ah-sequelize-plugin
This plugin connects Sequelize and Actionhero. It handles running migrations and connecting your models. Under the hood, we use sequelize-typescript and Uzmug
Notes
- Versions
2.0.0+
of this package are only compatible with Actionhero versions 21.0.0+
. - Versions
1.0.0+
of this package are only compatible with Actionhero versions 18.0.0+
.
For versions compatible with ActionHero versions prior to 21.0.0
, use version 1.x.x
.
For versions compatible with ActionHero versions prior to 18.0.0
, use version 0.9.x
.
Setup
- Install this plugin:
npm install ah-sequelize-plugin --save
- Add sequelize packages:
npm install sequelize sequelize-typescript --save
- Add types and reflexive addons:
npm install @types/bluebird @types/validator reflect-metadata --save
- Add plugin to your project's
./src/config/plugins.ts
:
import * as path from "path";
export const DEFAULT = {
plugins: () => {
return {
"ah-sequelize-plugin": {
path: path.join(process.cwd(), "node_modules", "ah-sequelize-plugin"),
},
};
},
};
- Add
experimentalDecorators
and emitDecoratorMetadata
to your Typescript tsconfig.json
file:
{
"compilerOptions": {
"outDir": "./dist",
"allowJs": true,
"module": "commonjs",
"target": "es2018",
"experimentalDecorators": true,
"emitDecoratorMetadata": true
},
"include": ["./src/**/*"]
}
Add supported database packages
- MySQL:
npm install mysql2 --save
- SQLite:
npm install sqlite3 --save
- Postgres:
npm install --save pg pg-hstore
- MSSql:
npm install --save tedious
For additional information on supported databases visit the Sequelize Docs.
Install optional dependencies
- For Sequelize CLI:
npm install --save-dev sequelize-cli
Configuration
A ./src/config/sequelize.ts
will need to be created for your project. The example below will parse the Environment variable DATABASE_URL
for a postgres
database, however you can configure your connection in many ways. You can connect to DB pools, configure read/write splitting and more with Sequelize options. This configuration also enabled automigrate
, which means Actionhero will run your migrations for you at startup.
import { URL } from "url";
import * as path from "path";
export const DEFAULT = {
sequelize: (config) => {
let dialect = "postgres";
let host = "127.0.0.1";
let port = "5432";
let database = "actionhero";
let username = undefined;
let password = undefined;
if (process.env.DATABASE_URL) {
const parsed = new URL(process.env.DATABASE_URL);
if (parsed.username) {
username = parsed.username;
}
if (parsed.password) {
password = parsed.password;
}
if (parsed.hostname) {
host = parsed.hostname;
}
if (parsed.port) {
port = parsed.port;
}
if (parsed.pathname) {
database = parsed.pathname.substring(1);
}
}
return {
autoMigrate: true,
logging: false,
dialect: dialect,
port: parseInt(port),
database: database,
host: host,
username: username,
password: password,
models: [path.join(__dirname, "..", "models")],
migrations: [path.join(__dirname, "..", "migrations")],
};
},
};
module.exports.DEFAULT = DEFAULT;
module.exports.development = DEFAULT.sequelize({
env: "development",
process: { env: "development" },
});
module.exports.staging = DEFAULT.sequelize({
env: "staging",
process: { env: "staging" },
});
module.exports.production = DEFAULT.sequelize({
env: "production",
process: { env: "production" },
});
Configuring sequelize-cli
If you installed the CLI in the last step, you'll want to do the following to finish setting it up:
Create a file .sequelizerc
in the root of your project. It should contain:
const path = require("path");
module.exports = {
config: path.resolve(".", "sequelize.js"),
"models-path": path.resolve("src", "models"),
"seeders-path": path.resolve("src", "seeders"),
"migrations-path": path.resolve("src", "migrations"),
};
This tells the sequelize-cli where to find your migration files, models, etc. The values here assume you are using the default configuration.
