f08a9d8803
Summary: Some people want to use Haxl for large batch jobs or long-running computations. For these use-cases, caching everything is not practical, but we still want the batching behaviour that Haxl provides. The new Flag field, caching, controls whether caching is enabled or not. If not, we discard the cache after each round. Reviewed By: niteria Differential Revision: D3310266 fbshipit-source-id: 3fb707f77075dd42410bd50fc7465b18b216804e |
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example | ||
Haxl | ||
tests | ||
.gitignore | ||
.travis.yml | ||
changelog.md | ||
haxl.cabal | ||
LICENSE | ||
logo.png | ||
logo.svg | ||
PATENTS | ||
readme.md | ||
Setup.hs |
Haxl
Haxl is a Haskell library that simplifies access to remote data, such as databases or web-based services. Haxl can automatically
- batch multiple requests to the same data source,
- request data from multiple data sources concurrently,
- cache previous requests.
Having all this handled for you behind the scenes means that your data-fetching code can be much cleaner and clearer than it would otherwise be if it had to worry about optimizing data-fetching. We'll give some examples of how this works in the pages linked below.
There are two Haskell packages here:
haxl
: The core Haxl frameworkhaxl-facebook
(in example/facebook): An (incomplete) example data source for accessing the Facebook Graph API
To use Haxl in your own application, you will likely need to build one or more
data sources: the thin layer between Haxl and the data that you want
to fetch, be it a database, a web API, a cloud service, or whatever.
The haxl-facebook
package shows how we might build a Haxl data
source based on the existing fb
package for talking to the Facebook
Graph API.
Where to go next?
-
The Story of Haxl explains how Haxl came about at Facebook, and discusses our particular use case.
-
An example Facebook data source walks through building an example data source that queries the Facebook Graph API concurrently.
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The N+1 Selects Problem explains how Haxl can address a common performance problem with SQL queries by automatically batching multiple queries into a single query, completely invisibly to the programmer.
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Haxl Documentation on Hackage.
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There is no Fork: An Abstraction for Efficient, Concurrent, and Concise Data Access, our paper on Haxl, accepted for publication at ICFP'14.