NAME
Neo4j::Driver - Neo4j community graph database driver for Bolt and HTTP
VERSION
version 0.50
SYNOPSIS
$uri = 'bolt://localhost'; # requires Neo4j::Bolt
$uri = 'http://localhost';
$driver = Neo4j::Driver->new({ uri => $uri, ... });
$driver->basic_auth( $user, $password );
$session = $driver->session;
$query = <<~ END;
MATCH (someone :Person)-[:KNOWS]->(friend)
WHERE someone.name = \$name
RETURN friend.name
END
@records = $session->execute_read( sub ($tx) {
$tx->run($query, { name => 'Alice' })->list;
});
foreach my $record ( @records ) {
say $record->get('friend.name');
}
DESCRIPTION
This software is a community driver for the Neo4j graph database server. It is designed to follow the Neo4j Driver API, allowing clients to interact with a Neo4j server using the same classes and method calls as the official Neo4j drivers do. This extends the uniformity across languages, which is a stated goal of the Neo4j Driver API, to Perl.
This driver targets the Neo4j community edition, version 2.x, 3.x, 4.x, and 5.x. The Neo4j enterprise edition and AuraDB are only supported as far as practical, but patches will be accepted.
Two different network protocols exist for connecting to Neo4j. By default, Neo4j servers offer both, but this can be changed in neo4j.conf for each server; see "Configure connectors" in the Neo4j Operations Manual.
- Bolt
-
Bolt is a Neo4j proprietary, binary protocol, available with Neo4j 3.0 and newer. Bolt communication may be encrypted or unencrypted. Because Bolt is faster than HTTP, it is generally the recommended protocol. However, Perl support for it may be lagging after major updates to Neo4j.
This driver supports Bolt, but doesn't bundle the necessary XS packages. You will need to install Neo4j::Bolt separately to enable Bolt for this driver.
- HTTP / HTTPS
-
Support for HTTP is built into this driver, so it is always available. HTTP is still fast enough for many use cases and works even in a "Pure Perl" environment. It may also be quicker than Bolt to add support for future changes in Neo4j.
HTTP connections will use Jolt (JSON Bolt) when offered by the server. For older Neo4j servers (before version 4.2), the driver will automatically fall back to slower REST-style JSON.
The driver also supports encrypted communication using HTTPS, but doesn't bundle the necessary packages. You will need to install LWP::Protocol::https separately to enable HTTPS.
The protocol is automatically chosen based on the URI scheme. See "uri" in Neo4j::Driver::Config for details.
This driver will soon move to version 1.00, removing deprecated functionality.
METHODS
Neo4j::Driver implements the following methods.
basic_auth
$driver->basic_auth('neo4j', 'password');
Set basic auth credentials with a given user and password. This method returns the modified Neo4j::Driver object, so that method chaining is possible.
$session = $driver->basic_auth('neo4j', 'password')->session;
config
$driver->config({ option1 => 'foo', option2 => 'bar' });
Sets the specified configuration options on a Neo4j::Driver object. The options may be given as a hash or as a hash reference. This method returns the modified object, so that method chaining is possible.
$session = $driver->config(timeout => 60)->session;
See Neo4j::Driver::Config for a list of supported options. Setting configuration options on a driver is only allowed before creating the driver's first session.
Calling this method with just a single string parameter will return the current value of the config option named by the parameter.
$timeout = $driver->config('timeout');
new
$driver = Neo4j::Driver->new({ uri => 'http://localhost' });
Construct a new Neo4j::Driver object. This object holds the details required to establish connections with a Neo4j database, including server URIs, credentials and other configuration.
The new()
method accepts one or more configuration options given as a hash reference. See Neo4j::Driver::Config for a list of supported options. Alternatively, instead of the hash reference, the Neo4j server URI may be given as a scalar string.
$driver = Neo4j::Driver->new('bolt://localhost');
If new()
is called with no arguments, a default configuration will be used for the driver.
plugin
$driver->plugin( $plugin );
Load the given plug-in object into the driver. This method returns the modified driver, so that method chaining is possible.
Details on the implementation of plug-ins including descriptions of individual event handlers are provided in Neo4j::Driver::Plugin. Note that the plug-in API is experimental because some of its parts are still evolving.
session
$session = $driver->session;
Creates and returns a new Session, initiating a network connection with the Neo4j server.
Each session connects to a single database, which may be specified using the database
option in a hash or hash reference passed to this method. If no defined value is given for this option, the driver will select the default database configured in neo4j.conf.
$session = $driver->session( database => 'system' );
The database
option is silently ignored when used with Neo4j versions 2 and 3, which only support a single database.
ENVIRONMENT
This software requires at least Perl 5.10, though you should consider using Perl 5.26 or newer if you can.
DIAGNOSTICS
Neo4j::Driver triggers an "error" event as soon as an error condition is discovered. If unhandled, this event will cause the driver to die with an error string. See "ERROR HANDLING" in Neo4j::Driver::Transaction for further information.
Warnings are given when deprecated or ambiguous method calls are used. These warnings may be disabled if desired.
no warnings 'deprecated';
no warnings 'ambiguous';
SEE ALSO
Official API documentation: Neo4j Driver API Specification, Neo4j Drivers Manual, Neo4j HTTP API Docs
Other modules for working with Neo4j: DBD::Neo4p, Neo4j::Bolt, Neo4j::Cypher::Abstract, REST::Cypher, REST::Neo4p
AUTHOR
Arne Johannessen (AJNN)
CONTRIBUTORS
Mark A. Jensen <majensen@cpan.org>
Mohammad S Anwar <mohammad.anwar@yahoo.com>
COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
This software is Copyright (c) 2016-2024 by Arne Johannessen.
This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the Artistic License 2.0 or (at your option) the same terms as the Perl 5 programming language system itself.