var anyDB = require('any-db')
var pool = anyDB.createPool('postgres://user:pass@localhost/dbname', {
min: 5, max: 15,
reset: function (conn, done) {
conn.query('ROLLBACK', done)
}
})
// Proxies to mysql's connection.query
var q = pool.query('SELECT 1', function (err, res) { })
Note: As shown above, ConnectionPool instances are usually created
with anyDB.createPool. The any-db package will be installed
alongside any adapters (e.g. any-db-postgres), so most users should depend
on their adapter and not on any-db
or any-db-pool
.
This package contains a database connection pool that can be used with any
driver, but it requires an any-db compliant adapter. If you are
writing a library that needs to support multiple database backends (e.g.
SQLite3 or Postgres or MySQL) then it's strongly recommended that you add
any-db toyour peerDependencies
and rely on createPool instead of
depending on this package directly.
module.exports := (Adapter, adapterConfig: Object, PoolConfig) => ConnectionPool
ConnectionPool := EventEmitter & {
adapter: String,
query: (String, Array?, Continuation<ResultSet>?) => Query,
acquire: (Continuation<Connection>) => void,
release: (Connection) => void,
close: (Continuation<void>?) => void,
}
PoolConfig := {
min: Number?,
max: Number?,
onConnect: (Connection, ready: Continuation<Connection>) => void
reset: (Connection, done: Continuation<void>) => void
}
A PoolConfig
is generally a plain object with any of the following properties (they are all optional):
min
(default0
) The minimum number of connections to keep open in the pool.max
(default10
) The maximum number of connections to keep open in the pool. When this limit is reached further requests for connections will queue waiting for an existing connection to be released back into the pool.onConnect
Called immediately after a connection is first established. Use this to do one-time setup of new connections. The suppliedConnection
will not be added to the pool until you pass it to thedone
continuation.reset
Called each time a connection is returned to the pool. Use this to restore a connection to it's original state (e.g. rollback transactions, set the database session vars). Ifreset
fails to call thedone
continuation the connection will be lost in limbo.
(String, Array?, Continuation<ResultSet>?) => Query
Implements Queryable.query by automatically acquiring a connection and releasing it when the query completes.
(Continuation<Connection>) => void
Remove a connection from the pool. If you use this method you must return the connection back to the pool using ConnectionPool.release
(Connection) => void
Return a connection to the pool. This should only be called with connections you've manually acquired. You must not continue to use the connection after releasing it.
(Continuation<void>?) => void
Stop giving out new connections, and close all existing database connections as they are returned to the pool.
The string name of the adapter used for this connection pool, e.g. 'sqlite3'
.
'acquire'
- emitted wheneverpool.acquire
is called'release'
- emitted wheneverpool.release
is called'query', query
- emitted immediately after.query
is called on a connection viapool.query
. The argument is a Query object.'close'
- emitted when the connection pool has closed all of it connections after a call toclose()
.
generic-pool is awesome, but it's very generic. This is a Good
Thing for a library with "generic" in the name, but not so good for the very
common but slightly more specialized case of pooling stateful SQL database
connections. This library uses generic-pool
and simply augments it with some
added niceties:
- Hooks for initializing and/or resetting connection state when connections are added or returned to the pool.
- A
query
method that allows queries to be performed without the user needing a reference to a connection object (and potentially leaking that reference).
Ok, if you really want to use this package without using the any-db frontend you should provide a compliant Adapter implementation:
var ConnectionPool = require('any-db-pool')
var adapter = require('my-custom-adapter')
var connectionParams = { user: 'scott', password: 'tiger' }
var poolParams = {
min: 5, max: 15,
reset: function (conn, done) {
conn.query('ROLLBACK', done)
}
}
var pool = new ConnectionPool(adapter, connectionParams, poolParams)
However, it would be awesome if you just published your adapter as a
package named any-db-$name
so that everybody could use it 👍
MIT