var changes = require("CouchDBChanges");
changes.follow("database", function(change) {
// do whatever you want with the change.
}, { url: "http://127.0.0.1:5984/database/"});
Wow, easy!
CouchDB, The Definitive Guide has a chapter on the Changes feed.
CouchDB has this amazing feature called the “Changes Feed”. Think of
git log
for your database. There’s all sorts of awesome you can do
with this. For example, have a database called outbox
and connect
a CouchDB changes listener to it and whenever your application creates
a new document, say
{
"from": "me@example.com",
"to": "you@example.com",
"subject": "Hey there!",
"body": "I think you get the idea"
}
the changes listener then gets notified right when the document gets created, but asynchronously from your application and send the email that is described. When the email is sent, it can write back a new field
"status": "sent"
or, if anything went wrong:
"status": "error",
"error_message": "that email address is bogus you twat!"
So yeah, quick example, but there’s tons of things you can do with this. We should collect nice examples, but for now you can check out https://github.com/janl/couchdb-external-CreateUserDatabase.
follow(database, change_cb, follow_options, changes_options)
database
: (string) name of the databasechange_cb
: (callable) function to call for each changefollow_options
: (object) configurations for following {- persistent_since: (bool) false whether or not to persist the latest
seq_id
from the server. This allows us to avoid processing a change more than once. }
- persistent_since: (bool) false whether or not to persist the latest
changes_options
: (object) parameters for the follow library.
- Make
persistent_since
storage configurable.
This is just a very thin wrapper around Jason Smith’s / Iris Couch’s
excellent follow
library.
Thanks Jason!
(c) 2012 Jan Lehnardt jan@apache.org
Licensed under the Apache License 2.0.