🦄 sequelize-find-unique
Finder for retrieving a single Sequelize model entry by a unique column or a unique combination of multiple columns. Queries that occur in the same tick and have the same where
, attributes
, and include
parameters are automatically batched using a dataloader and will result in a single database query. This is very useful, especially on a GraphQL server to avoid the N+1 Problem.
This library is heavily inspired by Prisma's findUnique
method.
Install
With npm:
npm install sequelize-find-unique
With Yarn:
yarn add sequelize-find-unique
How to use?
A findUnique
function can be built for a specific Sequelize model by using the makeFindUnique
function:
const { Sequelize, DataTypes } = require('sequelize');
const { makeFindUnique } = require('sequelize-find-unique');
const sequelize = new Sequelize('sqlite::memory:');
const User = sequelize.define('user', {
id: { type: DataTypes.INTEGER, primaryKey: true, autoIncrement: true },
username: { type: DataTypes.TEXT, unique: true },
});
const findUniqueUser = makeFindUnique(User);
const users = await Promise.all([
findUniqueUser({
where: {
username: 'john',
},
}),
findUniqueUser({
where: {
username: 'mary',
},
}),
]);
The two findUniqueUser
queries in the example are batched and only one database query is executed.
Using as model's static method
The findUnique
(or name of your choice) static method can be defined for a model in the following way:
User.findUnique = makeFindUnique(User);
const user = await User.findUnique({
where: {
username: 'kalle',
},
});
Attributes
Queries with the same attributes
parameter are batched:
const users = await Promise.all([
User.findUnique({
where: {
username: 'john',
},
attributes: ['username'],
}),
User.findUnique({
where: {
username: 'mary',
},
attributes: ['username'],
}),
]);
Note that, if the attributes
parameter is provided, columns used in the where
parameter must be present in the attributes
parameter.
Associations
Queries with the same include
parameter are batched:
const users = await Promise.all([
User.findUnique({
where: {
username: 'john',
},
include: { model: Comment },
}),
User.findUnique({
where: {
username: 'mary',
},
include: { model: Comment },
}),
]);
Composite unique columns
Composite unique columns work just like a single unique column:
const persons = await Promise.all([
Person.findUnique({
where: {
firstName: 'Kalle',
lastName: 'Ilves',
},
}),
Person.findUnique({
where: {
firstName: 'John',
lastName: 'Doe',
},
}),
]);
Custom serializers
Serializers can be used to customize the batching behavior. The serializeBatchKey
option can be used to customize which queries go to the same batch. That is, queries that occur on the same tick will be batched based on the string key returned by the serializeBatchKey
. The default serializeBatchKey
serializer serializes the columns in the where
parameter, the attributes
parameter, and the include
parameter.
The serielizeLoadKey
option can be used to customize the DataLoader's cacheKeyFn function. The default serielizeLoadKey
serializer serializes the where
parameter.
Both functions receive the options provided for the findUnique
function and should return a string. The serializeBatchKey
and serializeLoadKey
can be provided using the second argument, the options object, of the makeFindUnique
function:
const customSerializeBatchKey = (options) => {
return JSON.stringify(Object.keys(options.where));
};
const customSerializeLoadKey = (options) => {
return JSON.stringify(options.where);
};
User.findUnique = makeFindUnique(User, {
serializeBatchKey: customSerializeBatchKey,
serializeLoadKey: customSerializeLoadKey,
});
Custom cache
The cache
option can be used to provide a custom DataLoader cache implementation. The cache keys are string and values DataLoader instances. The cache implementation should implement get
, set
, and delete
methods:
class CustomCache {
get(key) {
}
set(key, value) {
}
delete(key) {
}
}
User.findUnique = makeFindUnique(User, {
cache: new CustomCache(),
});
The default cache implementation is a simple wrapper around Map.
TypeScript
The library is written in TypeScript, so types are on the house!
If you are using a static method like in the previous examples, just declare the method on your model class:
import { makeFindUnique, FindUniqueOptions } from 'sequelize-find-unique';
export class User extends Model<
InferAttributes<User>,
InferCreationAttributes<User>
> {
declare id: CreationOptional<number>;
declare username: string;
declare static findUnique: (
options: FindUniqueOptions<Attributes<User>>,
) => Promise<User | null>;
}
User.findUnique = makeFindUnique(User);