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Marilyn

Bower version

Marilyn is a client side, WebSocket driven, Pub/Sub, model layer with a query system similar to Mongoose.

Angular, Backbone, Ember, and many other libraries provide model layers which are AJAX driven. While variations on these models exist they are usually only useful if you're using the entire framework they are built to work with.

Marilyn can work with any framework, or by itself if you just need more data abstraction.

Installation

Install the module with bower:

$ bower install marilyn

Or download it from GitHub, extract it, and copy the files into your application.

Intalling with Script Tags

Include a script for the marilyn.js or marilyn-min.js file after a script for it's dependency, underscore.js.

Upon including the marilyn.js file a global marilyn object will be available.

Intalling with AMD

Marilyn can also be loaded using any AMD compliant module loader such as RequireJS.

Marilyn's only dependency is underscore.

When using Marilyn with AMD you MUST load the models before using them inside controllers. This can be done as follows.

require(['model/myModel'], function(myModel) {

	// configure Marilyn and other core libraries

	require(['controller/myController'], function(myController) {

		// you can now use the model in your controller

	});

});

Usage

Configure Socket.IO

Before using Marilyn with Socket.IO you have to configure Marilyn to use Socket.IO's socket connection. Lets use the client side example connection from the Socket.IO website to demonstrate this.

<script src="/socket.io/socket.io.js"></script>
<script>
  var socket = io.connect('http://localhost');
</script>

This creates a global variable called socket. This variable should be passed to Marilyn so Marilyn can use the Socket.IO on and emit methods.

<script>
  marilyn.config(socket);
</script>

After this Marilyn has on and emit methods that we should call instead of the Socket.IO methods. This allows us to centralize all data querying and data fetching methods to Marilyn.

Creating Model

Like Mongoose, Marilyn creates models using the model method.

var MyModel = marilyn.model('someModelName');

MyModel is now a Marilyn model, containing query and event methods.

You can also create a model by passing the marilyn.model methods a second parameter, a callback function. Within this callback function this represents the model that has been created.

var MyModel = marilyn.model('someModelName', function(){

	// "this" is the same as MyModel

});

Like Mongoose, the Marilyn model created, called someModelName, can now be accessed from the global marilyn object.

This allows you to use self executing functions to create a model and not pollute the global scope.

// myModel.js

(function(){

	var NonPollutingModel = marilyn.model('someModelName', function(){

		this.on('someSocketEvent', function(data){
			// do something with data in model
			this.inform('someBrowserEvent', data);
		});

	});

	NonPollutingModel.on('someOtherSocketEvent', function(data){
		// do something else
	});

})();
// myController.js

(function(){

	var MyModel = marilyn.model('someModelName');

	MyModel.receive('someBrowserEvent', function(){
		// do something with data in controller
	});

})();

Adding Data to Models

All models have a _collection variable.

Setting the _collection variable directly without the CRUD methods or the collection setter will not create this __id property and Marilyn will not function properly.

This variable is an array of all the objects you have stored in your frontend model.

To populate this variable you can use the built in CRUD methods listed below, or the collection setter.

If you use the CRUD methods various built in callbacks will be run. If you use the collection setter these callback functions won't be called.

marilyn.model('someModelName', function(){

	this.on('someSocketEvent', function(data){

		// sets the _collection array
		// this won't trigger any callbacks
		this.collection(data);

	});

	this.on('someOtherServerEvent', function(data){

		// pushes a new object into the _collection array and performs many other tasks
		// this will trigger all the "create" callbacks
		this.create(data);

	});

});

When new objects are added to the _collection variable a property of __id is added to them so Marilyn can internally track them.

Event Handlers

Marilyn has four types of event handlers, socket events, browser events, befores, and afters.

Socket events are for communicating from your model to a socket server, or from a socket server to your model.

Browser events are for communicating between your model and controller, or client side logic layer.

Befores run before a query method is executed.

Afters run after a query method is executed.

Socket events and browser events have two methods, an event listener and an event dispatcher.

Socket Events

The socket event methods behave the same events as Socket.IO.

They are on and emit.

Refere to Socket.IO documentation to understand how these work.

Browser Events

Browser event methods are receive and inform. They act very similarly to Socket.IO's on and emit.

They can send data and receive data with callback functions.

// myModel.js

marilyn.model('someModelName', function(){

	this.inform('modelReady', {
		'someKey':'someValue'
	});

});
// myController.js

var MyModel = marilyn.model('someModelName');

MyModel.receive('modelReady', function(data){
	// do something here
	// data is the object passed from the inform method
});

All query events inform receivers after completion. This is best shown in the next example.

