SQLite Wasm
SQLite Wasm conveniently wrapped as an ES Module.
Note
This project wraps the code of
SQLite Wasm with no changes.
Please do not file issues or feature requests regarding the underlying
SQLite Wasm code here. Instead, please follow the
SQLite bug filing instructions.
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');
};
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
const worker = new Worker('worker.js', { type: 'module' });
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);
}
};
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);
}
});
Usage with vite
If you are using vite, you need to add the following
config option in vite.config.js
:
import { defineConfig } from 'vite';
export default defineConfig({
server: {
headers: {
'Cross-Origin-Opener-Policy': 'same-origin',
'Cross-Origin-Embedder-Policy': 'require-corp',
},
},
optimizeDeps: {
exclude: ['@sqlite.org/sqlite-wasm'],
},
});
Check out a
sample project
that shows this in action.
Demo
See the demo folder for
examples of how to use this in the main thread and in a worker. (Note that the
worker variant requires special HTTP headers, so it can't be hosted on GitHub
Pages.) An example that shows how to use this with vite is available on
StackBlitz.
Deploying a new version
(These steps can only be executed by maintainers.)
- 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
. - Run
npm run build
to build the ES Module. This downloads the latest SQLite
Wasm binary and builds the ES Module. - Run
npm run deploy
to commit the changes, push to GitHub, and 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
.