EventStore behaviour (EventStore v1.3.0) View Source
EventStore allows you to define one or more event store modules to append, read, and subscribe to streams of events.
It uses PostgreSQL (v9.5 or later) as the underlying storage engine.
Defining an event store
An event store module is defined in your own application as follows:
defmodule MyApp.EventStore do
use EventStore, otp_app: :my_app
# Optional `init/1` function to modify config at runtime.
def init(config) do
{:ok, config}
end
endWhere the configuration for the event store must be in your application
environment, usually defined in config/config.exs:
config :my_app, MyApp.EventStore,
serializer: EventStore.JsonSerializer,
username: "postgres",
password: "postgres",
database: "eventstore",
hostname: "localhost"Or use a URL to connect instead:
config :my_app, MyApp.EventStore,
serializer: EventStore.JsonSerializer,
url: "postgres://postgres:postgres@localhost/eventstore"Note: To use an EventStore with Commanded you should configure the event store to use Commanded's JSON serializer which provides additional support for JSON decoding:
config :my_app, MyApp.EventStore,
serializer: Commanded.Serialization.JsonSerializerThe event store module defines a start_link/1 function that needs to be
invoked before using the event store. In general, this function is not
called directly, but included as part of your application supervision tree.
If your application was generated with a supervisor (by passing --sup
to mix new) you will have a lib/my_app/application.ex file
containing the application start callback that defines and starts your
supervisor. You just need to edit the start/2 function to start the event
store in your application's supervisor:
def start(_type, _args) do
children = [
MyApp.EventStore
]
opts = [strategy: :one_for_one, name: MyApp.Supervisor]
Supervisor.start_link(children, opts)
endEach event store module (e.g. MyApp.EventStore) provides a public API to
read events from and write events to an event stream, and subscribe to event
notifications.
Postgres schema
By default the public schema will be used for event store tables. An event
store can be configured to use an alternate Postgres schema:
defmodule MyApp.EventStore do
use EventStore, otp_app: :my_app, schema: "schema_name"
endOr provide the schema as an option in the init/1 callback function:
defmodule MyApp.EventStore do
use EventStore, otp_app: :my_app
def init(config) do
{:ok, Keyword.put(config, :schema, "schema_name")}
end
endOr define it in environment config when configuring the database connection settings:
# config/config.exs
config :my_app, MyApp.EventStore, schema: "schema_name"This feature allows you to define and start multiple event stores sharing a single Postgres database, but with their data isolated and segregated by schema.
Note the mix event_store.<task> tasks to create, initialize, and drop an
event store database will also handle creating and/or dropping the schema.
Dynamic named event store
An event store can be started multiple times by providing a name when starting. The name must be provided as an option to all event store operations to identify the correct instance.
Example
Define an event store:
defmodule MyApp.EventStore do
use EventStore, otp_app: :my_app
endStart multiple instances of the event store, each with a unique name:
{:ok, _pid} = EventStore.start_link(name: :eventstore1)
{:ok, _pid} = EventStore.start_link(name: :eventstore2)
{:ok, _pid} = EventStore.start_link(name: :eventstore3)Use a dynamic event store by providing its name as an option to each function:
:ok = EventStore.append_to_stream(stream_uuid, expected_version, events, name: :eventstore1)
{:ok, events} = EventStore.read_stream_forward(stream_uuid, 0, 1_000, name: :eventstore1)Dynamic schemas
This feature also allows you to start each event store instance using a different schema:
{:ok, _pid} = EventStore.start_link(name: :tenant1, schema: "tenant1")
{:ok, _pid} = EventStore.start_link(name: :tenant2, schema: "tenant2")Or start supervised:
children =
for tenant <- [:tenant1, :tenant2, :tenant3] do
{MyApp.EventStore, name: tenant, schema: "#{tenant}"}
end
opts = [strategy: :one_for_one, name: MyApp.Supervisor]
Supervisor.start_link(children, opts)The above can be used for multi-tenancy where the data for each tenant is stored in a separate, isolated schema.
Shared database connection pools
By default each event store will start its own Postgrex database connection
pool. The size of the pool is configured with the pool_size config option.
When you have multiple event stores running you will also end up with multiple
connection pools. If they are all connecting to the same physical Postgres
database then it can be useful to share a single pool amongst all event
stores. Use the shared_connection_pool config option to specify a name for
the shared connection pool. Then configure the event stores you'd like to
share the pool with the same name.
