Node native bindings to the PostgreSQL libpq C client library. This module attempts to mirror as closely as possible the C API provided by libpq and provides the absolute minimum level of abstraction. It is intended to be extremely low level and allow you the same access as you would have to libpq directly from C, except in node.js! The obvious trade-off for being "close to the metal" is having to use a very "c style" API in JavaScript.
If you have a good understanding of libpq or used it before hopefully the methods within node-libpq will be familiar; otherwise, you should probably spend some time reading the official libpq C library documentation to become a bit familiar. Referencing the libpq documentation directly should also provide you with more insight into the methods here. I will do my best to explain any differences from the C code for each method.
I am also building some higher level abstractions to eventually replace the pg.native
portion of node-postgres. They should help as reference material.
This module relies heavily on nan and wouldn't really be possible without it. Mucho thanks to the node-nan team.
You need libpq installed & the pg_config
program should be in your path. You also need node-gyp installed.
$ npm install libpq
Note: for Node.js equal or greater to version 10.16.0 you need to have at least
OpenSSL 1.1.1
installed.
var Libpq = require('libpq');
var pq = new Libpq();
Libpq provides a few different connection functions, some of which are "not preferred" anymore. I've opted to simplify this interface a bit into a single async and single sync connnection function. The function accepts an connection string formatted as outlined in this documentation in section 31.1.1. If the parameters are not supplied, libpq will automatically use environment variables, a pgpass file, and other options. Consult the libpq documentation for a better rundown of all the ways it tries to determine your connection parameters.
I personally always connect with environment variables and skip supplying the optional connectionParams
. Easier, more 12 factor app-ish, and you never risk hard coding any passwords. YMMV. 😄
Asyncronously attempts to connect to the postgres server.
connectionParams
is an optional stringcallback
is mandatory. It is called when the connection has successfully been established.
async Connects to a PostgreSQL backend server process.
This function actually calls the PQconnectdb
blocking connection method in a background thread within node's internal thread-pool. There is a way to do non-blocking network I/O for some of the connecting with libpq directly, but it still blocks when your local file system looking for config files, SSL certificates, .pgpass file, and doing possible dns resolution. Because of this, the best way to get fully non-blocking is to juse use libuv_queue_work
and let node do it's magic and so that's what I do. This function does not block.
Attempts to connect to a PostgreSQL server. BLOCKS until it either succeedes, or fails. If it fails it will throw an exception.
connectionParams
is an optional string
Disconnects from the backend and cleans up all memory used by the libpq connection.
Retrieves the last error message from the connection. This is intended to be used after most functions which return an error code to get more detailed error information about the connection. You can also check this before issuing queries to see if your connection has been lost.
Returns an int representing the file descriptor for the socket used internally by the connection
sync sends a command to the backend and blocks until a result is received.
commandText
is a required string of the query.
snyc sends a command and parameters to the backend and blocks until a result is received.
commandText
is a required string of the query.parameters
is a required array of string values corresponding to each parameter in the commandText.
sync sends a named statement to the server to be prepared for later execution. blocks until a result from the prepare operation is received.
statementName
is a required string of name of the statement to prepare.commandText
is a required string of the query.nParams
is a count of the number of parameters in the commandText.
sync sends a command to the server to execute a previously prepared statement. blocks until the results are returned.
statementName
is a required string of the name of the prepared statement.parameters
are the parameters to pass to the prepared statement.
sync sends a command to the server to describe a previously prepared statement. blocks until the results are returned. Use pq.nparams
and pq.paramtype
to obtain information about the parameters and pq.nfields
, pq.fname
and pq.ftype
about the result columns of the prepared statement.
In libpq the async command execution functions only dispatch a request to the backend to run a query. They do not start result fetching on their own. Because libpq is a C api there is a somewhat complicated "dance" to retrieve the result information in a non-blocking way. node-libpq attempts to do as little as possible to abstract over this; therefore, the following functions are only part of the story. For a complete tutorial on how to dispatch & retrieve results from libpq in an async way you can view the complete approach here
async sends a query to the server to be processed.
commandText
is a required string containing the query text.
Returns true
if the command was sent succesfully or false
if it failed to send.
async sends a query and to the server to be processed.
commandText
is a required string containing the query text.parameters
is an array of parameters as strings used in the parameterized query.
Returns true
if the command was sent succesfully or false
if it failed to send.
async sends a request to the backend to prepare a named statement with the given name.
statementName
is a required string of name of the statement to prepare.commandText
is a required string of the query.nParams
is a count of the number of parameters in the commandText.
Returns true
if the command was sent succesfully or false
if it failed to send.
async sends a request to execute a previously prepared statement.
statementName
is a required string of the name of the prepared statement.parameters
are the parameters to pass to the prepared statement.
Parses received data from the server into a PGresult
struct and sets a pointer internally to the connection object to this result. warning: this function will block if libpq is waiting on async results to be returned from the server. Call pq.isBusy()
to determine if this command will block.
Returns true
if libpq was able to read buffered data & parse a result object. Returns false
if there are no results waiting to be parsed. Generally doing async style queries you'll call this repeadedly until it returns false and then use the result accessor methods to pull results out of the current result set.
After a command is run in either sync or async mode & the results have been received, node-libpq stores the results internally and provides you access to the results via the standard libpq methods. The difference here is libpq will return a pointer to a PGresult structure which you access via libpq functions, but node-libpq stores the most recent result within itself and passes the opaque PGresult structure to the libpq methods. This is to avoid passing around a whole bunch of pointers to unmanaged memory and keeps the burden of properly allocating and freeing memory within node-libpq.
