ksql

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Published: Nov 13, 2022 License: MIT Imports: 19 Imported by: 34

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KSQL the Keep it Simple SQL library

KSQL was created to offer an actually simple and satisfactory tool for interacting with SQL Databases in Golang.

The core idea on KSQL is to offer an easy to use interface, the actual communication with the database is decoupled so we can use KSQL on top of pgx, database/sql and possibly other tools. You can even create you own backend adapter for KSQL which is useful in some situations.

In this README you will find examples for "Getting Started" with the library, for more advanced use-cases please read our Wiki.

Let's start with some Code:

This short example below is a TLDR version for illustrating how easy it is to use KSQL.

You will find more complete examples on the sections below.

package main

import (
	"context"
	"fmt"
	"log"
	"os"

	"github.com/vingarcia/ksql"
	"github.com/vingarcia/ksql/adapters/kpgx"
)

var UsersTable = ksql.NewTable("users", "user_id")

type User struct {
	ID   int    `ksql:"user_id"`
	Name string `ksql:"name"`
	Type string `ksql:"type"`
}

func main() {
	ctx := context.Background()
	db, err := kpgx.New(ctx, os.Getenv("POSTGRES_URL"), ksql.Config{})
	if err != nil {
		log.Fatalf("unable connect to database: %s", err)
	}
	defer db.Close()

	// For querying only some attributes you can
	// create a custom struct like this:
	var count []struct {
		Count string `ksql:"count"`
		Type string `ksql:"type"`
	}
	err = db.Query(ctx, &count, "SELECT type, count(*) as count FROM users WHERE type = $1 GROUP BY type", "admin")
	if err != nil {
		log.Fatalf("unable to query users: %s", err)
	}

	fmt.Println("number of users by type:", count)

	// For loading entities from the database KSQL can build
	// the SELECT part of the query for you if you omit it like this:
	var users []User
	err = db.Query(ctx, &users, "FROM users WHERE type = $1", "admin")
	if err != nil {
		log.Fatalf("unable to query users: %s", err)
	}

	fmt.Println("users:", users)
}

We currently have 4 constructors available, one of them is illustrated above (kpgx.New()), the other ones have the exact same signature but work on different databases, they are:

  • kpgx.New(ctx, os.Getenv("DATABASE_URL"), ksql.Config{}) for Postgres, it works on top of pgxpool
  • kmysql.New(ctx, os.Getenv("DATABASE_URL"), ksql.Config{}) for MySQL, it works on top of database/sql
  • ksqlserver.New(ctx, os.Getenv("DATABASE_URL"), ksql.Config{}) for SQLServer, it works on top of database/sql
  • ksqlite3.New(ctx, os.Getenv("DATABASE_URL"), ksql.Config{}) for SQLite3, it works on top of database/sql

The KSQL Interface

The current interface contains the methods the users are expected to use, and it is also used for making it easy to mock the whole library if needed.

This interface is declared in the project as ksql.Provider and is displayed below.

We plan on keeping it very simple with a small number of well thought functions that cover all use-cases, so don't expect many additions:

// Provider describes the KSQL public behavior
//
// The Insert, Patch, Delete and QueryOne functions return `ksql.ErrRecordNotFound`
// if no record was found or no rows were changed during the operation.
type Provider interface {
	Insert(ctx context.Context, table Table, record interface{}) error
	Patch(ctx context.Context, table Table, record interface{}) error
	Delete(ctx context.Context, table Table, idOrRecord interface{}) error

	Query(ctx context.Context, records interface{}, query string, params ...interface{}) error
	QueryOne(ctx context.Context, record interface{}, query string, params ...interface{}) error
	QueryChunks(ctx context.Context, parser ChunkParser) error

	Exec(ctx context.Context, query string, params ...interface{}) (Result, error)
	Transaction(ctx context.Context, fn func(Provider) error) error
}

Using KSQL

In the example below we'll cover all the most common use-cases such as:

  1. Inserting records
  2. Updating records
  3. Deleting records
  4. Querying one or many records
  5. Making transactions

More advanced use cases are illustrated on their own pages on our Wiki:

For the more common use-cases please read the example below, which is also available here if you want to compile it yourself.

package main

import (
	"context"
	"fmt"

	"github.com/vingarcia/ksql"
	"github.com/vingarcia/ksql/adapters/ksqlite3"
	"github.com/vingarcia/ksql/nullable"
)

