found to be a function (a sign that level-js is not used). I see that level-browserify has a browser field in package.json pointing at browser.js, but this does not seem to be respected. I can add a browser field to my own package.json, along the lines of:

  "browser": {
    "level-browserify": "level-js"
  }

After which level-js seems to load correctly, but this feels blatantly wrong.

Edit:
browserify v15.0.0
level-browserify v1.1.1

Cross-db compatibility guidelines?

I would find it helpful to have some guidelines for making code portable to both level.js and leveldown. Basically, I tried to port some leveldown code into level-browserify, thinking that it would "just work," but it turned out that it didn't. Is that something that we could add into the README of this project?

As far as specifics, the only thing that I'm aware of is that level.js likes ArrayBuffers whereas leveldown likes Buffers. Are there other details worth mentioning?

Remove leveldown

In #4 @rvagg suggested that we remove leveldown from here.

The whole point of this module was to provide a level experience that worked both in the browser and on the server.

I'm ok to remove it, but then what's its purpose?

(I'm opening a new discussion as I'll release the bugfix asap)

Bump Level-js dependency

Level-js is currently at version 2.1.3. The bundled version here is 1.1.2.

@rvagg how should I bump the version number here to update the Level-js depedency? Currently is 0.18.0. Should we wait LevelUp 0.19?

Action required: Greenkeeper could not be activated 🚨

🚨 You need to enable Continuous Integration on all branches of this repository. 🚨

To enable Greenkeeper, you need to make sure that a commit status is reported on all branches. This is required by Greenkeeper because we are using your CI build statuses to figure out when to notify you about breaking changes.

Since we did not receive a CI status on the greenkeeper/initial branch, we assume that you still need to configure it.

If you have already set up a CI for this repository, you might need to check your configuration. Make sure it will run on all new branches. If you don’t want it to run on every branch, you can whitelist branches starting with greenkeeper/.

We recommend using Travis CI, but Greenkeeper will work with every other CI service as well.

Once you have installed CI on this repository, you’ll need to re-trigger Greenkeeper’s initial Pull Request. To do this, please delete the greenkeeper/initial branch in this repository, and then remove and re-add this repository to the Greenkeeper integration’s white list on Github. You'll find this list on your repo or organiszation’s settings page, under Installed GitHub Apps.

Does not build with Node v4.0.0

When installing with Node v4.0.0:

npm install --save level-browserify                     ⮂  

> [email protected] install /Users/jimkang/gcw/toss/node_modules/level-browserify/node_modules/leveldown
> node-pre-gyp install --fallback-to-build

