:ets
, the Elixir way
ETS is a set of Elixir modules that wrap Erlang Term Storage (:ets
).
ETS.Set
- wraps:set
and:ordered_set
ETS.Bag
- wraps:bag
and:duplicate_bag
ETS.KeyValueSet
- extension ofETS.Set
that abstracts away tuple and key index concepts into simple key/value inputs/outputs.- Most used functions from
:ets
replicated for all wrappers - Returns {:error, reason} tuples (or raises in ! versions) for:
:table_not_found
:table_already_exists
:key_not_found
:invalid_record
(when inserting non-tuples):record_too_small
(tuple smaller than keypos index):position_out_of_bounds
(lookup
with a pos > length of one of the results):invalid_select_spec
:write_protected
- trying to write to a protected or private table from a different process than the owner:read_protected
- trying to read from a private table from a different process than the owner
The purpose of this package is to improve the developer experience when both learning and interacting with Erlang Term Storage.
This will be accomplished by:
- Conforming to Elixir standards:
- Two versions of all functions:
- Main function (e.g.
get
) returns{:ok, return}
/{:error, reason}
tuples. - Bang function (e.g.
get!
) returns unwrapped value or raises on :error.
- Main function (e.g.
- All options specified via keyword list.
- Two versions of all functions:
- Wrapping unhelpful
ArgumentError
's with appropriate error returns.- Avoid adding performance overhead by using try/rescue instead of pre-validation
- On rescue, try to determine what went wrong (e.g. missing table) and return appropriate error
- Fall back to
{:error, :unknown_error}
(logging details) if unable to determine reason.
- Appropriate error returns/raises when encountering
$end_of_table
. - Providing Elixir friendly documentation.
- Providing
ETS.Set
andETS.Bag
modules with appropriate function signatures and error handling.ETS.Set.get
returns a single item (or nil/provided default) instead of list as sets never have multiple records for a key.
- Providing abstractions on top of the two base modules for specific usages
ETS.KeyValueSet
abstracts away the concept of tuple records, replacing it with standard key/value interactions.
For a list of changes, see the changelog
ETS Tables can be created using the new
function of the appropriate module, either ETS.Set
(for ordered and unordered sets) or ETS.Bag
(for duplicate or non-duplicate bags).
See module documentation for more examples and documentation, including a guide on What type of ETS table should I use?.
iex> {:ok, set} = Set.new(ordered: true, keypos: 3, read_concurrency: true, compressed: false)
iex> Set.info!(set)[:read_concurrency]
true
# Named :ets tables via the name keyword
iex> {:ok, set} = Set.new(name: :my_ets_table)
iex> Set.info!(set)[:name]
:my_ets_table
iex> {:ok, set} = Set.wrap_existing(:my_ets_table)
iex> set = Set.wrap_existing!(:my_ets_table)
To add records to an ETS table, use put
or put_new
with a tuple record or a list of tuple records.
put
will overwrite existing records with the same key. put_new
not insert if the key
already exists. When passing a list of tuple records, all records are inserted in an atomic and
isolated manner, but with put_new
no records are inserted if at least one existing key is found.
iex> set = Set.new!(ordered: true)
iex> |> Set.put!({:a, :b})
iex> |> Set.put!({:a, :c}) # Overwrites entry from previous line
iex> |> Set.put!({:c, :d})
iex> Set.get(:a)
{:ok, {:a, :c}}
iex> Set.to_list(set)
{:ok, [{:a, :c}, {:c, :d}]}
iex> Set.new!(ordered: true)
iex> |> Set.put!({:a, :b})
iex> |> Set.put_new!({:a, :c}) # Doesn't insert due to key :a already existing
iex> |> Set.to_list!()
[{:a, :b}]
iex> bag = Bag.new!()
iex> |> Bag.add!({:a, :b})
iex> |> Bag.add!({:a, :c})
iex> |> Bag.add!({:a, :c}) # Adds dude to duplicate: true
iex> |> Bag.add!({:c, :d})
iex> Bag.lookup(set, :a)
{:ok, [{:a, :b}, {:a, :c}, {:a, :c}]}
iex> Bag.to_list(bag)
{:ok, [{:a, :b}, {:a, :c}, {:a, :c}, {:c, :d}]}
iex> Bag.add_new!(bag, {:a, :z}) # Doesn't add due to key :a already existing
iex> Bag.to_list(bag)
{:ok, [{:a, :b}, {:a, :c}, {:a, :c}, {:c, :d}]}
iex> bag = Bag.new!(duplicate: false)
iex> |> Bag.add!({:a, :b})
iex> |> Bag.add!({:a, :c})
iex> |> Bag.add!({:a, :c}) # Doesn't add dude to duplicate: false
iex> |> Bag.add!({:c, :d})
iex> Bag.lookup(bag, :a)
{:ok, [{:a, :b}, {:a, :c}]}
iex> Bag.to_list(bag)
{:ok, [{:a, :b}, {:a, :c}, {:c, :d}]}
-
ETS
- All
-
ETS.Set
- Put (insert)
- Get (lookup)
- Get Element
- Delete
- Delete All
- First
- Next
- Last
- Previous
- Match
- Select
- Select Delete
- Has Key (Member)
- Info
- Delete
- To List (tab2list)
- Wrap
-
ETS.Bag
- Add (insert)
- Lookup
- Lookup Element
- Delete
- Delete All
- Match
- Select
- Select Delete
- Has Key (Member)
- Info
- Delete
- To List (tab2list)
- Wrap
-
ETS.KeyValueSet
- New
- Wrap Existing
- Put
- Put New
- Get
- Info
- Get Table
- First
- Last
- Next
- Previous
- Has Key
- Delete
- Delete Key
- Delete All
- To List
ETS
can be installed by adding ets
to your list of dependencies in mix.exs
:
def deps do
[
{:ets, "~> 0.9.0"}
]
end
Docs can be found at https://hexdocs.pm/ets.
Contributions welcome. Specifically looking to:
- Add remainder of functions, (See Erlang Docs).
- Discover and add zero-impact recovery for any additional possible
:ets
ArgumentError
s.