Simple functional helpers for node-postgres.
Requires Node >= ^10.0.0 and node-postgres ^8.0.0
Pool
andClient
are no longer an instance ofpg._Pool
andpg._Client
respectively.isConnected
is renamed withcanConnect
- Now user proper ES6 class extends.
- Due to new es6 codes, this module now requires Node v8.1.4 and above.
- This module no longer mutates pg.Pool and pg.Client, it instead
extends
them and store them aspg._Pool
andpg._Client
- It no longer automatically initialize the
Pool
unless a third Object argument is passed{singleton:true}
pg-Lazy
now returns a default Object{ pg, Pool, Client, sql, _raw }
in whichPool
is an instance ofpg._Pool
and Client is an instance ofpg._Client
. To get the originalpg.Pool
andpg.Client
instances, you can usepg
to access them.- If
{singleton:true}
is passed as a third argument, it then addspool
from the returned Object. Thispool
is an already-initializedpg._Pool
- Read more changes here ChangeLog
npm install pg-lazy pg --save
or yarn add pg-lazy pg
Manual Pool initialization:
const pgLazy = require('pg-lazy');
// create your configuration
const connectionString = 'postgres://localhost:5432/pg_test';
// pool instance is no longer initiated, you must initialize it using pg.Pool.
const { Pool, sql, _raw, pg } = pgLazy(require('pg'), { connectionString });
const pool = new Pool()
async function getUser(name,id){
// regular query
return pool.query(sql`SELECT * FROM TABLE WHERE name = ${name}`);
// many for more than 1 result
return pool.many(sql`SELECT * FROM TABLE WHERE id > ${id}`);
// one for single result
return pool.one(sql`SELECT * FROM TABLE WHERE id = ${id}`);
// none for no result
return pool.many(sql`SELECT * FROM TABLE WHERE id < 0`);
}
async function(){
const username = await getUser('john',5)
}
Automatic Pool initialization:
const pgLazy = require('pg-lazy');
// create your configuration
const connectionString = 'postgres://localhost:5432/pg_test';
// pool instance is automatically initialized when passing {singleton:true}
const { pool, sql, _raw, pg } = pgLazy(require('pg'), { connectionString }, {singleton:true});
async function getUser(name,id){
// regular query
return pool.query(sql`SELECT * FROM TABLE WHERE name = ${name}`);
// many for more than 1 result
return pool.many(sql`SELECT * FROM TABLE WHERE id > ${id}`);
// one for single result
return pool.one(sql`SELECT * FROM TABLE WHERE id = ${id}`);
// none for no result
return pool.many(sql`SELECT * FROM TABLE WHERE id < 0`);
}
async function(){
const username = await getUser('john',5)
}
-
pg.Pool with prototype methods
query
,many
,one
,none
,withTransaction
,canConnect
. -
pg.Client with prototype methods
query
,many
,one
,none
,canConnect
. -
Extends both with
.prepared(name).{query,many,one}()
-
All methods returns a Promise
-
Automatically defaults to Environment variables for DB config, that means you can also set your DB config via
process.env
-
Configures the client parser to parse postgres ints and numerics into javascript numbers (else
SELECT 1::int8
would return a string "1"). -
Accepts String, Objects and connectionString for configuration,
-
Exposes
sql
and_raw
template literal helpers for writing queries.const uname = 'nisha42' const key = 'uname' const direction = 'desc' await pool.one(sql` SELECT * FROM users WHERE lower(uname) = lower(${uname}) `.append(_raw`ORDER BY ${key} ${direction}`))
-
All query methods fail if the query you pass in is not built with the
sql
or_raw
tag. This avoids the issue of accidentally introducing sql injection with template literals. If you want normal template literal behavior (dumb interpolation), you must tag it with_raw
.
const pgLazy = require('pg-lazy');
const url = 'postgres://user:pass@localhost:5432/my-db'
const { pool, sql, _raw, pg } = pgLazy(require('pg'), { connectionString:url },{ singleton:true });
exports.findUserByUname = async function (uname) {
return pool.one(sql`
SELECT *
FROM users
WHERE lower(uname) = lower(${uname})
`)
}
exports.listUsersInCities = async function (cities, direction = 'DESC') {
return pool.many(sql`
SELECT *
FROM users
WHERE city = ANY (${cities})
`.append(_raw`ORDER BY uname ${direction}`))
}
exports.transferBalance = async function (from, to, amount) {
return pool.withTransaction(async (client) => {
await client.query(sql`
UPDATE accounts SET amount = amount - ${amount} WHERE id = ${from}
`)
await client.query(sql`
UPDATE accounts SET amount = amount + ${amount} WHERE id = ${to}
`)
})
}
Check more examples on the Test folder
pg-extra forces you to tag template strings with sql
or _raw
.
You usually use sql
.
sql
is a simple helper that translates this:
sql`
SELECT *
FROM users
WHERE lower(uname) = lower(${'nisha42'})
AND faveFood = ANY (${['kibble', 'tuna']})
`
into the sql bindings object that node-postgres expects:
{
text: `
SELECT *
FROM users
WHERE lower(uname) = lower($1)
AND faveFood = ANY ($2)
`,
values: ['nisha42', ['kibble', 'tuna']]
}
_raw
is how you opt-in to regular string interpolation, made ugly
so that it stands out.
Use .append()
to chain on to the query. The argument to .append()
must also be tagged with sql
or _raw
.
sql`${'foo'} ${'bar'}`.append(_raw`${'baz'}`) // '$1 $2 baz'
_raw`${'foo'} ${'bar'}`.append(sql`${'baz'}`) // 'foo bar $1'
Setup local postgres database with seeded rows that the tests expect:
- psql -c 'create user lazy_test_user with password '"'lazy_test_pw'"';' -U postgres
- psql -c 'create database lazy_test owner lazy_test_user;' -U postgres
- psql -d lazy_test -c 'create table bars (n int not null);' -U lazy_test_user
- psql -d lazy_test -c 'insert into bars (n) values (1), (2), (3);' -U lazy_test_user
Then run the tests:
`yarn test` or `npm test`
- Heavily inspired by pg-extra.