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Description
Azure Database (Table Storage, Cosmos DB and more) module for Nest framework (node.js)
Tutorial
Learn how to get started with Azure table storage for NestJS
Before Installation
For Table Storage
- Create a Storage account and resource (read more)
- For Table Storage, In the Azure Portal, go to Dashboard > Storage > your-storage-account.
- Note down the "Storage account name" and "Connection string" obtained at Access keys under Settings tab.
For Cosmos DB
- Create a Cosmos DB account and resource (read more)
- For Cosmos DB, In the Azure Portal, go to Dashboard > Azure Cosmos DB > your-cosmos-db-account.
- Note down the "URI" and "Primary Key" obtained at Keys under Settings tab.
Installation
$ npm i --save @nestjs/azure-database
Usage
For Azure Table Storage support
- Create or update your existing
.env
file with the following content:
AZURE_STORAGE_CONNECTION_STRING=
-
IMPORTANT: Make sure to add your .env
file to your .gitignore! The .env
file MUST NOT be versioned on Git.
-
Make sure to include the following call to your main file:
if (process.env.NODE_ENV !== 'production') require('dotenv').config();
This line must be added before any other imports!
Example
Prepare your entity
- Create a new feature module, eg. with the nest CLI:
$ nest generate module contact
- Create a Data Transfer Object (DTO) inside a file named
contact.dto.ts
:
export class ContactDTO {
name: string;
message: string;
}
- Create a file called
contact.entity.ts
and describe the entity model using the provided decorators:
-
@EntityPartitionKey(value: string)
: Represents the PartitionKey
of the entity (required).
-
@EntityRowKey(value: string)
: Represents the RowKey
of the entity (required).
-
@EntityInt32(value?: string)
: For signed 32-bit integer values.
-
@EntityInt64(value?: string)
: For signed 64-bit integer values.
-
@EntityBinary(value?: string)
: For binary (blob) data.
-
@EntityBoolean(value?: string)
: For true
or false
values.
-
@EntityString(value?: string)
: For character data.
-
@EntityDouble(value?: string)
: For floating point numbers with 15 digit precision.
-
@EntityDateTime(value?: string)
: For time of day.
For instance, the shape of the following entity:
import { EntityPartitionKey, EntityRowKey, EntityString } from '@nestjs/azure-database';
@EntityPartitionKey('ContactID')
@EntityRowKey('ContactName')
export class Contact {
@EntityString() name: string;
@EntityString() message: string;
}
Will be automatically converted to:
{
"PartitionKey": { "_": "ContactID", "$": "Edm.String" },
"RowKey": { "_": "ContactName", "$": "Edm.String" },
"name": { "_": undefined, "$": "Edm.String" },
"message": { "_": undefined, "$": "Edm.String" }
}
Note: The provided entity type annotations represent the Entity Data Model types.
- Import the
AzureTableStorageModule
inside your Nest feature module contact.module.ts
:
import { Module } from '@nestjs/common';
import { AzureTableStorageModule } from '@nestjs/azure-database';
import { ContactController } from './contact.controller';
import { ContactService } from './contact.service';
import { Contact } from './contact.entity';
@Module({
imports: [AzureTableStorageModule.forFeature(Contact)],
providers: [ContactService],
controllers: [ContactController],
})
export class ContactModule {}
You can optionally pass in the following arguments:
AzureTableStorageModule.forFeature(Contact, {
table: 'AnotherTableName',
createTableIfNotExists: true,
});
table: string
: The name of the table. If not provided, the name of the Contact
entity will be used as a table namecreateTableIfNotExists: boolean
: Whether to automatically create the table if it doesn't exists or not:
- If
true
the table will be created during the startup of the app. - If
false
the table will not be created. You will have to create the table by yourself before querying it!
CRUD operations
- Create a service that will abstract the CRUD operations:
$ nest generate service contact
- Use the
@InjectRepository(Contact)
to get an instance of the Azure Repository
for the entity definition created earlier:
import { Injectable } from '@nestjs/common';
import { Repository, InjectRepository } from '@nestjs/azure-database';
import { Contact } from './contact.entity';
@Injectable()
export class ContactService {
constructor(
@InjectRepository(Contact)
private readonly contactRepository: Repository<Contact>,
) {}
}
The AzureTableStorageRepository
provides a couple of public APIs and Interfaces for managing various CRUD operations:
CREATE
create(entity: T, rowKeyValue?: string): Promise<T>
: creates a new entity.
@Post()
async create(contact: Contact, rowKeyValue: string): Promise<Contact> {
return this.contactRepository.create(contact, rowKeyValue)
}
READ
find(rowKey: string, entity: Partial<T>): Promise<T>
: finds one entity using its RowKey
.
@Get(':rowKey')
async getContact(@Param('rowKey') rowKey) {
try {
return await this.contactRepository.find(rowKey, new Contact());
} catch (error) {
throw new UnprocessableEntityException(error);
}
}
findAll(tableQuery?: azure.TableQuery, currentToken?: azure.TableService.TableContinuationToken): Promise<AzureTableStorageResultList<T>>
: finds all entities that match the given query (return all entities if no query provided).
@Get()
async getAllContacts() {
return await this.contactRepository.findAll();
}
UPDATE
update(rowKey: string, entity: Partial<T>): Promise<T>
: Updates an entity. It does a partial update.
