This file contains Unicode characters that might be confused with other characters. If you think that this is intentional, you can safely ignore this warning. Use the Escape button to reveal them.
== CouchRest - CouchDB, close to the metal
CouchRest is based on [CouchDB's couch.js test library](http://svn.apache.org/repos/asf/incubator/couchdb/trunk/share/www/script/couch.js), which I find to be concise, clear, and well designed. CouchRest lightly wraps CouchDB's HTTP API, managing JSON serialization, and remembering the URI-paths to CouchDB's API endpoints so you don't have to.
CouchRest's lighweight is designed to make a simple base for application and framework-specific object oriented APIs.
=== Easy Install
sudo gem install jchris-couchrest -s http://gems.github.com
=== Relax, it's RESTful
The core of Couchrest is Heroku’s excellent REST Client Ruby HTTP wrapper. REST Client takes all the nastyness of Net::HTTP and gives is a pretty face, while still giving you more control than Open-URI. I recommend it anytime you’re interfacing with a well-defined web service.
=== Running the Specs
The most complete documentation is the spec/ directory. To validate your CouchRest install, from the project root directory run `rake`, or `autotest` (requires RSpec and optionally ZenTest for autotest support).
=== Examples
Quick Start:
# with !, it creates the database if it doesn't already exist
@db = CouchRest.database!("http://localhost:5984/couchrest-test")
response = @db.save({:key => 'value', 'another key' => 'another value'})
doc = @db.get(response['id'])
puts doc.inspect
Bulk Save:
@db.bulk_save([
{"wild" => "and random"},
{"mild" => "yet local"},
{"another" => ["set","of","keys"]}
])
# returns ids and revs of the current docs
puts @db.documents.inspect
Creating and Querying Views:
@db.save({
"_id" => "_design/first",
:views => {
:test => {
:map => "function(doc){for(var w in doc){ if(!w.match(/^_/))emit(w,doc[w])}}"
}
}
})
puts @db.view('first/test')['rows'].inspect
== CouchRest::Model
CouchRest::Model is a module designed along the lines of DataMapper::Resource. By
including it in your class, suddenly you get all sorts of magic sugar, so that
working with CouchDB in your Rails or Merb app is no harder than working with the
standard SQL alternatives. See the CouchRest::Model documentation for an example article class that illustrates usage.