317 lines
9.9 KiB
Go
317 lines
9.9 KiB
Go
// Copyright 2011 Google Inc. All rights reserved.
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// Use of this source code is governed by the Apache 2.0
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// license that can be found in the LICENSE file.
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/*
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Package datastore provides a client for App Engine's datastore service.
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Basic Operations
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Entities are the unit of storage and are associated with a key. A key
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consists of an optional parent key, a string application ID, a string kind
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(also known as an entity type), and either a StringID or an IntID. A
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StringID is also known as an entity name or key name.
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It is valid to create a key with a zero StringID and a zero IntID; this is
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called an incomplete key, and does not refer to any saved entity. Putting an
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entity into the datastore under an incomplete key will cause a unique key
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to be generated for that entity, with a non-zero IntID.
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An entity's contents are a mapping from case-sensitive field names to values.
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Valid value types are:
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- signed integers (int, int8, int16, int32 and int64),
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- bool,
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- string,
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- float32 and float64,
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- []byte (up to 1 megabyte in length),
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- any type whose underlying type is one of the above predeclared types,
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- ByteString,
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- *Key,
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- time.Time (stored with microsecond precision),
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- appengine.BlobKey,
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- appengine.GeoPoint,
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- structs whose fields are all valid value types,
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- slices of any of the above.
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Slices of structs are valid, as are structs that contain slices. However, if
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one struct contains another, then at most one of those can be repeated. This
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disqualifies recursively defined struct types: any struct T that (directly or
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indirectly) contains a []T.
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The Get and Put functions load and save an entity's contents. An entity's
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contents are typically represented by a struct pointer.
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Example code:
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type Entity struct {
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Value string
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}
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func handle(w http.ResponseWriter, r *http.Request) {
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c := appengine.NewContext(r)
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k := datastore.NewKey(c, "Entity", "stringID", 0, nil)
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e := new(Entity)
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if err := datastore.Get(c, k, e); err != nil {
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http.Error(w, err.Error(), 500)
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return
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}
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old := e.Value
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e.Value = r.URL.Path
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if _, err := datastore.Put(c, k, e); err != nil {
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http.Error(w, err.Error(), 500)
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return
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}
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w.Header().Set("Content-Type", "text/plain; charset=utf-8")
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fmt.Fprintf(w, "old=%q\nnew=%q\n", old, e.Value)
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}
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GetMulti, PutMulti and DeleteMulti are batch versions of the Get, Put and
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Delete functions. They take a []*Key instead of a *Key, and may return an
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appengine.MultiError when encountering partial failure.
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Properties
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An entity's contents can be represented by a variety of types. These are
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typically struct pointers, but can also be any type that implements the
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PropertyLoadSaver interface. If using a struct pointer, you do not have to
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explicitly implement the PropertyLoadSaver interface; the datastore will
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automatically convert via reflection. If a struct pointer does implement that
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interface then those methods will be used in preference to the default
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behavior for struct pointers. Struct pointers are more strongly typed and are
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easier to use; PropertyLoadSavers are more flexible.
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The actual types passed do not have to match between Get and Put calls or even
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across different App Engine requests. It is valid to put a *PropertyList and
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get that same entity as a *myStruct, or put a *myStruct0 and get a *myStruct1.
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Conceptually, any entity is saved as a sequence of properties, and is loaded
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into the destination value on a property-by-property basis. When loading into
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a struct pointer, an entity that cannot be completely represented (such as a
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missing field) will result in an ErrFieldMismatch error but it is up to the
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caller whether this error is fatal, recoverable or ignorable.
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By default, for struct pointers, all properties are potentially indexed, and
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the property name is the same as the field name (and hence must start with an
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upper case letter). Fields may have a `datastore:"name,options"` tag. The tag
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name is the property name, which must be one or more valid Go identifiers
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joined by ".", but may start with a lower case letter. An empty tag name means
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to just use the field name. A "-" tag name means that the datastore will
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ignore that field. If options is "noindex" then the field will not be indexed.
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If the options is "" then the comma may be omitted. There are no other
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recognized options.
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Fields (except for []byte) are indexed by default. Strings longer than 1500
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bytes cannot be indexed; fields used to store long strings should be
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tagged with "noindex". Similarly, ByteStrings longer than 1500 bytes cannot be
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indexed.
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Example code:
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// A and B are renamed to a and b.
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// A, C and J are not indexed.
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// D's tag is equivalent to having no tag at all (E).
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// I is ignored entirely by the datastore.
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// J has tag information for both the datastore and json packages.
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type TaggedStruct struct {
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A int `datastore:"a,noindex"`
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B int `datastore:"b"`
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C int `datastore:",noindex"`
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D int `datastore:""`
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E int
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I int `datastore:"-"`
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J int `datastore:",noindex" json:"j"`
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}
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Structured Properties
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If the struct pointed to contains other structs, then the nested or embedded
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structs are flattened. For example, given these definitions:
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type Inner1 struct {
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W int32
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X string
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}
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type Inner2 struct {
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Y float64
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}
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type Inner3 struct {
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Z bool
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}
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type Outer struct {
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A int16
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I []Inner1
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J Inner2
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Inner3
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}
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then an Outer's properties would be equivalent to those of:
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type OuterEquivalent struct {
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A int16
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IDotW []int32 `datastore:"I.W"`
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IDotX []string `datastore:"I.X"`
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JDotY float64 `datastore:"J.Y"`
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Z bool
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}
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If Outer's embedded Inner3 field was tagged as `datastore:"Foo"` then the
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equivalent field would instead be: FooDotZ bool `datastore:"Foo.Z"`.
