Siena is data provider agnostic ORM for Rust, enabling you to easily use custom data stores for your application with all the niceties of a quering engine.
Siena comes built-in with a flat-file data provider, LocalProvider
, supporting YAML and FrontMatter files, but you can easily create your own data provider by implementing the StoreProvider
trait.
Add the following to your Cargo.toml file:
siena = "3.2.1"
To see what's changed, check the changelog.
The first thing you need to do when using Siena is creating the store. A store is an instance of Siena with the data
provider set. A data provider is anything that implements the StoreProvider
trait (so you can create your own!).
Siena comes with the LocalProvider
provider, which works on the local file system.
Example:
use siena::providers::local::LocalProvider;
use siena::siena::siena;
fn main() {
let provider = LocalProvider { directory: "./path".to_string() };
let store = siena(provider);
}
Records are placed in collections. A collection is a directory in your store. So let's say that you have a collection called "blog-posts", you could fetch them like this:
let posts = store.collection("blog-posts").get_all();
You can also just get the first record via get_first()
or the last one via
.get_last()
.
You can filter records using numerous when_*
methods. And yes, you can chain them
as much as you want.
To filter records by a record key that equals a given value, you can use the when_is
method, like so:
let posts = store
.collection("blog-posts")
.when_is("status", "published")
.get_all();
Similarly, to filter records the opposite way, by a record key that does not equal a given value, you can use the
when_isnt
method:
let posts = store
.collection("blog-posts")
.when_is_not("status", "published")
.get_all();
To filter records by the presence of a record key, you can use the when_has
method, like so:
let posts = store
.collection("blog-posts")
.when_has("status")
.get_all();
Similarly, to filter records the opposite way, by the lack of a presence of a record key, you can use the when_hasnt
method:
let posts = store
.collection("blog-posts")
.when_has_not("status")
.get_all();
To filter records by a record key that matches a value according to a Regex pattern, you can use the when_matches
method, like so:
let posts = store
.collection("blog-posts")
.when_matches("date", r"2022\-09")
.get_all();
There is no opposite method for when_matches
, because regex gives you the ability to do that yourself.
You can sort records with the sort
method, like so:
use siena::siena::{RecordSortOrder};
let posts = store
.collection("blog-posts")
.sort("date", RecordSortOrder::Desc)
.get_all();
The available ways to sort are:
RecordSortOrder::Desc
RecordSortOrder::Asc
To limit the result, use the limit
method:
let posts = store
.collection("blog-posts")
.limit(10)
.get_all();
To offset the result, use the offset
method:
let posts = store
.collection("blog-posts")
.offset(10)
.get_all();
With the combination of limit
and offset
method, you can create easy pagination, for example:
let page = 2;
let posts_per_page = 10;
let posts = store
.collection("blog-posts")
.offset((page - 1) * posts_per_page)
.limit(posts_per_page)
.get_all();
Or, simply use the paginate
method which does this work for you, like this:
let posts = store
.collection("blog-posts")
.paginate(2, 10)
.get_all();
You can update the result of your query via the set
method. It doesn't matter if you have one record or multiple records, it will update anything that you have matching your query.
For example:
let posts = store
.collection("blog-posts")
.set(Vec::from([("status", "private")]));
This will update all the records in the blog-post
collection by updating the status
to private
.
Whereas this example:
let posts = store
.collection("blog-posts")
.when_is("status", "public")
.set(Vec::from([("status", "private")]));
Will only update all the records that have status
as public
to private
.
The create
method is what you use for creating a new record. Note however that the
record is not persisted until you use the set
method to add some data. The set
method is the only method
which writes data. The create
method only creates the record in-memory so that the set
method would know
where to write data.
An example:
store
.create("blog-posts", "hello-world")
.set(Vec::from([("title", "Hello, World.")]));
The create
method takes two arguments, the collection name, and the ID of the record, which has to be unique to that collection or it will overwrite an existing record.
The delete
method is what you use for deleting all the records matching a query, so for example if you want to
delete all records matching the status "draft", you'd run this:
store
.collection("blog-posts")
.when_is("status", "draft")
.delete();
The LocalProvider
is a provider that works on the local file system. It supports YAML and Markdown (FrontMatter) files. In the case of Markdown files, the Record
's returned will have content
and content_raw
String entries, one for the rendered HTML and one for the raw Markdown, respectively.
Supported data types are:
String
usize
bool
HashMap<String, RecordData>
Vec<RecordData>
You can create your own provider by implementing the StoreProvider
trait. The trait has three methods that you need to implement:
pub trait StoreProvider {
fn retrieve(&self, name: &str) -> Vec<Record>;
fn set(&self, records: Vec<Record>, data: Vec<(&str, &RecordData)>) -> Vec<Record>;
fn delete(&self, records: Vec<Record>);
}
This function should take in a name
of a data collection, e.g posts
and return all Record
's for that.
This function should take in a Vec<Record>
and a Vec<(&str, &RecordData)>
and return a Vec<Record>
. The Vec<Record>
is the records that you want to update, and the Vec<(&str, &RecordData)>
is the data that you want to update them with. The &str
is the key of the data, and the &RecordData
is the value.
This function should take in a Vec<Record>
and delete them.