// User ...
type User struct {
	ID   int    `ksql:"id"`
	Name string `ksql:"name"`
	Age  int    `ksql:"age"`

	// This field will be saved as JSON in the database
	Address Address `ksql:"address,json"`
}

// PartialUpdateUser ...
type PartialUpdateUser struct {
	ID      int      `ksql:"id"`
	Name    *string  `ksql:"name"`
	Age     *int     `ksql:"age"`
	Address *Address `ksql:"address,json"`
}

// Address ...
type Address struct {
	State string `json:"state"`
	City  string `json:"city"`
}

// UsersTable informs KSQL the name of the table and that it can
// use the default value for the primary key column name: "id"
var UsersTable = ksql.NewTable("users")

func main() {
	ctx := context.Background()

	// The available adapters are:
	// - kpgx.New(ctx, connURL, ksql.Config{})
	// - kmysql.New(ctx, connURL, ksql.Config{})
	// - ksqlserver.New(ctx, connURL, ksql.Config{})
	// - ksqlite3.New(ctx, connURL, ksql.Config{})
	//
	// For more detailed examples see:
	// - `./examples/all_adapters/all_adapters.go`
	//
	// In this example we'll use sqlite3:
	db, err := ksqlite3.New(ctx, "/tmp/hello.sqlite", ksql.Config{
		MaxOpenConns: 1,
	})
	if err != nil {
		panic(err.Error())
	}
	defer db.Close()

	// In the definition below, please note that BLOB is
	// the only type we can use in sqlite for storing JSON.
	_, err = db.Exec(ctx, `CREATE TABLE IF NOT EXISTS users (
	  id INTEGER PRIMARY KEY,
		age INTEGER,
		name TEXT,
		address BLOB
	)`)
	if err != nil {
		panic(err.Error())
	}

	var alison = User{
		Name: "Alison",
		Age:  22,
		Address: Address{
			State: "MG",
		},
	}
	err = db.Insert(ctx, UsersTable, &alison)
	if err != nil {
		panic(err.Error())
	}
	fmt.Println("Alison ID:", alison.ID)

	// Inserting inline:
	err = db.Insert(ctx, UsersTable, &User{
		Name: "Cristina",
		Age:  27,
		Address: Address{
			State: "SP",
		},
	})
	if err != nil {
		panic(err.Error())
	}

	// Deleting Alison:
	err = db.Delete(ctx, UsersTable, alison.ID)
	if err != nil {
		panic(err.Error())
	}

	// Retrieving Cristina, note that if you omit the SELECT part of the query
	// KSQL will build it for you (efficiently) based on the fields from the struct:
	var cris User
	err = db.QueryOne(ctx, &cris, "FROM users WHERE name = ? ORDER BY id", "Cristina")
	if err != nil {
		panic(err.Error())
	}
	fmt.Printf("Cristina: %#v\n", cris)

	// Updating all fields from Cristina:
	cris.Name = "Cris"
	err = db.Patch(ctx, UsersTable, cris)

	// Changing the age of Cristina but not touching any other fields:

	// Partial update technique 1:
	err = db.Patch(ctx, UsersTable, struct {
		ID  int `ksql:"id"`
		Age int `ksql:"age"`
	}{ID: cris.ID, Age: 28})
	if err != nil {
		panic(err.Error())
	}

	// Partial update technique 2:
	err = db.Patch(ctx, UsersTable, PartialUpdateUser{
		ID:  cris.ID,
		Age: nullable.Int(28), // (just a pointer to an int, if null it won't be updated)
	})
	if err != nil {
		panic(err.Error())
	}

	// Listing first 10 users from the database
	// (each time you run this example a new Cristina is created)
	//
	// Note: Using this function it is recommended to set a LIMIT, since
	// not doing so can load too many users on your computer's memory or
	// cause an Out Of Memory Kill.
	//
	// If you need to query very big numbers of users we recommend using
	// the `QueryChunks` function.
	var users []User
	err = db.Query(ctx, &users, "FROM users LIMIT 10")
	if err != nil {
		panic(err.Error())
	}

	fmt.Printf("Users: %#v\n", users)

	// Making transactions:
	err = db.Transaction(ctx, func(db ksql.Provider) error {
		var cris2 User
		err = db.QueryOne(ctx, &cris2, "FROM users WHERE id = ?", cris.ID)
		if err != nil {
			// This will cause an automatic rollback:
			return err
		}

		err = db.Patch(ctx, UsersTable, PartialUpdateUser{
			ID:  cris2.ID,
			Age: nullable.Int(29),
		})
		if err != nil {
			// This will also cause an automatic rollback and then panic again
			// so that we don't hide the panic inside the KSQL library
			panic(err.Error())
		}

		// Commits the transaction
		return nil
	})
	if err != nil {
		panic(err.Error())
	}
}

Benchmark Comparison

The results of the benchmark are good: they show that KSQL is in practical terms, as fast as sqlx which was our goal from the start.