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If an outer struct is tagged "noindex" then all of its implicit flattened
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fields are effectively "noindex".
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The PropertyLoadSaver Interface
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An entity's contents can also be represented by any type that implements the
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PropertyLoadSaver interface. This type may be a struct pointer, but it does
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not have to be. The datastore package will call Load when getting the entity's
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contents, and Save when putting the entity's contents.
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Possible uses include deriving non-stored fields, verifying fields, or indexing
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a field only if its value is positive.
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Example code:
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type CustomPropsExample struct {
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I, J int
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// Sum is not stored, but should always be equal to I + J.
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Sum int `datastore:"-"`
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}
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func (x *CustomPropsExample) Load(c <-chan Property) error {
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// Load I and J as usual.
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if err := datastore.LoadStruct(x, c); err != nil {
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return err
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}
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// Derive the Sum field.
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x.Sum = x.I + x.J
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return nil
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}
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func (x *CustomPropsExample) Save(c chan<- Property) error {
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defer close(c)
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// Validate the Sum field.
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if x.Sum != x.I + x.J {
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return errors.New("CustomPropsExample has inconsistent sum")
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}
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// Save I and J as usual. The code below is equivalent to calling
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// "return datastore.SaveStruct(x, c)", but is done manually for
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// demonstration purposes.
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c <- datastore.Property{
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Name: "I",
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Value: int64(x.I),
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}
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c <- datastore.Property{
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Name: "J",
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Value: int64(x.J),
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}
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return nil
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}
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The *PropertyList type implements PropertyLoadSaver, and can therefore hold an
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arbitrary entity's contents.
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Queries
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Queries retrieve entities based on their properties or key's ancestry. Running
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a query yields an iterator of results: either keys or (key, entity) pairs.
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Queries are re-usable and it is safe to call Query.Run from concurrent
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goroutines. Iterators are not safe for concurrent use.
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Queries are immutable, and are either created by calling NewQuery, or derived
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from an existing query by calling a method like Filter or Order that returns a
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new query value. A query is typically constructed by calling NewQuery followed
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by a chain of zero or more such methods. These methods are:
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- Ancestor and Filter constrain the entities returned by running a query.
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- Order affects the order in which they are returned.
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- Project constrains the fields returned.
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- Distinct de-duplicates projected entities.
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- KeysOnly makes the iterator return only keys, not (key, entity) pairs.
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- Start, End, Offset and Limit define which sub-sequence of matching entities
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to return. Start and End take cursors, Offset and Limit take integers. Start
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and Offset affect the first result, End and Limit affect the last result.
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If both Start and Offset are set, then the offset is relative to Start.
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If both End and Limit are set, then the earliest constraint wins. Limit is
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relative to Start+Offset, not relative to End. As a special case, a
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negative limit means unlimited.
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Example code:
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type Widget struct {
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Description string
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Price int
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}
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func handle(w http.ResponseWriter, r *http.Request) {
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c := appengine.NewContext(r)
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q := datastore.NewQuery("Widget").
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Filter("Price <", 1000).
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Order("-Price")
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b := new(bytes.Buffer)
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for t := q.Run(c); ; {
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var x Widget
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key, err := t.Next(&x)
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if err == datastore.Done {
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break
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}
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if err != nil {
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serveError(c, w, err)
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return
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}
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fmt.Fprintf(b, "Key=%v\nWidget=%#v\n\n", key, x)
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}
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w.Header().Set("Content-Type", "text/plain; charset=utf-8")
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io.Copy(w, b)
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}
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Transactions
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RunInTransaction runs a function in a transaction.
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Example code:
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type Counter struct {
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Count int
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}
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func inc(c appengine.Context, key *datastore.Key) (int, error) {
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var x Counter
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if err := datastore.Get(c, key, &x); err != nil && err != datastore.ErrNoSuchEntity {
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return 0, err
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}
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x.Count++
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if _, err := datastore.Put(c, key, &x); err != nil {
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return 0, err
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}
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return x.Count, nil
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}
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func handle(w http.ResponseWriter, r *http.Request) {
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c := appengine.NewContext(r)
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var count int
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err := datastore.RunInTransaction(c, func(c appengine.Context) error {
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var err1 error
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count, err1 = inc(c, datastore.NewKey(c, "Counter", "singleton", 0, nil))
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return err1
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}, nil)
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if err != nil {
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serveError(c, w, err)
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return
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}
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w.Header().Set("Content-Type", "text/plain; charset=utf-8")
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fmt.Fprintf(w, "Count=%d", count)
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}
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*/
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package datastore
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