TypeScript ORM for Node.js based on Data Mapper, Unit of Work and Identity Map patterns. Supports MongoDB, MySQL, MariaDB, PostgreSQL and SQLite (including libSQL) databases.
Heavily inspired by Doctrine and Hibernate.
🤔 Unit of What?
You might be asking: What the hell is Unit of Work and why should I care about it?
Unit of Work maintains a list of objects (entities) affected by a business transaction
and coordinates the writing out of changes. (Martin Fowler)
Identity Map ensures that each object (entity) gets loaded only once by keeping every
loaded object in a map. Looks up objects using the map when referring to them.
(Martin Fowler)
So what benefits does it bring to us?
Implicit Transactions
First and most important implication of having Unit of Work is that it allows handling transactions automatically.
When you call em.flush()
, all computed changes are queried inside a database transaction (if supported by given driver). This means that you can control the boundaries of transactions simply by calling em.persistLater()
and once all your changes are ready, calling flush()
will run them inside a transaction.
You can also control the transaction boundaries manually via em.transactional(cb)
.
const user = await em.findOneOrFail(User, 1);
user.email = 'foo@bar.com';
const car = new Car();
user.cars.add(car);
await em.flush();
ChangeSet based persistence
MikroORM allows you to implement your domain/business logic directly in the entities. To maintain always valid entities, you can use constructors to mark required properties. Let's define the User
entity used in previous example:
@Entity()
export class User {
@PrimaryKey()
id!: number;
@Property()
name!: string;
@OneToOne(() => Address)
address?: Address;
@ManyToMany(() => Car)
cars = new Collection<Car>(this);
constructor(name: string) {
this.name = name;
}
}
Now to create new instance of the User
entity, we are forced to provide the name
:
const user = new User('John Doe');
user.address = new Address('10 Downing Street');
Once your entities are loaded, make a number of synchronous actions on your entities,
then call em.flush()
. This will trigger computing of change sets. Only entities
(and properties) that were changed will generate database queries, if there are no changes,
no transaction will be started.
const user = await em.findOneOrFail(User, 1, {
populate: ['cars', 'address.city'],
});
user.title = 'Mr.';
user.address.street = '10 Downing Street';
user.cars.getItems().forEach(car => car.forSale = true);
const car = new Car('VW');
user.cars.add(car);
await em.flush();
em.flush()
will then execute these queries from the example above:
begin;
update "user" set "title" = 'Mr.' where "id" = 1;
update "user_address" set "street" = '10 Downing Street' where "id" = 123;
update "car"
set "for_sale" = case
when ("id" = 1) then true
when ("id" = 2) then true
when ("id" = 3) then true
else "for_sale" end
where "id" in (1, 2, 3)
insert into "car" ("brand", "owner") values ('VW', 1);
commit;
Identity Map
Thanks to Identity Map, you will always have only one instance of given entity in one context. This allows for some optimizations (skipping loading of already loaded entities), as well as comparison by identity (ent1 === ent2
).
📖 Documentation
MikroORM documentation, included in this repo in the root directory, is built with Docusaurus and publicly hosted on GitHub Pages at https://mikro-orm.io.
There is also auto-generated CHANGELOG.md file based on commit messages (via semantic-release
).
✨ Core Features
📦 Example Integrations
You can find example integrations for some popular frameworks in the mikro-orm-examples
repository:
TypeScript Examples
JavaScript Examples
🚀 Quick Start
First install the module via yarn
or npm
and do not forget to install the database driver as well:
Since v4, you should install the driver package, but not the db connector itself, e.g. install @mikro-orm/sqlite
, but not sqlite3
as that is already included in the driver package.
yarn add @mikro-orm/core @mikro-orm/mongodb
yarn add @mikro-orm/core @mikro-orm/mysql
yarn add @mikro-orm/core @mikro-orm/mariadb
yarn add @mikro-orm/core @mikro-orm/postgresql
yarn add @mikro-orm/core @mikro-orm/mssql
yarn add @mikro-orm/core @mikro-orm/sqlite
yarn add @mikro-orm/core @mikro-orm/better-sqlite
yarn add @mikro-orm/core @mikro-orm/libsql
or
npm i -s @mikro-orm/core @mikro-orm/mongodb
npm i -s @mikro-orm/core @mikro-orm/mysql
npm i -s @mikro-orm/core @mikro-orm/mariadb
npm i -s @mikro-orm/core @mikro-orm/postgresql
npm i -s @mikro-orm/core @mikro-orm/mssql
npm i -s @mikro-orm/core @mikro-orm/sqlite
npm i -s @mikro-orm/core @mikro-orm/better-sqlite
npm i -s @mikro-orm/core @mikro-orm/libsql
Next, if you want to use decorators for your entity definition, you will need to enable support for decorators as well as esModuleInterop
in tsconfig.json
via:
"experimentalDecorators": true,
"emitDecoratorMetadata": true,
"esModuleInterop": true,
Alternatively, you can use EntitySchema
.