@Put(':rowKey')
async saveContact(@Param('rowKey') rowKey, @Body() contactData: ContactDTO) {
try {
const contactEntity = new Contact();
Object.assign(contactEntity, contactData);
return await this.contactRepository.update(rowKey, contactEntity);
} catch (error) {
throw new UnprocessableEntityException(error);
}
}
@Patch(':rowKey')
async updateContactDetails(@Param('rowKey') rowKey, @Body() contactData: Partial<ContactDTO>) {
try {
const contactEntity = new Contact();
Object.assign(contactEntity, contactData);
return await this.contactRepository.update(rowKey, contactEntity);
} catch (error) {
throw new UnprocessableEntityException(error);
}
}
DELETE
delete(rowKey: string, entity: T): Promise<AzureTableStorageResponse>
: Removes an entity from the database.
@Delete(':rowKey')
async deleteDelete(@Param('rowKey') rowKey) {
try {
const response = await this.contactRepository.delete(rowKey, new Contact());
if (response.statusCode === 204) {
return null;
} else {
throw new UnprocessableEntityException(response);
}
} catch (error) {
throw new UnprocessableEntityException(error);
}
}
For Azure Cosmos DB support
- Create or update your existing
.env
file with the following content:
AZURE_COSMOS_DB_NAME=
AZURE_COSMOS_DB_ENDPOINT=
AZURE_COSMOS_DB_KEY=
-
IMPORTANT: Make sure to add your .env
file to your .gitignore! The .env
file MUST NOT be versioned on Git.
-
Make sure to include the following call to your main file:
if (process.env.NODE_ENV !== 'production') require('dotenv').config();
This line must be added before any other imports!
Example
Note: Check out the CosmosDB example project included in the sample folder
Prepare your entity
- Create a new feature module, eg. with the nest CLI:
$ nest generate module event
- Create a Data Transfer Object (DTO) inside a file named
event.dto.ts
:
export class EventDTO {
name: string;
type: string;
date: Date;
location: Point;
}
- Create a file called
event.entity.ts
and describe the entity model using the provided decorators:
For instance, the shape of the following entity:
import { CosmosPartitionKey, CosmosDateTime, Point } from '@nestjs/azure-database';
@CosmosPartitionKey('type')
export class Event {
id?: string;
type: string;
@CosmosDateTime() createdAt: Date;
location: Point;
}
Will be automatically converted to:
{
"type": "Meetup",
"createdAt": "2019-11-15T17:05:25.427Z",
"position": {
"type": "Point",
"coordinates": [2.3522, 48.8566]
}
}
- Import the
AzureCosmosDbModule
inside your Nest feature module event.module.ts
:
import { Module } from '@nestjs/common';
import { AzureCosmosDbModule } from '@nestjs/azure-database';
import { EventController } from './event.controller';
import { EventService } from './event.service';
import { Event } from './event.entity';
@Module({
imports: [
AzureCosmosDbModule.forRoot({
dbName: process.env.AZURE_COSMOS_DB_NAME,
endpoint: process.env.AZURE_COSMOS_DB_ENDPOINT,
key: process.env.AZURE_COSMOS_DB_KEY,
}),
AzureCosmosDbModule.forFeature([{ dto: Event }]),
],
providers: [EventService],
controllers: [EventController],
})
export class EventModule {}
CRUD operations
- Create a service that will abstract the CRUD operations:
$ nest generate service event
- Use the
@InjectModel(Event)
to get an instance of the Azure Cosmos DB Container for the entity definition created earlier:
import { Injectable } from '@nestjs/common';
import { InjectModel } from '@nestjs/azure-database';
import { Event } from './event.entity';
@Injectable()
export class EventService {
constructor(
@InjectModel(Event)
private readonly eventContainer,
) {}
}
The Azure Cosmos DB Container
provides a couple of public APIs and Interfaces for managing various CRUD operations:
CREATE
create(entity: T): Promise<T>
: creates a new entity.
@Post()
async create(event: Event): Promise<Event> {
return this.eventContainer.items.create(event)
}
READ
query<T>(query: string | SqlQuerySpec, options?: FeedOptions): QueryIterator<T>
: run a SQL Query to find a document.
@Get(':id')
async getContact(@Param('id') id) {
try {
const querySpec = {
query: "SELECT * FROM root r WHERE r.id=@id",
parameters: [
{
name: "@id",
value: id
}
]
};
const { resources } = await this.eventContainer.items.query<Event>(querySpec).fetchAll()
return resources
} catch (error) {
throw new UnprocessableEntityException(error);
}
}
UPDATE
read<T>(options?: RequestOptions): Promise<ItemResponse<T>>
: Get a document.
replace<T>(body: T, options?: RequestOptions): Promise<ItemResponse<T>>
: Updates a document.
@Put(':id')
async saveEvent(@Param('id') id, @Body() eventData: EventDTO) {
try {
const { resource: item } = await this.eventContainer.item<Event>(id, 'type').read()
Object.assign(item, eventData);
const { resource: replaced } = await this.eventContainer
.item(id, 'type')
.replace<Event>(item)
return replaced
} catch (error) {
throw new UnprocessableEntityException(error);
}
}
DELETE
delete<T>(options?: RequestOptions): Promise<ItemResponse<T>>
: Removes an entity from the database.
@Delete(':id')
async deleteEvent(@Param('id') id) {
try {
const { resource: deleted } = await this.eventContainer
.item(id, 'type')
.delete<Event>()
return deleted;
} catch (error) {
throw new UnprocessableEntityException(error);
}
}
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License
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