To understand the benchmark below you must know that all tests are performed using Postgres 12.1 and that we are comparing the following tools:

  • KSQL using the adapter that wraps database/sql
  • KSQL using the adapter that wraps pgx
  • database/sql
  • sqlx
  • pgx (with pgxpool)
  • gorm
  • sqlc
  • sqlboiler

For each of these tools we are running 3 different queries:

The insert-one query looks like:

INSERT INTO users (name, age) VALUES ($1, $2) RETURNING id

The single-row query looks like:

SELECT id, name, age FROM users OFFSET $1 LIMIT 1

The multiple-rows query looks like:

SELECT id, name, age FROM users OFFSET $1 LIMIT 10

Keep in mind that some of the tools tested (like GORM) actually build the queries internally so the actual code used for the benchmark might differ a little bit from the example ones above.

Without further ado, here are the results:

$ make bench TIME=5s
sqlc generate
go test -bench=. -benchtime=5s
goos: linux
goarch: amd64
pkg: github.com/vingarcia/ksql/benchmarks
cpu: Intel(R) Core(TM) i7-10750H CPU @ 2.60GHz
BenchmarkInsert/ksql/sql-adapter/insert-one-12         	    9256	    626985 ns/op
BenchmarkInsert/ksql/pgx-adapter/insert-one-12         	   11056	    548748 ns/op
BenchmarkInsert/sql/insert-one-12                      	    9565	    623659 ns/op
BenchmarkInsert/sql/prep-stmt/insert-one-12            	   10000	    541058 ns/op
BenchmarkInsert/sqlx/insert-one-12                     	    9319	    637775 ns/op
BenchmarkInsert/sqlx/prep-stmt/insert-one-12           	   10000	    549806 ns/op
BenchmarkInsert/pgxpool/insert-one-12                  	   10000	    546349 ns/op
BenchmarkInsert/gorm/insert-one-12                     	    8859	    675650 ns/op
BenchmarkInsert/sqlc/insert-one-12                     	    9889	    634589 ns/op
BenchmarkInsert/sqlc/prep-stmt/insert-one-12           	   10000	    552079 ns/op
BenchmarkInsert/sqlboiler/insert-one-12                	    9536	    633515 ns/op
BenchmarkQuery/ksql/sql-adapter/single-row-12          	   41222	    144799 ns/op
BenchmarkQuery/ksql/sql-adapter/multiple-rows-12       	   38523	    156556 ns/op
BenchmarkQuery/ksql/pgx-adapter/single-row-12          	   85074	     72465 ns/op
BenchmarkQuery/ksql/pgx-adapter/multiple-rows-12       	   70690	     84502 ns/op
BenchmarkQuery/sql/single-row-12                       	   41802	    144467 ns/op
BenchmarkQuery/sql/multiple-rows-12                    	   39248	    147765 ns/op
BenchmarkQuery/sql/prep-stmt/single-row-12             	   80530	     71376 ns/op
BenchmarkQuery/sql/prep-stmt/multiple-rows-12          	   76730	     77769 ns/op
BenchmarkQuery/sqlx/single-row-12                      	   41960	    146817 ns/op
BenchmarkQuery/sqlx/multiple-rows-12                   	   39349	    152887 ns/op
BenchmarkQuery/sqlx/prep-stmt/single-row-12            	   81045	     73004 ns/op
BenchmarkQuery/sqlx/prep-stmt/multiple-rows-12         	   75256	     78604 ns/op
BenchmarkQuery/pgxpool/single-row-12                   	   82630	     72241 ns/op
BenchmarkQuery/pgxpool/multiple-rows-12                	   81619	     74408 ns/op
BenchmarkQuery/gorm/single-row-12                      	   76700	     78651 ns/op
BenchmarkQuery/gorm/multiple-rows-12                   	   62342	     95746 ns/op
BenchmarkQuery/sqlc/single-row-12                      	   41563	    146143 ns/op
BenchmarkQuery/sqlc/multiple-rows-12                   	   40240	    149534 ns/op
BenchmarkQuery/sqlc/prep-stmt/single-row-12            	   83230	     72397 ns/op
BenchmarkQuery/sqlc/prep-stmt/multiple-rows-12         	   79408	     78645 ns/op
BenchmarkQuery/sqlboiler/single-row-12                 	   65866	     93841 ns/op
BenchmarkQuery/sqlboiler/multiple-rows-12              	   65091	     94486 ns/op
PASS
ok  	github.com/vingarcia/ksql/benchmarks	226.109s
Benchmark executed at: 2022-11-13
Benchmark executed on commit: 5bfb5cd92affae29dab3499b07fcd36b70a20057

