Read key-value pairs
To get the value for a given key, call the get()
method of the KV binding on any KV namespace you have bound to your Worker code:
The get()
method returns a promise you can await
on to get the value. If the key is not found, the promise will resolve with the literal value null
.
An example of reading a key from within a Worker:
The following methods are provided to read from KV:
To get the value for a given key, call the get()
method on any KV namespace you have bound to your Worker code:
The get()
method returns a promise you can await
on to get the value. If the key is not found, the promise will resolve with the literal value null
.
key
:string
- The key of the KV pair.
type
:"text" | "json" | "arrayBuffer" | "stream"
- Optional. The type of the value to be returned.
text
is the default.
- Optional. The type of the value to be returned.
options
:{ cacheTtl?: number, type?: "text" | "json" | "arrayBuffer" | "stream" }
- Optional. Object containing the optional
cacheTtl
andtype
properties. ThecacheTtl
property defines the length of time in seconds that a KV result is cached in the global network location it is accessed from (minimum: 60). Thetype
property defines the type of the value to be returned.
- Optional. Object containing the optional
response
:Promise<string | Object | ArrayBuffer | ReadableStream | null>
- The value for the requested KV pair. The response type will depend on the
type
parameter provided for theget()
command as follows:text
: Astring
(default).json
: An object decoded from a JSON string.arrayBuffer
: AnArrayBuffer
↗ instance.stream
: AReadableStream
↗.
- The value for the requested KV pair. The response type will depend on the
The get()
method may return stale values. If a given key has recently been read in a given location, writes or updates to the key made in other locations may take up to 60 seconds (or the duration of the cacheTtl
) to display.
To get the value for a given key along with its metadata, call the getWithMetadata()
method on any KV namespace you have bound to your Worker code:
Metadata is a serializable value you append to each KV entry.
key
:string
- The key of the KV pair.
type
:"text" | "json" | "arrayBuffer" | "stream"
- Optional. The type of the value to be returned.
text
is the default.
- Optional. The type of the value to be returned.
options
:{ cacheTtl?: number, type?: "text" | "json" | "arrayBuffer" | "stream" }
- Optional. Object containing the optional
cacheTtl
andtype
properties. ThecacheTtl
property defines the length of time in seconds that a KV result is cached in the global network location it is accessed from (minimum: 60). Thetype
property defines the type of the value to be returned.
- Optional. Object containing the optional
-
response
:Promise<{ value: string | Object | ArrayBuffer | ReadableStream | null, metadata: string | null }>
- An object containing the value and the metadata for the requested KV pair. The type of the value attribute will depend on the
type
parameter provided for thegetWithMetadata()
command as follows:text
: Astring
(default).json
: An object decoded from a JSON string.arrayBuffer
: AnArrayBuffer
↗ instance.stream
: AReadableStream
↗.
- An object containing the value and the metadata for the requested KV pair. The type of the value attribute will depend on the
If there is no metadata associated with the requested key-value pair, null
will be returned for metadata.
The getWithMetadata()
method may return stale values. If a given key has recently been read in a given location, writes or updates to the key made in other locations may take up to 60 seconds (or the duration of the cacheTtl
) to display.
An example of reading a key with metadata from within a Worker:
For simple values, use the default text
type which provides you with your value as a string
. For convenience, a json
type is also specified which will convert a JSON value into an object before returning the object to you. For large values, use stream
to request a ReadableStream
. For binary values, use arrayBuffer
to request an ArrayBuffer
.
For large values, the choice of type
can have a noticeable effect on latency and CPU usage. For reference, the type
can be ordered from fastest to slowest as stream
, arrayBuffer
, text
, and json
.
cacheTtl
is a parameter that defines the length of time in seconds that a KV result is cached in the global network location it is accessed from.
Defining the length of time in seconds is useful for reducing cold read latency on keys that are read relatively infrequently. cacheTtl
is useful if your data is write-once or write-rarely.
cacheTtl
is not recommended if your data is updated often and you need to see updates shortly after they are written, because writes that happen from other global network locations will not be visible until the cached value expires.
The cacheTtl
parameter must be an integer greater than or equal to 60
, which is the default.
The effective cacheTtl
of an already cached item can be reduced by getting it again with a lower cacheTtl
. For example, if you did NAMESPACE.get(key, {cacheTtl: 86400})
but later realized that caching for 24 hours was too long, you could NAMESPACE.get(key, {cacheTtl: 300})
or even NAMESPACE.get(key)
and it would check for newer data to respect the provided cacheTtl
, which defaults to 60 seconds.
You can read key-value pairs from the command line with Wrangler and from the REST API.