State management API reference
Detailed documentation on the state management API
Component file
A Dapr State Store component yaml file has the following structure:
apiVersion: dapr.io/v1alpha1
kind: Component
metadata:
name: <NAME>
namespace: <NAMESPACE>
spec:
type: state.<TYPE>
version: v1
metadata:
- name:<KEY>
value:<VALUE>
- name: <KEY>
value: <VALUE>
The metadata.name
is the name of the state store.
the spec/metadata
section is an open key value pair metadata that allows a binding to define connection properties.
Starting with 0.4.0 release, support for multiple state stores was added. This is a breaking change from previous releases as the state APIs were changed to support this new scenario.
Please refer https://github.com/dapr/dapr/blob/master/docs/decision_records/api/API-008-multi-state-store-api-design.md for more details.
Key scheme
Dapr state stores are key/value stores. To ensure data compatibility, Dapr requires these data stores follow a fixed key scheme. For general states, the key format is:
<App ID>||<state key>
For Actor states, the key format is:
<App ID>||<Actor type>||<Actor id>||<state key>
Save state
This endpoint lets you save an array of state objects.
HTTP Request
POST http://localhost:<daprPort>/v1.0/state/<storename>
URL Parameters
Parameter | Description |
---|---|
daprPort | the Dapr port |
storename | metadata.name field in the user configured state store component yaml. Please refer Dapr State Store configuration structure mentioned above. |
Note, all URL parameters are case-sensitive.
Request Body
A JSON array of state objects. Each state object is comprised with the following fields:
Field | Description |
---|---|
key | state key |
value | state value, which can be any byte array |
etag | (optional) state ETag |
metadata | (optional) additional key-value pairs to be passed to the state store |
options | (optional) state operation options, see state operation options |
ETag format Dapr runtime treats ETags as opaque strings. The exact ETag format is defined by the corresponding data store.
HTTP Response
Response Codes
Code | Description |
---|---|
204 | State saved |
400 | State store is missing or misconfigured or malformed request |
500 | Failed to save state |
Response Body
None.
Example
curl -X POST http://localhost:3500/v1.0/state/starwars \
-H "Content-Type: application/json" \
-d '[
{
"key": "weapon",
"value": "DeathStar",
"etag": "1234"
},
{
"key": "planet",
"value": {
"name": "Tatooine"
}
}
]'
Get state
This endpoint lets you get the state for a specific key.
HTTP Request
GET http://localhost:<daprPort>/v1.0/state/<storename>/<key>
URL Parameters
Parameter | Description |
---|---|
daprPort | the Dapr port |
storename | metadata.name field in the user configured state store component yaml. Please refer Dapr State Store configuration structure mentioned above. |
key | the key of the desired state |
consistency | (optional) read consistency mode, see state operation options |
metadata | (optional) metadata as query parameters to the state store |
Note, all URL parameters are case-sensitive.
HTTP Response
Response Codes
Code | Description |
---|---|
200 | Get state successful |
204 | Key is not found |
400 | State store is missing or misconfigured |
500 | Get state failed |
Response Headers
Header | Description |
---|---|
ETag | ETag of returned value |
Response Body
JSON-encoded value
Example
curl http://localhost:3500/v1.0/state/starwars/planet \
-H "Content-Type: application/json"
The above command returns the state:
{
"name": "Tatooine"
}
To pass metadata as query parammeter:
GET http://localhost:3500/v1.0/state/starwars/planet?metadata.partitionKey=mypartitionKey
Get bulk state
This endpoint lets you get a list of values for a given list of keys.
HTTP Request
POST/PUT http://localhost:<daprPort>/v1.0/state/<storename>/bulk
URL Parameters
Parameter | Description |
---|---|
daprPort | the Dapr port |
storename | metadata.name field in the user configured state store component yaml. Please refer Dapr State Store configuration structure mentioned above. |
metadata | (optional) metadata as query parameters to the state store |
Note, all URL parameters are case-sensitive.
HTTP Response
Response Codes
Code | Description |
---|---|
200 | Get state successful |
400 | State store is missing or misconfigured |
500 | Get bulk state failed |
Response Body
An array of JSON-encoded values
Example
curl http://localhost:3500/v1.0/state/myRedisStore/bulk \
-H "Content-Type: application/json" \
-d '{
"keys": [ "key1", "key2" ],
"parallelism": 10
}'
The above command returns an array of key/value objects:
[
{
"key": "key1",
"data": "value1",
"etag": "1"
},
{
"key": "key2",
"data": "value2",
"etag": "1"
}
]
To pass metadata as query parammeter:
POST http://localhost:3500/v1.0/state/myRedisStore/bulk?metadata.partitionKey=mypartitionKey
Delete state
This endpoint lets you delete the state for a specific key.