Running the KSQL tests (for contributors)

The tests use docker-test for setting up all the supported databases, which means that:

  • You need to have docker installed

  • You must be able to run docker without sudo, i.e. if you are not root you should add yourself to the docker group, e.g.:

    $ sudo usermod <your_username> -aG docker
    

    And then restart your login session (or just reboot)

After that you can just run the tests by using:

make test

But it is recommended to first download the required images using:

docker pull postgres:14.0
docker pull mysql:8.0.27
docker pull mcr.microsoft.com/mssql/server:2017-latest

Otherwise the first attempt to run the tests will spend a long time downloading these images and then fail because the TestMain() function is configured to kill the containers after 20 seconds.

TODO List

  • Add support for serializing structs as other formats such as YAML
  • Update ksqltest.FillStructWith to work with ksql:"..,json" tagged attributes
  • Create a way for users to submit user defined dialects
  • Improve error messages (ongoing)
  • Add support for the Patch function to work with maps for partial updates
  • Add support for the Insert function to work with maps
  • Add support for a ksql.Array(params ...interface{}) for allowing queries like this: db.Query(ctx, &user, "SELECT * FROM user WHERE id in (?)", ksql.Array(1,2,3))
  • Improve docs about ksql.Mock

Optimization Oportunities

  • Test if using a pointer on the field info is faster or not
  • Consider passing the cached structInfo as argument for all the functions that use it, so that we don't need to get it more than once in the same call.
  • Use a cache to store often used queries (like pgx)
  • Preload the insert method for all dialects inside ksql.NewTable()
  • Use prepared statements for the helper functions, Update, Insert and Delete.

Features for a possible V2

  • Change the .Transaction(db ksql.Provider) to a .Transaction(ctx context.Context)
  • Make the .Query() method to return a type Query interface { One(); All(); Chunks(); }
  • Have an Update() method that updates without ignoring NULLs as Patch() does
  • Rename NewTable() to just Table() so it feels right to declare it inline when convenient

Documentation

Index

Constants

This section is empty.

Variables

View Source
var ErrAbortIteration error = fmt.Errorf("ksql: abort iteration, should only be used inside QueryChunks function")

ErrAbortIteration should be used inside the QueryChunks function to inform QueryChunks it should stop querying, close the connection and return with no errors.

View Source
var ErrNoValuesToUpdate error = fmt.Errorf("ksql: the input struct contains no values to update")

ErrNoValuesToUpdate informs the error of trying to make an update that would not change any attributes.

This could happen if all the non-ID attributes of the struct are being ignored or if they don't exist.

Since ID attributes are ignored by the Patch() method updating a struct that only have IDs will result in this error. And this error will also occur if the struct does have some non-ID attributes but they are all being ignored.

The reasons that can cause an attribute to be ignored in the Patch() function are: (1) If it is a nil pointer, Patch() will just ignore it. (2) If the attribute is using a modifier that contains the SkipUpdates flag.

View Source
var ErrRecordNotFound error = fmt.Errorf("ksql: the query returned no results: %w", sql.ErrNoRows)

ErrRecordNotFound informs that a given query failed because the record was not found. This error can be returned by the following methods: Update(), QueryOne() and Delete().