Returns either PGRES_COMMAND_OK
or PGRES_FATAL_ERROR
depending on the status of the last executed command.
Retrieves the error message from the result. This will return null
if the result does not have an error.
Retrieves detailed error information from the current result object. Very similar to PQresultErrorField()
except instead of passing a fieldCode and retrieving a single field, retrieves all fields from the error at once on a single object. The object returned is a simple hash, not an instance of an error object. Example: if you wanted to access PG_DIAG_MESSAGE_DETAIL
you would do the following:
console.log(pq.errorFields().messageDetail)
Manually frees the memory associated with a PGresult
pointer. Generally this is called for you, but if you absolutely want to free the pointer yourself, you can.
Retrieve the number of tuples (rows) from the result.
Retrieve the number of fields (columns) from the result.
Retrieve the name of the field (column) at the given offset. Offset starts at 0.
Retrieve the Oid
of the table at the given offset. Offset starts at 0.
Retrieve the column number (within its table) of the field at the given offset. Offset starts at 0. Query-result column numbers start at 0, but table columns have nonzero numbers.
Retrieve the Oid
of the field (column) at the given offset. Offset starts at 0.
Retrieve the text value at a given tuple (row) and field (column) offset. Both offsets start at 0. A null value is returned as the empty string ''
.
Returns true
if the value at the given offsets is actually null
. Otherwise returns false
. This is because pq.getvalue()
returns an empty string for both an actual empty string and for a null
value. Weird, huh?
Returns the number of parameters a prepared statement expects.
Returns the Oid
of the prepared statement's parameter at the given offset.
Returns the status string associated with a result. Something akin to INSERT 3 0
if you inserted 3 rows.
Returns the number of tuples (rows) affected by the command. Even though this is a number, it is returned as a string to mirror libpq's behavior.
These functions don't have a direct match within libpq. They exist to allow you to monitor the readability or writability of the libpq socket based on your platforms equivilant to select()
. This allows you to perform async I/O completely from JavaScript.
This uses libuv to start a read watcher on the socket open to the backend. As soon as this socket becomes readable the pq
instance will emit a readable
event. It is up to you to call pq.consumeInput()
one or more times to clear this read notification or it will continue to emit read events over and over and over. The exact flow is outlined [here] under the documentation for PQisBusy
.
Tells libuv to stop the read watcher on the connection socket.
Call this to make sure the socket has flushed all data to the operating system. Once the socket is writable, your callback will be called. Usefully when using PQsetNonBlocking
and PQflush
for async writing.
These are all documented in detail within the libpq documentation and function almost identically.
Reads waiting data from the socket. If the socket is not readable and you call this it will block so be careful and only call it within the readable
callback for the most part.
Returns true
if data was read. Returns false
if there was an error. You can access error details with pq.errorMessage()
.
Returns true
if calling pq.consumeInput()
would block waiting for more data. Returns false
if all data has been read from the socket. Once this returns false
it is safe to call pq.getResult()
Toggle the socket blocking on write. Returns true
if the socket's state was succesfully toggled. Returns false
if there was an error.
nonBlocking
istrue
to set the connection to use non-blocking writes.false
to use blocking writes.
Flushes buffered data to the socket. Returns 1
if socket is not write-ready at which case you should call pq.writable
with a callback and wait for the socket to be writable and then call pq.flush()
again. Returns 0
if all data was flushed. Returns -1
if there was an error.
Checks for NOTIFY
messages that have come in. If any have been received they will be in the following format:
var msg = {
relname: 'name of channel',
extra: 'message passed to notify command',
be_pid: 130
}
After issuing a successful command like COPY table FROM stdin
you can start putting buffers directly into the databse with this function.
buffer
Is a required node buffer of text data such asBuffer('column1\tcolumn2\n')
Returns 1
if sent succesfully. Returns 0
if the command would block (only if you have called pq.setNonBlocking(true)
). Returns -1
if there was an error sending the command.
Signals the backed your copy procedure is complete. If you pass errorMessage
it will be sent to the backend and effectively cancel the copy operation.
errorMessage
is an optional string you can pass to cancel the copy operation.
Returns 1
if sent succesfully. Returns 0
if the command would block (only if you have called pq.setNonBlocking(true)
). Returns -1
if there was an error sending the command.
After issuing a successfuly command like COPY table TO stdout
gets copy data from the connection.
Returns a node buffer if there is data available.
Returns 0
if the copy is still in progress (only if you have called pq.setNonBlocking(true)
). Returns -1
if the copy is completed. Returns -2
if there was an error.
async
is a boolean. Passfalse
to block waiting for data from the backend. defaults tofalse
Exact copy of the PQescapeLiteral
function within libpq. Requires an established connection but does not perform any I/O.
Exact copy of the PQescapeIdentifier
function within libpq. Requires an established connection but does not perform any I/O.
Issues a request to cancel the currently executing query on this instance of libpq. Returns true
if the cancel request was sent. Returns a string
error message if the cancel request failed for any reason. The string will contain the error message provided by libpq.
Returns the version of the connected PostgreSQL backend server as a number.
$ npm test
To run the tests you need a PostgreSQL backend reachable by typing psql
with no connection parameters in your terminal. The tests use environment variables to connect to the backend.
An example of supplying a specific host the tests:
$ PGHOST=blabla.mydatabasehost.com npm test
The MIT License (MIT)
Copyright (c) 2014 Brian M. Carlson
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