Gremlin console addV seem not to add vertices - gremlin

In Gremlin Console, in order to add a vertex, I do the following:
// One time initialization
graph = TinkerGraph.open()
g = graph.traversal()
// Add the vertex
g.addV('somelabel')
And in the console i get:
==>v[0]
But if I try to traverse the vertex:
g.V(0)
I get nothing in the console, as if the index was wrong.
A proof of that (the fact i get nothing) is:
g.V(0).count()
==>0
If instead i define the id myself:
g.addV('somelabel').property(id, 1)
Everything works fine:
g.V(1)
==>v[1]
But I would not like to define the ids myself...
Where am I doing (or thinking) wrong?
Software version is JanusGraph 0.2.2, Apache TinkerPop 3.2.9

You are not using JanusGraph here but TinkerGraph, an in-memory graph store that is often used for testing or simple examples.
TinkerGraph uses long ids by default which means that it cannot find your vertex when you use an int id. It should work when you use parameter of type long:
gremlin> g.addV('somelabel')
==>v[0]
gremlin> g.V(0)
gremlin> g.V(0L)
==>v[0]
The configuration section for TinkerGraph explains how this configuration can be changed to use different types for its integers.

Related

Is it possible to get which or condition resulted true in traversals?

We have one photo sharing service in which one can allow or deny other set of users to view or not. We exposed this service as an API /view?caller=userId&photoId=photoId. We're using AWS Neptune Graph database service to maintain this authorization and using tinkerpop java library.
For the code maintainability, we fetch possible paths from other class methods and call canUserView method from the outside.
public boolean canUserView(User user, String photoId) {
return graph.V(user.getId()).hasLabel("user").or(getPossibleTraversals(user)).hasNext();
}
private GraphTraversal<Object, Vertex>[] getPossibleTraversals(User user) {
List<GraphTraversal<Vertex, Vertex>> traversals = collectTraversalsFromExternal();
return traversals.toArray(GraphTraversal[]::new);
}
collectTraversalsFromExternal() queries our other datastore and based on result, we form the query.
In every or traversal at the end we inject unique constant value to identify the traversal.
We were using .union() earlier to get the result and the constant value. But due to performance issues using .or() condition now.
This might be a dumb question. Is it possible to get reference which traversal was true ?
Using the air routes data set, here is one way you can achieve what you are looking for.
The or will filter out all airports not in either Texas or Georgia. After that the choose step returns a constant indicating which or path was taken. You can of course do something more interesting that return a constant value in your query.
gremlin> g.V(1,3,12).values('region')
==>US-GA
==>US-TX
==>US-NY
gremlin> g.V(1,3,12).
......1> or(has('region','US-GA'),
......2> has('region', 'US-TX')).
......3> choose(has('region','US-GA'),constant(1),constant(2))
==>1
==>2

Reflect on Gremlin traversal type (Edge, Vertex, Property) in CHOOSE step, possible?

I am extending sparql-to-gremlin code to support fully and partially unbound predicate queries that can be used by automated processes to explore the graph structure. The idea being that you could just connect to some graph DB and ask a fully unbound query with some limit and get vertex properties, edge types, edge properties, etc. That can then be explored more.
I can now solve a fully unbound query and can solve one that has the subject bound to a vertex. Now I am trying to put it together into a multi-literal query and finding that the Gremlin MATCH Step would need to reflect on the type of Traversal before it can decide which steps would actually apply. For example if, the Traversal results in a Vertex, asking for out/in edges and properties makes sense; if it’s an Edge though, asking for out/in edges does not make sense and actually results in errors about unexpected type being thrown.
Thus the question, is it possible to write a kind of “switch” statement that would reflect on the type and then only ask for things that makes sense in that context?
Here’s one type of SPARQL query that I am trying to support (based on the Graph of the Gods described here https://old-docs.janusgraph.org/0.1.0/getting-started.html):
https://old-docs.janusgraph.org/0.1.0/images/graph-of-the-gods-2.png
SELECT ?BATTLE ?PRED ?VALUE
WHERE {
vid:6 ep:battled ?BATTLE .
?BATTLE ?PRED ?VALUE .
}
Here we are starting from a vertex with id 6, grabbing the outgoing edge reference with “battled” label, then grabbing all possible properties of the edge along with their values.
Here vertex with id 6 is Hercules, which has 3 outgoing edges with label “battled” going to vertex with id 9 (Nemean), 10 (Hydra) and 11 (Cerberus). I would want to the have ?PRED be bound to v:id (edge id), v:label (edge label), v:time (edge time property value), v:place (edge place property value), eps:battled (an extension to sparql-to-gremlin relating edge to an IN vertex).
I think that I follow your problem and I don't think I have a good answer for you. At the moment, Gremlin isn't terribly good with type detection and the issue remains open on TINKERPOP-2234. The typical workaround for most people when they have a mixed set of elements in a stream is to use a step like coalesce() or choose() to act as a form of switch statement and then figure out some filter than can identify the object type. So here's some mixed results that I've contrived:
gremlin> g.V().union(outE(),__.in())
==>e[9][1-created->3]
==>e[7][1-knows->2]
==>e[8][1-knows->4]
==>v[1]
==>v[1]
==>v[4]
==>v[6]
==>e[10][4-created->5]
==>e[11][4-created->3]
==>v[1]
==>v[4]
==>e[12][6-created->3]
and then I test with hasLabel() for labels I know to belong to vertices only, then everything else must be an edge:
gremlin> g.V().union(outE(),__.in()).choose(hasLabel('person','software'), values('name'), values('weight'))
==>0.4
==>0.5
==>1.0
==>marko
==>marko
==>josh
==>peter
==>1.0
==>0.4
==>marko
==>josh
==>0.2
Not ideal obviously but it typically resolves most people's problems. Hopefully we will see TINKERPOP-2234 solved for 3.5.0.
Another possible workaround is to use a lambda which works well for some use cases though we try to avoid them when possible:
gremlin> g.V().union(outE(),__.in()).choose(filter{it.get() instanceof Vertex}, values('name'), values('weight'))
==>0.4
==>0.5
==>1.0
==>marko
==>marko
==>josh
==>peter
==>1.0
==>0.4
==>marko
==>josh
==>0.2

Some way to count elements in a property in gremlin?

