#30DaysOfAppwrite : Appwrite Database
Christy Jacob
Posted on May 15, 2021
Intro
Appwrite is an open-source, self-hosted Backend-as-a-Service that makes app development easier with a suite of SDKs and APIs to accelerate app development. #30DaysOfAppwrite is a month-long event focused on giving developers a walkthrough of all of Appwrite's features, starting from the basics to more advanced features like Cloud Functions! Alongside we will also be building a fully-featured Medium clone to demonstrate how these concepts can be applied when building a real-world app. We also have some exciting prizes for developers who follow along with us!
Appwrite Database
Welcome to Day 15 👋. Today is finally the day to cover storing data in the Appwrite database. Appwrite offers an easy-to-use, document-based database API for storing your app's data. We built our NoSQL interface on top of MariaDB, inspired by Wix, who did the same. MariaDB provides its battle-tested stability and performance, and you can manage Appwrite using existing, familiar database tools like MySQLWorkbench, phpMyAdmin, and more. Collections, documents, attributes, and permissions can all be managed with the Appwrite console or with our SDKs. There's a lot to cover, so let's dive in.
A database refactor is underway to improve overall performance and add support for a variety of databases, including PostgreSQL, MongoDB, and more!
Glossary
Each database comes with its own set of technical jargon - before we get too far, let's go over ours.
- Collection: A group of documents. Each collection has attributes to define its document structure and permissions for read and write.
- Document: A structured JSON object of keys and values, belonging to a collection. Keys and their types are defined in a collection attribute.
- Attributes: The definition of each document attribute. Each attribute has key, attribute type, default, required and array properties, which define the type and structure of expected data. Think of them as columns in a traditional relational database.
- Permissions: Array of strings that define the access control to documents, collections, and files in storage.
Now, let's review each in more detail.
Collections and Documents
In short: collections hold documents. If you're a SQL veteran, you might know these better as tables and rows (and internally, that's technically correct). Each collection is identified by collectionID
and holds many similarly formatted documents where each document is a piece of data. The kind of data accepted by Appwrite is governed by the attributes defined for the collection.
The ID for a collection or a document can be custom or randomly generated. For custom IDs, simply pass in a string ID of your choice. For randomly generated IDs, you can pass in the string unique()
to indicate that an ID should be unique and randomly generated.
Attributes
Simply put, attributes outline what your documents should look like. With this approach, Appwrite's rule validators ensure the data going into your database is the exact format you expect. So, for each key-value pair of our document, we provide:
Property | Description |
---|---|
key | Name of the attribute. |
type | Data type of the attribute. |
default | Default value of the attribute. |
required | If the attribute is required. |
array | If the attribute is an array. |
Here are the validators available for attribute types:
Attribute Type | Description |
---|---|
String | Any string value. |
Integer | Any integer value. |
Float | Any float value. |
boolean | Any boolean value. |
url | Any valid URL. |
Any valid email address. | |
ip | Any valid IPv4 or IPv6 address. |
enum | Any enum defined by you. |
Permissions
To control access to resources, Appwrite offers developers a flexible permission system that is aware of Appwrite users and teams. Let's cover the most used permissions:
Permission | Description |
---|---|
role:all |
Wildcard permission. Grants anyone read or write access. |
user:[userID] |
Grants access to a specific user by userID. |
team:[teamID] |
Grants access to any member of the specific team. Note: the user must be the team owner or have accepted a team invite to grant this access. |
team:[teamID]/[role] |
Grants access to any member who possesses a specific role in a team. Roles can be assigned on invite. |
member:[memberID] |
Grants access to a specific member of a team, only while they are still a member of the team. |
role:guest |
Grants access to any guest user who isn't logged in. |
role:member |
Grants access to any logged-in user (a user with a valid session). Logged in users don't have access to role:guest resources. |
Note: documents don't inherit permissions from their parent collection if the collection's permission level is set to Document Level.
Query Building
After building Indexes for your collection, you can query these indexes using any of our client side SDKs or server side SDKs. Each SDK comes packaged with a Query
class which allows you to build query statements. The Query
class will turn the provided queries into a string. You can write query strings directly if you're not using an SDK, but we will be using the Query
class in our posts.
Let's start with a simple example:
Here's an example which finds movies with the title Avatar
or Lord of the Rings
from years after 1999:
sdk.database.listDocuments('movies', [
Query.equal('title', ['Avatar', 'Lord of the Rings']),
Query.greater('year', 1999)
]);
Here's the same example with Dart/Flutter:
import 'package:appwrite/appwrite.dart';
void main() async {
final client = Client();
final database = Database(client);
try {
final docs = await database.listDocuments(
collectionId: 'movies',
queries: [
Query.equal('title', ['Avatar', 'Lord of the Rings']),
Query.greater('year', 1999),
]);
print(docs.toMap());
} on AppwriteException catch(e) {
print(e);
}
}
Appwrite supports seven types of query operations:
Operator | Description |
---|---|
equal | Equal to. |
notEqual | Not equal to. |
lesser | Lesser than. |
lesserEqual | Less than or equal to. |
greater | Greater than. |
greaterEqual | Greater than or equal to. |
search | Requires a Fulltext Index. |
When passed into listDocuments()
, an AND
operation is applied to the list of query operations. For OR
behavior, pass in an array of values into an operator.
Putting it all together
As an example, let's create a collection of books in Appwrite. While some projects require creating collections programmatically, others are easier to create with the Appwrite console.
A book has a title, author, and year it was published. Let's add those, starting with title using the text rule type:
If you see, new attributes are not required by default. Let's make title required:
Now, we can do the same for author and published, using the numeric rule type for publication year, so we now have:
Permissions, by example
Now that our Books collection has the necessary attributes, we can create documents and restrict access as necessary. Check out the following code:
let sdk = new Appwrite();
sdk
.setEndpoint('https://<HOSTNAME_OR_IP>/v1') // Your API Endpoint
.setProject('5df5acd0d48c2') // Your project ID
;
let promise = sdk.database.createDocument(
'609bdea2f0f99', // collectionID for Books
'unique()', // unique() will create a random ID
{'title': 'The Great Gatsby', 'author': 'F. Scott Fitzgerald', 'published': 1925},
['role:member'],
['team:5c1f88b87435e/owner', 'user:6095f2933a96f']);
In this example, the new book from createDocument
can be read by any logged in user, but only the owner of Team 5c1f88b87435e and User 6095f2933a96f have the permissions to write (or update).
Credits
We hope you liked this write-up. You can follow #30DaysOfAppwrite on Social Media to keep up with all of our posts. The complete event timeline can be found here
Feel free to reach out to us on Discord if you would like to learn more about Appwrite, Aliens or Unicorns 🦄. Stay tuned for tomorrow's article! Until then 👋
Posted on May 15, 2021
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