ts-postgres

PostgreSQL client in TypeScript

Usage no npm install needed!

<script type="module">
  import tsPostgres from 'https://cdn.skypack.dev/ts-postgres';
</script>

README

ts-postgres

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Non-blocking PostgreSQL client for Node.js written in TypeScript.

Install

To install the latest version of this library:

$ npm install ts-postgres@latest

Features

  • Fast!
  • Supports both binary and text value formats
    • Result data is currently sent in binary format only
  • Multiple queries can be sent at once (pipeline)
  • Extensible value model
  • Hybrid query result object
    • Iterable (synchronous or asynchronous; one row at a time)
    • Promise-based
    • Streaming

Usage

The client uses an async/await-based programming model.

import { Client } from 'ts-postgres';

async function main() {
    const client = new Client();
    await client.connect();

    try {
        // Querying the client returns a query result promise
        // which is also an asynchronous result iterator.
        const result = client.query(
            "SELECT 'Hello ' || $1 || '!' AS message",
            ['world']
        );

        for await (const row of result) {
            // 'Hello world!'
            console.log(row.get('message'));
        }
    } finally {
        await client.end();
    }
}

await main()

Waiting on the result (i.e., result iterator) returns the complete query result.

const result = await client.query(...)

If the query fails, an exception is thrown.

Connection options

The client constructor takes an optional Configuration object.

For example, to connect to a remote host use the host configuration key:

const client = new Client({"host": <hostname>});

The following table lists the various configuration options and their default value when applicable.

Key Type Default
host string "localhost"
port number 5432
user string The username of the process owner
database string "postgres"
password string
types Map<DataType, ValueTypeReader> Default value mapping for built-in types
extraFloatDigits number 0
keepAlive boolean true
preparedStatementPrefix string "tsp_"

Querying

The query method accepts a Query object or a number of arguments that together define the query, the first argument (query text) being the only required one.

The initial example above could be written as:

const query = new Query(
    "SELECT 'Hello ' || $1 || '!' AS message",
    ['world']
);
const result = await client.execute(query);

Passing query parameters

Query parameters use the format $1, $2 etc.

When a specific data type is not inferrable from the query, PostgreSQL uses DataType.Text as the default data type (which is mapped to the string type in TypeScript). An explicit type can be provided in two different ways:

  1. Using type cast in the query, e.g. $1::int.

  2. By passing a list of types to the query method:

    import { DataType } from 'ts-postgres';
    const result = await client.query(
       "select $1 || ' bottles of beer'", [99], [DataType.Int4]
    );
    

Note that the number type in TypeScript has a maximum safe integer value which lies between and DataType.Int8 – given by Number.MAX_SAFE_INTEGER. To use DataType.Int8 the bigint type should be used.

Iterator interface

Whether we're operating on a stream or an already waited for result set, the iterator interface provides the most high-level row interface. This also applies when using the spread operator:

const rows = [...result];

Each row provides direct access to values through its data attribute, but we can also get a value by name using the get(name) method.

for (const row of rows) {
  console.log('The number is: ' + row.get('i')); // 1, 2, 3, ...
}

Note that values are polymorphic and need to be explicitly cast to a concrete type such as number or string.

Result interface

This interface is available on the already waited for result object. It makes data available in the rows attribute as an array of arrays (of values).

for (const row of result.rows) {
  console.log('The number is: ' + row[0]); // 1, 2, 3, ...
}

This is the most efficient way to work with result data. Column names are available as the names attribute of a result.

Streaming

A query can support streaming of one or more columns directly into an asynchronous stream such as a network socket, or a file.

Assuming that socket is a writable stream:

const query = new Query(
    "SELECT some_bytea_column",
    {streams: {"some_bytea_column": socket}}
);
const result = await client.execute(query);

This can for example be used to reduce time to first byte and memory use.

Multiple queries

The query command accepts a single query only. If you need to send multiple queries, just call the method multiple times. For example, to send an update command in a transaction:

client.query('begin');
client.query('update ...');
await client.query('commit');

The queries are sent back to back over the wire, but PostgreSQL still processes them one at a time, in the order they were sent (first in, first out).

Prepared statements

You can prepare a query and subsequently execute it multiple times. This is also known as a "prepared statement".

const statement = await client.prepare(
    `SELECT 'Hello ' || $1 || '!' AS message`
);
for await (const row of statement.execute(['world'])) {
    console.log(row.get('message')); // 'Hello world!'
}

When the prepared statement is no longer needed, it should be closed to release the resource.

await statement.close();

Prepared statements can be used (executed) multiple times, even concurrently.

Notes

Queries with parameters are sent using the prepared statement variant of the extended query protocol. In this variant, the type of each parameter is determined prior to parameter binding, ensuring that values are encoded in the correct format.

If a query has no parameters, it uses the portal variant which saves a round trip.

The copy commands are not supported.

FAQ

  1. How do I set up a pool of connections? You can for example use the generic-pool library:

    import { createPool } from 'generic-pool';
    
    const pool = createPool({
        create: async () => {
            const client = new Client();
            return client.connect().then(() => {
                client.on('error', console.log);
                return client;
            });
        },
        destroy: async (client: Client) => {
            return client.end().then(() => { })
        },
        validate: (client: Client) => {
            return Promise.resolve(!client.closed);
        }
    }, { testOnBorrow: true });
    
    pool.use(...)
    

Benchmarking

Use the following environment variable to run tests in "benchmark" mode.

$ NODE_ENV=benchmark npm run test

Support

ts-postgres is free software. If you encounter a bug with the library please open an issue on the GitHub repo.

License

Copyright (c) 2018-2021 Malthe Borch (mborch@gmail.com)

Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:

The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software.

THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.