Befores and Afters

Befores and afters are similar to Mongoose's pre and post events. Befores are triggered before all querys, and afters are after the query.

Befores and afters are triggered from save, create, read, readOne, update, and delete.

Sometimes multiple befores and afters can be triggered by one CRUD method being invoked, for example the save method can trigger befores and afters for create and update in addition to befores and afters for save events.

To create a before or after you use the before or after method passing it two parameters

The first parameter is either a string of a single event name (listed above) or an array of strings of event names.

The second paramter is a callback function.

All callbacks of befores and afters are passed data that they can manipulate and a next method, which must be called in order to progress the flow control. Callbacks are passed different sets of data depending on the event being listened for, which are listed below.

Save / Create

before callback

data:Object, next:Function

data is the object being created. It is useful for validating data or adding default fields to objects.

after callback

data:Object, next:Function

data is the object that has been created. It is useful for altering data before it's returned to the callback or syncing the data with a server.

Read

before callback

query:Object, next:Function

query is what is being used to search for records. It is useful for restricting access to records.

after callback

data:Array, next:Function

data is an array of objects found from the query. It is useful for adding custom fields or methods.

Read One

before callback

query:Object, next:Function

query is the query being used to read the one object. It is useful for restricting access to records.

after callback

data:Object, next:Function

data is an the single object found from the query. It is useful for adding custom fields and methods.

Update

before callback

searchQuery:Object, updateQuery:Object, next:Function

searchQuery is the query being used to read the objects. It is useful for restricting access to records. updateQuery is the changes that will be made to all objects found. It is useful for restricting access to certain field updates.

after callback

data:Array, next:Function

data is an array of objects that have been updated. It is useful for adding custom fields and methods or syncing with a server.

Delete

before callback

searchQuery:Object, next:Function

searchQuery is the query being used to read the objects. It is useful for restricting access to records.

after callback

data:Array, next:Function

data is an array of objects that have been deleted. It is useful for syncing with a server.

Querying Data with CRUD Methods

Each Marilyn model has a private variable called _collection, which can be populated with an array of data. All query methods query this variable.

There are ten query methods, create, createSilent, read, readSilent, readOne, readOneSilent, update, updateSilent, del, and delSilent.

All silent query methods don't trigger befores or afters.

Create

var myModel = new MyModel();
myModel.title = 'Star Wars';
myModel.director = 'George Lucas';

// calling the save method will trigger create befores and afters as well as save befores and afters
myModel.save(function(err, result){
	// result is the object created
});

// OR

var myModel = new MyModel({
	'title':'Star Wars',
	'director':'George Lucas'
});

// calling the save method will trigger create befores and afters as well as save befores and afters
myModel.save(function(err, result){
	// result is the object created
});

// OR

// calling the create method will trigger create befores and afters, but not saves
MyModel.create({
	'title':'Star Wars',
	'director':'George Lucas'
}, function(err, result){
	// result is the object created
});

Read

// calling the read method will trigger read befores and afters
// calling read without passing a query will read all
MyModel.read(function(err, results){
	// results is an array of all the objects in the collection
});

// calling the read method will trigger read befores and afters
MyModel.read({
	'director':'George Lucas'
}, function(err, results){
	// results is an array of all the objects found
});

// calling this method will trigger read befores and afters
MyModel.read({
	'director':'George Lucas'
}, function(err, results){
	// results is an array of all the objects found
});

// calling this method will trigger readOne befores and afters
MyModel.readOne({
	'id':1138
}, function(err, result){
	// result is the single object found
});

Update

// updates using readOne
MyModel.readOne({
	'id':1138
}, function(err, result){

	result.director = 'George Lucas';

	// calling the save method will trigger update befores and afters as well as save befores and afters
	result.save(function(err, result){
		// result is the updated object
	});

});

// calling this method will trigger update befores and afters
MyModel.update({
	'id':1138
}, {
	'propertyToUpdate':'someValue'
}, function(err, results){
	// results is an array of all the objects updated
});

Delete

// calling this method will trigger delete befores and afters
MyModel.del({
	'id':1138
}, function(err results){
	// results is an array of all the objects deleted
});

err is always populated if nothing matches the query.

Query methods don't directly call the server, you must call the server manually with emit either before or after query methods are invoked. This makes before and after very useful for server integration.

Dependencies

Marilyn requires Underscore >= 1.5.0. Get it from: http://underscorejs.org/

Author

Alan James: alanjames1987@gmail.com

License

Licensed under MIT.

About

Marilyn is a client side, Socket.IO driven, Pub/Sub, model layer with a query system similar to Mongoose.

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