This can be done in config:
# config/config.exs
config :my_app, MyApp.EventStore, shared_connection_pool: :shared_poolOr when starting the event stores, such as via a Supervisor:
Supervisor.start_link(
[
{MyApp.EventStore, name: :eventstore1, shared_connection_pool: :shared_pool},
{MyApp.EventStore, name: :eventstore2, shared_connection_pool: :shared_pool},
{MyApp.EventStore, name: :eventstore3, shared_connection_pool: :shared_pool}
], opts)Using an existing database connection or transaction
In some situations you might want to execute the event store operations using an existing Postgres database connection or transaction. For instance, if you want to persist changes to one or more other tables, such as a read-model projection.
To do this you can provide a Postgrex connection process or transaction as a
:conn option to any of the supported EventStore functions.
{:ok, pid} = Postgrex.start_link(config)
Postgrex.transaction(pid, fn conn ->
:ok = EventStore.append_to_stream(stream_uuid, expected_version, events, conn: conn)
end)This can also be used with an Ecto Repo which is configured to use the
Postgres SQL adapter. The connection process may be looked up as follows:
Repo.transaction(fn ->
%{pid: pool} = Ecto.Adapter.lookup_meta(Repo)
conn = Process.get({Ecto.Adapters.SQL, pool})
:ok = EventStore.append_to_stream(stream_uuid, expected_version, events, conn: conn)
end)Guides
Please refer to the following guides to learn more:
- Getting started
- Usage
- Subscriptions
- Running on a cluster of nodes
- Event serialization
- Upgrading an existing EventStore database
Link to this section Summary
Callbacks
Acknowledge receipt of the given events received from a subscription.
Append one or more events to a stream atomically.
Returns the event store configuration stored in the :otp_app environment.
Delete an existing persistent subscription to all streams.
Delete a previously recorded snapshop for a given source.
Delete an existing stream.
Delete an existing persistent subscription.
A callback executed when the event store starts or when configuration is read.
Link one or more existing events to another stream.
Reads the requested number of events from all streams in the reverse order from which they were originally written.
Reads the requested number of events from all streams in the order in which they were originally written.
Read a snapshot, if available, for a given source.
Reads the requested number of events from the given stream in the reverse order from which they were originally written.
Reads the requested number of events from the given stream in the order in which they were originally written.
Record a snapshot of the data and metadata for a given source.
Starts any connection pooling or supervision and return {:ok, pid}
or just :ok if nothing needs to be done.
Shuts down the event store.
Streams events from all streams in the reverse order from which they were originally written.
Streams events from all streams in the order in which they were originally written.
Streams events from the given stream in the reverse order from which they were originally written.
Streams events from the given stream in the order in which they were originally written.
Create a transient subscription to a given stream.
Create a subscription to all streams. By default the subscription is persistent.
Create a subscription to a single stream. By default the subscription is persistent.
Unsubscribe an existing subscriber from all event notifications.
Unsubscribe an existing subscriber from event notifications.
Link to this section Types
Specs
expected_version() :: :any_version | :no_stream | :stream_exists | non_neg_integer()
Specs
option() ::
{:name, atom()}
| {:conn, Postgrex.conn() | DBConnection.t()}
| {:timeout, timeout()}
Specs
options() :: [option()]
Specs
persistent_subscription_option() :: transient_subscribe_option() | {:buffer_size, pos_integer()} | {:checkpoint_after, non_neg_integer()} | {:checkpoint_threshold, pos_integer()} | {:concurrency_limit, pos_integer()} | {:partition_by, (EventStore.RecordedEvent.t() -> any())} | {:start_from, :origin | :current | non_neg_integer()}
Specs
persistent_subscription_options() :: [persistent_subscription_option()]
Specs
start_from() :: :origin | :current | non_neg_integer()
Specs
t() :: module()
Specs
transient_subscribe_option() ::
{:name, atom()}
| {:selector, (EventStore.RecordedEvent.t() -> any())}
| {:mapper, (EventStore.RecordedEvent.t() -> any())}
Specs
transient_subscribe_options() :: [transient_subscribe_option()]
Link to this section Callbacks
Specs
ack( subscription :: pid(), EventStore.RecordedEvent.t() | [EventStore.RecordedEvent.t()] | non_neg_integer() ) :: :ok | {:error, reason :: term()}
Acknowledge receipt of the given events received from a subscription.
