6.0.1-alpha.17 • Published 2 years ago

wip-corestore v6.0.1-alpha.17

Weekly downloads
-
License
MIT
Repository
github
Last release
2 years ago

Corestore v6

Corestore is a Hypercore factory that makes it easier to manage large collections of named Hypercores.

Corestore provides: 1. Key Derivation - All writable Hypercore keys are derived from a single master key and a user-provided name. 2. Session Handling - If a single Hypercore is loaded multiple times through the get method, the underlying resources will only be opened once (using Hypercore 10's new session feature). Once all sessions are closed, the resources will be released. 3. Storage Management - Hypercores can be stored in any random-access-storage instance, where they will be keyed by their discovery keys. 4. Namespacing - You can share a single Corestore instance between multiple applications or components without worrying about naming collisions by creating "namespaces" (e.g. `corestore.namespace('my-app').get({ name: 'main' })

Installation

npm install corestore@next

Usage

A corestore instance can be constructed with a random-access-storage module, a function that returns a random-access-storage module given a path, or a string. If a string is specified, it will be assumed to be a path to a local storage directory:

const Corestore = require('corestore')

const store = new Corestore('./my-storage')
const core1 = store.get({ name: 'core-1' })
const core2 = store.get({ name: 'core-2' })

API

const store = new Corestore(storage)

Create a new Corestore instance.

storage can be either a random-access-storage module, a string, or a function that takes a path and returns an random-access-storage instance.

const core = store.get(key | { name: 'a-name', ...hypercoreOpts})

Loads a Hypercore, either by name (if the name option is provided), or from the provided key (if the first argument is a Buffer, or if the key options is set).

If that Hypercore has previously been loaded, subsequent calls to get will return a new Hypercore session on the existing core.

All other options besides name and key will be forwarded to the Hypercore constructor.

const stream = store.replicate(opts)

Creates a replication stream that's capable of replicating all Hypercores that are managed by the Corestore, assuming the remote peer has the correct capabilities.

opts will be forwarded to Hypercore's replicate function.

Corestore replicates in an "all-to-all" fashion, meaning that when replication begins, it will attempt to replicate every Hypercore that's currently loaded and in memory. These attempts will fail if the remote side doesn't have a Hypercore's capability -- Corestore replication does not exchange Hypercore keys.

If the remote side dynamically adds a new Hypercore to the replication stream, Corestore will load and replicatethat core if possible.

const store = store.namespace(name)

Create a new namespaced Corestore. Namespacing is useful if you're going to be sharing a single Corestore instance between many applications or components, as it prevents name collisions.

Namespaces can be chained:

const ns1 = store.namespace('a')
const ns2 = ns1.namespace('b')
const core1 = ns1.get({ name: 'main' }) // These will load different Hypercores
const core2 = ns2.get({ name: 'main' })

License

MIT