Learn how to create and access nodes and relationships. For information on project setup, see Section 32.1, “Include Neo4j in your project”.
Remember, from Section 2.1, “The Neo4j Graph Database”, that a Neo4j graph consists of:
- Nodes that are connected by
- Relationships, with
- Properties on both nodes and relationships.
All relationships have a type.
For example, if the graph represents a social network, a relationship type could be KNOWS
.
If a relationship of the type KNOWS
connects two nodes, that probably represents two people that know each other.
A lot of the semantics (that is the meaning) of a graph is encoded in the relationship types of the application.
And although relationships are directed they are equally well traversed regardless of which direction they are traversed.
Tip The source code of this example is found here: EmbeddedNeo4j.java |
Prepare the database
Relationship types can be created by using an enum
.
In this example we only need a single relationship type. This is how to
define it:
private static enum RelTypes implements RelationshipType { KNOWS }
We also prepare some variables to use:
GraphDatabaseService graphDb; Node firstNode; Node secondNode; Relationship relationship;
The next step is to start the database server. Note that if the directory given for the database doesn’t already exist, it will be created.
graphDb = new GraphDatabaseFactory().newEmbeddedDatabase( DB_PATH ); registerShutdownHook( graphDb );
Note that starting a database server is an expensive operation, so don’t start up a new instance every time you need to interact with the database! The instance can be shared by multiple threads. Transactions are thread confined.
As seen, we register a shutdown hook that will make sure the database shuts down when the JVM exits. Now it’s time to interact with the database.
Wrap operations in a transaction
All operations have to be performed in a transaction. This is a conscious design decision, since we believe transaction demarcation to be an important part of working with a real enterprise database. Now, transaction handling in Neo4j is very easy:
try ( Transaction tx = graphDb.beginTx() ) { // Database operations go here tx.success(); }
For more information on transactions, see Chapter 18, Transaction Management and Java API for Transaction.
Note For brevity, we do not spell out wrapping of operations in a transaction throughout the manual. |
Create a small graph
Now, let’s create a few nodes. The API is very intuitive. Feel free to have a look at the Neo4j Javadocs. They’re included in the distribution, as well. Here’s how to create a small graph consisting of two nodes, connected with one relationship and some properties:
firstNode = graphDb.createNode(); firstNode.setProperty( "message", "Hello, " ); secondNode = graphDb.createNode(); secondNode.setProperty( "message", "World!" ); relationship = firstNode.createRelationshipTo( secondNode, RelTypes.KNOWS ); relationship.setProperty( "message", "brave Neo4j " );
We now have a graph that looks like this:
Print the result
After we’ve created our graph, let’s read from it and print the result.
System.out.print( firstNode.getProperty( "message" ) ); System.out.print( relationship.getProperty( "message" ) ); System.out.print( secondNode.getProperty( "message" ) );
Which will output:
Hello, brave Neo4j World!
Remove the data
In this case we’ll remove the data before committing:
// let's remove the data firstNode.getSingleRelationship( RelTypes.KNOWS, Direction.OUTGOING ).delete(); firstNode.delete(); secondNode.delete();
Note that deleting a node which still has relationships when the transaction commits will fail. This is to make sure relationships always have a start node and an end node.
Shut down the database server
Finally, shut down the database server when the application finishes:
graphDb.shutdown();