Accepts a single EventStore.RecordedEvent struct, a list of
EventStore.RecordedEvents, or the event number of the recorded event to
acknowledge.
Specs
append_to_stream( stream_uuid :: String.t(), expected_version(), events :: [EventStore.EventData.t()], opts :: options() ) :: :ok | {:error, :cannot_append_to_all_stream} | {:error, :stream_exists} | {:error, :stream_not_found} | {:error, :wrong_expected_version} | {:error, :stream_deleted} | {:error, reason :: term()}
Append one or more events to a stream atomically.
stream_uuidis used to uniquely identify a stream.expected_versionis used for optimistic concurrency checks. You can provide a non-negative integer to specify the expected stream version. This is used to ensure you can only append to the stream if it is at exactly that version.You can also provide one of the following values to alter the concurrency check behaviour:
:any_version- No concurrency checking and allow any stream version (including no stream).:no_stream- Ensure the stream does not exist.:stream_exists- Ensure the stream exists.
eventsis a list of%EventStore.EventData{}structs.optsan optional keyword list containing:namethe name of the event store if provided tostart_link/1.timeoutan optional timeout for the database transaction, in milliseconds. Defaults to 15,000ms.
Returns :ok on success, or an {:error, reason} tagged tuple. The returned
error may be due to one of the following reasons:
{:error, :wrong_expected_version}when the actual stream version differs from the provided expected version.{:error, :stream_exists}when the stream exists, but expected version was:no_stream.{:error, :stream_not_found}when the stream does not exist, but expected version was:stream_exists.
Specs
config() :: Keyword.t()
Returns the event store configuration stored in the :otp_app environment.
Specs
delete_all_streams_subscription( subscription_name :: String.t(), opts :: options() ) :: :ok | {:error, term()}
Delete an existing persistent subscription to all streams.
subscription_nameis used to identify the existing subscription to remove.
Returns :ok on success.
Specs
Delete a previously recorded snapshop for a given source.
Returns :ok on success, or when the snapshot does not exist.
Specs
delete_stream( stream_uuid :: String.t(), expected_version :: :any_version | :stream_exists | non_neg_integer(), type :: :soft | :hard, opts :: Keyword.t() ) :: :ok | {:error, :stream_not_found} | {:error, :stream_deleted} | {:error, term()}
Delete an existing stream.
stream_uuididentity of the stream to be deleted.expected_versionis used for optimistic concurrency checking. You can provide a non-negative integer to specify the expected stream version. This is used to ensure you can only delete a stream if it is at exactly that version.You can also provide one of the following values to alter the concurrency checking behaviour:
:any_version- No concurrency check, allow any stream version.:stream_exists- Ensure the stream exists, at any version.
type- used to indicate how the stream is deleted::soft- the stream is marked as deleted, but no events are removed.:hard- the stream and its events are permanently deleted from the database. Soft deletion is the default if the type is not provided.
Returns :ok on success or an error tagged tuple on failure.
Soft delete
Will mark the stream as deleted, but will not delete its events. Events from
soft deleted streams will still appear in the globally ordered all events
($all) stream and in any linked streams.
A soft deleted stream cannot be read nor appended to. Subscriptions to the deleted stream will not receive any events but subscriptions containing linked events from the deleted stream, such as the global all events stream, will still receive events from the deleted stream.
Hard delete
Will permanently delete the stream and its events. This is irreversible and will remove data. Events will be removed from the globally ordered all events stream and any linked streams.
After being hard deleted, a stream can later be appended to and read as if it had never existed.
Examples
Soft delete a stream
Delete a stream at any version:
:ok = MyApp.EventStore.delete_stream("stream1", :any_version, :soft)Delete a stream at an expected version:
:ok = MyApp.EventStore.delete_stream("stream2", 3, :soft)Delete stream will use soft delete by default so you can omit the type:
:ok = MyApp.EventStore.delete_stream("stream1", :any_version)Hard delete a stream
Since hard deletes are destructive and irreversible they are disabled by default. To use hard deletes you must first enable them for the event store:
defmodule MyApp.EventStore do
use EventStore, otp_app: :my_app, enable_hard_deletes: true
endOr via config:
# config/config.exs
config :my_app, MyApp.EventStore, enable_hard_deletes: trueHard delete a stream at any version:
:ok = MyApp.EventStore.delete_stream("stream1", :any_version, :hard)Hard delete a stream that should exist:
:ok = MyApp.EventStore.delete_stream("stream2", :stream_exists, :hard)
Specs
delete_subscription( stream_uuid :: String.t(), subscription_name :: String.t(), opts :: options() ) :: :ok | {:error, term()}
Delete an existing persistent subscription.
stream_uuidis the stream the subscription is subscribed to.subscription_nameis used to identify the existing subscription to remove.
