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@sqlite.org/sqlite-wasm

SQLite Wasm conveniently wrapped as an ES Module.

  • 3.41.2-build4
  • Source
  • npm
  • Socket score

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increased by1.99%
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SQLite Wasm

SQLite Wasm conveniently wrapped as an ES Module.

Installation

npm install @sqlite.org/sqlite-wasm

Usage

There are two ways to use SQLite Wasm: in the main thread and in a worker. Only the worker version allows you to use the origin private file system (OPFS) storage back-end.

In the main thread (without OPFS):

import sqlite3InitModule from '@sqlite.org/sqlite-wasm';

const log = (...args) => console.log(...args);
const error = (...args) => console.error(...args);

const start = function (sqlite3) {
  log('Running SQLite3 version', sqlite3.version.libVersion);
  const db = new sqlite3.oo1.DB('/mydb.sqlite3', 'ct');
  // Your SQLite code here.
};

log('Loading and initializing SQLite3 module...');
sqlite3InitModule({
  print: log,
  printErr: error,
}).then((sqlite3) => {
  try {
    log('Done initializing. Running demo...');
    start(sqlite3);
  } catch (err) {
    error(err.name, err.message);
  }
});

In a worker (with OPFS if available):

Warning For this to work, you need to set the following headers on your server:

Cross-Origin-Opener-Policy: same-origin

Cross-Origin-Embedder-Policy: require-corp

// In `main.js`.
const worker = new Worker('worker.js', { type: 'module' });
// In `worker.js`.
import sqlite3InitModule from '@sqlite.org/sqlite-wasm';

const log = (...args) => console.log(...args);
const error = (...args) => console.error(...args);

const start = function (sqlite3) {
  log('Running SQLite3 version', sqlite3.version.libVersion);
  let db;
  if ('opfs' in sqlite3) {
    db = new sqlite3.oo1.OpfsDb('/mydb.sqlite3');
    log('OPFS is available, created persisted database at', db.filename);
  } else {
    db = new sqlite3.oo1.DB('/mydb.sqlite3', 'ct');
    log('OPFS is not available, created transient database', db.filename);
  }
  // Your SQLite code here.
};

log('Loading and initializing SQLite3 module...');
sqlite3InitModule({
  print: log,
  printErr: error,
}).then((sqlite3) => {
  log('Done initializing. Running demo...');
  try {
    start(sqlite3);
  } catch (err) {
    error(err.name, err.message);
  }
});

Deploying a new version

(These steps can only be executed by maintainers.)

  1. Update the version number in package.json reflecting the current SQLite version number and add a build identifier suffix like -build1. The complete version number should read something like 3.41.2-build1.
  2. Run npm run build to build the ES Module. This downloads the latest SQLite Wasm binary and builds the ES Module.
  3. Run git commit -am "Release v<version>" to commit the changes.
  4. Run git push to push the changes to GitHub.
  5. Run npm publish --access-public to publish the new version to npm.

License

Apache 2.0.

Acknowledgements

This project is based on SQLite Wasm, which it conveniently wraps as an ES Module and publishes to npm as @sqlite.org/sqlite-wasm.

FAQs

Package last updated on 17 Apr 2023

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