loopback-datasource-juggler/docs/definition-language.md

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LoopBack Definition Language Guide

LoopBack Definition Language (LDL) is simple DSL to define data models in JavaScript or plain JSON. With LoopBack, we often start with a model definition which describes the structure and types of data. The model establishes common knowledge of data in LoopBack.

Describing a simple model

Let's start with a simple example in plain JSON.

{
    "id": "number",
    "firstName": "string",
    "lastName": "string"
}

The model simply defines a user model that consists of three properties:

  • id - The user id. It's a number.
  • firstName - The first name. It's a string.
  • lastName - The last name. It's a string.

Each key in the JSON object defines a property in our model which will be cast to its associated type. The simplest form of a property definition is propertyName: type. The key is the name of the property and the value is the type of the property. We'll cover more advanced form later in this guide.

LDL supports a list of built-in types, including the basic types from JSON:

  • String
  • Number
  • Boolean
  • Array
  • Object

Note: The type name is case-insensitive, i.e., either "Number" or "number" can be used.

The same model can also be described in JavaScript code:

var UserDefinition = {
    id: Number,
    firstName: String,
    lastName: String
}

As we can see, the JavaScript version is less verbose as it doesn't require quotes for property names. The types are described using JavaScript constructors, for example, Number for "Number". String literals are also supported.

Now we have the definition of a model, how do we use it in LoopBack Node.js code? It's easy, LoopBack will build a JavaScript constructor (or class) for you.

Creating a model constructor

LDL compiles the model definition into a JavaScript constructor using ModelBuilder.define APIs. ModelBuilder is the basic factory to create model constructors.

ModelBuilder.define() method takes the following arguments:

  • name: The model name
  • properties: An object of property definitions
  • options: An object of options, optional

Here is an example,

var ModelBuilder = require('loopback-datasource-juggler').ModelBuilder;

// Create an instance of the ModelBuilder
var modelBuilder = new ModelBuilder();

// Describe the user model
var UserDefinition = {
    id: Number,
    firstName: String,
    lastName: String
}

// Compile the user model definition into a JavaScript constructor
var User = modelBuilder.define('User', UserDefinition);

// Create a new instance of User
var user = new User({id: 1, firstName: 'John', lastName: 'Smith'});

console.log(user.id); // 1
console.log(user.firstName); // 'John'
console.log(user.lastName); // 'Smith'

That's it. Now you have a User constructor representing the user model.

At this point, the constructor only has a set of accessors to model properties. No behaviors have been introduced yet.

Adding logic to a model

Models describe the shape of data. To leverage the data, we'll add logic to the model for various purposes, such as:

  • Interact with the data store for CRUD
  • Add behavior around a model instance
  • Add service operations using the model as the context

There are a few ways to add methods to a model constructor:

Create the model constructor from a data source

A LoopBack data source injects methods on the model.

var DataSource = require('loopback-datasource-juggler').DataSource;
var ds = new DataSource('memory');

// Compile the user model definition into a JavaScript constructor
var User = ds.define('User', UserDefinition);

// Create a new instance of User
User.create({id: 1, firstName: 'John', lastName: 'Smith'}, function(err, user) {
    console.log(user); // The newly created user instance
    User.findById(1, function(err, user) {
        console.log(user); // The user instance for id 1
        user.firstName = 'John1'; // Change the property
        user.save(function(err, user) {
            console.log(user); // The modified user instance for id 1
        });
    };
});

Attach the model to a data source

A plain model constructor created from ModelBuilder can be attached a DataSource.

var DataSource = require('loopback-datasource-juggler').DataSource;
var ds = new DataSource('memory');

User.attachTo(ds); // The CRUD methods will be mixed into the User constructor

Manually add methods to the model constructor

Static methods can be added by declaring a function as a member of the model constructor. Within a class method, other class methods can be called using the model as usual.

