I'm trying to do some practicing with the GAE datastore to get a feeling about the queries and billings mechanisms.
I've read the Oreilly book about the GAE, and watched the Google videos about the datastore. My problem is that the best practice methods are usually concerning more reads than writes to the datastore.
I Built a super simple app:
- there are two webpages - one to choose links, and one view chosen links
- every user can choose to add url links to his "links feed"
- the user can choose as many links as he wants, whenever he wants.
- on a different webpage, I want to show the user the most recent 10 links he chose.
- every user has his own "links feed" webpage.
- on every "link" I want to save and show some metadata - for example: the url link itself; when it was chosen; how many times it appeared on the feed already; etc.
In this case, since the user can choose as many links he wants, whenever he wants, my app write to the datastore, much more than the number of reads (write - when the user chose another link; read - when the user opens the webpage to see his "links feed")
Question 1: I can think of (at least) two options how to handle the data for this app:
Option A: - maintain entity per user with the user details, registration, etc - maintain another entity per user that holds his recent 10 chosen links, which will be rendered to the user's webpage after he asks for it
Option B: - maintain entity per url link - which means all the urls of all users will be stored as the same object - maintain entity per user details (same as in Option A), but add a reference to the user's urls in the big table of the urls
What will be the better method?
Question 2: If I want to count the total numbers of urls chosen till today, or the daily amount of urls the user chose, or any other counting - should I use it with my SDK tools, or should I insert counters in the entities I described above? (I want to reduce the amount of datastore writes as much as I can)
EDIT (to answer @Elad's comment): Assume I want to save only the 10 last urls per users. the rest of them I want to get rid of (so to not overpopulate my DB with unnecessary data).
EDIT 2: after adding the code So I made the try with the following code (trying first Elad's method):
Here's my class:
class UserChannel(db.Model):
currentUser = db.UserProperty()
userCount = db.IntegerProperty(default=0)
currentList = db.StringListProperty() #holds the last 20-30 urls
then I serialized the url & metadata into JSON strings, which the user POSTs from the first page. here's how the POST is dealt:
def post(self):
user = users.get_current_user()
if user:
logging messages for debugging
self.response.headers['Content-Type'] = 'text/html'
#self.response.out.write('<p>the user_id is: %s</p>' % user.user_id())
updating the new item that user adds
current_user = UserChannel.get_by_key_name(user.nickname())
dataJson = self.request.get('dataJson')
#self.response.out.write('<p>the dataJson is: %s</p>' % dataJson)
current_user.currentPlaylist.append(dataJson)
sizePlaylist= len(current_user.currentPlaylist)
self.response.out.write('<p>size of currentplaylist is: %s</p>' % sizePlaylist)
#whenever the list gets to 30 I cut it to be 20 long
if sizePlaylist > 30:
for i in range (0,9):
current_user.currentPlaylist.pop(i)
current_user.userCount +=1
current_user.put()
Updater().send_update(dataJson)
else:
self.response.headers['Content-Type'] = 'text/html'
self.response.out.write('user_not_logged_in')
where Updater is my method for updating with Channel-API the webpage with the feed.
Now, it all works, I can see each user has a ListProperty with 20-30 links (when it hits 30, I cut it down to 20 with the pop()), but! the prices are quite high... each POST like the one here takes ~200ms, 121 cpu_ms, cpm_usd= 0.003588. This is very expensive considering all I do is save a string to the list... I think the problem might be that the entity gets big with the big ListProperty?