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GitHub - outworkers/phantom: Schema safe, type-safe, reactive Scala driver for Cassandra/Datastax Enterprise
Schema safe, type-safe, reactive Scala driver for Cassandra/Datastax Enterprise - outworkers/phantom
Visit SiteGitHub - outworkers/phantom: Schema safe, type-safe, reactive Scala driver for Cassandra/Datastax Enterprise
Schema safe, type-safe, reactive Scala driver for Cassandra/Datastax Enterprise - outworkers/phantom
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phantom
CI | Test coverage(%) | Code quality | Stable version | ScalaDoc | Chat | Open issues | Average issue resolution time |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Reactive type-safe Scala driver for Apache Cassandra/Datastax Enterprise
To stay up-to-date with our latest releases and news, follow us on Twitter: @outworkers.
If you use phantom, please consider adding your company to our list of adopters. Phantom is and will always be open source, but the more adopters our projects have, the more people from our company will actively work to make them better.
Migrating to phantom 2.14.0 and using execution backends.
Please refer to the new docs on query execution to understand the breaking changes in phantom 2.14.0. They will affect all users of phantom, as we further optimise the internals for better performance and to gently prepare 3.0.
Details here. In short, query generation is no longer coupled with query execution within the framework. That means phantom can natively support different kind of concurrency frameworks in parallel, using different sub-modules. That includes Monix, Twitter Util, Scala Futures, and a few others, some of which only available via phantom-pro.
import com.outworkers.phantom.dsl._
is now required in more places than before. The future
method is no longer implementation by query classes, but
rather added via implicit augmentation by QueryContext
. The return type of the future
method is now dependent
on which QueryContext
you use, so that's why importing is required, without it the necessary implicits will not
be in scope by default, or similarly, in some places new implicits are required to specify things specific to an execution backend.
Scala 2.13 support
As of phantom 2.50.0, Scala 2.13 support is officially available, however all support has been dropped for Scala 2.10. To use Scala 2.10 with phantom, please use a version of phantom earlier than 2.5.0. No support or ongoing maintenance will be offered for 2.10 artifacts, as the codebase has undergone significant change to support newer versions, and the various libraries we depend on no longer support this.
Migrating to phantom 2.x.x series
The new series of phantom introduces several key backwards incompatible changes with previous versions. This was done to obtain massive performance boosts and to thoroughly improve user experience with phantom.
Read the MIGRATION GUIDE for more information on how to upgrade.
Available modules
This is a table of the available modules for the various Scala versions. Not all modules are available for all versions just yet, and this is because certain dependencies have yet to be published for Scala 2.12.
Phantom OSS
Module name | Scala 2.11.x | Scala 2.12.x | Scala 2.13.x |
---|---|---|---|
phantom-connectors | yes | yes | yes |
phantom-dsl | yes | yes | yes |
phantom-jdk8 | yes | yes | yes |
phantom-sbt | no | yes | no |
phantom-example | yes | yes | yes |
phantom-thrift | yes | yes | yes |
phantom-finagle | yes | yes | yes |
phantom-streams | yes | yes | no |
Phantom Pro subscription edition
Modules marked with "x" are still in beta or pre-publishing mode.
Module name | Scala 2.11.x | Scala 2.12.x | Scala 2.13.x | Release date |
---|---|---|---|---|
phantom-dse | yes | yes | yes | Released |
phantom-udt | yes | yes | yes | Released |
phantom-autotables | yes | yes | yes | Released |
phantom-monix | yes | yes | yes | Released |
phantom-docker | x | x | x | Released |
phantom-migrations | yes | yes | yes | Released |
phantom-graph | x | x | x | April 2020 |
phantom-spark | x | x | x | July 2020 |
phantom-solr | x | x | x | July 2020 |
phantom-native | x | x | x | December 2020 |
phantom-java-dsl | x | x | x | December 2020 |
Using phantom
Scala 2.11, 2.12 and 2.13 releases
We publish phantom in 2 formats, stable releases and bleeding edge.
-
The stable release is always available on Maven Central and will be indicated by the badge at the top of this readme. The Maven Central badge is pointing at the latest version
-
Intermediary releases are available through our Bintray repo available at
Resolver.bintrayRepo("outworkers", "oss-releases")
orhttps://dl.bintray.com/outworkers/oss-releases/
. The latest version available on our Bintray repository is indicated by the Bintray badge at the top of this readme.
How phantom compares
To compare phantom to similar tools in the Scala/Cassandra category, you can read more here.
Latest versions
The latest versions are available here. The badges automatically update when a new version is released.
Tutorials on phantom and Cassandra
For ease of use and far better management of documentation, we have decided to export the README.md
to a compiled
documentation page, now available here.
The following are the current resources available for learning phantom, outside of tests which are very useful in highlighting all the possible features in phantom and how to use them.
This is a list of resources to help you learn phantom and Cassandra:
- Quickstart
- Official documentation
- Datastax Introduction to Cassandra.
- The official Scala API docs for phantom
- The main Wiki
- The StackOverflow phantom-dsl tag, which we always monitor!
- Anything tagged phantom on our blog is a phantom tutorial: phantom tutorials
- A series on Cassandra: Getting rid of the SQL mentality
- A series on Cassandra: Indexes and keys
- A series on Cassandra: Advanced features
- A series on phantom: Getting started with phantom
- The Play! Phantom Activator template
- Thiago's Cassandra + Phantom demo repository
Issues and questions
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We love Cassandra to bits and use it in every bit of our stack. phantom makes it super trivial for Scala users to embrace Cassandra.
Cassandra is highly scalable and it is by far the most powerful database technology available, open source or otherwise.
Phantom is built on top of the Datastax Java Driver, which handles Cassandra connectivity and raw query execution.
We are very happy to help implement missing features in phantom, answer questions about phantom, and occasionally help you out with Cassandra questions! Please use GitHub for any issues or bug reports.
Adopters
Here are a few of the biggest phantom adopters, though the full list is far more comprehensive.
License and copyright
Phantom is distributed under the Apache V2 License.
-
Outworkers, Limited
is the copyright holder. -
You can use phantom in commercial products or otherwise.
-
We strongly appreciate and encourage contributions.
-
All paid for features are published and sold separately as
phantom-pro
, everything that is currently available for free will remain so forever.
If you would like our help with any new content or initiatives, we'd love to hear about it!
Contributors
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Phantom was developed at outworkers as an in-house project. All Cassandra integration at outworkers goes through phantom, and nowadays it's safe to say most Scala/Cassandra users in the world rely on phantom.
- Flavian Alexandru (@alexflav23) - maintainer
- Bartosz Jankiewicz (@bjankie1)
- Benjamin Edwards (@benjumanji)
- Kevin Wright (@kevinwright)
- Eugene Zhulenev (@ezhulenev)
- Michal Matloka (@mmatloka)
- Thiago Pereira (@thiagoandrade6)
- Juan José Vázquez (@juanjovazquez)
- Viktor Taranenko (@viktortnk)
- Stephen Samuel (@sksamuel)
- Evan Chan (@evanfchan)
- Jens Halm (@jenshalm)
- Donovan Levinson (@levinson)
Copyright
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Special thanks to Viktor Taranenko from WhiskLabs, who gave us the original idea, and special thanks to Miles Sabin and team behind Shapeless, where we shamelessly stole all the good patterns from.
Copyright © 2013 - 2017 outworkers.
Contributing to phantom
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Contributions are most welcome! Use GitHub for issues and pull requests and we will happily help out in any way we can!
Scala Resources
are all listed below.
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