A minimalistic relational database library for Go.
Table of Contents
- Install
- Initialize
- Define
- Create
- CreateAndRead
- Read
- Update
- Delete
- Contexts
- Transactions
- Logs
- Custom Queries
- What's Missing?
- LICENSE
$ go get github.com/azer/crud/v2
import (
"github.com/azer/crud/v2"
_ "github.com/go-sql-driver/mysql"
)
var DB *crud.DB
func init () {
var err error
DB, err = crud.Connect("mysql", os.Getenv("DATABASE_URL"))
err = DB.Ping()
}
type User struct {
Id int `sql:"auto-increment primary-key"`
FirstName string
LastName string
ProfileId int
}
type Profile struct {
Id int `sql:"auto-increment primary-key"`
Bio string `sql:"text"`
}
CRUD will automatically convert column names from "FirstName" (CamelCase) to "first_name" (snake_case) for you. You can still choose custom names though;
type Post struct {
Slug string `sql:"name=slug_id varchar(255) primary-key required"`
}
If no primary key is specified, CRUD will look for a field named "Id" with int type, and set it as auto-incrementing primary-key field.
CreateTables
takes list of structs and makes sure they exist in the database.
err := DB.CreateTables(User{}, Profile{})
err := DB.DropTables(User{}, Profile{})
Shortcut for dropping and creating tables.
err := DB.ResetTables(User{}, Profile{})
CRUD tries to be smart about figuring out the best SQL options for your structs, and lets you choose manually, too. For example;
type Tweet struct {
Text string `sql:"varchar(140) required name=tweet"`
}
Above example sets the type of the Text
column as varchar(140)
, makes it required (NOT NULL
) and changes the column name as tweet
.
Here is the list of the options that you can pass;
- Types:
int
,bigint
,varchar
,text
,date
,time
,timestamp
auto-increment
/autoincrement
/auto_increment
primary-key
/primarykey
/primary_key
required
default='?'
name=?
table-name=?
If you'd like a struct field to be ignored by CRUD, choose -
as options:
type Foo struct {
IgnoreMe string `sql:"-"`
}
Simply pass a struct. It can be pointer or not.
user := &User{1, "Foo", "Bar", 1}
err := DB.Create(user)
Create a row, and read it back from the DB. The values of the struct you passed get resetted to whatever the corresponding DB row has. In the other words, CreateAndRead
creates, and reads. So you got fields generated by the DB scanned to your struct, like ID.
Make sure passing a pointer.
user := User{
FirstName:"Foo"
}
err := DB.CreateAndRead(&user)
user.Id
// => 123
You can read single/multiple rows, or custom values, with the Read
method.
Pass your struct's pointer, and a query;
user := &User{}
err := DB.Read(user, "SELECT * FROM users WHERE id = ?", 1)
// => SELECT * FROM users WHERE id = 1
fmt.Println(user.Name)
// => Foo
users := []*User{}
err := DB.Read(&users, "SELECT * FROM users")
// => SELECT * FROM users
fmt.Println(len(users))
// => 10
names := []string{}
err := DB.Read(&names, "SELECT name FROM users")
name := ""
err := DB.Read(&name, "SELECT name FROM users WHERE id=1")
totalUsers := 0
err := DB.Read(&totalUsers, "SELECT COUNT(id) FROM users"
Updates matching row in database, returns sql.ErrNoRows
nothing matched.
user := &User{}
err := DB.Read(user, "SELECT * FROM users WHERE id = ?", 1)
user.Name = "Yolo"
err := DB.Update(user)
Deletes matching row in database, returns sql.ErrNoRows
nothing matched.
err := DB.Delete(&User{
Id: 1
})
Use WithContext
method to get a DB client with context. Here is an example;
db := DB.WithContext(context.Background())
Use Begin
method of a crud.DB
instance to create a new transaction. Each transaction will provide you following methods;
- Commit
- Rollback
- Exec
- Query
- Create
- CreateAndRead
- Read
- Update
- Delete
tx, err := DB.Begin(context.Background())
err := tx.Create(&User{
Name: "yolo"
})
err := tx.Delete(&User{
Id: 123
})
err := tx.Commit()
CRUD generates an ID for each transaction, and uses that for logging queries and the state of the transactions. You can override transaction IDs in some use cases such as having same IDs and ID field keys with your Rest framework generating request IDs;
tx.Id = requestId
tx.IdKey = "requestId"
If you want to see crud's internal logs, specify crud
in the LOG
environment variable when you run your app. For example;
$ LOG=crud go run myapp.go
result, err := DB.Query("DROP DATABASE yolo") // or .Exec
DATABASE_URL="?" go test ./...
- Hooks: I'm not sure if this is needed, but worths to consider.
- Foreign Keys: *
- Make UTF-8 Default: Looks like the default charset is not UTF8.