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any-db-transaction
Advanced tools
A simple transaction helper for any-db compliant database adapters.
var anyDB = require('any-db')
var begin = require('any-db-transaction')
var connection = anyDB.createConnection(...)
// Callback-style
begin(connection, function (err, transaction) {
if (err) return console.error(err)
// Do work using transaction
transaction.query(...)
transaction.commit()
})
// Synchronous-style*
var transaction = begin(connection)
transaction.on('error', console.error)
transaction.query(...)
transaction.commit()
// Or use a connection pool
var pool = anyDB.createPool(...)
var transaction = begin(pool)
module.exports := begin(Queryable, statement: String?, Continuation<Transaction>?) => Transaction
Transaction := FSM & Queryable & {
commit: (Continuation?) => void
rollback: (Continuation?) => void
}
module.exports := begin(Queryable, statement: String?, Continuation<Transaction>?) => Transaction
Transaction objects are are simple wrappers around a Connection that also
implement the Queryable API, but guarantee that all queries take place
within a single database transaction or not at all. Note that begin
also
understands how to acquire (and release) a connection from a ConnectionPool
as well, so you can simply pass a pool to it: var tx = begin(pool)
By default, any queries that error during a transaction will cause an automatic rollback.
If a query has no callback, the transaction will also handle (and re-emit)
'error'
events for the Query instance. This enables handling errors for
an entire transaction in a single place.
Transactions may also be nested by passing a Transaction
to begin
and these
nested transactions can safely error and rollback without rolling back their
parent transaction:
var parent = begin(connection)
var child = begin(parent)
child.query('some invalid sql')
child.on('error', function() {
parent.query('select 1') // parent still works
})
This feature relies on the SAVEPOINT
support in your database. (In particular
MySQL will doesn't have good support in very old versions). The use of
savepoints also means there is no option to replace the statement used to begin
the child transaction.
While the child transaction is in progress the parent transaction will queue any queries it receives until the child transaction either commits or rolls back, at which point it will process the queue. Be careful: it's quite possible to write code that deadlocks by waiting for a query in the parent transaction before committing the child transaction. For example:
// Do not do this! it will deadlock!
var parent = begin(connection) // starts the transaction
var child = begin(parent) // creates a savepoint
parent.query('SELECT 1', function(err) {
child.commit()
})
As stated previously, by default any queries that error during a transaction will cause an automatic rollback. This is to support the common pattern in which a transaction is a series of queries you either want to succeed or fail atomically.
There is another common pattern for transactions where you either create or
update a record. Many databases support an INSERT OR REPLACE
statement, but
quite often you'd like an INSERT OR UPDATE
construct instead.
Intuitively, a transaction can be used for this as well:
A transaction is unlikely to be the best choice here. The results of the first statement need to make it back to the client before it can decide whether to commit or try something else. Usually databases better support this kind of construct with nested queries, which avoid those roundtrips.
To facilitate this kind transaction use, automatic rollback of transactions can be disabled.
var tx = begin(conn, { autoRollback: false })
tx.query('Query that produces errors', function(err) {
tx.query('another query')
})
Note: PostgreSQL does not allow you to use a transaction immediately after
an error. However, you can get much the same behaviour by explicitly adding
SAVEPOINT
statements. A transaction with an error can be rolled back to a
known good savepoint, and can be used from there onwards. You can achieve the
same by using nested transactions.
var tx = begin(conn, { autoRollback: false })
var sp = begin(tx)
sp.query('query that might fail', function(err) {
if (err) {
tx.query('alternate queries')
} else {
sp.commit()
}
})
Note that the failing query is performed on the "savepoint" child transaction, but the final query is perfomed on the outer/parent transaction.
Transactions are [FSM][] instances with 4 states: disconnected
,
connected
, open
, and closed
:
[disconnected]
↓
[connected]
↓ ↓ ↑
↓ [open]
↓ ↓
[closed]
Every transaction starts out in the disconnected
state, in which it will queue
all tasks (queries, child transactions, commits and rollbacks) in the order they
are received.
Once the transaction acquires a connection* it will transition to the
connected
state and begin processing it's internal task queue. While in this
state any new tasks will still be added to the end of the queue. There are two
possible transitions from the connected
state:
connected → open
- When all queued tasks have finished.connected → closed
- When a rollback or commit is encountered in the queue.