HTTP Request
DELETE http://localhost:<daprPort>/v1.0/state/<storename>/<key>
URL Parameters
Parameter | Description |
---|---|
daprPort | the Dapr port |
storename | metadata.name field in the user configured state store component yaml. Please refer Dapr State Store configuration structure mentioned above. |
key | the key of the desired state |
concurrency | (optional) either first-write or last-write, see state operation options |
consistency | (optional) either strong or eventual, see state operation options |
Note, all URL parameters are case-sensitive.
Request Headers
Header | Description |
---|---|
If-Match | (Optional) ETag associated with the key to be deleted |
HTTP Response
Response Codes
Code | Description |
---|---|
204 | Delete state successful |
400 | State store is missing or misconfigured |
500 | Delete state failed |
Response Body
None.
Example
curl -X "DELETE" http://localhost:3500/v1.0/state/starwars/planet -H "If-Match: xxxxxxx"
Query state
This endpoint lets you query the key/value state.
alpha
This API is in alpha stage.
HTTP Request
POST/PUT http://localhost:<daprPort>/v1.0-alpha1/state/<storename>/query
URL Parameters
Parameter | Description |
---|---|
daprPort | the Dapr port |
storename | metadata.name field in the user configured state store component yaml. Refer to the Dapr state store configuration structure mentioned above. |
metadata | (optional) metadata as query parameters to the state store |
Note, all URL parameters are case-sensitive.
Response Codes
Code | Description |
---|---|
200 | State query successful |
400 | State store is missing or misconfigured |
500 | State query failed |
Response Body
An array of JSON-encoded values
Example
curl http://localhost:3500/v1.0-alpha1/state/myStore/query \
-H "Content-Type: application/json" \
-d '{
"query": {
"filter": {
"OR": [
{
"EQ": { "value.person.org": "Dev Ops" }
},
{
"AND": [
{
"EQ": { "value.person.org": "Finance" }
},
{
"IN": { "value.state": [ "CA", "WA" ] }
}
]
}
]
},
"sort": [
{
"key": "value.state",
"order": "DESC"
},
{
"key": "value.person.id"
}
],
"pagination": {
"limit": 3
}
}
}'
The above command returns an array of objects along with a token:
{
"results": [
{
"key": "1",
"data": {
"person": {
"org": "Dev Ops",
"id": 1036
},
"city": "Seattle",
"state": "WA"
},
"etag": "6f54ad94-dfb9-46f0-a371-e42d550adb7d"
},
{
"key": "4",
"data": {
"person": {
"org": "Dev Ops",
"id": 1042
},
"city": "Spokane",
"state": "WA"
},
"etag": "7415707b-82ce-44d0-bf15-6dc6305af3b1"
},
{
"key": "10",
"data": {
"person": {
"org": "Dev Ops",
"id": 1054
},
"city": "New York",
"state": "NY"
},
"etag": "26bbba88-9461-48d1-8a35-db07c374e5aa"
}
],
"token": "3"
}
To pass metadata as query parammeter:
POST http://localhost:3500/v1.0-alpha1/state/myStore/query?metadata.partitionKey=mypartitionKey
State transactions
Persists the changes to the state store as a multi-item transaction.
Note that this operation is dependant on a using state store component that supports multi-item transactions.
List of state stores that support transactions:
- Redis
- MongoDB
- PostgreSQL
- SQL Server
- Azure CosmosDB
HTTP Request
POST/PUT http://localhost:<daprPort>/v1.0/state/<storename>/transaction
HTTP Response Codes
Code | Description |
---|---|
204 | Request successful |
400 | State store is missing or misconfigured or malformed request |
500 | Request failed |
URL Parameters
Parameter | Description |
---|---|
daprPort | the Dapr port |
storename | metadata.name field in the user configured state store component yaml. Please refer Dapr State Store configuration structure mentioned above. |
Note, all URL parameters are case-sensitive.
Request Body
Field | Description |
---|---|
operations | A JSON array of state operation |
metadata | (optional) the metadata for transaction that applies to all operations |
Each state operation is comprised with the following fields:
Field | Description |
---|---|
key | state key |
value | state value, which can be any byte array |
etag | (optional) state ETag |
metadata | (optional) additional key-value pairs to be passed to the state store |
options | (optional) state operation options, see state operation options |
Examples
curl -X POST http://localhost:3500/v1.0/state/starwars/transaction \
-H "Content-Type: application/json" \
-d '{
"operations": [
{
"operation": "upsert",
"request": {
"key": "key1",
"value": "myData"
}
},
{
"operation": "delete",
"request": {
"key": "key2"
}
}
],
"metadata": {
"partitionKey": "planet"
}
}'
Configuring state store for actors
Actors don’t support multiple state stores and require a transactional state store to be used with Dapr. Currently Mongodb, Redis, PostgreSQL, SQL Server, and Azure CosmosDB implement the transactional state store interface.
