Lina is an extensible, un-opinionated graphql powered nodejs backend with a suite of features and apps to support most of the basic and advance features your project will need
ArangoDb module for Lina based on the official arangojs package.
$ npm i --save @linaframework/arango
Import ArangoDbModule
:
@Module({
imports: [ArangoDbModule.register({
database: 'test', // db name
// You can initialize the database using just a url.
url: 'http://root:@localhost:8529',
// Or supply each of these values. You do not need both.
host: 'localhost',
port: '8529',
username: 'root',
password: '',
// You can also supply a protocol. If localhost, it's `http` by default, otherwise `https`
protocol: 'tcp'
})],
providers: [...],
})
export class UserModule {}
Inject UserService
:
@Injectable()
export class UserService {
constructor(private readonly arangoDbService: ArangoDbService) {}
}
Quite often you might want to asynchronously pass your module options instead of passing them beforehand. In such case, use registerAsync()
method, that provides a couple of various ways to deal with async data.
1. Use factory
ArangoDbModule.registerAsync({
useFactory: () => ({
database: 'test',
url: 'http://root:@localhost:8529',
host: 'localhost',
port: '8529',
username: 'root',
password: '',
protocol: 'tcp'
}),
})
Obviously, our factory behaves like every other one (might be async
and is able to inject dependencies through inject
).
ArangoDbModule.registerAsync({
imports: [ConfigModule],
useFactory: async (configService: ConfigService) => ({
database: configService.getString('ARANGO_DATABASE_NAME'),
// You can initialize the database using just a url.
url: configService.getString('ARANGO_HOST_URL'),,
// Or supply each of these values. You do not need both.
host: configService.getString('ARANGO_HOST'),,
port: configService.getString('ARANGO_PORT'),,
username: configService.getString('ARANGO_USERNAME'),,
password: configService.getString('ARANGO_PASSWORD'),,
// You can also supply a protocol. If localhost, it's `http` by default, otherwise `https`
protocol: configService.getString('ARANGO_PROTOCOL'),
}),
inject: [ConfigService],
}),
2. Use class
ArangoDbModule.registerAsync({
useClass: ArangoDbConfigService,
})
Above construction will instantiate ArangoDbConfigService
inside ArangoDbModule
and will leverage it to create options object.
class ArangoDbConfigService implements ArangoDbOptionsFactory {
createElasticsearchOptions(): ArangoDbModuleOptions {
return {
database: 'test',
url: 'http://root:@localhost:8529',
host: 'localhost',
port: '8529',
username: 'root',
password: '',
protocol: 'tcp'
};
}
}
3. Use existing
ArangoDbModule.registerAsync({
imports: [ConfigModule],
useExisting: ConfigService,
}),
It works the same as useClass
with one critical difference - ArangoDbModule
will lookup imported modules to reuse already created ConfigService
, instead of instantiating it on its own.
The ArangoDbService
exposes native Arango methods and wraps them in the Observable, read more. The ArangoDbModule.register()
takes options
object as an argument, read more.
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