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knooq

v0.1.4

Published

Generate schema objects intended for use with knex.js

Downloads

11

Readme

knooq

Knooq inspects your database schema and generates javascript objects for use with knexjs.

Benefits include:

  • Code-completion suggestions in IDEs that support it
  • Automatic inclusion of table aliases

Knooq was inspired by the workflow of the excellent, and infinitely more complex, jOOQ.

Installing knooq

In almost every case, you'll want to install knooq as a development dependency. As it generates source, using it in production is not expected.

npm install knooq --save-dev
yarn add knooq --dev

Configuration

Knooq requires a configuration file in the current working directory named knooq.config.js.

You must provide:

  • Client name - mysql, mysql2, and mssql are supported
  • Connection string - Formatted as is appropriate for the client library
  • Location for the generated file.

mysql and mysql2

module.exports = {
  client: 'mysql2', // Or 'mysql'
  connection: 'mysql://user:password@localhost:3306/mydatabase',
  output: 'src/schema.js'
};

mssql

module.exports = {
  client: 'mssql',
  connection: 'mssql://user:password@localhost:1433/mydatabase',
  output: 'src/schema.js'
};

Running knooq

Once the configuration file is complete, running knooq couldn't be easier.

npx knooq

Or, my preference is to add a script to package.json.

  "scripts": {
    "generate-schema": "knooq"
  },
npm run generate-schema

The generated code

You will find the generated code in the output path provided in the configuration file.

Knooq defines table names in 'constant case', and column names into 'camel case'.

Example output:

const TABLES = {
  EMPLOYEES: function EMPLOYEES(alias = 'employees') {
    let prefix = ''
    let asClause = ''
    if (alias && alias.length > 0) {
      prefix = alias + '.'
      asClause = ' as ' + alias
    }
    return {
      $name: 'employees',
      $as: 'employees' + asClause,
      id: prefix + 'id',
      name: prefix + 'name',
      supervisorId: prefix + 'supervisor_id',
      departmentId: prefix + 'department_id'
    }
  },
  DEPARTMENTS: function DEPARTMENTS(alias = 'departments') {
    let prefix = ''
    let asClause = ''
    if (alias && alias.length > 0) {
      prefix = alias + '.'
      asClause = ' as ' + alias
    }
    return {
      $name: 'departments',
      $as: 'departments' + asClause,
      id: prefix + 'id',
      name: prefix + 'name'
    }
  }
}

module.exports = {
  TABLES
}

So, what do I do with it?

Now, you use it in conjunction with knexjs to write knexjs queries, like this!

// Import the generated schema objects.
const TABLES = require('./schema').TABLES;
const knex = require('knex');

// Create some table objects with explicit aliases.
const e = TABLES.EMPLOYEES('e1');
const s = TABLES.EMPLOYEES('e2');

// Create a table object with no alias.
const d = TABLES.DEPARTMENTS();

// knex allows these 'select' objects where the keys are
// the aliases and the values are the column names. It's
// how I prefer to do this, but not required.
const EMPLOYEES = {
  employeeName: e.name,
  supervisorName: s.name,
  departmentName: d.name
};

function getEmployeesForSupervisor(supervisorId) {
  return knex
    .select(EMPLOYEES)
    .from(e.$as)
    .join(s.$as, s.id, e.supervisorId)
    .join(d.$as, d.id, e.departmentId)
    .where(s.id, supervisorId)
    .orderBy(e.id);
}