A simple yet powerful module to allow you to use ES6 tagged template strings for prepared/escaped statements in mysql / mysql2 and postgres.
Example for escaping queries (callbacks omitted):
const SQL = require('sql-template-strings')
const book = 'harry potter'
const author = 'J. K. Rowling'
mysql.query('SELECT author FROM books WHERE name = ? AND author = ?', [book, author])
mysql.query(SQL`SELECT author FROM books WHERE name = ${book} AND author = ${author}`)
pg.query('SELECT author FROM books WHERE name = $1 AND author = $2', [book, author])
pg.query(SQL`SELECT author FROM books WHERE name = ${book} AND author = ${author}`)
This might not seem like a big deal, but when you do an INSERT with a lot columns writing all the placeholders becomes a nightmare:
db.query(
'INSERT INTO books (name, author, isbn, category, recommended_age, pages, price) VALUES (?, ?, ?, ?, ?, ?, ?)',
[name, author, isbn, category, recommendedAge, pages, price]
)
db.query(SQL`
INSERT
INTO books
(name, author, isbn, category, recommended_age, pages, price)
VALUES (${name}, ${author}, ${isbn}, ${category}, ${recommendedAge}, ${pages}, ${price})
`)
Also template strings support line breaks, while normal strings do not.
How it works
The SQL template string tag transforms the template string and returns an object that is understood by both mysql and postgres:
const query = SQL`SELECT author FROM books WHERE name = ${book} AND author = ${author}`
typeof query
query.text
query.sql
query.values
Building complex queries with append()
It is also possible to build queries by appending another query or a string with the append()
method (returns this
for chaining):
query.append(SQL`AND genre = ${genre}`).append(' ORDER BY rating')
query.text
query.sql
query.values
This allows you to build complex queries without having to care about the placeholder index or the values array:
const query = SQL`SELECT * FROM books`
if (params.name) {
query.append(SQL` WHERE name = ${params.name}`)
}
query.append(SQL` LIMIT 10 OFFSET ${params.offset || 0}`)
Raw values
Some values cannot be replaced by placeholders in prepared statements, like table names.
append()
replaces the SQL.raw()
syntax from version 1, just pass a string and it will get appended raw.
Please note that when inserting raw values, you are responsible for quoting and escaping these values with proper escaping functions first if they come from user input (E.g. mysql.escapeId()
and pg.escapeIdentifier()
).
Also, executing many prepared statements with changing raw values in a loop will quickly overflow the prepared statement buffer (and destroy their performance benefit), so be careful.
const table = 'books'
const order = 'DESC'
const column = 'author'
db.query(SQL`SELECT * FROM "`.append(table).append(SQL`" WHERE author = ${author} ORDER BY ${column} `).append(order))
mysql.query(SQL`SELECT * FROM `.append(mysql.escapeId(someUserInput)).append(SQL` WHERE name = ${book} ORDER BY ${column} `).append(order))
pg.query(SQL`SELECT * FROM `.append(pg.escapeIdentifier(someUserInput)).append(SQL` WHERE name = ${book} ORDER BY ${column} `).append(order)))
Prepared Statements in Postgres
Postgres requires prepared statements to be named, otherwise the parameters will be escaped and replaced on the client side.
You can set the name with the setName()
method:
pg.query({name: 'my_query', text: 'SELECT author FROM books WHERE name = $1', values: [book]})
pg.query(SQL`SELECT author FROM books WHERE name = ${book}`.setName('my_query'))
You can also set the name property on the statement object directly or use Object.assign()
.
Contributing
- Tests are written using mocha (BDD style) and chai (expect style)
- You can use
npm test
to run the tests and check coding style - Since this module is only compatible with ES6 versions of node anyway, use all the ES6 goodies
- Pull requests are welcome :)