@nestjs!/refract
v1.3.12
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Generate Prisma from TypeScript
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refract
Generate Prisma from TypeScript
Installation
npm i -D @cwqt/refract
yarn add -D @cwqt/refract
Usage
See here for a full demo.
Use the Refract
default export of this package to generate a Prisma file.
// schema.ts
// Import the entry-point
import Refract from '@cwqt/refract';
// Import your custom Models
import { Roles, User, Posts } from './models';
Refract({
// Supply models/enums for generation
schema: [Roles, User, Posts],
// https://www.prisma.io/docs/reference/api-reference/prisma-schema-reference#datasource
datasource: {
provider: 'postgresql',
url: 'env("DATABASE_URL")',
shadowDatabaseUrl: 'env("DATABASE_SHADOW_URL")',
referentialIntegrity: 'prisma',
},
// https://www.prisma.io/docs/reference/api-reference/prisma-schema-reference#generator
generators: [
{
provider: 'prisma-client-js',
previewFeatures: ['referentialIntegrity'],
engineType: 'library',
binaryTargets: ['native'],
},
],
// Define output path for generated Prisma file
output: path.join(process.cwd(), 'schema.prisma'),
});
A command like npx ts-node schema.ts
will run this TypeScript code & generate
the resulting Prisma file at the output
path.
Models
const User = Model('User', 'This is an optional comment');
User.Field('id', Int(Id, Default('autoincrement()')), 'The primary key');
// // This is an optional comment
// model User {
// // The primary key
// id Int @id @default(autoincrement())
// }
Model
uses a fluid interface, so you can chain the following methods:
.Field(name, scalar)
: Add a scalar column to a Model.Relation(name, relation)
: Add a relationship to a Model.Block(compound)
: Add a block field, e.g.@@id
,@@unique
,@@map
.Mixin(mixin)
: Inherit columns from a Mixin for compositional Models.Raw(value)
: Escape hatch into writing raw Prisma
Scalars
Scalars are the types of data that the column contains, Int
, String
etc. You can define & re-use Scalars wherever in your models
const PrimaryKey = Int(Id, Default('autoincrement()'));
// id Int @id @default("autoincrement()")
m.Field('id', PrimaryKey);
Modifiers
Modifiers are functions/objects that append attributes to a column e.g.
// String? @default("Hello World")
String(Default('Hello World'), Nullable);
// Int @id @unique @default(autoincrement())
Int(Id, Unique, Default('autoincrement()'));
// DateTime @default(now()) @updatedAt
DateTime(Default('now()'), UpdatedAt);
Certain modifiers are constrained to certain scalars, the mapping is:
String
: Unique, Id, Default(string | 'auto()'), Limit(number)Int
: Unique, Id, Default('cuid' | 'autoincrement()' | 'uuid()' | number)Float
: Unique, Default(number)BigInt
: Unique, Default(BigInt)Bytes
: UniqueDecimal
: UniqueBoolean
: UniqueDateTime
: Default('now()'), UpdatedAtUnsupported
Additionally all scalars can use: Nullable, Map, Ignore, Raw & Array modifiers.
The Raw()
modifier can be used as an escape hatch:
// String @db.ObjectId
String(Raw('@db.ObjectId'));
@db
attributes
Currently there's support for mysql
, postgresql
, cockroachdb
& mongodb
@db
attributes, and can be used like all the other modifiers.
import { MySql as db } from '@cwqt/refract';
// email String @db.VarChar(255)
m.Field('email', String(db.VarChar(255)));
Check src/public/db/mysql.ts
(mongo.ts
/postgresql.ts
/cockroach.ts
) for list of mappings between scalar types &
attributes.
Relationships
OneToMany
(model, name?, ...modifiers)- Nullable
OneToOne
(model, name?, fields, references, ...modifiers)OneToOne
(model, name?, ...modifiers)- Nullable, OnUpdate(Action), OnDelete(Action)
ManyToOne
(model, name?, fields, references, ...modifiers)- Nullable, OnUpdate(Action), OnDelete(Action)
Where Action
is one of: Cascade
, Restrict
, NoAction
, SetNull
, SetDefault
Examples
OneToOne
const User = Model('User');
const Something = Model('Something');
Something
.Field('id', PrimaryKey)
// Holds foreign key
.Field('userId', Int())
.Relation('user', OneToOne(User, Fields('userId'), References('id')));
// Alternatively you can do Fields('userId', Int()) to avoid the extra
// .Field() call, this'll add the column to the model for you
User
.Field('id', PrimaryKey)
.Relation('thingy', OneToOne(Something));
Implicit ManyToMany
const Post = Model('Post');
const Category = Model('Category');
Post
.Field('id', Int(Id, Default('autoincrement()')))
.Relation('categories', OneToMany(Category));
Category
.Field('id', Int(Id, Default('autoincrement()')))
.Relation('posts', OneToMany(Post));
Ambiguous relations
The 2nd parameter of the Relation can be a string & explicitly denote the name of the relation.
