The less-opinionated Node.js database abstraction layer
Any-DB is in maintenance mode and bug fixes will happen infrequently/never.* What this means for you depends on how you are using any-db:
- If you need support for a fixed set of database engines: you should replace the dependency on any-db with the underlying database driver(s). Code adjustments should be minimal and you'll get access to all the modern features provided by the database drivers that any-db doesn't expose (such as promises).
- If you need to support arbitrary runtime defined database connections: any-db is still functional, but has had to start restricting the driver versions it depends on. If you are interested in maintaining these packages feel free to contact me.
- If you are using a library that depends on any-db: contact the author of that library and ask them to read this notice.
* Why? I haven't used any-db myself in nearly a decade and there are no other maintainers.
Establish a connection:
// Takes an optional callback
var conn = anyDB.createConnection('driver://user:pass@hostname/database')
Make queries:
var sql = 'SELECT * FROM questions'
// query() returns a readable stream
conn.query(sql).on('data', function (row) {})
// pass a callback to collect results
conn.query(sql, function (error, result) {})
Use bound parameters:
sql += ' WHERE answer = ?'
conn.query(sql, [42], function (err, res) {})
Manage database transactions with any-db-transaction:
var begin = require('any-db-transaction')
var tx = begin(conn) // Can also take a callback
tx.on('error', function (err) {}) // Emitted for unhandled query errors
tx.query(...) // same interface as connections, plus...
tx.rollback() // this too
tx.commit() // takes an optional callback for errors
Create a connection pool that maintains 2-20 connections:
var pool = anyDB.createPool(dbURL, {min: 2, max: 20})
pool.query(...) // perform a single query, same API as connection
var tx = begin(pool) // create a transaction with the first available connection
pool.close() // close the pool (call when your app should exit)
The purpose of this library is to provide a consistent API for the commonly used functionality of SQL database drivers, while avoiding altering driver behaviour as much as possible.
npm install --save any-db-{postgres,mysql,sqlite3,mssql} any-db
All of the adapter libraries have any-db
as a peerDependency, which means
that you will have to install any-db
as well.
Add any-db
to peerDependencies
in package.json. This allows users of your
library to satisfy the any-db dependency by installing the adapter of their
choice. If you need to run tests, list it as a devDependency
too.
module.exports := {
createConnection: (Url, Continuation<Connection>?) => Connection
createPool: (Url, PoolConfig) => ConnectionPool
}
Url := String | { adapter: String }
PoolConfig := {
min: Number,
max: Number,
onConnect: (Connection, ((Error) => void) => void
reset: (Connection, ((Error) => void) => void
}
Continuation := (Maybe<Error>, Any) => void
The API of Connection and Query objects is fully described in the
adapter-spec, while Transaction and ConnectionPool objects have
their own documentation. Connections, transactions and pools all have a query
method that behaves consistently between drivers.
Both exported functions require an Url
as their first parameter. This can
either be a string of the form adapter://user:password@host/database
(which
will be parsed by parse-db-url) or an object. When an object is used, it
must have an adapter
property, and any other properties required by the
specified adapters createConnection method.
See also: README for your chosen adapter (MS SQL, MySQL, Postgres, and SQLite3)
MIT