Then call MikroORM.init
as part of bootstrapping your app:
To access driver specific methods like em.createQueryBuilder()
we need to specify the driver type when calling MikroORM.init()
. Alternatively we can cast the orm.em
to EntityManager
exported from the driver package:
import { EntityManager } from '@mikro-orm/postgresql';
const em = orm.em as EntityManager;
const qb = em.createQueryBuilder(...);
import type { PostgreSqlDriver } from '@mikro-orm/postgresql';
const orm = await MikroORM.init<PostgreSqlDriver>({
entities: ['./dist/entities'],
dbName: 'my-db-name',
type: 'postgresql',
});
console.log(orm.em);
There are more ways to configure your entities, take a look at installation page.
Read more about all the possible configuration options in Advanced Configuration section.
Then you will need to fork entity manager for each request so their identity maps will not collide. To do so, use the RequestContext
helper:
const app = express();
app.use((req, res, next) => {
RequestContext.create(orm.em, next);
});
You should register this middleware as the last one just before request handlers and before any of your custom middleware that is using the ORM. There might be issues when you register it before request processing middleware like queryParser
or bodyParser
, so definitely register the context after them.
More info about RequestContext
is described here.
Now you can start defining your entities (in one of the entities
folders). This is how simple entity can look like in mongo driver:
./entities/MongoBook.ts
@Entity()
export class MongoBook {
@PrimaryKey()
_id: ObjectID;
@SerializedPrimaryKey()
id: string;
@Property()
title: string;
@ManyToOne(() => Author)
author: Author;
@ManyToMany(() => BookTag)
tags = new Collection<BookTag>(this);
constructor(title: string, author: Author) {
this.title = title;
this.author = author;
}
}
For SQL drivers, you can use id: number
PK:
./entities/SqlBook.ts
@Entity()
export class SqlBook {
@PrimaryKey()
id: number;
}
Or if you want to use UUID primary keys:
./entities/UuidBook.ts
import { v4 } from 'uuid';
@Entity()
export class UuidBook {
@PrimaryKey()
uuid = v4();
}
More information can be found in defining entities section in docs.
When you have your entities defined, you can start using ORM either via EntityManager
or via EntityRepository
s.
To save entity state to database, you need to persist it. Persist takes care or deciding whether to use insert
or update
and computes appropriate change-set. Entity references that are not persisted yet (does not have identifier) will be cascade persisted automatically.
const author = new Author('Jon Snow', 'snow@wall.st');
author.born = new Date();
const publisher = new Publisher('7K publisher');
const book1 = new Book('My Life on The Wall, part 1', author);
book1.publisher = publisher;
const book2 = new Book('My Life on The Wall, part 2', author);
book2.publisher = publisher;
const book3 = new Book('My Life on The Wall, part 3', author);
book3.publisher = publisher;
await em.persistAndFlush([book1, book2, book3]);
To fetch entities from database you can use find()
and findOne()
of EntityManager
:
const authors = em.find(Author, {}, { populate: ['books'] });
for (const author of authors) {
console.log(author);
console.log(author.name);
for (const book of author.books) {
console.log(book);
console.log(book.title);
}
}
More convenient way of fetching entities from database is by using EntityRepository
, that carries the entity name, so you do not have to pass it to every find
and findOne
calls:
const booksRepository = em.getRepository(Book);
const books = await booksRepository.find({ author: '...' }, {
populate: ['author'],
limit: 1,
offset: 2,
orderBy: { title: QueryOrder.DESC },
});
console.log(books);
Take a look at docs about working with EntityManager
or using EntityRepository
instead.
🤝 Contributing
Contributions, issues and feature requests are welcome. Please read CONTRIBUTING.md for details on the process for submitting pull requests to us.
Authors
👤 Martin Adámek
See also the list of contributors who participated in this project.
Show Your Support
Please ⭐️ this repository if this project helped you!
📝 License
Copyright © 2018 Martin Adámek.
This project is licensed under the MIT License - see the LICENSE file for details.