- Nim 2.x has moved the DB connectors outside the standard library to the `db_connector` package. - Refactor the pooling implementation and macro expectations to use the `withConnection` name instead of `withConn`. This change allows a caller to use a [waterpark](https://github.com/guzba/waterpark) pool instance instead of the builtin pool instance. Waterpark provides better support for multi-threaded environments. The builtin pooling mechanism may be deprecated in favor of waterpark in the future. - Add the `getModelIfItExists` generated proc to the list of standard procs we generate. This is a flavour of `getModel` that returns an `Option` instead of raising an exception when there is no model for the given id.
Fiber ORM ~~~~~~~~~ Lightweight ORM supporting the `Postgres`_ and `SQLite`_ databases in Nim. It supports a simple, opinionated model mapper to generate SQL queries based on Nim objects. It also includes a simple connection pooling implementation. Fiber ORM is not intended to be a 100% all-cases-covered ORM that handles every potential data access pattern one might wish to implement. It is best thought of as a collection of common SQL generation patterns. It is intended to cover 90% of the common queries and functions one might write when implementing an SQL-based access layer. It is expected that there may be a few more complicated queries that need to be implemented to handle specific access patterns. The simple mapping pattern provided by Fiber ORM also works well on top of databases that encapsulate data access logic in SQL with, for example, views. .. _Postgres: https://nim-lang.org/docs/db_postgres.html .. _SQLite: https://nim-lang.org/docs/db_sqlite.html Basic Usage =========== Consider a simple TODO list application that keeps track of TODO items as well as time logged against those items. Example DB Schema ----------------- You might have a schema such as: .. code-block:: SQL create extension if not exists "pgcrypto"; create table todo_items columns ( id uuid not null primary key default gen_random_uuid(), owner varchar not null, summary varchar not null, details varchar default null, priority integer not null default 0, related_todo_item_ids uuid[] not null default '{}' ); create table time_entries columns ( id uuid not null primary key default gen_random_uuid(), todo_item_id uuid not null references todo_items (id) on delete cascade, start timestamp with timezone not null default current_timestamp, stop timestamp with timezone default null, ); Example Model Definitions ------------------------- Models may be defined as: .. code-block:: Nim # models.nim import std/[options, times] import uuids type TodoItem* = object id*: UUID owner*: string summary*: string details*: Option[string] priority*: int relatedTodoItemIds*: seq[UUID] TimeEntry* = object id*: UUID todoItemId*: Option[UUID] start*: DateTime stop*: Option[DateTime] Example Fiber ORM Usage ----------------------- Using Fiber ORM we can generate a data access layer with: .. code-block:: Nim # db.nim import std/[options] import db_connectors/db_postgres import fiber_orm import ./models.nim type TodoDB* = DbConnPool proc initDb*(connString: string): TodoDB = result = fiber_orm.initPool( connect = proc(): DbConn = open("", "", "", connString), poolSize = 20, hardCap = false) generateProcsForModels(TodoDB, [TodoItem, TimeEntry]) generateLookup(TodoDB, TimeEntry, @["todoItemId"]) This will generate the following procedures: .. code-block:: Nim proc getTodoItem*(db: TodoDB, id: UUID): TodoItem; proc getTodoItemIfItExists*(db: TodoDB, id: UUID): Option[TodoItem]; proc getAllTodoItems*(db: TodoDB): seq[TodoItem]; proc createTodoItem*(db: TodoDB, rec: TodoItem): TodoItem; proc updateTodoItem*(db: TodoDB, rec: TodoItem): bool; proc deleteTodoItem*(db: TodoDB, rec: TodoItem): bool; proc deleteTodoItem*(db: TodoDB, id: UUID): bool; proc findTodoItemsWhere*(db: TodoDB, whereClause: string, values: varargs[string, dbFormat]): seq[TodoItem]; proc getTimeEntry*(db: TodoDB, id: UUID): TimeEntry; proc getTimeEntryIfItExists*(db: TodoDB, id: UUID): Option[TimeEntry]; proc getAllTimeEntries*(db: TodoDB): seq[TimeEntry]; proc createTimeEntry*(db: TodoDB, rec: TimeEntry): TimeEntry; proc updateTimeEntry*(db: TodoDB, rec: TimeEntry): bool; proc deleteTimeEntry*(db: TodoDB, rec: TimeEntry): bool; proc deleteTimeEntry*(db: TodoDB, id: UUID): bool; proc findTimeEntriesWhere*(db: TodoDB, whereClause: string, values: varargs[string, dbFormat]): seq[TimeEntry]; proc findTimeEntriesByTodoItemId(db: TodoDB, todoItemId: UUID): seq[TimeEntry]; Object-Relational Modeling ========================== Model Class ----------- Fiber ORM uses simple Nim `object`s and `ref object`s as model classes. Fiber ORM expects there to be one table for each model class. Name Mapping ```````````` Fiber ORM uses `snake_case` for database identifiers (column names, table names, etc.) and `camelCase` for Nim identifiers. We automatically convert model names to and from table names (`TodoItem` <-> `todo_items`), as well as column names (`userId` <-> `user_id`). Notice that table names are automatically pluralized from model class names. In the above example, you have: =========== ================ Model Class Table Name =========== ================ TodoItem todo_items TimeEntry time_entries =========== ================ Because Nim is style-insensitive, you can generall refer to model classes and fields using `snake_case`, `camelCase`, or `PascalCase` in your code and expect Fiber ORM to be able to map the names to DB identifier names properly (though FiberORM will always use `camelCase` internally). See the `identNameToDb`_, `dbNameToIdent`_, `tableName`_ and `dbFormat`_ procedures in the `fiber_orm/util`_ module for details. .. _identNameToDb: fiber_orm/util.html#identNameToDb,string .. _dbNameToIdent: fiber_orm/util.html#dbNameToIdent,string .. _tableName: fiber_orm/util.html#tableName,type .. _dbFormat: fiber_orm/util.html#dbFormat,DateTime .. _util: fiber_orm/util.html ID Field ```````` Fiber ORM expects every model class to have a field named `id`, with a corresponding `id` column in the model table. This field must be either a `string`, `integer`, or `UUID`_. When creating a new record the `id` field will be omitted if it is empty (`Option.isNone`_, `UUID.isZero`_, value of `0`, or only whitespace). This is intended to allow for cases like the example where the database may generate an ID when a new record is inserted. If a non-zero value is provided, the create call will include the `id` field in the `INSERT` query. For example, to allow the database to create the id: .. code-block:: Nim let item = TodoItem( owner: "John Mann", summary: "Create a grocery list.", details: none[string](), priority: 0, relatedTodoItemIds: @[]) let itemWithId = db.createTodoItem(item) echo $itemWithId.id # generated in the database And to create it in code: .. code-block:: Nim import uuids let item = TodoItem( id: genUUID(), owner: "John Mann", summary: "Create a grocery list.", details: none[string](), priority: 0, relatedTodoItemIds: @[]) let itemInDb = db.createTodoItem(item) echo $itemInDb.id # will be the same as what was provided .. _Option.isNone: https://nim-lang.org/docs/options.html#isNone,Option[T] .. _UUID.isZero: https://github.com/pragmagic/uuids/blob/8cb8720b567c6bcb261bd1c0f7491bdb5209ad06/uuids.nim#L72 Supported Data Types -------------------- The following Nim data types are supported by Fiber ORM: =============== ====================== ================= Nim Type Postgres Type SQLite Type =============== ====================== ================= `string` `varchar`_ `int` `integer`_ `float` `double`_ `bool` `boolean`_ `DateTime`_ `timestamp`_ `seq[]` `array`_ `UUID`_ `uuid (pg)`_ `Option`_ *allows* `NULL` [#f1]_ `JsonNode`_ `jsonb`_ =============== ====================== ================= .. [#f1] Note that this implies that all `NULL`-able fields should be typed as optional using `Option[fieldType]`. Conversely, any fields with non-optional types should also be constrained to be `NOT NULL` in the database schema. .. _DateTime: https://nim-lang.org/docs/times.html#DateTime .. _UUID: https://github.com/pragmagic/uuids .. _Option: https://nim-lang.org/docs/options.html#Option .. _JsonNode: https://nim-lang.org/docs/json.html#JsonNode .. _varchar: https://www.postgresql.org/docs/current/datatype-character.html .. _integer: https://www.postgresql.org/docs/current/datatype-numeric.html#DATATYPE-INT .. _double: https://www.postgresql.org/docs/current/datatype-numeric.html#DATATYPE-FLOAT .. _boolean: https://www.postgresql.org/docs/current/datatype-boolean.html .. _timestamp: https://www.postgresql.org/docs/current/datatype-datetime.html .. _array: https://www.postgresql.org/docs/current/arrays.html .. _uuid (pg): https://www.postgresql.org/docs/current/datatype-uuid.html .. _jsonb: https://www.postgresql.org/docs/current/datatype-json.html Database Object =============== Many of the Fiber ORM macros expect a database object type to be passed. In the example above the `pool.DbConnPool`_ object is used as database object type (aliased as `TodoDB`). This is the intended usage pattern, but anything can be passed as the database object type so long as there is a defined `withConn` template that provides an injected `conn: DbConn` object to the provided statement body. For example, a valid database object implementation that opens a new connection for every request might look like this: .. code-block:: Nim import std/db_postgres type TodoDB* = object connString: string template withConn*(db: TodoDB, stmt: untyped): untyped = let conn {.inject.} = open("", "", "", db.connString) try: stmt finally: close(conn) .. _pool.DbConnPool: fiber_orm/pool.html#DbConnPool
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