Configure, Open, and Close a Realm - Node.js SDK
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Open a Realm
To open a local (non-synced) realm, pass a Realm.Configuration object to the asynchronous method Realm.open().
Note
Accessing the Default Realm Path
If you do not specify a path
property in your Configuration
object,
the SDK creates a realm at the default path. You can access and change
the default realm path using the Realm.defaultPath
global property.
// Open a local realm file with a predefined Car object model const realm = await Realm.open({ schema: [Car], });
Open a Realm Without Providing a Schema
After you create a realm on a device, you can omit the schema when you
access the same realm by calling new Realm()
. The SDK derives the
realm's schema from the existing realm file at Realm.defaultPath
.
Accessing a realm without providing a schema only works for local realms. You must always pass a schema when using a Synced realm.
// Open the Realm with a schema const realm = new Realm({ schema: [Car] }); realm.close(); // Reopen it without a schema const reopenedRealm = new Realm();
Open an In-Memory Realm
To create a realm that runs entirely in memory without being written to a file,
add inMemory: true
to your Realm.Configuration object:
const realm = await Realm.open({ inMemory: true, schema: [Car], });
Note
In-memory realms may use disk space if memory is running low, but files created by an in-memory realm are deleted when you close the realm.
Copy Data and Open a New Realm
New in version 10.14.0.
To copy data from an existing realm to a new realm with different configuration options, pass the new configuration the Realm.writeCopyTo() method.
In the new realm's configuration, you must specify the path
.
If you write the copied realm to a realm file that already exists, the data is written object by object. The copy operation replaces objects if there already exists objects for given primary keys. The schemas of the realm you copy and the realm you are writing to must be compatible for the copy operation to succeed. Only objects in the schemas of both configurations are copied over.
The configuration change can include modifications to SyncConfiguration:
Local realm to synced realm
Synced Realm to local realm
Synced Realm to a Synced Realm for a different user
Note
Partition-Based Sync Only
This method only supports converting between a non-sync realm and Partition-Based Sync. If your app uses Flexible Sync, you must manually iterate through the objects in one realm and copy them into the other realm.
Note
Same-Type Sync Only
This method only supports copying a Partition-Based Sync configuration for another Partition-Based Sync user, or a Flexible Sync configuration for another Flexible Sync user. You cannot use this method to convert between a Partition-Based Sync realm and a Flexible Sync realm or vice-versa.
The configuration change can also include changes to encryptionKey
property of the Configuration
:
Encrypted realm to unencrypted realm
Unencrypted realm to encrypted realm
Example
Convert Local Realm to Synced Realm
You can also combine changes to configuration. For example, you can open a local encrypted realm as a synced unencrypted realm or a unencrypted synced realm as an encrypted synced realm.
Example
Convert Synced Encrypted to Local Unencrypted Realm
Close a Realm
It is important to remember to call the close()
method when done with a
realm instance to avoid memory leaks.
realm.close();
Use an HTTP Proxy
The Realm Node.js SDK has limited support for running behind an HTTP proxy.
Requirements
Realm Node.js SDK v10.3.0 or later.
NPM CLI v6.9.0 or later is required.
Limitations
You must install the fetch-with-proxy package manually.
HTTPS connections from the client to the proxy server are not supported. The URL specified in
HTTPS_PROXY
must start withhttp://
.You must set an
HTTPS_PROXY
environment variable. The proxy can't be set at runtime or on a per-app basis.
Install fetch-with-proxy
A manual step is required to switch out the node-fetch
package used by the
network transport layer.
After installing the Realm Node.js SDK, run the following command to install a different package into the Network Transport package:
npm install node-fetch@npm:fetch-with-proxy --prefix node_modules/realm-network-transport
Set HTTPS_PROXY and Run a Script
You can run an arbitrary script file while routing all of Realm JS's requests through an HTTP proxy.
On a Unix system, you can prefix the assignment of an environment variable before the command:
HTTPS_PROXY=http://127.0.0.1:3128 node index.js