1.9 KiB
Joplin Server items
To upload an item to Joplin Server:
-
Call
PUT /api/items
with the serialized Joplin item. Examples of serialized items are described inpackages/app-cli/tests/support/syncTargetSnapshots
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That route is in
packages/server/src/routes/api/items.ts
. In there it's going to do some basic processing on the item, and eventually will callmodels.item().saveFromRawContent
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This
saveFromRawContent
is where most of the job is done - it's going to detect what the item is, whether it's a note, notebook, etc. (this is the serialised content, as described above), or a binary file (resource).-
If it's a resource, the content is going to be saved as-is in the database
-
If it's an item, it's going to deserialise it because we want to save certain properties separately in the database, such as the parent ID, the type (whether it's a note, notebook, etc.). We save these properties separately purely for performance reasons. Once the properties have been extracted, the rest of the object is serialised back to JSON and saved to the database.
-
-
In the end, the content is saved to the
items
table. The JSON item or the resource binary content will be saved to thecontent
field. Other Joplin items properties will be saved to thejop_*
fields. For example, the ID, the parent ID, whether encryption is enabled, etc. -
items.jop_id
is the ID as it was generated on the client.items.id
is the server-side ID. We need two different IDs because we have no way to guarantee thatitems.jop_id
is globally unique since it's generated client-side. -
In
ItemModel
there are various utility functions to deal with the content. This is because it may be saved in different places depending on configuration. It can be saved to theitems.content
field in the database, or it can be saved to S3, or to the filesystem. This is why any code that deals with item content must used these utility functions.