  CXX(target) Release/obj.target/leveldb/deps/leveldb/leveldb-1.17.0/db/builder.o
  CXX(target) Release/obj.target/leveldb/deps/leveldb/leveldb-1.17.0/db/db_impl.o
  CXX(target) Release/obj.target/leveldb/deps/leveldb/leveldb-1.17.0/db/db_iter.o
  CXX(target) Release/obj.target/leveldb/deps/leveldb/leveldb-1.17.0/db/filename.o
  CXX(target) Release/obj.target/leveldb/deps/leveldb/leveldb-1.17.0/db/dbformat.o
  CXX(target) Release/obj.target/leveldb/deps/leveldb/leveldb-1.17.0/db/log_reader.o
  CXX(target) Release/obj.target/leveldb/deps/leveldb/leveldb-1.17.0/db/log_writer.o
  CXX(target) Release/obj.target/leveldb/deps/leveldb/leveldb-1.17.0/db/memtable.o
  CXX(target) Release/obj.target/leveldb/deps/leveldb/leveldb-1.17.0/db/repair.o
  CXX(target) Release/obj.target/leveldb/deps/leveldb/leveldb-1.17.0/db/table_cache.o
  CXX(target) Release/obj.target/leveldb/deps/leveldb/leveldb-1.17.0/db/version_edit.o
  CXX(target) Release/obj.target/leveldb/deps/leveldb/leveldb-1.17.0/db/version_set.o
  CXX(target) Release/obj.target/leveldb/deps/leveldb/leveldb-1.17.0/db/write_batch.o
  CXX(target) Release/obj.target/leveldb/deps/leveldb/leveldb-1.17.0/helpers/memenv/memenv.o
  CXX(target) Release/obj.target/leveldb/deps/leveldb/leveldb-1.17.0/table/block.o
  CXX(target) Release/obj.target/leveldb/deps/leveldb/leveldb-1.17.0/table/block_builder.o
  CXX(target) Release/obj.target/leveldb/deps/leveldb/leveldb-1.17.0/table/filter_block.o
  CXX(target) Release/obj.target/leveldb/deps/leveldb/leveldb-1.17.0/table/format.o
  CXX(target) Release/obj.target/leveldb/deps/leveldb/leveldb-1.17.0/table/iterator.o
  CXX(target) Release/obj.target/leveldb/deps/leveldb/leveldb-1.17.0/table/merger.o
  CXX(target) Release/obj.target/leveldb/deps/leveldb/leveldb-1.17.0/table/table.o
  CXX(target) Release/obj.target/leveldb/deps/leveldb/leveldb-1.17.0/table/table_builder.o
  CXX(target) Release/obj.target/leveldb/deps/leveldb/leveldb-1.17.0/table/two_level_iterator.o
  CXX(target) Release/obj.target/leveldb/deps/leveldb/leveldb-1.17.0/util/arena.o
  CXX(target) Release/obj.target/leveldb/deps/leveldb/leveldb-1.17.0/util/bloom.o
  CXX(target) Release/obj.target/leveldb/deps/leveldb/leveldb-1.17.0/util/cache.o
  CXX(target) Release/obj.target/leveldb/deps/leveldb/leveldb-1.17.0/util/coding.o
  CXX(target) Release/obj.target/leveldb/deps/leveldb/leveldb-1.17.0/util/comparator.o
  CXX(target) Release/obj.target/leveldb/deps/leveldb/leveldb-1.17.0/util/crc32c.o
  CXX(target) Release/obj.target/leveldb/deps/leveldb/leveldb-1.17.0/util/env.o
  CXX(target) Release/obj.target/leveldb/deps/leveldb/leveldb-1.17.0/util/filter_policy.o
  CXX(target) Release/obj.target/leveldb/deps/leveldb/leveldb-1.17.0/util/hash.o
  CXX(target) Release/obj.target/leveldb/deps/leveldb/leveldb-1.17.0/util/logging.o
  CXX(target) Release/obj.target/leveldb/deps/leveldb/leveldb-1.17.0/util/options.o
  CXX(target) Release/obj.target/leveldb/deps/leveldb/leveldb-1.17.0/util/status.o
  CXX(target) Release/obj.target/leveldb/deps/leveldb/leveldb-1.17.0/port/port_posix.o
  CXX(target) Release/obj.target/leveldb/deps/leveldb/leveldb-1.17.0/util/env_posix.o
  LIBTOOL-STATIC Release/leveldb.a
  CXX(target) Release/obj.target/snappy/deps/snappy/snappy-1.1.1/snappy-sinksource.o
  CXX(target) Release/obj.target/snappy/deps/snappy/snappy-1.1.1/snappy-stubs-internal.o
  CXX(target) Release/obj.target/snappy/deps/snappy/snappy-1.1.1/snappy.o
  LIBTOOL-STATIC Release/snappy.a
  CXX(target) Release/obj.target/leveldown/src/batch.o
In file included from ../src/batch.cc:3:
../node_modules/nan/nan.h:261:25: error: redefinition of '_NanEnsureLocal'
NAN_INLINE v8::Local<T> _NanEnsureLocal(v8::Local<T> val) {
                        ^
../node_modules/nan/nan.h:256:25: note: previous definition is here
NAN_INLINE v8::Local<T> _NanEnsureLocal(v8::Handle<T> val) {
                        ^
../node_modules/nan/nan.h:661:13: error: no member named 'smalloc' in namespace
      'node'
    , node::smalloc::FreeCallback callback
      ~~~~~~^
../node_modules/nan/nan.h:672:12: error: no matching function for call to 'New'
    return node::Buffer::New(v8::Isolate::GetCurrent(), data, size);
           ^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
/Users/jimkang/.node-gyp/4.0.0/include/node/node_buffer.h:31:40: note: 
      candidate function not viable: no known conversion from 'uint32_t'
      (aka 'unsigned int') to 'enum encoding' for 3rd argument
NODE_EXTERN v8::MaybeLocal<v8::Object> New(v8::Isolate* isolate,
                                       ^
/Users/jimkang/.node-gyp/4.0.0/include/node/node_buffer.h:43:40: note: 