Returns :ok on success.
Specs
A callback executed when the event store starts or when configuration is read.
It must return {:ok, keyword} with the updated list of configuration.
Specs
link_to_stream( stream_uuid :: String.t(), expected_version(), events :: [EventStore.RecordedEvent.t()] | [non_neg_integer()], opts :: options() ) :: :ok | {:error, :cannot_append_to_all_stream} | {:error, :stream_exists} | {:error, :stream_not_found} | {:error, :wrong_expected_version} | {:error, :stream_deleted} | {:error, reason :: term()}
Link one or more existing events to another stream.
Allows you to construct streams containing events already appended to any other stream. This is more efficient than copying events between streams since only a reference to the existing event is created.
stream_uuidis used to uniquely identify the target stream.expected_versionis used for optimistic concurrency checks. You can provide a non-negative integer to specify the expected stream version. This is used to ensure you can only append to the stream if it is at exactly that version.You can also provide one of the following values to affect the concurrency check behaviour:
:any_version- No concurrency checking; allow any stream version (including no stream).:no_stream- Ensure the stream does not exist.:stream_exists- Ensure the stream exists.
events_or_event_idsis a list of%EventStore.EventData{}structs or event ids.optsan optional keyword list containing:namethe name of the event store if provided tostart_link/1.timeoutan optional timeout for the database transaction, in milliseconds. Defaults to 15,000ms.
Returns :ok on success, or an {:error, reason} tagged tuple. The returned
error may be due to one of the following reasons:
{:error, :wrong_expected_version}when the actual stream version differs from the provided expected version.{:error, :stream_exists}when the stream exists, but expected version was:no_stream.{:error, :stream_not_found}when the stream does not exist, but expected version was:stream_exists.
Specs
read_all_streams_backward( start_version :: integer(), count :: non_neg_integer(), opts :: options() ) :: {:ok, [EventStore.RecordedEvent.t()]} | {:error, reason :: term()}
Reads the requested number of events from all streams in the reverse order from which they were originally written.
start_versionoptionally, the stream version of the first event to read. Use-1to indicate starting from the end of the stream. Defaults to the end of the stream if not set.countoptionally, the maximum number of events to read. Defaults to returning 1,000 events from all streams.optsan optional keyword list containing:namethe name of the event store if provided tostart_link/1.timeoutan optional timeout for the database transaction, in milliseconds. Defaults to 15,000ms.
Specs
read_all_streams_forward( start_version :: non_neg_integer(), count :: non_neg_integer(), opts :: options() ) :: {:ok, [EventStore.RecordedEvent.t()]} | {:error, reason :: term()}
Reads the requested number of events from all streams in the order in which they were originally written.
start_versionoptionally, the stream version of the first event to read. Defaults to the beginning of the stream if not set.countoptionally, the maximum number of events to read. Defaults to returning 1,000 events from all streams.optsan optional keyword list containing:namethe name of the event store if provided tostart_link/1.timeoutan optional timeout for the database transaction, in milliseconds. Defaults to 15,000ms.
Specs
read_snapshot(source_uuid :: String.t(), opts :: options()) :: {:ok, EventStore.Snapshots.SnapshotData.t()} | {:error, :snapshot_not_found}
Read a snapshot, if available, for a given source.
Returns {:ok, %EventStore.Snapshots.SnapshotData{}} on success, or
{:error, :snapshot_not_found} when unavailable.
Specs
read_stream_backward( stream_uuid :: String.t(), start_version :: non_neg_integer(), count :: non_neg_integer(), opts :: options() ) :: {:ok, [EventStore.RecordedEvent.t()]} | {:error, :stream_deleted} | {:error, reason :: term()}
Reads the requested number of events from the given stream in the reverse order from which they were originally written.
stream_uuidis used to uniquely identify a stream.start_versionoptionally, the stream version of the first event to read. Use-1to indicate starting from the end of the stream. Defaults to the end of the stream if not set.countoptionally, the maximum number of events to read. Defaults to to returning 1,000 events from the stream.optsan optional keyword list containing:namethe name of the event store if provided tostart_link/1.timeoutan optional timeout for the database transaction, in milliseconds. Defaults to 15,000ms.
