TINKERPOP-3247 Convert request bindings to gremlin-lang string format Moving parameters from binary-serialized maps to string representations makes the request side pure text, decoupling Gremlin language evolution from GraphBinary versioning. New types can be introduced in minor/patch versions without touching GraphBinary, eliminating the need for a major version bump across the ecosystem for every new request-side type. The asParameter() fallback is replaced with an unsupportedType flag that records the class name and falls back to toString(). A flag is used rather than throwing because embedded Traversals build GremlinLang as a side effect but never send it, so unknown types must not break execution. All other GLVs throw immediately since they have no embedded mode and the early throw gives better errors. Client APIs accept both map and string bindings (but not both at the same time) because users who use the Client directly with raw Gremlin strings shouldn't need to hand-craft gremlin-lang map literals. Mixing both throws immediately to prevent silent loss where one set of bindings would be discarded. Edge and VertexProperty tests that relied on the old asParameter fallback were removed because they aren't supported in gremlin-lang.
Apache TinkerPop™ is a graph computing framework for both graph databases (OLTP) and graph analytic systems (OLAP). It provides the Gremlin graph traversal language, drivers, and tools for working with property graphs across a wide variety of underlying data systems.
TinkerPop defines a common interface and language (Gremlin) so that applications can work against many different graph systems without being locked into a single vendor. It includes a reference in‑memory graph database (TinkerGraph), Gremlin Server, language variants, and a rich collection of recipes and documentation.
Key resources:
TinkerPop uses Maven and requires Java 11/17 for proper building and proper operations. To build, execute unit tests and package Gremlin Console/Server run:
mvn clean install
Please see the Building on Windows section for Windows-specific build instructions.
The zip distributions can be found in the following directories:
gremlin-server/targetgremlin-console/targetPlease see the CONTRIBUTING.md file for more detailed information and options for building, test running and developing TinkerPop.
Download Gremlin Console (compatible with Java 11/17) and unzip to a directory, then:
$ bin/gremlin.sh \,,,/ (o o) -----oOOo-(3)-oOOo----- plugin activated: tinkerpop.server plugin activated: tinkerpop.utilities plugin activated: tinkerpop.tinkergraph gremlin> Gremlin.version() ==>3.8.0 gremlin> graph = TinkerFactory.createModern() ==>tinkergraph[vertices:6 edges:6] gremlin> g = traversal().with(graph) ==>graphtraversalsource[tinkergraph[vertices:6 edges:6], standard] gremlin> g.V().has('name','vadas').valueMap() ==>[name:[vadas], age:[27]]
From the Gremlin Console, you can connect to a TinkerGraph instance and run your first traversals. Refer to the Getting Started for detailed walkthroughs and examples.
Common ways to use TinkerPop include:
See the Reference Documentation for supported features, configuration options, and other details.
The full TinkerPop documentation is published on the project website and is also maintained in this repository under docs/src/ as AsciiDoc “books.”
When changing or adding documentation, follow the existing AsciiDoc structure in docs/src/** and update the relevant index.asciidoc files so new content is included in the build.
Contributions to Apache TinkerPop are welcome. The Developer Documentation and contributing guide describe how to set up a development environment, run tests, and submit changes.
CONTRIBUTING.md in the repository root.Before opening a pull request, please:
CHANGELOG.asciidoc and upgrade docs when behavior or public APIs change.If you use AI coding agents or IDE assistants when working on TinkerPop, please consult AGENTS.md. That file summarizes:
AGENTS.md is a concise guide for tools and tool‑using contributors, while CONTRIBUTING.md and the Developer Documentation remain the canonical sources for project policies and processes.
Apache TinkerPop is an open source project of The Apache Software Foundation and is licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0. See the LICENSE file in this repository for details.