So I'm working on a project in Java, but really the language doesn't matter here.
So I want to create and store users in the datastore and I'm trying to work out the best way to do this, such that I can ensure an email is not used more than once. So the normal way to do it on a relational ACID database would be during a transaction. Lock the database, look up if the email exists, if it does then unlock and fail, else insert and unlock.
Now this as a concept would work in Appengine as well as you can use transactions. However, because the entry might have only been inserted milliseconds before, it might not be present in the datastore yet due to the strong / eventual consistency.
So things I've thought about:
using a global parent for all users such that I can then do an ancestor query in my transaction, therefore forcing it to be the latest data queried. However this then causes issues with the limit of 1 XG update per second. (This is an approach I have decided to not go with)
storing the emails that are inserted into the memcache in a separate list, because even if it were to get cleared, it probably wouldn't get cleared before the entry is inserted into the datastore, so we could then search both the cache and datastore, and if it's not present in either, we can assume it's not going to be in the datastore. However, this memcache lookup wouldn't be part of the transaction so there would still be issues
So my main issue is that neither of these approaches would use an ancestor query so could not be done as part of a transaction.
Thanks
Edit: After thinking about the structure, I am considering something like this. Will have to test it when I get home later, and will mark this as my accepted answer if it works.
UserBean
@id Long id;
//All child elements will use UserBean as their parent
Login
@id String id; //This will be the a hashed/base64 version of the email address
@Parent UserBean user;
String emailAddress
String hashedPassword;
start transaction
Login login = ofy()
.load()
.type(Login.class)
.key(hashEmail(emailAddress)).now();
if (login == null) {
fail transaction - email already in use
}
Insert UserBean and Login objects into datastore
@Id
? If i got my facts straight, queries by id are always strongly consistent.