      candidate function not viable: 2nd argument ('const char *') would lose
      const qualifier
NODE_EXTERN v8::MaybeLocal<v8::Object> New(v8::Isolate* isolate,
                                       ^
/Users/jimkang/.node-gyp/4.0.0/include/node/node_buffer.h:28:40: note: 
      candidate function not viable: requires 2 arguments, but 3 were provided
NODE_EXTERN v8::MaybeLocal<v8::Object> New(v8::Isolate* isolate, size_t length);
                                       ^
/Users/jimkang/.node-gyp/4.0.0/include/node/node_buffer.h:36:40: note: 
      candidate function not viable: requires 5 arguments, but 3 were provided
NODE_EXTERN v8::MaybeLocal<v8::Object> New(v8::Isolate* isolate,
                                       ^
In file included from ../src/batch.cc:3:
../node_modules/nan/nan.h:676:12: error: no viable conversion from
      'v8::MaybeLocal<v8::Object>' to 'v8::Local<v8::Object>'
    return node::Buffer::New(v8::Isolate::GetCurrent(), size);
           ^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
/Users/jimkang/.node-gyp/4.0.0/include/node/v8.h:210:7: note: candidate
      constructor (the implicit copy constructor) not viable: no known
      conversion from 'v8::MaybeLocal<v8::Object>' to 'const
      v8::Local<v8::Object> &' for 1st argument
class Local {
      ^
/Users/jimkang/.node-gyp/4.0.0/include/node/v8.h:210:7: note: candidate
      constructor (the implicit move constructor) not viable: no known
      conversion from 'v8::MaybeLocal<v8::Object>' to 'v8::Local<v8::Object> &&'
      for 1st argument
class Local {
      ^
/Users/jimkang/.node-gyp/4.0.0/include/node/v8.h:214:13: note: candidate
      template ignored: could not match 'Local' against 'MaybeLocal'
  V8_INLINE Local(Local<S> that)
            ^
/Users/jimkang/.node-gyp/4.0.0/include/node/v8.h:326:13: note: candidate
      template ignored: could not match 'S *' against
      'v8::MaybeLocal<v8::Object>'
  V8_INLINE Local(S* that)
            ^
In file included from ../src/batch.cc:3:
../node_modules/nan/nan.h:683:26: error: no member named 'Use' in namespace
      'node::Buffer'
    return node::Buffer::Use(v8::Isolate::GetCurrent(), data, size);
           ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~^
In file included from ../src/batch.cc:1:
In file included from /Users/jimkang/.node-gyp/4.0.0/include/node/node.h:42:
/Users/jimkang/.node-gyp/4.0.0/include/node/v8.h:221:5: error: assigning to
      'v8::Primitive *volatile' from incompatible type 'v8::Value *'
    TYPE_CHECK(T, S);
    ^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
/Users/jimkang/.node-gyp/4.0.0/include/node/v8.h:180:37: note: expanded from
      macro 'TYPE_CHECK'
    *(static_cast<T* volatile*>(0)) = static_cast<S*>(0);      \
                                    ^ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
../node_modules/nan/nan.h:414:12: note: in instantiation of function template
      specialization 'v8::Local<v8::Primitive>::Local<v8::Value>' requested here
    return NanEscapeScope(NanNew(v8::Undefined(v8::Isolate::GetCurrent())));
           ^
../node_modules/nan/nan.h:398:30: note: expanded from macro 'NanEscapeScope'
# define NanEscapeScope(val) scope.Escape(_NanEnsureLocal(val))
                             ^
In file included from ../src/batch.cc:1:
In file included from /Users/jimkang/.node-gyp/4.0.0/include/node/node.h:42:
/Users/jimkang/.node-gyp/4.0.0/include/node/v8.h:221:5: error: assigning to
      'v8::Boolean *volatile' from incompatible type 'v8::Value *'
    TYPE_CHECK(T, S);
    ^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
/Users/jimkang/.node-gyp/4.0.0/include/node/v8.h:180:37: note: expanded from
      macro 'TYPE_CHECK'
    *(static_cast<T* volatile*>(0)) = static_cast<S*>(0);      \
                                    ^ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
../node_modules/nan/nan.h:424:12: note: in instantiation of function template
      specialization 'v8::Local<v8::Boolean>::Local<v8::Value>' requested here
    return NanEscapeScope(NanNew(v8::True(v8::Isolate::GetCurrent())));
           ^
../node_modules/nan/nan.h:398:30: note: expanded from macro 'NanEscapeScope'
# define NanEscapeScope(val) scope.Escape(_NanEnsureLocal(val))
                             ^
In file included from ../src/batch.cc:1:
In file included from /Users/jimkang/.node-gyp/4.0.0/include/node/node.h:42:
/Users/jimkang/.node-gyp/4.0.0/include/node/v8.h:221:5: error: assigning to
      'v8::Function *volatile' from incompatible type 'v8::Value *'
    TYPE_CHECK(T, S);
    ^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