To specify which state store to be used for actors, specify value of property actorStateStore
as true in the metadata section of the state store component yaml file. Example: Following components yaml will configure redis to be used as the state store for Actors.
apiVersion: dapr.io/v1alpha1
kind: Component
metadata:
name: statestore
namespace: default
spec:
type: state.redis
version: v1
metadata:
- name: redisHost
value: <redis host>
- name: redisPassword
value: ""
- name: actorStateStore
value: "true"
Optional behaviors
Key scheme
A Dapr-compatible state store shall use the following key scheme:
- <App ID>||<state key> key format for general states
- <App ID>||<Actor type>||<Actor id>||<state key> key format for Actor states.
Concurrency
Dapr uses Optimized Concurrency Control (OCC) with ETags. Dapr makes optional the following requirements on state stores:
- An Dapr-compatible state store may support optimistic concurrency control using ETags. When an ETag is associated with an save or delete request, the store shall allow the update only if the attached ETag matches with the latest ETag in the database.
- When ETag is missing in the write requests, the state store shall handle the requests in a last-write-wins fashion. This is to allow optimizations for high-throughput write scenarios in which data contingency is low or has no negative effects.
- A store shall always return ETags when returning states to callers.
Consistency
Dapr allows clients to attach a consistency hint to get, set and delete operation. Dapr support two consistency level: strong and eventual, which are defined as the follows:
Eventual Consistency
Dapr assumes data stores are eventually consistent by default. A state should:
- For read requests, the state store can return data from any of the replicas
- For write request, the state store should asynchronously replicate updates to configured quorum after acknowledging the update request.
Strong Consistency
When a strong consistency hint is attached, a state store should:
- For read requests, the state store should return the most up-to-date data consistently across replicas.
- For write/delete requests, the state store should synchronisely replicate updated data to configured quorum before completing the write request.
Example - Complete options request example
The following is an example set request with a complete options definition:
curl -X POST http://localhost:3500/v1.0/state/starwars \
-H "Content-Type: application/json" \
-d '[
{
"key": "weapon",
"value": "DeathStar",
"etag": "xxxxx",
"options": {
"concurrency": "first-write",
"consistency": "strong"
}
}
]'
Example - Working with ETags
The following is an example which walks through the usage of an ETag when setting/deleting an object in a compatible statestore.
First, store an object in a statestore (this sample uses Redis that has been defined as ‘statestore’):
curl -X POST http://localhost:3500/v1.0/state/statestore \
-H "Content-Type: application/json" \
-d '[
{
"key": "sampleData",
"value": "1"
}
]'
Get the object to find the ETag that was set automatically by the statestore:
curl http://localhost:3500/v1.0/state/statestore/sampleData -v
* Connected to localhost (127.0.0.1) port 3500 (#0)
> GET /v1.0/state/statestore/sampleData HTTP/1.1
> Host: localhost:3500
> User-Agent: curl/7.64.1
> Accept: */*
>
< HTTP/1.1 200 OK
< Server: fasthttp
< Date: Sun, 14 Feb 2021 04:51:50 GMT
< Content-Type: application/json
< Content-Length: 3
< Etag: 1
< Traceparent: 00-3452582897d134dc9793a244025256b1-b58d8d773e4d661d-01
<
* Connection #0 to host localhost left intact
"1"* Closing connection 0
The returned ETag here was 1. Sending a new request to update or delete the data with the wrong ETag will return an error (omitting the ETag will allow the request):
# Update
curl -X POST http://localhost:3500/v1.0/state/statestore \
-H "Content-Type: application/json" \
-d '[
{
"key": "sampleData",
"value": "2",
"etag": "2"
}
]'
{"errorCode":"ERR_STATE_SAVE","message":"failed saving state in state store statestore: possible etag mismatch. error from state store: ERR Error running script (call to f_83e03ec05d6a3b6fb48483accf5e594597b6058f): @user_script:1: user_script:1: failed to set key nodeapp||sampleData"}
# Delete
curl -X DELETE -H 'If-Match: 5' http://localhost:3500/v1.0/state/statestore/sampleData
{"errorCode":"ERR_STATE_DELETE","message":"failed deleting state with key sampleData: possible etag mismatch. error from state store: ERR Error running script (call to f_9b5da7354cb61e2ca9faff50f6c43b81c73c0b94): @user_script:1: user_script:1: failed to delete node
app||sampleData"}
In order to update or delete the object, simply match the ETag in either the request body (update) or the If-Match
header (delete). Note, when the state is updated, it receives a new ETag so further updates or deletes will need to use the new ETag.
# Update
curl -X POST http://localhost:3500/v1.0/state/statestore \
-H "Content-Type: application/json" \
-d '[
{
"key": "sampleData",
"value": "2",
"etag": "1"
}
]'
# Delete
curl -X DELETE -H 'If-Match: 1' http://localhost:3500/v1.0/state/statestore/sampleData
Next Steps
Last modified November 12, 2021 : Merge pull request #1949 from willtsai/az-staticwebapp-versioning (c40e456)