This includes automatic rollbacks caused by query errors.closed
is a terminal state in which all further database operations result in
errors. (The errors will either be sent to any callback provided or emitted as
error
events on the next tick).
In the open
state, all database operations will be performed immediately. If
a child transaction is started like var child = begin(parentTxn)
, the parent
transaction will move back into the connected
state (queueing any queries it
receives) until the child completes, at which point it will resume processing
it's own internal queue.
Transactions created from a Connection transition to connected
before
begin returns.
The Adapter instance used by the resource (connection or parent transaction) underlying this transaction.
(text: String, params: Array?, Continuation<Result>?) => Query
Maintains the same contract as Queryable.query but adds further guarantees
that queries will be performed within the transaction or not at all. If the
transaction has been committed or rolled back this method will fail by passing
an error to the continuation (if provided) or emitting an 'error'
event.
(Continuation<void>) => void
Issue a COMMIT
(or RELEASE ...
in the case of nested transactions) statement
to the database. If a continuation is provided it will be called (possibly with
an error) after the COMMIT
statement completes. The transaction object itself
will be unusable after calling commit()
.
(Continuation<void>) => void
The same as Transaction.commit but issues a ROLLBACK
.
Again, the transaction will be unusable after calling this method.
'query', query
- emitted immediately after .query
is called on a
connection via tx.query
. The argument is a query object.
'commit:start'
- Emitted when .commit()
is called.
'commit:complete'
- Emitted after the transaction has committed.
'rollback:start'
- Emitted when .rollback()
is called.
'rollback:complete'
- Emitted after the transaction has rolled back.
'close'
- Emitted after rollback
or commit
completes.
'error', err
- Emitted under three conditions:
query
, begin
, commit
, or rollback
are called after the
connection has already been committed or rolled back.Note that the 'error'
event may be emitted multiple times! depending on
the callback you are registering, you way want to wrap it using [once][].
A common pattern in web applications is start a transaction for each request and commit it before sending a response. Here is a simplified connect middleware that encapsulates this pattern:
module.exports = function unitOfWorkMiddleware(pool, errorHandler) {
return function(req, res, next) {
req.tx = pool.begin()
// intercept writeHead to ensure we have completed our transaction before
// responding to the user
var writeHead = res.writeHead
res.writeHead = function() {
var args = arguments
if (req.tx.state() != 'closed') {
req.tx.commit(function(err) {
if (err) {
errorHandler(req, res, err)
} else {
writeHead.apply(res, args)
}
})
} else {
writeHead.apply(res, args)
}
}
next()
}
}
Here's an example where we stream all of our user ids, check them against an external abuse-monitoring service, and flag or delete users as necessary, if for any reason we only get part way through, the entire transaction is rolled back and nobody is flagged or deleted:
var pool = require('any-db').createPool(...)
// this is our external service
var abuseService = require('./services').abuseService()
var tx = begin(pool)
tx.on('error', finished)
/*
Why query with the pool and not the transaction?
Because it allows the transaction queries to begin executing immediately,
rather than queueing them all up behind the initial SELECT.
*/
pool.query('SELECT id FROM users')
.on('data', function (user) {
if (tx.state() == 'closed') {
// Do not make unneccessary requests
return
}
abuseService.checkUser(user.id, function (err, result) {
if (err) return tx.handleError(err)
// Errors from these queries will propagate up to the transaction object
if (result.flag) {
tx.query('UPDATE users SET abuse_flag = 1 WHERE id = $1', [user.id])
} else if (result.destroy) {
tx.query('DELETE FROM users WHERE id = $1', [user.id])
}
})
}).on('end', function () {
tx.commit(finished)
})
function finished (err) {
if (err) console.error(err)
else console.log('All done!')
}
2-clause BSD
FAQs
Transaction object for Any-DB adapters
The npm package any-db-transaction receives a total of 849 weekly downloads. As such, any-db-transaction popularity was classified as not popular.
We found that any-db-transaction demonstrated a not healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released a year ago. It has 1 open source maintainer collaborating on the project.
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