/Users/jimkang/.node-gyp/4.0.0/include/node/v8.h:180:37: note: expanded from
      macro 'TYPE_CHECK'
    *(static_cast<T* volatile*>(0)) = static_cast<S*>(0);      \
                                    ^ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
../node_modules/nan/nan.h:1514:12: note: in instantiation of function template
      specialization 'v8::Local<v8::Function>::Local<v8::Value>' requested here
    return NanEscapeScope(NanNew(handle)->Get(kCallbackIndex)
           ^
../node_modules/nan/nan.h:398:30: note: expanded from macro 'NanEscapeScope'
# define NanEscapeScope(val) scope.Escape(_NanEnsureLocal(val))
                             ^
In file included from ../src/batch.cc:1:
In file included from /Users/jimkang/.node-gyp/4.0.0/include/node/node.h:42:
/Users/jimkang/.node-gyp/4.0.0/include/node/v8.h:221:5: error: assigning to
      'v8::Object *volatile' from incompatible type 'v8::Value *'
    TYPE_CHECK(T, S);
    ^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
/Users/jimkang/.node-gyp/4.0.0/include/node/v8.h:180:37: note: expanded from
      macro 'TYPE_CHECK'
    *(static_cast<T* volatile*>(0)) = static_cast<S*>(0);      \
                                    ^ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
../node_modules/nan/nan.h:1632:12: note: in instantiation of function template
      specialization 'v8::Local<v8::Object>::Local<v8::Value>' requested here
    return NanEscapeScope(handle->Get(NanNew(key)).As<v8::Object>());
           ^
../node_modules/nan/nan.h:398:30: note: expanded from macro 'NanEscapeScope'
# define NanEscapeScope(val) scope.Escape(_NanEnsureLocal(val))
                             ^
9 errors generated.
make: *** [Release/obj.target/leveldown/src/batch.o] Error 1
gyp ERR! build error 
gyp ERR! stack Error: `make` failed with exit code: 2
gyp ERR! stack     at ChildProcess.onExit (/usr/local/lib/node_modules/npm/node_modules/node-gyp/lib/build.js:270:23)
gyp ERR! stack     at emitTwo (events.js:87:13)
gyp ERR! stack     at ChildProcess.emit (events.js:172:7)
gyp ERR! stack     at Process.ChildProcess._handle.onexit (internal/child_process.js:200:12)
gyp ERR! System Darwin 14.5.0
gyp ERR! command "/usr/local/bin/node" "/usr/local/lib/node_modules/npm/node_modules/node-gyp/bin/node-gyp.js" "build" "--fallback-to-build" "--module=/Users/jimkang/gcw/toss/node_modules/level-browserify/node_modules/leveldown/build-pre-gyp/leveldown.node" "--module_name=leveldown" "--module_path=/Users/jimkang/gcw/toss/node_modules/level-browserify/node_modules/leveldown/build-pre-gyp"
gyp ERR! cwd /Users/jimkang/gcw/toss/node_modules/level-browserify/node_modules/leveldown
gyp ERR! node -v v4.0.0
gyp ERR! node-gyp -v v3.0.1
gyp ERR! not ok 
node-pre-gyp ERR! build error 
node-pre-gyp ERR! stack Error: Failed to execute '/usr/local/bin/node /usr/local/lib/node_modules/npm/node_modules/node-gyp/bin/node-gyp.js build --fallback-to-build --module=/Users/jimkang/gcw/toss/node_modules/level-browserify/node_modules/leveldown/build-pre-gyp/leveldown.node --module_name=leveldown --module_path=/Users/jimkang/gcw/toss/node_modules/level-browserify/node_modules/leveldown/build-pre-gyp' (1)
node-pre-gyp ERR! stack     at ChildProcess.<anonymous> (/Users/jimkang/gcw/toss/node_modules/level-browserify/node_modules/leveldown/node_modules/node-pre-gyp/lib/util/compile.js:83:29)
node-pre-gyp ERR! stack     at emitTwo (events.js:87:13)
node-pre-gyp ERR! stack     at ChildProcess.emit (events.js:172:7)
node-pre-gyp ERR! stack     at maybeClose (internal/child_process.js:817:16)
node-pre-gyp ERR! stack     at Process.ChildProcess._handle.onexit (internal/child_process.js:211:5)
node-pre-gyp ERR! System Darwin 14.5.0
node-pre-gyp ERR! command "/usr/local/bin/node" "/Users/jimkang/gcw/toss/node_modules/level-browserify/node_modules/leveldown/node_modules/.bin/node-pre-gyp" "install" "--fallback-to-build"
node-pre-gyp ERR! cwd /Users/jimkang/gcw/toss/node_modules/level-browserify/node_modules/leveldown
node-pre-gyp ERR! node -v v4.0.0
node-pre-gyp ERR! node-pre-gyp -v v0.6.7
node-pre-gyp ERR! not ok 
Failed to execute '/usr/local/bin/node /usr/local/lib/node_modules/npm/node_modules/node-gyp/bin/node-gyp.js build --fallback-to-build --module=/Users/jimkang/gcw/toss/node_modules/level-browserify/node_modules/leveldown/build-pre-gyp/leveldown.node --module_name=leveldown --module_path=/Users/jimkang/gcw/toss/node_modules/level-browserify/node_modules/leveldown/build-pre-gyp' (1)
npm ERR! Darwin 14.5.0
npm ERR! argv "/usr/local/bin/node" "/usr/local/bin/npm" "install" "--save" "level-browserify"
npm ERR! node v4.0.0
npm ERR! npm  v2.14.2
npm ERR! code ELIFECYCLE