Functions

func DeleteTest added in v1.4.2

func DeleteTest(
	t *testing.T,
	driver string,
	connStr string,
	newDBAdapter func(t *testing.T) (DBAdapter, io.Closer),
)

DeleteTest runs all tests for making sure the Delete function is working for a given adapter and driver.

func InsertTest added in v1.4.2

func InsertTest(
	t *testing.T,
	driver string,
	connStr string,
	newDBAdapter func(t *testing.T) (DBAdapter, io.Closer),
)

InsertTest runs all tests for making sure the Insert function is working for a given adapter and driver.

func ModifiersTest added in v1.4.9

func ModifiersTest(
	t *testing.T,
	driver string,
	connStr string,
	newDBAdapter func(t *testing.T) (DBAdapter, io.Closer),
)

func PatchTest added in v1.4.8

func PatchTest(
	t *testing.T,
	driver string,
	connStr string,
	newDBAdapter func(t *testing.T) (DBAdapter, io.Closer),
)

PatchTest runs all tests for making sure the Patch function is working for a given adapter and driver.

func QueryChunksTest added in v1.4.2

func QueryChunksTest(
	t *testing.T,
	driver string,
	connStr string,
	newDBAdapter func(t *testing.T) (DBAdapter, io.Closer),
)

QueryChunksTest runs all tests for making sure the QueryChunks function is working for a given adapter and driver.

func QueryOneTest added in v1.4.2

func QueryOneTest(
	t *testing.T,
	driver string,
	connStr string,
	newDBAdapter func(t *testing.T) (DBAdapter, io.Closer),
)

QueryOneTest runs all tests for making sure the QueryOne function is working for a given adapter and driver.

func QueryTest added in v1.4.2

func QueryTest(
	t *testing.T,
	driver string,
	connStr string,
	newDBAdapter func(t *testing.T) (DBAdapter, io.Closer),
)

QueryTest runs all tests for making sure the Query function is working for a given adapter and driver.

func RunTestsForAdapter added in v1.4.2

func RunTestsForAdapter(
	t *testing.T,
	adapterName string,
	driver string,
	connStr string,
	newDBAdapter func(t *testing.T) (DBAdapter, io.Closer),
)

RunTestsForAdapter will run all necessary tests for making sure a given adapter is working as expected.

Optionally it is also possible to run each of these tests separatedly, which might be useful during the development of a new adapter.

func ScanRowsTest added in v1.4.2

func ScanRowsTest(
	t *testing.T,
	driver string,
	connStr string,
	newDBAdapter func(t *testing.T) (DBAdapter, io.Closer),
)

ScanRowsTest runs all tests for making sure the ScanRows feature is working for a given adapter and driver.

func TransactionTest added in v1.4.2

func TransactionTest(
	t *testing.T,
	driver string,
	connStr string,
	newDBAdapter func(t *testing.T) (DBAdapter, io.Closer),
)

TransactionTest runs all tests for making sure the Transaction function is working for a given adapter and driver.

Types

type ChunkParser

type ChunkParser struct {
	// The Query and Params are used together to build a query with
	// protection from injection, just like when using the Find function.
	Query  string
	Params []interface{}

	ChunkSize int

	// This attribute must be a function with the following signature:
	//
	// `func(chunk []<Record>) error`.
	//
	// Where the actual Record type should be of a struct
	// representing the rows you are expecting to receive.
	ForEachChunk interface{}
}

ChunkParser stores the arguments of the QueryChunks function

type Config

type Config struct {
	// MaxOpenCons defaults to 1 if not set
	MaxOpenConns int

	// Used by some adapters (such as kpgx) where nil disables TLS
	TLSConfig *tls.Config
}

Config describes the optional arguments accepted by the `ksql.New()` function.

func (*Config) SetDefaultValues added in v1.2.0

func (c *Config) SetDefaultValues()

SetDefaultValues should be called by all adapters to set the default config values if unset.

type DB

type DB struct {
	// contains filtered or unexported fields
}

DB represents the KSQL client responsible for interfacing with the "database/sql" package implementing the KSQL interface `ksql.Provider`.

func NewWithAdapter

func NewWithAdapter(
	db DBAdapter,
	dialectName string,
) (DB, error)

NewWithAdapter allows the user to insert a custom implementation of the DBAdapter interface

func (DB) Close added in v1.4.6

func (c DB) Close() error

Close implements the io.Closer interface

func (DB) Delete

func (c DB) Delete(
	ctx context.Context,
	table Table,
	idOrRecord interface{},
) error

Delete deletes one record from the database using the ID or IDs defined on the `ksql.Table` passed as second argument.

For tables with a single ID column you can pass the record to be deleted as a struct, as a map or just pass the ID itself.

For tables with composite keys you must pass the record as a struct or a map so that KSQL can read all the composite keys from it.

