Deleting Objects
The delete command follows a predictable pattern and looks like this:
DELETE /types/TYPE/buckets/BUCKET/keys/KEY
The normal HTTP response codes for DELETE
operations are 204 No
Content
and 404 Not Found
. 404 responses are normal, in the sense
that DELETE
operations are idempotent and not finding the resource has
the same effect as deleting it.
Let’s try to delete the genius
key from the oscar_wilde
bucket
(which bears the type quotes
):
Location geniusQuote = new Location(new Namespace("quotes", "oscar_wilde"), "genius");
DeleteValue delete = new DeleteValue.Builder(geniusQuote).build();
client.execute(delete);
bucket = client.bucket_type('quotes').bucket('oscar_wilde')
bucket.delete('genius')
(new \Basho\Riak\Command\Builder\DeleteObject($riak))
->buildBucket('oscar_wilde', 'quotes')
->build()
->execute();
bucket = client.bucket_type('quotes').bucket('oscar_wilde')
bucket.delete('genius')
var id = new RiakObjectId("users", "random_user_keys", null);
var obj = new RiakObject(id, @"{'user':'data'}",
RiakConstants.ContentTypes.ApplicationJson);
var rslt = client.Put(obj);
string key = rslt.Value.Key;
id = new RiakObjectId("users", "random_user_keys", key);
var del_rslt = client.Delete(id);
// continuing from above example
options = {
bucketType: 'users', bucket: 'random_user_keys',
key: generatedKey
};
client.deleteValue(options, function (err, rslt) {
if (err) {
throw new Error(err);
}
});
riakc_pb_socket:delete(Pid, {<<"quotes">>, <<"oscar_wilde">>}, <<"genius">>)
// Continuing from above example
cmd, err = riak.NewDeleteValueCommandBuilder().
WithBucketType("users").
WithBucket("random_user_keys").
WithKey(rsp.GeneratedKey).
Build()
if err != nil {
fmt.Println(err.Error())
return
}
if err := cluster.Execute(cmd); err != nil {
fmt.Println(err.Error())
return
}
curl -XDELETE http://localhost:8098/types/quotes/buckets/oscar_wilde/keys/genius
Client Library Examples
If you are updating an object that has been deleted—or if an update
might target a deleted object—we recommend that
you first fetch the causal context of the object prior to updating.
This can be done by setting the deletedvclock
parameter to true
as
part of the fetch operation. This can also be done
with the official Riak clients for Ruby, Java, and Erlang, as in the
example below:
object.delete
deleted_object = bucket.get('bucket', 'key', deletedvclock: true)
deleted_object.vclock
# It is not currently possible to fetch the causal context for a deleted
# key in the Python client.
Location loc = new Location("<bucket>")
.setBucketType("<bucket_type>")
.setKey("<key>");
FetchValue fetch = new FetchValue.Builder(loc)
.withOption(Option.DELETED_VCLOCK, true)
.build();
FetchValue.Response response = client.execute(fetch);
System.out.println(response.getVclock().asString());
{ok, Obj} = riakc_pb_socket:get(Pid,
{<<"bucket_type">>, <<"bucket">>},
<<"key">>,
[{deleted_vclock}]).
%% In the Erlang client, the vector clock is accessible using the Obj
%% object obtained above.
$response = (new \Basho\Riak\Command\Builder\FetchObject($riak))
->buildLocation('deleted_key', 'in_some_bucket', 'of_a_certain_type')
->build()
->execute();
echo $response->getVclock(); // a85hYGBgzGDKBVI8m9WOeb835ZRhYCg1zGBKZM5jZdhnceAcXxYA