npm ERR! [email protected] install: `node-pre-gyp install --fallback-to-build`
npm ERR! Exit status 1
npm ERR! 
npm ERR! Failed at the [email protected] install script 'node-pre-gyp install --fallback-to-build'.
npm ERR! This is most likely a problem with the leveldown package,
npm ERR! not with npm itself.
npm ERR! Tell the author that this fails on your system:
npm ERR!     node-pre-gyp install --fallback-to-build
npm ERR! You can get their info via:
npm ERR!     npm owner ls leveldown
npm ERR! There is likely additional logging output above.

npm ERR! Please include the following file with any support request:
npm ERR!     /Users/jimkang/gcw/toss/npm-debug.log

It installs fine with 0.12.7, though.

Open a .leveldb file?

I have a project that requires reading .leveldb files that were output by a desktop program. They are uploaded to a browser, and thus the raw byte data is all available. Can I somehow give that to level to load so I can read from the pre-existing database rather than IndexedDB and the like?

Recommend Projects

  • React photo React

    A declarative, efficient, and flexible JavaScript library for building user interfaces.

  • Vue.js photo Vue.js

    🖖 Vue.js is a progressive, incrementally-adoptable JavaScript framework for building UI on the web.

  • Typescript photo Typescript

    TypeScript is a superset of JavaScript that compiles to clean JavaScript output.

  • TensorFlow photo TensorFlow

    An Open Source Machine Learning Framework for Everyone

  • Django photo Django

    The Web framework for perfectionists with deadlines.

  • D3 photo D3

    Bring data to life with SVG, Canvas and HTML. 📊📈🎉

Recommend Topics

  • javascript

    JavaScript (JS) is a lightweight interpreted programming language with first-class functions.

  • web

    Some thing interesting about web. New door for the world.

  • server

    A server is a program made to process requests and deliver data to clients.

  • Machine learning

    Machine learning is a way of modeling and interpreting data that allows a piece of software to respond intelligently.

  • Game

    Some thing interesting about game, make everyone happy.

Recommend Org

  • Facebook photo Facebook

    We are working to build community through open source technology. NB: members must have two-factor auth.

  • Microsoft photo Microsoft

    Open source projects and samples from Microsoft.

  • Google photo Google

    Google ❤️ Open Source for everyone.

  • D3 photo D3

    Data-Driven Documents codes.