Specs
read_stream_forward( stream_uuid :: String.t(), start_version :: non_neg_integer(), count :: non_neg_integer(), opts :: options() ) :: {:ok, [EventStore.RecordedEvent.t()]} | {:error, :stream_deleted} | {:error, reason :: term()}
Reads the requested number of events from the given stream in the order in which they were originally written.
stream_uuidis used to uniquely identify a stream.start_versionoptionally, the stream version of the first event to read. Defaults to the beginning of the stream if not set.countoptionally, the maximum number of events to read. Defaults to to returning 1,000 events from the stream.optsan optional keyword list containing:namethe name of the event store if provided tostart_link/1.timeoutan optional timeout for the database transaction, in milliseconds. Defaults to 15,000ms.
Specs
record_snapshot( snapshot :: EventStore.Snapshots.SnapshotData.t(), opts :: options() ) :: :ok | {:error, reason :: term()}
Record a snapshot of the data and metadata for a given source.
Returns :ok on success.
Specs
start_link(opts :: Keyword.t()) :: {:ok, pid()} | {:error, {:already_started, pid()}} | {:error, term()}
Starts any connection pooling or supervision and return {:ok, pid}
or just :ok if nothing needs to be done.
Returns {:error, {:already_started, pid}} if the event store is already
started or {:error, term} in case anything else goes wrong.
Specs
stop(Supervisor.supervisor(), timeout()) :: :ok
Shuts down the event store.
Specs
stream_all_backward( start_version :: non_neg_integer(), opts :: [options() | {:read_batch_size, non_neg_integer()}] ) :: Enumerable.t() | {:error, :stream_deleted} | {:error, reason :: term()}
Streams events from all streams in the reverse order from which they were originally written.
start_versionoptionally, the stream version of the first event to read. Use-1to indicate starting from the end of the stream. Defaults to the end of the stream if not set.optsan optional keyword list containing:namethe name of the event store if provided tostart_link/1.timeoutan optional timeout for the database transaction, in milliseconds. Defaults to 15,000ms.read_batch_sizeoptionally, the number of events to read at a time from storage. Defaults to reading 1,000 events per batch.
Specs
stream_all_forward( start_version :: non_neg_integer(), opts :: [options() | {:read_batch_size, non_neg_integer()}] ) :: Enumerable.t() | {:error, :stream_deleted} | {:error, reason :: term()}
Streams events from all streams in the order in which they were originally written.
start_versionoptionally, the stream version of the first event to read. Defaults to the beginning of the stream if not set.optsan optional keyword list containing:namethe name of the event store if provided tostart_link/1.timeoutan optional timeout for the database transaction, in milliseconds. Defaults to 15,000ms.read_batch_sizeoptionally, the number of events to read at a time from storage. Defaults to reading 1,000 events per batch.
Specs
stream_backward( stream_uuid :: String.t(), start_version :: integer(), opts :: [options() | {:read_batch_size, non_neg_integer()}] ) :: Enumerable.t() | {:error, :stream_deleted} | {:error, reason :: term()}
Streams events from the given stream in the reverse order from which they were originally written.
start_versionoptionally, the stream version of the first event to read. Use-1to indicate starting from the end of the stream. Defaults to the end of the stream if not set.optsan optional keyword list containing:namethe name of the event store if provided tostart_link/1.timeoutan optional timeout for the database transaction, in milliseconds. Defaults to 15,000ms.read_batch_sizeoptionally, the number of events to read at a time from storage. Defaults to reading 1,000 events per batch.
Specs
stream_forward( stream_uuid :: String.t(), start_version :: integer(), opts :: [options() | {:read_batch_size, non_neg_integer()}] ) :: Enumerable.t() | {:error, :stream_deleted} | {:error, reason :: term()}
Streams events from the given stream in the order in which they were originally written.
start_versionoptionally, the stream version of the first event to read. Defaults to the beginning of the stream if not set.optsan optional keyword list containing:namethe name of the event store if provided tostart_link/1.timeoutan optional timeout for the database transaction, in milliseconds. Defaults to 15,000ms.read_batch_sizeoptionally, the number of events to read at a time from storage. Defaults to reading 1,000 events per batch.