In the root folder create a file called sequelize.js
, and add the following contents
const sequelizeConfig = require("./dist/config/sequelize.js");
const sequelizeConfigEnv =
sequelizeConfig[process.env.NODE_ENV] || sequelizeConfig.DEFAULT;
module.exports = sequelizeConfigEnv.sequelize();
This initializes the config for the CLI to use.
Once you're done, the folder structure should look like so:
src/
models/
migrations/
.sequelizerc
sequelize.js
You can now use the CLI to create & run migrations:
npx sequelize-cli migration:generate --name migration-skeleton
Logging
The logging
configuration parameter accepts either a false
value, or a function which accepts a log value of type string
and a event level value of type string
(ex: console.log
, log
from Actionhero). If you are passing in a function for the logging parameter.
Models
Thanks to sequelize-typescript
, we can have models with tagged parameters. The example below shows of how to use hooks, associations, and more. Further information can be found at https://github.com/RobinBuschmann/sequelize-typescript.
import * as bcrypt from "bcrypt";
import {
Model,
Table,
Column,
AllowNull,
IsEmail,
BeforeCreate,
HasMany,
} from "sequelize-typescript";
import * as uuid from "uuid/v4";
import { Post } from "./Post";
@Table({ tableName: "users", paranoid: true })
export class User extends Model<User> {
saltRounds = 10;
@Column({ primaryKey: true })
guid: string;
@AllowNull(false)
@Column
firstName: string;
@AllowNull(false)
@Column
lastName: string;
@AllowNull(false)
@IsEmail
@Column
email: string;
@Column
passwordHash: string;
@HasMany(() => Post)
posts: Post[];
@BeforeCreate
static generateGuid(instance) {
if (!instance.guid) {
instance.guid = uuid();
}
}
async updatePassword(password: string) {
this.passwordHash = await bcrypt.hash(password, this.saltRounds);
await this.save();
}
async checkPassword(password: string) {
if (!this.passwordHash) {
throw new Error("password not set for this team member");
}
const match = await bcrypt.compare(password, this.passwordHash);
return match;
}
}
You can then use these models in your Actions, Tasks, etc, by simply requiring them.
import { Action } from "actionhero";
import { User } from "./../models/User";
export class UserCreate extends Action {
constructor() {
super();
this.name = "user:create";
this.description = "create a new user";
this.outputExample = {};
this.inputs = {
firstName: { required: true },
lastName: { required: true },
password: { required: true },
email: { required: true },
};
}
async run({ params, response }) {
const user = new User({
firstName: params.firstName,
lastName: params.lastName,
email: params.email,
});
await user.save();
await user.updatePassword(params.password);
response.userGuid = user.guid;
}
}
This plugin does not condone the use of Sequelize.sync()
in favor of migrations. Keep you migrations in ./migrations
and use the sequelize-cli to execute them.
An example migration to create a users
table would look like:
module.exports = {
up: async function (migration, DataTypes) {
await migration.createTable(
"users",
{
guid: {
type: DataTypes.UUID,
defaultValue: DataTypes.UUIDV4,
primaryKey: true,
},
firstName: {
type: DataTypes.STRING(191),
allowNull: false,
},
lastName: {
type: DataTypes.STRING(191),
allowNull: false,
},
email: {
type: DataTypes.STRING(191),
allowNull: false,
},
passwordHash: {
type: DataTypes.TEXT,
allowNull: true,
},
lastLoginAt: {
type: DataTypes.DATE,
allowNull: true,
},
createdAt: DataTypes.DATE,
updatedAt: DataTypes.DATE,
deletedAt: DataTypes.DATE,
},
{
charset: "utf8mb4",
}
);
await migration.addIndex("users", ["email"], {
unique: true,
fields: "email",
});
},
down: async function (migration) {
await migration.dropTable("users");
},
};
You can use the sequelize-cli to create and execute migrations.
By default, ah-sequelize-plugin
will automatically execute any pending migrations when Actionhero starts up. You can disable this behavior by adding autoMigrate: false
to your sequelize config.
Fixtures (removed)
As of version 2.0.0
, we have removed support for fixtures from this plugin. If you need to load data into your application consider an Initializer in your project.