The examples below should work for both types of tables:

err := c.Delete(ctx, UsersTable, user)

err := c.Delete(ctx, UserPostsTable, map[string]interface{}{
    "user_id": user.ID,
    "post_id": post.ID,
})

The example below is shorter but will only work for tables with a single primary key:

err := c.Delete(ctx, UsersTable, user.ID)

func (DB) Exec

func (c DB) Exec(ctx context.Context, query string, params ...interface{}) (Result, error)

Exec just runs an SQL command on the database returning no rows.

func (DB) Insert

func (c DB) Insert(
	ctx context.Context,
	table Table,
	record interface{},
) error

Insert one or more instances on the database

If the original instances have been passed by reference the ID is automatically updated after insertion is completed.

func (DB) Patch added in v1.4.2

func (c DB) Patch(
	ctx context.Context,
	table Table,
	record interface{},
) error

Patch applies a partial update (explained below) to the given instance on the database by id.

Partial updates will ignore any nil pointer attributes from the struct, updating only the non nil pointers and non pointer attributes.

func (DB) Query

func (c DB) Query(
	ctx context.Context,
	records interface{},
	query string,
	params ...interface{},
) error

Query queries several rows from the database, the input should be a slice of structs (or *struct) passed by reference and it will be filled with all the results.

Note: it is very important to make sure the query will return a small known number of results, otherwise you risk of overloading the available memory.

func (DB) QueryChunks

func (c DB) QueryChunks(
	ctx context.Context,
	parser ChunkParser,
) error

QueryChunks is meant to perform queries that returns more results than would normally fit on memory, for others cases the Query and QueryOne functions are indicated.

The ChunkParser argument has 4 attributes: (1) The Query; (2) The query args; (3) The chunk size; (4) A callback function called ForEachChunk, that will be called to process each chunk loaded from the database.

Note that the signature of the ForEachChunk callback can be any function that receives a slice of structs or a slice of pointers to struct as its only argument and that reflection will be used to instantiate this argument and to fill it with the database rows.

func (DB) QueryOne

func (c DB) QueryOne(
	ctx context.Context,
	record interface{},
	query string,
	params ...interface{},
) error

QueryOne queries one instance from the database, the input struct must be passed by reference and the query should return only one result.

QueryOne returns a ErrRecordNotFound if the query returns no results.

func (DB) Transaction

func (c DB) Transaction(ctx context.Context, fn func(Provider) error) error

Transaction encapsulates several queries into a single transaction. All these queries should be made inside the input callback `fn` and they should use the input ksql.Provider.

If the callback returns any errors the transaction will be rolled back, otherwise the transaction will me committed.

If it happens that a second transaction is started inside a transaction callback the same transaction will be reused with no errors.

func (DB) Update deprecated

func (c DB) Update(
	ctx context.Context,
	table Table,
	record interface{},
) error

Update updates the given instances on the database by id.

Partial updates are supported, i.e. it will ignore nil pointer attributes

Deprecated: Use the Patch method instead

type DBAdapter

type DBAdapter interface {
	ExecContext(ctx context.Context, query string, args ...interface{}) (Result, error)
	QueryContext(ctx context.Context, query string, args ...interface{}) (Rows, error)
}

DBAdapter is minimalistic interface to decouple our implementation from database/sql, i.e. if any struct implements the functions below with the exact same semantic as the sql package it will work with KSQL.

To create a new client using this adapter use `ksql.NewWithAdapter()`

type Dialect

type Dialect interface {
	InsertMethod() insertMethod
	Escape(str string) string
	Placeholder(idx int) string
	DriverName() string
}

Dialect is used to represent the different ways of writing SQL queries used by each SQL driver.

func GetDriverDialect

func GetDriverDialect(driver string) (Dialect, error)

GetDriverDialect instantiantes the dialect for the provided driver string, if the drive is not supported it returns an error

type Mock

type Mock struct {
	InsertFn func(ctx context.Context, table Table, record interface{}) error
	PatchFn  func(ctx context.Context, table Table, record interface{}) error
	DeleteFn func(ctx context.Context, table Table, idOrRecord interface{}) error

	UpdateFn func(ctx context.Context, table Table, record interface{}) error

	QueryFn       func(ctx context.Context, records interface{}, query string, params ...interface{}) error
	QueryOneFn    func(ctx context.Context, record interface{}, query string, params ...interface{}) error
	QueryChunksFn func(ctx context.Context, parser ChunkParser) error

	ExecFn        func(ctx context.Context, query string, params ...interface{}) (Result, error)
	TransactionFn func(ctx context.Context, fn func(db Provider) error) error
}

Mock implements the Provider interface in order to allow users to easily mock the behavior of a ksql.Provider.

