krill

1.0.1 • Public • Published

krill: simple boolean filter language

Krill provides functions for validating and evaluating boolean filters (also called predicates) expressed in a simple JSON language that's intended to be easy to incorporate into JSON APIs.

Synopsis

The basic idea is that you construct a predicate as a boolean expression that uses variables (called fields). You can then evaluate the predicate with a particular assignment of variables.

You can specify types for each field, in which case the expression itself will be type-checked when you create it.

/*
 * Example user input.  There are two fields: "hostname", a string, and
 * "latency", a number.
 */
var types = {
    'hostname': 'string',
    'latency': 'number'
};
 
/*
 * This predicate will be true if the "hostname" value is "spike" OR the
 * "latency" variable is a number greater than 300.
 */
var input = {
    'or': [
        { 'eq': [ 'hostname', 'spike' ] },
        { 'gt': [ 'latency', 300 ] }
    ]
};
 
/* Validate predicate syntax and types and throw on error. */
console.log(input);
var predicate = krill.createPredicate(input, types);

A trivial predicate is one that's just "true":

/* Check whether this predicate is trivial (always returns true) */
console.log('trivial? ', predicate.trivial());
/* Prints: "false" */

You can print out the fields (variables) used in this predicate:

/* Enumerate the fields contained in this predicate. */
console.log('fields: ', predicate.fields().join(''));
/* Prints: "hostname, latency" */

You can also get access to an object that represents a map between field names and the lists of values used for each field name in this predicate:

/* Output the map between field names and their values */
console.log('field names to values: ' + predicate.fieldsAndValues());
/* Prints: { hostname: [ 'spike' ], latency: [ 300 ] } */

You can also print a C-syntax expression for this predicate, which you can actually plug directly into a C-like language (like JavaScript) to evaluate it:

/* Print a DTrace-like representation of the predicate. */
console.log('DTrace format: ', predicate.toCStyleString());
/* Prints "(hostname == "spike") || (latency > 300)" */

You can also print a LDAP search filter that represents this predicate:

/* Print a LDAP search filter that represents the predicate */
console.log('LDAP search filter: ', predicate.toLDAPFilterString());
/* Prints "(|(hostname=spike)(latency>300))" */

Please note however that without knowing the LDAP object schema, it is not possible to generate a filter that matches all objects. As a result, trivial predicates cannot be serialized as LDAP search filters:

var pred = krill.createPredicate({});
pred.toLDAPSearchFilter();
/* Throws the following error:
Error: Cannot serialize empty predicate to LDAP search filter
*/

The recommended way to handle this case is to check if the predicate is trivial before calling toLDAPSearchFilter:

var pred = krill.createPredicate({});
var ldapSearchFilter;
if (!pred.trivial()) {
    ldapSearchFilter = pred.toLDAPFilterString();
} else {
    /*
     * This example assumes that when the predicate is trivial, the intention
     * is to build a LDAP search filter that includes all entries, but this is
     * done only to illustrate a common use case.
     */
    ldapSearchFilter = '(someRDN=*)';
}

You can also evaluate the predicate for a specific set of values:

/* Should print "true".  */
var value = { 'hostname': 'spike', 'latency': 12 };
console.log(value, predicate.eval(value));
 
/* Should print "true".  */
value = { 'hostname': 'sharptooth', 'latency': 400 };
console.log(value, predicate.eval(value));
 
/* Should print "false".  */
value = { 'hostname': 'sharptooth', 'latency': 12 };
console.log(value, predicate.eval(value));

Streaming interface

For data processing pipelines, it's useful to treat predicates as a transform stream that just filters out some results. You can do this with a PredicateStream. Using the same "types" and "predicate" from above:

var stream = mod_krill.createPredicateStream({ 'predicate': predicate });
stream.write({ 'hostname': 'spike', 'latency': 12 });
stream.write({ 'hostname': 'sharptooth', 'latency': 12 });
stream.write({ 'hostname': 'sharptooth', 'latency': 400 });
 
/* Prints only the first and third data points. */
stream.on('data', function (c) { console.log(c); });
 
/* Prints a warning for invalid records. */
stream.on('invalid_object', function (obj, err, count) {
    console.error('object %d is invalid: %s', count, err.message);
    console.error('object was: %s', JSON.stringify(obj));
});
stream.write({ 'hostname': 'invalid' });
 
/* Shows that 4 objects were processed, 1 was invalid, and 1 was ignored. */
stream.on('end', function () { console.log(stream.stats()); });
stream.end();

JSON input format

All predicates can be represented as JSON objects, and you typically pass such an object into createPredicate to work with them. The simplest predicate is:

{}                                      /* always evaluates to "true" */

The general pattern for relational operators is:

{ 'OPERATOR': [ 'VARNAME', 'VALUE' ] }  

In all of these cases, OPERATOR must be one of the built-in operators, VARNAME can be any string, and VALUE should be either a specific string or numeric value.

The built-in operators are:

  • 'eq': is-equal-to (strings and numbers)
  • 'ne': is-not-equal-to (strings and numbers)
  • 'lt': is-less-than (numbers only)
  • 'le': is-less-than-or-equal-to (numbers only)
  • 'ge': is-greater-than-or-equal-to (numbers only)
  • 'gt': is-greater-than (numbers only)

For examples:

{ 'eq': [ 'hostname', 'spike' ] }       /* "hostname" variable == "spike" */
{ 'lt': [ 'count',    15      ] }       /* "count" variable <= 15 */

You can also use "and" and "or", which have the form:

{ 'or':  [ expr1, expr2, ... ] }    /* any of "expr1", "expr2", ... is true */
{ 'and': [ expr1, expr2, ... ] }    /* all of "expr1", "expr2", ... are true */

where expr1, expr2, and so on are any other predicate. For example:

{
    'or': [
        { 'eq': [ 'hostname', 'spike' ] },
        { 'gt': [ 'latency', 300 ] }
    ]
};

is logically equivalent to the C expression:

hostname == "spike" || latency > 300

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