libsql-serverless
v0.3.6-pre.7
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libSQL driver for TypeScript and JavaScript
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JavaScript & TypeScript SDK for libSQL
This is the source repository of the JavaScript & TypeScript SDK for libSQL.
You can use this SDK to interact with the following types of databases:
- Local SQLite/libSQL database files
- Remote libSQL databases, including Turso
Installation
npm install @libsql/client
This step is not required if using the Deno style import shown below.
Using the library with Next.js
To use libsql-client
, you need to add the following to your Next configuration:
const nextConfig = {
experimental: {
serverComponentsExternalPackages: ["libsql"],
},
}
module.exports = nextConfig
Create a database client object
Importing
There are multiple ways to import the module. For Node.js and other environments where you need to use a local SQLite file URL, as well as network access to sqld
:
import { createClient } from "@libsql/client";
For environments that don't have a local filesystem, but support HTTP or WebSockets, including:
- Browsers
- CloudFlare Workers
- Vercel Edge Functions
- Netlify Edge Functions
import { createClient } from "@libsql/client/web";
For Deno:
// replace [version] with the client version
import { createClient } from "https://esm.sh/@libsql/client@[version]/web";
Local SQLite files
To connect to a local SQLite database file using a local file URL:
const config = {
url: "file:local.db"
};
const db = createClient(config);
const rs = await db.execute("SELECT * FROM users");
console.log(rs);
libSQL sqld instance
To connect to a [libSQL sqld] instance using a libsql: URL:
import { createClient } from "@libsql/client"
const config = {
url: "libsql://[your-sqld-host]",
authToken: "[your-token]"
};
const db = createClient(config);
const rs = await db.execute("SELECT * FROM users");
console.log(rs);
If you are querying a sqld
instance on your local machine, add ?tls=0
to the URL to disable TLS.
authToken
in the config object is a token that your sqld instance recognizes to allow client access. For Turso databases, a token is obtained using the Turso CLI. No token is required by default when running sqld
on its own.
Supported URLs
The client can connect to the database using different methods depending on the scheme (protocol) of the passed URL:
Local SQLite file URLs
A file:
URL connects to a local SQLite database (using libsql).
- This is only supported on Node.js. It will not work in the browser or with most hosted environments that don't provide access to a local filesystem.
file:/absolute/path
orfile:///absolute/path
is an absolute path on local filesystem.file:relative/path
is a relative path on local filesystem.file://path
is not a valid URL.
libSQL sqld instances
The client can connect to sqld
using HTTP or WebSockets. Internally, it uses the Hrana protocol implemented by hrana-client-ts.
libsql URLs
libsql:
URL leaves the choice of protocol to the client. We are now using HTTP by default, but this may change in the future.
- By default, a
libsql:
URL uses TLS (i.e.https:
orwss:
). - To disable TLS, you can pass the query parameter
?tls=0
. You will also need to specify the port.
HTTP URLs
http:
or https:
URLs connect to sqld
using HTTP.
- This is supported in Node.js and in every environment that supports the Web fetch API.
WebSocket URLs
ws:
or wss:
URLs use a stateful WebSocket to connect to sqld
.
- WebSockets are supported in Node.js and browser.
- If you are running in a cloud or edge hosted environments, you should check to see if WebSockets are supported. If not, change the URL to use an HTTP URL.
Additional documentation
You can find more examples of how to use this library using the Turso docs for JS&TS.
License
This project is licensed under the MIT license.
Contribution
Unless you explicitly state otherwise, any contribution intentionally submitted for inclusion in @libsql/client
by you, shall be licensed as MIT, without any additional terms or conditions.