To mock a particular method, e.g. Insert, you just need to overwrite the corresponding function attribute whose name is InsertFn().

NOTE: This mock should be instantiated inside each unit test not globally.

For capturing input values use a closure as in the example:

var insertRecord interface{}
dbMock := Mock{
	InsertFn: func(ctx context.Context, table Table, record interface{}) error {
		insertRecord = record
	},
}

NOTE: It is recommended not to make assertions inside the mocked methods, you should only check the captured values afterwards as all tests should have 3 stages: (1) setup, (2) run and finally (3) assert.

For cases where the function will be called several times you might want to capture the number of calls as well as the values passed each time for that use closures and a slice of values, e.g.:

var insertRecords []interface{}
dbMock := Mock{
	InsertFn: func(ctx context.Context, table Table, record interface{}) error {
		insertRecords = append(insertRecords, record)
	},
}

expectedNumberOfCalls := 2
assert.Equal(t, expectedNumberOfCalls, len(insertRecords))

expectedInsertedRecords := []interface{}{
	user1,
	user2,
}
assert.Equal(t, expectedInsertedRecords, insertRecords)

func (Mock) Delete

func (m Mock) Delete(ctx context.Context, table Table, idOrRecord interface{}) error

Delete mocks the behavior of the Delete method. If DeleteFn is set it will just call it returning the same return values. If DeleteFn is unset it will panic with an appropriate error message.

func (Mock) Exec

func (m Mock) Exec(ctx context.Context, query string, params ...interface{}) (Result, error)

Exec mocks the behavior of the Exec method. If ExecFn is set it will just call it returning the same return values. If ExecFn is unset it will panic with an appropriate error message.

func (Mock) Insert

func (m Mock) Insert(ctx context.Context, table Table, record interface{}) error

Insert mocks the behavior of the Insert method. If InsertFn is set it will just call it returning the same return values. If InsertFn is unset it will panic with an appropriate error message.

func (Mock) Patch added in v1.4.2

func (m Mock) Patch(ctx context.Context, table Table, record interface{}) error

Patch mocks the behavior of the Patch method. If PatchFn is set it will just call it returning the same return values. If PatchFn is unset it will panic with an appropriate error message.

func (Mock) Query

func (m Mock) Query(ctx context.Context, records interface{}, query string, params ...interface{}) error

Query mocks the behavior of the Query method. If QueryFn is set it will just call it returning the same return values. If QueryFn is unset it will panic with an appropriate error message.

func (Mock) QueryChunks

func (m Mock) QueryChunks(ctx context.Context, parser ChunkParser) error

QueryChunks mocks the behavior of the QueryChunks method. If QueryChunksFn is set it will just call it returning the same return values. If QueryChunksFn is unset it will panic with an appropriate error message.

func (Mock) QueryOne

func (m Mock) QueryOne(ctx context.Context, record interface{}, query string, params ...interface{}) error

QueryOne mocks the behavior of the QueryOne method. If QueryOneFn is set it will just call it returning the same return values. If QueryOneFn is unset it will panic with an appropriate error message.

func (Mock) SetFallbackDatabase

func (m Mock) SetFallbackDatabase(db Provider) Mock

SetFallbackDatabase will set all the Fn attributes to use the function from the input database.

SetFallbackDatabase is useful when you only want to overwrite some of the operations, e.g. for testing errors or if you want to use the same setup for making unit tests and integration tests, this way instead of creating a new server with a real database and another with a mocked one you can start the server once and run both types of tests.

Example Usage:

db, err := ksql.New(...)
if err != nil {
	t.Fatal(err.Error())
}

mockdb := ksql.Mock{
	UpdateFn: func(_ context.Context, _ ksql.Table, record interface{}) error {
		return ksql.ErrRecordNotFound
	},
}.SetFallbackDatabase(db)

// Passing the address to the service so
// you can change it for each test
myService := myservice.New(..., &mockdb, ...)

func (Mock) Transaction

func (m Mock) Transaction(ctx context.Context, fn func(db Provider) error) error

Transaction mocks the behavior of the Transaction method. If TransactionFn is set it will just call it returning the same return values. If TransactionFn is unset it will just call the input function passing the Mock itself as the database.

func (Mock) Update

func (m Mock) Update(ctx context.Context, table Table, record interface{}) error

Update mocks the behavior of the Update method. If UpdateFn is set it will just call it returning the same return values. If UpdateFn is unset it will panic with an appropriate error message.

type MockResult added in v1.4.2

type MockResult struct {
	LastInsertIdFn func() (int64, error)
	RowsAffectedFn func() (int64, error)
}

MockResult implements the Result interface returned by the Exec function

Use the constructor `NewMockResult(42, 42)` for a simpler instantiation of this mock.

