Deno Storage Area
An implementation of the StorageArea (1,2,3) interface for Deno with an extensible system for supporting various database backends.
The goal of this class is ease of use and compatibility with other Storage Area implementations,
such as kv-storage-polyfill
.
While work on the specification itself has stopped, KV Storage is still a good interface for asynchronous data access that feels native to JavaScript.
Example
// file: "mod.ts"
import { StorageArea } from 'https://deno.land/x/kv_storage/sqlite.ts';
const storage = new StorageArea();
await storage.set(['a', 3, new Date(0)], {
foo: 'bar',
fizz: new Set(['buzz']),
xyz: new Uint8Array([255]),
});
console.log(await storage.get(['a', 3, new Date(0)]));
Prerequisites
A URL to a database needs to be provided via environment variable alongside the following permissions (for SQLite adapters):
DENO_STORAGE_AREA__DEFAULT_URL=sqlite://database.sqlite deno run --allow-read --allow-write --allow-env mod.ts
There are other ways of providing the database URL:
As a static variable:
StorageArea.defaultURL = 'sqlite://database.sqlite';
As a global variable:
self['DENO_STORAGE_AREA__DEFAULT_URL'] = 'sqlite://database.sqlite';
As a constructor argument:
new StorageArea('default', { url: 'sqlite://database.sqlite' });
Features
Beyond the cross-worker-env aspects of using StorageArea, it aso provides a number of quality of life improvements over using other key value implementations:
- Wrapping and Unwrapping of many built-in types, such as
Map
andSet
(Structured Clone Algorithm) - Support for non-string keys and complex keys
Disclaimers
Note that efficiency is not a goal. Specifically, if you have sizable ArrayBuffer
s,
it’s better to use a database implementation with proper support for binary data.