// Define a static method
User.findByLastName = function(lastName, cb) {
    User.find({where: {lastName: lastName}, cb);
};

User.findByLastName('Smith', function(err, users) {
    console.log(users); // Print an array of user instances
});

Instance methods can be added to the prototype. Within instance methods, the model instance itself can be referenced with this keyword.

// Define a prototype method
User.prototype.getFullName = function () {
    return this.firstName + ' ' + this.lastName;
};

var user = new User({id: 1, firstName: 'John', lastName: 'Smith'});
console.log(user.getFullName()); // 'John Smith'

Exploring advanced LDL features

As we mentioned before, a complete model definition is an object with three properties:

  • name: The model name
  • options: An object of options, optional
  • properties: An object of property definitions

Model level options

There are a set of options to control the model definition.

  • strict:

    • true: Only properties defined in the model are accepted. Use this mode if you want to make sure only predefined properties are accepted.
    • false: The model will be an open model. All properties are accepted, including the ones that not predefined with the model. This mode is useful if the mobile application just wants to store free form JSON data to a schema-less database such as MongoDB.
    • undefined: Default to false unless the data source is backed by a relational database such as Oracle or MySQL.
  • idInjection:

    • true: An id property will be added to the model automatically
    • false: No id property will be added to the model
  • Data source specific mappings The model can be decorated with connector-specific options to customize the mapping between the model and the connector. For example, we can define the corresponding schema/table names for Oracle as follows:

      {
        "name": "Location",
        "options": {
          "idInjection": false,
          "oracle": {
            "schema": "BLACKPOOL",
            "table": "LOCATION"
          }
        },
        ...
      }
    

Property definitions

A model consists of a list of properties. The basic example use propertyName: type to describe a property.

Properties can have options in addition to the type. LDL uses a JSON object to describe such properties, for example:

"id": {"type": "number", "id": true, "doc": "User ID"}

"firstName": {"type": "string", "required": true, "oracle": {"column": "FIRST_NAME", "type": "VARCHAR(32)"}}

Note "id": "number" is a short form of "id": {"type": "number"}.

Data types

LDL supports the following data types.

  • String/Text
  • Number
  • Date
  • Boolean
  • Buffer/Binary
  • Array
  • Any/Object/JSON
  • GeoPoint
Array types

LDL supports array types as follows:

  • {emails: [String]}
  • {"emails": ["String"]}
  • {emails: [{type: String, length: 64}]}
Object types

A model often has properties that consist of other properties. For example, the user model can have an address property that in turn has properties such as street, city, state, and zipCode.

LDL allows inline declaration of such properties, for example,

var UserModel = {
    firstName: String,
    lastName: String,
    address: {
        street: String,
        city: String,
        state: String,
        zipCode: String
    },
    ...
}

The value of the address is the definition of the address type, which can be also considered as an anonymous model.

If you intend to reuse the address model, we can define it independently and reference it in the user model. For example,

var AddressModel = {
    street: String,
    city: String,
    state: String,
    zipCode: String
};

var Address = ds.define('Address', AddressModel);

var UserModel = {
        firstName: String,
        lastName: String,
        address: 'Address',  // or address: Address
        ...
}

var User = ds.define('User', UserModel);

Note: The user model has to reference the Address constructor or the model name - 'Address'.

ID(s) for a model

A model representing data to be persisted in a database usually has one or more properties as an id to uniquely identify the model instance. For example, the user model can have user ids.

By default, if no id properties are defined and the idInjection of the model options is false, LDL will automatically add an id property to the model as follows:

id: {type: Number, generated: true, id: true}

To explicitly specify a property as id, LDL provides an id property for the option. The value can be true, false, or a number.

  • true: It's an id
  • false or any falsey values: It's not an id (default)
  • a positive number, such as 1 or 2: It's the index of the composite id

LDL supports the definition of a composite id that has more than one properties. For example,

var InventoryDefinition =
{
    productId: {type: String, id: 1},
    locationId: {type: String, id: 2},
    qty: Number
}

The composite id is (productId, locationId) for an inventory model.