Hi I have a node that represents an email, and one of the properties is the recipients (e.g. { 'john#doe.com', 'max#example.com' }.
Is there a way that I can count how many recipients each email has?
So assuming:
gremlin> g = TinkerGraph.open().traversal()
==>graphtraversalsource[tinkergraph[vertices:0 edges:0], standard]
gremlin> g.addV().property('emails','["x#x.com","y#y.com"]')
==>v[0]
I'd start by saying that you should probably parse that JSON to multi-properties if your graph supports it because then you get a more natural approach to dealing with that data. It would be something like:
g.V(0L).values('emails').count()
Gremlin simply doesn't have native methods for parsing JSON so that leaves you with two options I guess:
Use a lambda and a Groovy JsonSlurper
Just return the JSON string and parse it on the client to get your count in your native programming language.
If you were using a lambda it would look like this:
gremlin> json = new groovy.json.JsonSlurper()
==>groovy.json.JsonSlurper#421a4ee1
gremlin> g.V(0L).values('emails').map{json.parseText(it.get())}
==>[x#x.com,y#y.com]
gremlin> g.V(0L).values('emails').map{json.parseText(it.get())}.count(local)
==>2
Note that this assumes your graph supports lambdas and that you can make use of JsonSlurper in that environment. We typically try to get folks to avoid lambdas so your best choice would be to model your data better (i.e. multiproperties or a List) or to process the JSON locally.

Transactions in Tinkerpop3 DSE

This is a question to understand the transaction semantics in DSE graph via TinkerPop3 Java API
As I understand, when you have DseSession.executeGraph(String query) is executed in a single transaction.
But what is the mechanism to achieve the same using TinkerPop3 Java API ?
Say I want to add a vertex and then drop a few edges and then add a new vertex etc.,
I tried
g.V("{~label=company, id=12345}").drop().addV("company").property("id", "1").next()
This didn't work as I intended. (Dropping the company and adding one in a single transaction). The first vertex did indeed get deleted, however the new company was never created.
I got below exception
Exception in thread "main" java.util.NoSuchElementException
at com.datastax.dse.graph.internal.DseRemoteTraversal.nextTraverser(DseRemoteTraversal.java:60)
The drop() step "kills" the traverser you are deleting, meaning nothing is returned from drop(). You can see that if you try this:
gremlin> g.V().has('name','marko').drop().next()
java.util.NoSuchElementException
Type ':help' or ':h' for help.
Display stack trace? [yN]
Without a traverser there is nothing to feed forward to your addV() step that follows. There might be a nicer way to do this, but you can work around that problem by using inject() to add a throwaway value as a traverser that will feed into your addV(). In this case, you deleted one thing, so you need to put one traverser back to trigger the single call to addV() thus:
gremlin> g.V().has('name','marko').drop().
......1> inject(1).
......2> addV('person').property('name','stephen').next()
==>v[13]
I also wonder if this is a nice way to do it:
gremlin> g.V().has('name','marko').
......1> union(drop(),
......2> addV('person').property('name','stephen'))
==>v[13]

gremlin, what is identity _() pipe

I am using java-gremlin, and since the most examples I read about in internet are written in groovy, I supposed that identity pipe has a special meaning in groovy, but i discovered that it exists in java api, so what does it mean?
As described in TinkerPop 2.x, the _() turns an arbitrary object into a pipeline:
gremlin> x = [1,2,3]
==>1
==>2
==>3
gremlin> x._().transform{it+1}
==>2
==>3
==>4
gremlin> x = g.E.has('weight', T.gt, 0.5f).toList()
==>e[10][4-created->5]
==>e[8][1-knows->4]
gremlin> x.inV
==>[StartPipe, InPipe]
==>[StartPipe, InPipe]
gremlin> x._().inV
==>v[5]
==>v[4]
In TinkerPop 3.x, it basically has the same meaning but we tend to refer to it more as the start of an anonymous traversal, one that is not bound to a graph instance. You can read more about it here in a recent post on the Gremlin Users mailing list. Here's how it looks in 3.x:
gremlin> __(1,2,3)
==>1
==>2
==>3
gremlin> __(1,2,3).map{g.V(it.get()).next()}
==>v[1]
==>v[2]
==>v[3]
Examples of it's usage are sprinkled throughout this section:
http://tinkerpop.incubator.apache.org/docs/3.0.0-incubating/#graph-traversal-steps
You actually see it more than you think you might as the documentation does a static import of it so that you don't actually have to use the "__()". For example:
gremlin> g.V().out('knows').where(out('created'))
==>v[4]
is really:
gremlin> g.V().out('knows').where(__().out('created'))
==>v[4]
Finally, note that in TinkerPop 3.x, Groovy is just a "flavor" of Gremlin that introduces a small bit of syntactic sugar. The Gremlin language in 3.x over Java 8 looks mostly identical to the Groovy flavor.
http://tinkerpop.incubator.apache.org/docs/3.0.0-incubating/#_on_gremlin_language_variants
Can't tell you exactly about the value it brings, but it looks like it just maps to itself.
"The identity()-step (map) is an identity function which maps the current object to itself."
http://tinkerpop.apache.org/docs/current/reference/#identity-step

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