Specs
subscribe(stream_uuid :: String.t(), opts :: transient_subscribe_options()) :: :ok | {:error, term()}
Create a transient subscription to a given stream.
stream_uuidis the stream to subscribe to. Use the$allidentifier to subscribe to events from all streams.optsis an optional map providing additional subscription configuration:namethe name of the event store if provided tostart_link/1.selectorto define a function to filter each event, i.e. returns only those elements for which fun returns a truthy valuemapperto define a function to map each recorded event before sending to the subscriber.
The calling process will be notified whenever new events are appended to
the given stream_uuid.
As the subscription is transient you do not need to acknowledge receipt of
each event. The subscriber process will miss any events if it is restarted
and resubscribes. If you need a persistent subscription with guaranteed
at-least-once event delivery and back-pressure you should use
EventStore.subscribe_to_stream/4.
Notification message
Events will be sent to the subscriber, in batches, as {:events, events}
where events is a collection of EventStore.RecordedEvent structs.
Example
{:ok, subscription} = EventStore.subscribe(stream_uuid)
# receive first batch of events
receive do
{:events, events} ->
IO.puts "Received events: " <> inspect(events)
end
Specs
subscribe_to_all_streams( subscription_name :: String.t(), subscriber :: pid(), opts :: persistent_subscription_options() ) :: {:ok, subscription :: pid()} | {:error, :already_subscribed} | {:error, :subscription_already_exists} | {:error, :too_many_subscribers} | {:error, reason :: term()}
Create a subscription to all streams. By default the subscription is persistent.
The subscriber process will be notified of each batch of events appended to
any stream.
subscription_nameis used to uniquely identify the subscription.subscriberis a process that will be sent{:events, events}notification messages.optsis an optional map providing additional subscription configuration:namethe name of the event store if provided tostart_link/1.start_fromis a pointer to the first event to receive. It must be one of::originfor all events from the start of the stream (default).:currentfor any new events appended to the stream after the subscription has been created.- any positive integer for an event id to receive events after that exact event.
selectorto define a function to filter each event, i.e. returns only those elements for which fun returns a truthy valuemapperto define a function to map each recorded event before sending to the subscriber.concurrency_limitdefines the maximum number of concurrent subscribers allowed to connect to the subscription. By default only one subscriber may connect. If too many subscribers attempt to connect to the subscription an{:error, :too_many_subscribers}is returned.transientis an optional boolean flag to create a transient subscription. Seesubscribe_to_streamfor the full information.
The subscription will resume from the last acknowledged event if it already
exists. It will ignore the start_from argument in this case.
Returns {:ok, subscription} when subscription succeeds.
Example
{:ok, subscription} = EventStore.subscribe_to_all_streams("all_subscription", self())
# wait for the subscription confirmation
receive do
{:subscribed, ^subscription} ->
IO.puts "Successfully subscribed to all streams"
end
receive do
{:events, events} ->
IO.puts "Received events: " <> inspect(events)
# acknowledge receipt
EventStore.ack(subscription, events)
end
subscribe_to_stream(stream_uuid, subscription_name, subscriber, opts)
View SourceSpecs
subscribe_to_stream( stream_uuid :: String.t(), subscription_name :: String.t(), subscriber :: pid(), opts :: persistent_subscription_options() ) :: {:ok, subscription :: pid()} | {:error, :already_subscribed} | {:error, :subscription_already_exists} | {:error, :too_many_subscribers} | {:error, reason :: term()}
Create a subscription to a single stream. By default the subscription is persistent.
