
Interface with SQL databases through sqlx. It supports the sqlite, mysql and postgres drivers, enabled by a Cargo feature.
Install
This plugin requires a Rust version of at least 1.70
There are three general methods of installation that we can recommend.
- Use crates.io and npm (easiest, and requires you to trust that our publishing pipeline worked)
- Pull sources directly from Github using git tags / revision hashes (most secure)
- Git submodule install this repo in your tauri project and then use file protocol to ingest the source (most secure, but inconvenient to use)
Install the Core plugin by adding the following to your Cargo.toml file:
src-tauri/Cargo.toml
[dependencies.tauri-plugin-sql]
features = ["sqlite"]
version = "2.0.0-alpha"
git = "https://github.com/tauri-apps/plugins-workspace"
branch = "v2"
You can install the JavaScript Guest bindings using your preferred JavaScript package manager:
Note: Since most JavaScript package managers are unable to install packages from git monorepos we provide read-only mirrors of each plugin. This makes installation option 2 more ergonomic to use.
pnpm add @tauri-apps/plugin-sql
npm add @tauri-apps/plugin-sql
yarn add @tauri-apps/plugin-sql
pnpm add https://github.com/tauri-apps/tauri-plugin-sql
npm add https://github.com/tauri-apps/tauri-plugin-sql
yarn add https://github.com/tauri-apps/tauri-plugin-sql
Usage
First you need to register the core plugin with Tauri:
src-tauri/src/main.rs
fn main() {
tauri::Builder::default()
.plugin(tauri_plugin_sql::Builder::default().build())
.run(tauri::generate_context!())
.expect("error while running tauri application");
}
Afterwards all the plugin's APIs are available through the JavaScript guest bindings:
import Database from "@tauri-apps/plugin-sql";
const db = await Database.load("sqlite:test.db");
const db = await Database.load("mysql://user:pass@host/database");
const db = await Database.load("postgres://postgres:password@localhost/test");
await db.execute("INSERT INTO ...");
Syntax
We use sqlx as our underlying library, adopting their query syntax:
- sqlite and postgres use the "$#" syntax when substituting query data
- mysql uses "?" when substituting query data
const result = await db.execute(
"INSERT into todos (id, title, status) VALUES ($1, $2, $3)",
[todos.id, todos.title, todos.status],
);
const result = await db.execute(
"UPDATE todos SET title = $1, completed = $2 WHERE id = $3",
[todos.title, todos.status, todos.id],
);
const result = await db.execute(
"INSERT into todos (id, title, status) VALUES (?, ?, ?)",
[todos.id, todos.title, todos.status],
);
const result = await db.execute(
"UPDATE todos SET title = ?, completed = ? WHERE id = ?",
[todos.title, todos.status, todos.id],
);
Contributing
PRs accepted. Please make sure to read the Contributing Guide before making a pull request.
Partners
For the complete list of sponsors please visit our website and Open Collective.
License
Code: (c) 2015 - Present - The Tauri Programme within The Commons Conservancy.
MIT or MIT/Apache 2.0 where applicable.