Custom, Cypher Based Procedures and Functions
I wanted for a long time to be able to register Cypher statements as proper procedures and functions, so that they become callable in a standalone way.
You can achieve that with the apoc.custom.declareProcedure and apoc.custom.declareFunction procedure calls.
Those register a given Cypher statement, prefixed with the custom.* namespace, overriding potentially existing ones, so you can redefine them as needed.
| APOC provides also apoc.custom.asFunction and apoc.custom.asProcedure procedures, but they have been deprecated in favor of `apoc.custom.declare*`s. |
The first parameter of the apoc.custom.declareProcedure and apoc.custom.declareFunction procedures,
is the signature of the procedure/function you want to create.
This looks similar to the signature results returned by the SHOW PROCEDURES YIELD signature and SHOW FUNCTIONS YIELD signature cypher commands,
that is:
- for a procedure: nameProcedure(firstParam = defaultValue :: typeParam , secondParam = defaultValue :: typeParam, ….) :: (firstResult :: typeResult, secondResult :: typeResult, … )
- for a function: nameFunction(firstParam = defaultValue :: typeParam , secondParam = defaultValue :: typeParam, ….) :: typeResult
Note that, for both procedures and functions, the = defaultValue are optionals.
The typeParam and typeResult in the signature parameter are what you would expect to see in outputs of SHOW PROCEDURES, SHOW FUNCTIONS or CALL apoc.help(''), just without the final ?.
The following values are supported:
* FLOAT, DOUBLE, INT, INTEGER, NUMBER, LONG
* TEXT, STRING
* BOOL, BOOLEAN
* POINT, GEO, GEOMETRY
* DATE, DATETIME, LOCALDATETIME, TIME, LOCALTIME, DURATION
* NODE, REL, RELATIONSHIP, EDGE, PATH
* MAP
* LIST TYPE, LIST OF TYPE (where TYPE can be one of the previous values)
* ANY
If you override procedures or functions you might need to call call db.clearQueryCaches() as lookups to internal id’s are kept in compiled query plans.
|
Custom Procedures with apoc.custom.declareProcedure
Here is a simple example:
CALL apoc.custom.declareProcedure('answerInteger() :: (row::INT)', 'RETURN 42 as answer')
This registers the statement as procedure custom.answer that you then can call.
CALL custom.answerInteger
| answer |
|---|
42 |
Or you can also write in this way:
CALL apoc.custom.declareProcedure('answer() :: (row::MAP)', 'RETURN 42 as answer')
In this case the result is wrapped in a stream of maps called row. Therefore, you can do:
CALL custom.answer() YIELD row
RETURN row.answer
| answer |
|---|
42 |
which is equivalent to deprecated one:
CALL apoc.custom.asProcedure('answer','RETURN 42 as answer')
We can create the function custom.powers that returns a stream of the powers of the first parameter, up to and including the power provided by the second parameter:
CALL apoc.custom.declareProcedure(
'powers(input::INT, power::INT) :: (answer::INT)',
'UNWIND range(0, $power) AS power
RETURN $input ^ power AS answer'
);
| Procedure, input and output names must have at least 2 characters. |
We can use this function, to return 4°, 4¹, 4², and 4³, as shown in the query below:
call custom.powers(4,3);
| answer |
|---|
1.0 |
4.0 |
16.0 |
64.0 |
Furthermore, we can pass as the 3rd parameter a string to specify the procedure mode (default "WRITE"). It can be: - "READ" - if the procedure will only perform read operations against the graph - "WRITE" - if it may perform both read and write operations against the graph - "SCHEMA" - if it will perform operations against the schema - "DBMS" - if it will perform system operations - i.e. not against the graph
Moreover, we can pass a description parameter as the 4th parameter,
which will be returned by the call apoc.custom.list and SHOW PROCEDURES.
Custom Functions with apoc.custom.declareFunction
Here is a simple example:
CALL apoc.custom.declareFunction('answerFun() :: INT', 'RETURN 42 as answer')
This registers the statement as procedure custom.answer that you then can call.
RETURN custom.answerFun()
| answer |
|---|
42 |
Or you can also write in this way:
CALL apoc.custom.declareFunction('answerFunMap() :: MAP', 'RETURN 42 as answer')
In this case the result is wrapped in a stream of maps called row. Therefore, you can do:
WITH custom.answerFunMap() YIELD row
RETURN row.answer
| answer |
|---|
42 |
which is equivalent to deprecated one:
CALL apoc.custom.asFunction('answer','RETURN 42 as answer')
We can create the function custom.powers that returns a stream of the powers of the first parameter, up to and including the power provided by the second parameter:
CALL apoc.custom.declareProcedure(
'powers(input::INT, power::INT) :: (answer::INT)',
'UNWIND range(0, $power) AS power
RETURN $input ^ power AS answer'
);
We can create the function custom.double, that doubles the provided value, by running the following function:
CALL apoc.custom.declareFunction(
'double(input::INT) :: INT',
'RETURN $input*2 as answer'
);
| Function, input and output names must have at least 2 characters. |
We can use this function, as shown in the query below:
RETURN custom.double(83) AS value;
| value |
|---|
166 |
Furthermore, we can pass as a 3rd parameter a boolean (with default false) which, if true, in case the function returns a list of a single element, it will return only the single element itself and not the list.
For example:
CALL apoc.custom.declareFunction('forceSingleTrue(input::ANY) :: LIST OF INT',
'RETURN 1',
true
);
| value |
|---|
1 |
otherwise with false the result will be a singleton list:
CALL apoc.custom.declareFunction('forceSingleFalse(input::ANY) :: LIST OF INT',
'RETURN 1',
false
);
| value |
|---|
[1] |
Moreover, we can pass a description parameter as the 4th parameter,
which will be returned by the call apoc.custom.list and SHOW FUNCTIONS.
List of registered procedures/function with apoc.custom.list
The procedure apoc.custom.list provide a list of all registered procedures/function via
apoc.custom.declareProcedure and apoc.custom.declareFunction, apoc.custom.asProcedure and apoc.custom.asFunction.
Given the this call:
CALL apoc.custom.list
The output will look like the following table:
| type | name | description | mode | statement | inputs | outputs | forceSingle |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
"function" |
"answer" |
<null> |
<null> |
"RETURN $input as answer" |
[["input","number"]] |
"long" |
false |
"procedure" |
"answer" |
"Procedure that answer to the Ultimate Question of Life, the Universe, and Everything" |
"read" |
"RETURN $input as answer" |
[["input","int","42"]] |
[["answer","number"]] |
<null> |
Remove a procedure apoc.custom.removeProcedure
The procedure apoc.custom.removeProcedure allows to delete the targeted custom procedure.
Given the this call:
CALL apoc.custom.removeProcedure(<name>)
Fields:
| argument | description |
|---|---|
name |
the procedure name |
Remove a procedure apoc.custom.removeFunction
The procedure apoc.custom.removeFunction allows to delete the targeted custom function.
Given the this call:
CALL apoc.custom.removeFunction(<name>)
Fields:
| argument | description |
|---|---|
name |
the function name |
How to manage procedure/function replication in a Causal Cluster
In order to replicate the procedure/function in a cluster environment you can tune the following parameters:
| name | type | description |
|---|---|---|
|
long (default |
the refresh time that allows replicating the procedure/function changes to each cluster member |
Export metadata
|
To import custom procedures in another database (for example after a |