Note: Composite ids are NOT supported as query parameters in REST APIs yet.

Property documentation

  • doc: Documentation of the property

Constraints

Constraints are modeled as options too, for example:

  • default: The default value of the property
  • required: Indicate if the property is required
  • pattern: A regular expression pattern that a string should match
  • min/max: The minimal and maximal value
  • length: The maximal length of a string

Conversion and formatting

Format conversions can also be declared as options, for example:

  • trim: Trim the string
  • lowercase: Convert the string to be lowercase
  • uppercase: Convert the string to be uppercase
  • format: Format a Date

Mapping

Data source specific mappings can be added to the property options, for example, to map a property to be a column in Oracle database table, you can use the following syntax:

"oracle": {"column": "FIRST_NAME", "type": "VARCHAR", "length": 32}

Relations between models

hasMany

A hasMany relation builds a one-to-many connection with another model. You'll often find this relation on the "other side" of a belongsTo relation. This relation indicates that each instance of the model has zero or more instances of another model. For example, in an application containing users and posts, a user has zero or more posts. For example,

// setup relationships
User.hasMany(Post,   {as: 'posts',  foreignKey: 'userId'});
// creates instance methods:
// user.posts(conds)
// user.posts.build(data) // like new Post({userId: user.id});
// user.posts.create(data) // build and save

Define all necessary stuff for one to many relation:

  • foreign key in many model
  • named scope in one model

Example:

var Book = db.define('Book');
var Chapter = db.define('Chapters');

// Style 1
Book.hasMany(Chapter, {as: 'chapters'});

// Style 2
Book.hasMany('chapters', {model: Chapter, foreignKey: 'chapter_id'});

Scope methods created on the base model by hasMany allows to build, create and query instances of other class. For example,

Book.create(function(err, book) {
    // using 'chapters' scope for build:
    var c = book.chapters.build({name: 'Chapter 1'});
    // same as:
    c = new Chapter({name: 'Chapter 1', bookId: book.id});
    // using 'chapters' scope for create:
    book.chapters.create();
    // same as:
    Chapter.create({bookId: book.id});

    // using scope for querying:
    book.chapters(function() {/* all chapters with bookId = book.id */ });
    book.chapters({where: {name: 'test'}, function(err, chapters) {
    // all chapters with bookId = book.id and name = 'test'
});

belongsTo

A belongsTo relation sets up a one-to-one connection with another model, such that each instance of the declaring model "belongs to" one instance of the other model. For example, if your application includes users and posts, and each post can be written by exactly one user.

Post.belongsTo(User, {as: 'author', foreignKey: 'userId'});

The code above basically says Post has a reference called author to User using the userId property of Post as the foreign key. Now we can access the author in one of the following styles:

post.author(callback); // Get the User object for the post author asynchronously
post.author(); // Get the User object for the post author synchronously
post.author(user) // Set the author to be the given user

hasAndBelongsToMany

A hasAndBelongsToMany relation creates a direct many-to-many connection with another model, with no intervening model. For example, if your application includes users and groups, with each group having many users and each user appearing in many groups, you could declare the models this way,

User.hasAndBelongsToMany('groups', {model: Group, foreignKey: 'groupId'});
user.groups(callback); // get groups of the user
user.groups.create(data, callback); // create a new group and connect it with the user
user.groups.add(group, callback); // connect an existing group with the user
user.groups.remove(group, callback); // remove the user from the group

Extend from a base model

LDL allows a new model to extend from an existing model. For example, Customer can extend from User as follows. The Customer model will inherit properties and methods from the User model.

var Customer = User.extend('customer', {
    accountId: String,
    vip: Boolean
});

Mix in model definitions

Some models share the common set of properties and logic around. LDL allows a model to mix in one or more other models. For example,

var TimeStamp = modelBuilder.define('TimeStamp', {created: Date, modified: Date});
var Group = modelBuilder.define('Group', {groups: [String]});
User.mixin(Group, TimeStamp);