Here's a drop-in, fast, embedded database for multi-platform apps (server, desktop, mobile). Sync Rust types effortlessly. Enjoy! 😌🍃.
- Simple API 🦀.
- Support for multiple indexes (primary, secondary, unique, non-unique, optional).
- Minimal boilerplate see benchmarks.
- Transparent serialization/deserialization using native_model.
- Automatic model migration 🌟.
- Thread-safe and fully ACID-compliant transactions provided by redb.
- Real-time subscription with filters for
insert
,update
anddelete
operations. - Compatible with all Rust types (
enum
,struct
,tuple
etc.). - Hot snapshots.
Add this to your Cargo.toml
:
[dependencies]
native_db = "0.7.1"
native_model = "0.4.19"
NOTE: native_db
requires native_model
to work.
Active development. The API is not stable yet and may change in the future.
- Documentation API
- Quick Start
- Full example with Tauri: native_db_tauri_vanilla
use serde::{Deserialize, Serialize};
use native_db::*;
use native_model::{native_model, Model};
use once_cell::sync::Lazy;
#[derive(Serialize, Deserialize, PartialEq, Debug)]
#[native_model(id = 1, version = 1)]
#[native_db]
struct Item {
#[primary_key]
id: u32,
#[secondary_key]
name: String,
}
// Define the models
// The lifetime of the models needs to be longer or equal to the lifetime of the database.
// In many cases, it is simpler to use a static variable but it is not mandatory.
static MODELS: Lazy<Models> = Lazy::new(|| {
let mut models = Models::new();
models.define::<Item>().unwrap();
models
});
fn main() -> Result<(), db_type::Error> {
// Create a database in memory
let mut db = Builder::new().create_in_memory(&MODELS)?;
// Insert data (open a read-write transaction)
let rw = db.rw_transaction().unwrap();
rw.insert(Item { id: 1, name: "red".to_string() })?;
rw.insert(Item { id: 2, name: "green".to_string() })?;
rw.insert(Item { id: 3, name: "blue".to_string() })?;
rw.commit()?;
// Open a read-only transaction
let r = db.r_transaction()?;
// Retrieve data with id=3
let retrieve_data: Item = r.get().primary(3_u32)?.unwrap();
println!("data id='3': {:?}", retrieve_data);
// Iterate items with name starting with "red"
for item in r.scan().secondary::<Item>(ItemKey::name)?.start_with("red") {
println!("data name=\"red\": {:?}", item);
}
// Remove data (open a read-write transaction)
let rw = db.rw_transaction()?;
rw.remove(retrieve_data)?;
rw.commit()?;
Ok(())
}
Akshith Madhur 💻 |