co-pg
v2.0.2
Published
Co wrapper for node-postgres
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co-pg
Co wrapper for node-postgres. Also supports ESNext's async/await.
Installation
$ npm install co-pg
Overview
co-pg
provides higher order functions that will return a wrapped edition of pg
. Everything that is available
from pg
is also available on co-pg
with no alterations to the original API. The pg
API methods that use a
callback style interface also have companion promise methods that are usable by co
4.0 and by ESNext async/await.
Supports:
- node-postgres
- node-pg-native
- node-postgres-pure (even though it has been deprecated)
Supports Node Engines:
- v0.12 (requires
--harmony
flag to work) - v4
- v5
API Additions
co-pg
adds a few additional methods on top of the pg
API.
PG
prototype adds the#connectAsync
method- also includes
#connectPromise
which aliases#connectAsync
- also includes
Client
prototype adds the#connectAsync
and#queryAsync
methods- also includes
#connectPromise
which aliases#connectAsync
- also includes
#queryPromise
which aliases#queryAsync
- also includes
These methods behave exactly the same as their counter-parts, including their arguments, except instead of supplying a callback, the promise is yielded. All the original methods are still available by using the sans-underscore methods. For documentation or help on how they work, please see the original project's documentation.
Examples
Single connection
Connect to a postgres instance, run a query, and disconnect, using co
.
let co = require('co');
let pg = require('co-pg')(require('pg'));
let connectionString = 'postgres://postgres:1234@localhost/postgres';
co(function* connectExample() {
try {
let client = new pg.Client(connectionString);
yield client.connectPromise();
let result = yield client.queryPromise('select now() as "theTime"');
console.log(result.rows[0].theTime);
client.end();
} catch (ex) {
console.error(ex);
}
});
Client pooling
The underlying pooling system is not altered. The companion thunk methods can be used instead. Since PG#Connect returns multiple objects, the return value is an array of those results. They can then be manually destructured into separate variables for cleaner code.
let co = require('co');
let pg = require('co-pg')(require('pg'));
let connectionString = 'postgres://postgres:1234@localhost/postgres';
co(function* poolExample() {
try {
let connectResults = yield pg.connectPromise(connectionString);
let client = connectResults[0];
let done = connectResults[1];
let result = yield client.queryPromise('select now() as "theTime"');
//call `done()` to release the client back to the pool
done();
console.log(result.rows[0].theTime);
process.exit();
} catch (ex) {
console.error(ex.toString());
}
});
Other projects
- brianc/node-postgres: the PostgreSQL driver
- brianc/node-pg-native: the PostgreSQL drive using native bindings
License
MIT