#node-postgres
PostgreSQL client for node.js. Pure JavaScript and native libpq bindings.
npm install pg
var pg = require('pg');
//or native libpq bindings
//var pg = require('pg').native
var conString = "tcp://postgres:1234@localhost/postgres";
//note: error handling omitted
var client = new pg.Client(conString);
client.connect(function(err) {
client.query('SELECT NOW() AS "theTime"', function(err, result) {
console.log(result.rows[0].theTime);
//output: Tue Jan 15 2013 19:12:47 GMT-600 (CST)
})
});
var pg = require('pg'); //native libpq bindings = `var pg = require('pg').native`
var conString = "tcp://postgres:1234@localhost/postgres";
var client = new pg.Client(conString);
client.connect();
//queries are queued and executed one after another once the connection becomes available
client.query("CREATE TEMP TABLE beatles(name varchar(10), height integer, birthday timestamptz)");
client.query("INSERT INTO beatles(name, height, birthday) values($1, $2, $3)", ['John', 68, new Date(1944, 10, 13)]);
var query = client.query("SELECT * FROM beatles WHERE name = $1", ['John']);
//can stream row results back 1 at a time
query.on('row', function(row) {
console.log(row);
console.log("Beatle name: %s", row.name); //Beatle name: John
console.log("Beatle birth year: %d", row.birthday.getYear()); //dates are returned as javascript dates
console.log("Beatle height: %d' %d\"", Math.floor(row.height/12), row.height%12); //integers are returned as javascript ints
});
//fired after last row is emitted
query.on('end', function() {
client.end();
});
node-postgres supports both an 'event emitter' style API and a 'callback' style. The callback style is more concise and generally preferred, but the evented API can come in handy when you want to handle row events as they come in.
They can be mixed and matched. The only events which do not fire when callbacks are supplied are the error
events, as they are to be handled within the callback function.
All examples will work with the pure javascript bindings or the libpq native (c/c++) bindings
To use native libpq bindings replace require('pg')
with require('pg').native
.
The two share the same interface so no other code changes should be required. If you find yourself having to change code other than the require statement when switching from pg
to pg.native
, please report an issue.
- pure javascript client and native libpq bindings share the same api
- row-by-row result streaming
- responsive project maintainer
- supported PostgreSQL features
- parameterized queries
- named statements with query plan caching
- async notifications with
LISTEN/NOTIFY
- bulk import & export with
COPY TO/COPY FROM
- extensible js<->postgresql data-type coercion
Documentation is a work in progress primarily taking place on the github WIKI
If you have a question, post it to the FAQ section of the WIKI so everyone can read the answer
if you use node-postgres in production and would like your site listed here, fork & add it
I love contributions.
You are welcome contribute via pull requests. If you need help getting the tests running locally feel free to email me or gchat me.
I will happily accept your pull request if it:
- has tests
- looks reasonable
- does not break backwards compatibility
- satisfies jshint
Information about the testing processes is in the wiki.
If you need help or have questions about constructing a pull request I'll be glad to help out as well.
If at all possible when you open an issue please provide
- version of node
- version of postgres
- smallest possible snippet of code to reproduce the problem
Usually I'll pop the code into the repo as a test. Hopefully the test fails. Then I make the test pass. Then everyone's happy!
If you need help or run into any issues getting node-postgres to work on your system please report a bug or contact me directly. I am usually available via google-talk at my github account public email address.
I usually tweet about any important status updates or changes to node-postgres. You can follow me @briancarlson to keep up to date.
node-postgres is by design low level with the bare minimum of abstraction. These might help out:
Copyright (c) 2010 Brian Carlson ([email protected])
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