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redisgraph_php

A client for RedisGraph aiming to track its development and implementation of OpenCypher. The goal of this library is providing a standard way of sending queries to the RedisGraph engine and encapsulate the results in a clean object.

Installation

composer require jpbourbon/redisgraph_php:"0.5.8"

Usage

There are 2 ways of using this library.

  • Using the Client, an instantiable class;
  • Using RedisGraph, a static wrapper that loads the Client as a singleton;

Connection

Client

...
use RedisGraphPhp\Client;
...
$options = [
    "host"  => "127.0.0.1",
    "port"  => "6379",
    "graph" => "test"
];
$client = new Client($options);

RedisGraph

...
use RedisGraphPhp\RedisGraph;
...
$options = [
    "host"  => "127.0.0.1",
    "port"  => "6379",
    "graph" => "test"
];
RedisGraph::setOptions($options);

Queries

This library supports only raw queries. However, we encapsulate the query in a Cypher class that can be used for validation in future iterations. This class also provides tagging and runtime changing of graphs.

...
use RedisGraphPha\Cypher;
...
$cypher = new Cypher("MATCH (f:Foo) RETURN f", "MyTast");

Running queries

Client

...
use RedisGraphPhp\Client;
use RedisGraphPha\Cypher;
...
$options = [
    "host"  => "127.0.0.1",
    "port"  => "6379",
    "graph" => "test"
];
$client = new Client($options);
$cypher = new Cypher("MATCH (f:Foo) RETURN f", "MyTast");
$result = $client->run($cypher);

RedisGraph

...
use RedisGraphPhp\RedisGraph;
use RedisGraphPha\Cypher;
...
$options = [
    "host"  => "127.0.0.1",
    "port"  => "6379",
    "graph" => "test"
];
RedisGraph::setOptions($options);
$cypher = new Cypher("MATCH (f:Foo) RETURN f", "MyTast");
$result = RedisGraph::run($cypher);

Results

The response from the run method will return an instance of the Result class. This class consists of a structure that holds an array of query return keys, and array of RecordSets with Records*, the Cypher object and the Statistics object.

Return keys

A Cypher query that contains a RETURN clause will always return a key:value pair, except when the query generates no returnable values. Consider the following Cypher query:

MATCH (f:Foo) RETURN f

This returns the key f. To obtain an array with the returned keys, use the getKeys method:

$result->getKeys();

Getting the RecordSet and Records

The *Result and RecordSet objects provide methods to lookup their child classes.

$result->getRecordSets(); // Returns all RecordSet objects returnes (rows)
$result->getRecordSet(N); // Returns the RecordSet at position N or null
$result->firstRecordSet(); // Returns the first RecordSet or null
$result->size(); // Returns the size of the recordSets array

$result->firstRecordSet()->getRecords(); // Returns all Records from the first RecordSet
$result->firstRecordSet()->getRecord(N); // Returns the Record at position N or null
$result->firstRecordSet()->firstRecord(); // Returns the first Records from the RecordSet

Types of Records

The Records can be either Nodes, Relationships or Scalar values. Each of them has its own characteristics, reflected in the returned object. The distinct types of record can be easily identified using the getRecordType method:

$result->firstRecordSet()->firstRecord()->getRecordType(); // Returns the record type as a string

Scalar

Scalar values are single values. Those can be either the result of an internal cypher function (such as SUM(), COUNT() etc) or the value from a node or relationship property.

MATCH (n) RETURN COUNT(n) AS total // "total" is a scalar value
MATCH (n) RETURN n.key // "n.key" is a scalar value

To access the value you would first need to know the key, and use the getValue() method on the record:

$result->firstRecordSet()->getRecord("total")->getValue(); // Returns the single value

However, as we often need to get a list of scalar values, there is a special method for that:

$result->getAllScalar("n.key"); // Returns an array of all values from all recordsets

Nodes and Relationships

Nodes and Relationships share some common methods, since they can both hold properties, but have their specific ones. Common

$result->firstRecordSet()->firstRecord()->getId(); // returns the internal id of the record
$result->firstRecordSet()->firstRecord()-getProperties(); // Gets an array with existing properties;
$result->firstRecordSet()->firstRecord()->getValue($property); // Gets the value for the given property name

Nodes

$result->firstRecordSet()->firstRecord()->getLabels(); // Gets the array of labels

Relationship

$result->firstRecordSet()->firstRecord()->getType(); // Returns the type as a string
$result->firstRecordSet()->firstRecord()->getLinkedNodes(); // Gets an array with the source and target node ids

Graphs

RedisGraph supports multiple graphs running alongside. This means the client must be flexible and support the different graphs. This client allows the definition of the graph in 3 different places: 1 - connection options; 2 - cypher object; 3 - chained method before running the query; The graph defined in the connection options is the default graph, and acts as a fallback in case no graph is defined anywhere else. The graph defined on the cypher query or the chained method is always considered secondary, and must be explicitely set to be used.

1 - Connection options

simply define the graph in the array:

 $options = [
    "host"  => "127.0.0.1",
    "port"  => "6379",
    "graph" => "test"
];

2 - Cypher query

The graph is an optional argument when creating the Cypher object. If defined, overrides the default graph for the query execution.

$cypher = new Cypher("MATCH (f:Foo) RETURN f", "MyTast", "myOtherGraph);

3 - Chained method

This option is useful if the user intends to use the same Cypher object for different graphs, as it overrides both the default graph and the Cypher object graph:

Client
...
$cypher = new Cypher("MATCH (f:Foo) RETURN f", "MyTast", "myOtherGraph");
$result = $client->graph("myAlternativeGraph")->run($cypher);
RedisGraph
...
$cypher = new Cypher("MATCH (f:Foo) RETURN f", "MyTast", "myOtherGraph");
$result = RedisGraph::graph("myAlternativeGraph")::run($cypher);

Delete graphs

Graphs can be deleted with a simple delete method:

Client
...
$result = $client)->delete("myGraph");
RedisGraph
...
$result = RedisGraph::delete("myGraph");

Explain queries

Both the RedisGraph and the Client classes feature an explain method that returns the query analysis:

Client

...
use RedisGraphPhp\Client;
use RedisGraphPha\Cypher;
...
$options = [
    "host"  => "127.0.0.1",
    "port"  => "6379",
    "graph" => "test"
];
$client = new Client($options);
$cypher = new Cypher("MATCH (f:Foo) RETURN f", "MyTast");
$result = $client->explain($cypher);

RedisGraph

...
use RedisGraphPhp\RedisGraph;
use RedisGraphPha\Cypher;
...
$options = [
    "host"  => "127.0.0.1",
    "port"  => "6379",
    "graph" => "test"
];
RedisGraph::setOptions($options);
$cypher = new Cypher("MATCH (f:Foo) RETURN f", "MyTast");
$result = RedisGraph::explain($cypher);

TBC...