The subscriber process will be notified of each batch of events appended to
the single stream identified by stream_uuid.
stream_uuidis the stream to subscribe to. Use the$allidentifier to subscribe to events from all streams.subscription_nameis used to uniquely identify the subscription.subscriberis a process that will be sent{:events, events}notification messages.optsis an optional map providing additional subscription configuration:namethe name of the event store if provided tostart_link/1.start_fromis a pointer to the first event to receive. It must be one of::originfor all events from the start of the stream (default).:currentfor any new events appended to the stream after the subscription has been created.- any positive integer for a stream version to receive events after.
selectorto define a function to filter each event, i.e. returns only those elements for which fun returns a truthy value.mapperto define a function to map each recorded event before sending to the subscriber.concurrency_limitdefines the maximum number of concurrent subscribers allowed to connect to the subscription. By default only one subscriber may connect. If too many subscribers attempt to connect to the subscription an{:error, :too_many_subscribers}is returned.buffer_sizelimits how many in-flight events will be sent to the subscriber process before acknowledgement of successful processing. This limits the number of messages sent to the subscriber and stops their message queue from getting filled with events. Defaults to one in-flight event.checkpoint_thresholddetermines how frequently a checkpoint is written to the database for the subscription after events are acknowledged. Increasing the threshold will reduce the number of database writes for busy subscriptions, but means that events might be replayed when the subscription resumes if the checkpoint cannot be written. The default is to persist the checkpoint after each acknowledgement.checkpoint_after(milliseconds) used to ensure a checkpoint is written after a period of inactivity even if the checkpoint threshold has not been met. This ensures checkpoints are consistently written during less busy periods. It is only applicable when a checkpoint threshold has been set as the default subscription behaviour is to checkpoint after each acknowledgement.partition_byis an optional function used to partition events to subscribers. It can be used to guarantee processing order when multiple subscribers have subscribed to a single subscription. The function is passed a single argument (anEventStore.RecordedEventstruct) and must return the partition key. As an example to guarantee events for a single stream are processed serially, but different streams are processed concurrently, you could use thestream_uuidas the partition key.by_stream = fn %EventStore.RecordedEvent{stream_uuid: stream_uuid} -> stream_uuid end {:ok, _subscription} = EventStore.subscribe_to_stream(stream_uuid, "example", self(), concurrency_limit: 10, partition_by: by_stream )transientis an optional boolean flag to create a transient subscription. By default this is set tofalse. If you want to create a transient subscription set this flag to true. Your subscription will not be persisted, so if the subscription is restarted, you will receive the events again starting fromstart_from. An example usage are short lived event handlers that keep their state in memory but still want to have the guarantee to have received all events. It's possible to create a persistent subscription with some name, stop it and later create a transient subscription with the same name. The transient subscription will now receive all events starting fromstart_from. If you later stop thistransientsubscription and start a persistent subscription again with the same name, you will receive the events again as if the transient subscription never existed.
The subscription will resume from the last acknowledged event if it already
exists. It will ignore the start_from argument in this case.
Returns {:ok, subscription} when subscription succeeds.
Notification messages
Subscribers will initially receive a {:subscribed, subscription} message
once the subscription has successfully subscribed.
After this message events will be sent to the subscriber, in batches, as
{:events, events} where events is a collection of EventStore.RecordedEvent
structs.
Example
{:ok, subscription} = EventStore.subscribe_to_stream(stream_uuid, "example", self())
# wait for the subscription confirmation
receive do
{:subscribed, ^subscription} ->
IO.puts "Successfully subscribed to stream: " <> inspect(stream_uuid)
end
receive do
{:events, events} ->
IO.puts "Received events: " <> inspect(events)
# acknowledge receipt
EventStore.ack(subscription, events)
endSubscription tuning
Use the checkpoint_threshold and checkpoint_after options to configure how
frequently checkpoints are written to the database. By default a subscription
will persist a checkpoint after each acknowledgement. This can cause high
write load on the database for busy subscriptions which receive a large number
of events. This problem is known as write amplification where each event
written to a stream causes many additional writes as subscriptions acknowledge
processing of the event.
The checkpoint_threshold controls how frequently checkpoints are persisted.
Increasing the threshold reduces the number of database writes. For example
using a threshold of 100 means that a checkpoint is written at most once for
every 100 events processed. The checkpoint_after ensures that a checkpoint
will still be written after a period of inactivity even when the threshold has
not been met. This ensures bursts of event processing can be safely handled.
Specs
Unsubscribe an existing subscriber from all event notifications.
subscription_nameis used to identify the existing subscription process to stop.
Returns :ok on success.
Specs
unsubscribe_from_stream( stream_uuid :: String.t(), subscription_name :: String.t(), opts :: options() ) :: :ok
Unsubscribe an existing subscriber from event notifications.
stream_uuidis the stream to unsubscribe from.subscription_nameis used to identify the existing subscription process to stop.
Returns :ok on success.