But if you want one of the functions to return an error you'll need to specify the desired behavior by overwriting one of the attributes of the struct.

func (MockResult) LastInsertId added in v1.4.2

func (m MockResult) LastInsertId() (int64, error)

LastInsertId implements the Result interface

func (MockResult) RowsAffected added in v1.4.2

func (m MockResult) RowsAffected() (int64, error)

RowsAffected implements the Result interface

type Provider

type Provider interface {
	Insert(ctx context.Context, table Table, record interface{}) error
	Patch(ctx context.Context, table Table, record interface{}) error
	Delete(ctx context.Context, table Table, idOrRecord interface{}) error

	// Deprecated: use the Patch() method instead.
	Update(ctx context.Context, table Table, record interface{}) error

	Query(ctx context.Context, records interface{}, query string, params ...interface{}) error
	QueryOne(ctx context.Context, record interface{}, query string, params ...interface{}) error
	QueryChunks(ctx context.Context, parser ChunkParser) error

	Exec(ctx context.Context, query string, params ...interface{}) (Result, error)
	Transaction(ctx context.Context, fn func(Provider) error) error
}

Provider describes the ksql public behavior.

The Insert, Update, Delete and QueryOne functions return ksql.ErrRecordNotFound if no record was found or no rows were changed during the operation.

type Result

type Result interface {
	LastInsertId() (int64, error)
	RowsAffected() (int64, error)
}

Result stores information about the result of an Exec query

func NewMockResult added in v1.4.2

func NewMockResult(lastInsertID int64, rowsAffected int64) Result

NewMockResult returns a simple implementation of the Result interface.

type Rows

type Rows interface {
	Scan(...interface{}) error
	Close() error
	Next() bool
	Err() error
	Columns() ([]string, error)
}

Rows represents the results from a call to Query()

type ScanArgError added in v1.4.10

type ScanArgError struct {
	ColumnIndex int
	Err         error
}

ScanArgError is a type of error that is expected to be returned from the Scan() method of the Rows interface.

It should be returned when there is an error scanning one of the input values.

This is necessary in order to allow KSQL to produce a better and more readable error message when this type of error occur.

func (ScanArgError) Error added in v1.4.10

func (s ScanArgError) Error() string

Error implements the error interface.

func (ScanArgError) ErrorWithStructNames added in v1.4.10

func (s ScanArgError) ErrorWithStructNames(structName string, colName string) error

type Table

type Table struct {
	// contains filtered or unexported fields
}

Table describes the required information for inserting, updating and deleting entities from the database by ID using the 3 helper functions created for that purpose.

func NewTable

func NewTable(tableName string, ids ...string) Table

NewTable returns a Table instance that stores the tablename and the names of columns used as ID, if no column name is passed it defaults to using the `"id"` column.

This Table is required only for using the helper methods:

- Insert - Update - Delete

Passing multiple ID columns will be interpreted as a single composite key, if you want to use the helper functions with different keys you'll need to create multiple Table instances for the same database table, each with a different set of ID columns, but this is usually not necessary.

type Tx

type Tx interface {
	DBAdapter

	Rollback(ctx context.Context) error
	Commit(ctx context.Context) error
}

Tx represents a transaction and is expected to be returned by the DBAdapter.BeginTx function

type TxBeginner

type TxBeginner interface {
	BeginTx(ctx context.Context) (Tx, error)
}

TxBeginner needs to be implemented by the DBAdapter in order to make it possible to use the `ksql.Transaction()` function.

Directories

Path Synopsis
adapters
kmysql module
kpgx module
kpgx5 module
kpostgres module
ksqlite3 module
ksqlserver module
benchmarks module
internal
This package exposes only the public types and functions for creating new modifiers for KSQL.
This package exposes only the public types and functions for creating new modifiers for KSQL.
Package kstructs is deprecated: use ksqltest instead.
Package kstructs is deprecated: use ksqltest instead.

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