@jcoreio/sequelize-sql-tag
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3.0.0 • Public • Published

@jcoreio/sequelize-sql-tag

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a template tag for Sequelize that quotes Models' table names, attribute names, and puts other expressions into bind parameters

Using the table and attribute names from your Sequelize Models is much more refactor-proof in raw queries than embedding raw identifiers.

Installation

pnpm install --save @jcoreio/sequelize-sql-tag

Compatibility

Requires sequelize@^4.0.0. Once v5 is released I'll check if it's still compatible. Not making any effort to support versions < 4, but you're welcome to make a PR.

Examples

const Sequelize = require('sequelize')
const sql = require('@jcoreio/sequelize-sql-tag')
const sequelize = new Sequelize('test', 'test', 'test', { dialect: 'postgres', logging: false })

const User = sequelize.define('User', {
  name: {type: Sequelize.STRING},
  birthday: {type: Sequelize.STRING},
  active: {type: Sequelize.BOOLEAN},
})

const lock = true

sequelize.query(...sql`SELECT ${User.rawAttributes.name} FROM ${User}
WHERE ${User.rawAttributes.birthday} = ${new Date('2346-7-11')} AND
  ${User.rawAttributes.active} = ${true}
  ${lock ? sql`FOR UPDATE` : sql``}then(console.log);
// => [ [ { name: 'Jimbob' } ], Statement { sql: 'SELECT "name" FROM "Users" WHERE "birthday" = $1 AND "active" = $2 FOR UPDATE' } ]

Sometimes custom subqueries within a Sequelize where clause can be useful. In this case, there is no way to use query parameters. You can use sql.escape in this context to inline the escaped values rather than using query parameters:

const { Op } = Sequelize

const User = sequelize.define('User', {
  name: { type: Sequelize.STRING },
})
const Organization = sequelize.define('Organization', {
  name: { type: Sequelize.STRING },
})
const OrganizationMember = sequelize.define('OrganizationMember', {
  userId: { type: Sequelize.INTEGER },
  organizationId: { type: Sequelize.INTEGER },
})
User.belongsToMany(Organization, { through: OrganizationMember })
Organization.belongsToMany(User, { through: OrganizationMember })

async function getUsersInOrganization(organizationId, where = {}) {
  return await User.findAll({
    where: {
      ...where,
      // Using a sequelize include clause to do this kind of sucks tbh
      id: {
        [Op.in]: Sequelize.literal(sql.escape`
        SELECT ${OrganizationMember.rawAttributes.userId}
        FROM ${OrganizationMember}
        WHERE ${OrganizationMember.rawAttributes.organizationId} = ${organizationId}
      `),
      },
      // SELECT "userId" FROM "OrganizationMembers" WHERE "organizationId" = 2
    },
  })
}

API

sql`query`

Creates arguments for sequelize.query.

Expressions you can embed in the template

Sequelize Model class

Will be interpolated to the model's tableName.

Model attribute (e.g. User.rawAttributes.id)

Will be interpolated to the column name for the attribute

sql`nested`

Good for conditionally including a SQL clause (see examples above)

Sequelize.literal(...)

Text will be included as-is

Arrays of values tagged template literals

Will be included as-is joined by commas.

All other values

Will be added to bind parameters.

Returns ([string, {bind: Array<string>}])

The sql, options arguments to pass to sequelize.query.

sql.escape`query`

Creates a raw SQL string with all expressions in the template escaped.

Expressions you can embed in the template

Sequelize Model class

Will be interpolated to the model's tableName.

Model attribute (e.g. User.rawAttributes.id)

Will be interpolated to the column name for the attribute

sql`nested`

Good for conditionally including a SQL clause (see examples above)

Sequelize.literal(...)

Text will be included as-is

Arrays of values tagged template literals

Will be included as-is joined by commas.

All other values

Will be escaped with QueryGenerator.escape(...). If none of the expressions is a Sequelize Model class, attribute, Sequelize instance, or nested sql`query` containing such, then an error will be thrown.

Returns (string)

The raw SQL.

sql.with(sequelize)

Returns an interface using the QueryGenerator from the given Sequelize instance. The returned interface has the following tagged template literals:

escape`query`

Just like sql.escape, but doesn't require any of the expressions to be a Sequelize Model class or attribute.

values`sql`

Used for building VALUES lists. Only works inside an array expression. The items will be included as-is joined by commas. For example:

const users = [
  { name: 'Jim', birthday: 'Jan 1 2020' },
  { name: 'Bob', birthday: 'Jan 2 1986' },
]
const { escape, values } = sql.with(sequelize)
escape`
INSERT INTO ${User}
  ${User.rawAttributes.name}, ${User.rawAttributes.birthday}
  VALUES ${users.map(({ name, birthday }) => values`(${name}, ${birthday})`)}
`
// returns `INSERT INTO "Users" "name", "birthday" VALUES ('Jim', 'Jan 1 2020'), ('Bob', 'Jan 2 1986')`

literal`sql`

Like sql.escape, but wraps the escaped SQL in Sequelize.literal.

query`sql`

Returns a function that executes the query. Example:

const Sequelize = require('sequelize')
const sql = require('@jcoreio/sequelize-sql-tag')
const sequelize = new Sequelize('test', 'test', 'test', {
  dialect: 'postgres',
  logging: false,
})

const User = sequelize.define('User', {
  name: { type: Sequelize.STRING },
})

async function insertUser(user) {
  const { query } = sql.with(sequelize)
  await query`
    INSERT INTO ${User} ${User.rawAttributes.name} VALUES (${user.name});
  `({ transaction })
}

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Install

npm i @jcoreio/sequelize-sql-tag

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Version

3.0.0

License

MIT

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  • gravitate1838
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  • avramdodson
  • forrest-keller
  • jrmclaurin
  • jedwards1211
  • eladendorf