// pinnedBy User? @relation(name: "PinnedPost", fields: [pinnedById], references: [id])
m.Relation(
'pinnedBy',
OneToOne(
User,
'PinnedPost',
Fields('pinnedById'),
References('id'),
Nullable,
),
);
Referentials Actions
OnUpdate
& OnDelete
modifiers can be used as follows:
// tag Tag? @relation(fields: [tagId], references: [id], onUpdate: Cascade, onDelete: Cascade)
m.Relation(
'tag',
ManyToOne(
Fields('tagId'),
References('id'),
OnUpdate('Cascade'),
OnDelete('Cascade'),
Nullable,
),
);
Enums
Composed of two parts:
Enum(name, comment?, ...Key)
Key(value, ...modifiers, comment?)
- Map
const Animal = Enum(
'Animal',
Key('Seacow'),
Key('Capybara'),
Key('Otter', Map('otter')),
);
// fave Animal @default(Seacow)
// null Animal?
model
.Field('fave', Animal('Seacow'))
.Field('null', Animal());
const WithComment = Enum(
"Foo", "This is with a comment",
Key("Bar", "Another comment")
);
// // This is with a comment
// enum Foo {
// // Another comment
// Bar
// }
Composite Types
Used for adding Composite Types for MongoDB datasources.
import { Model, Type, Mongo as db } from '@cwqt/refract';
const User = Model('User');
const Profile = Type('Profile', 'Describes the user public profile');
Profile
.Field('fullname', String())
.Field('bio', String())
// // Describes the user public profile
// type Profile {
// fullname String
// bio String
// }
User
.Field('id', String(Id, db.ObjectId, Map('_id')))
.Field('profile', Profile(Nullable))
// model User {
// id Int @id @db.ObjectId @map("_id")
// profile Profile?
// }
Blocks
Used for adding fields like @@map
, @@id
, @@fulltext
etc.
import { Compound, Mongo as db } from '@cwqt/refract';
// Creating a compound index
model
.Field('id', Int(Id, Default('autoincrement()')))
.Field('authorId', Int())
.Relation('author', ManyToOne(User, Fields('authorId'), References('id')))
.Block(Compound.Id('id', 'authorId'));
// e.g. in MongoDB schemas
Model('User')
.Field('id', String(Id, db.ObjectId, Map('_id')))
.Block(Compound.Map('users'));
Mixins
Allows you to re-use groups of fields, compositional models.
const Timestamps = Mixin()
.Field('createdAt', DateTime(Default('now()')))
.Field('updatedAt', DateTime(Nullable, UpdatedAt));
const User = Model('User').Field('id', PrimaryKey).Mixin(Timestamps);
// User will now have `createdAt` & `updatedAt` columns
Programmatic usage
const prisma = Refract.generate({
datasource: {...},
generators: [...],
schema
})
console.log(prisma); // schema.prisma contents
Handling circular relationships
At some point you'll want to split the schema across files, which introduces issues with circular relationships when you're importing for .Relation()
s in Node
One way to get around this is to have a file with all the models/enums defined, and have files import those & apply the fields, e.g.
// models.ts ------------------------------
const User = Model("User");
const Post = Model("Posts");
// ... and all the other Models
// users.ts ------------------------------
import { User, Post } from './models'
User
.Field("id", Int(Id, Default("autoincrement()")))
.Relation("posts", OneToMany(Post))
// posts.ts ------------------------------
import { User, Post } from './models'
Post
.Field("id", Int(Id, Default("autoincrement()")))
.Field("authorId", Int())
.Relation("author", ManyToOne(User, Fields("authorId"), References("id")))
// refract.ts ------------------------------
import * as schema from './models'
// IMPORTANT: import the model files which performs the `.Field()`, `.Relation()`
// etc. calls, thereby adding the columns to the models
import "./posts";
import "./users";
Refract({
datasource: {...},
generators: [...],
schema
})