Awesome
Notice
This library is sparsely maintined. If you are starting a new project, you will probably want to look into using exqlite or it's matching Ecto Adatper ecto_sqlite3
Sqlitex
An Elixir wrapper around esqlite. The main aim here is to provide convenient usage of SQLite databases.
Updated to 1.0
With the 1.0 release, we made just a single breaking change. Sqlitex.Query.query
previously returned just the raw query results on success and {:error, reason}
on failure.
This has been bothering us for a while, so we changed it in 1.0 to return {:ok, results}
on success and {:error, reason}
on failure.
This should make it easier to pattern match on. The Sqlitex.Query.query!
function has kept its same functionality of returning bare results on success and raising an error on failure.
Usage
The simple way to use sqlitex
is just to open a database and run a query:
Sqlitex.with_db('test/fixtures/golfscores.sqlite3', fn(db) ->
Sqlitex.query(db, "SELECT * FROM players ORDER BY id LIMIT 1")
end)
# => [[id: 1, name: "Mikey", created_at: {{2012,10,14},{05,46,28}}, updated_at: {{2013,09,06},{22,29,36}}, type: nil]]
Sqlitex.with_db('test/fixtures/golfscores.sqlite3', fn(db) ->
Sqlitex.query(db, "SELECT * FROM players ORDER BY id LIMIT 1", into: %{})
end)
# => [%{id: 1, name: "Mikey", created_at: {{2012,10,14},{05,46,28}}, updated_at: {{2013,09,06},{22,29,36}}, type: nil}]
Pass the bind
option to bind parameterized queries.
Sqlitex.with_db('test/fixtures/golfscores.sqlite3', fn(db) ->
Sqlitex.query(
db,
"INSERT INTO players (name, created_at, updated_at) VALUES (?1, ?2, ?3, ?4)",
bind: ['Mikey', '2012-10-14 05:46:28.318107', '2013-09-06 22:29:36.610911']
)
end)
# => [[id: 1, name: "Mikey", created_at: {{2012,10,14},{05,46,28}}, updated_at: {{2013,09,06},{22,29,36}}, type: nil]]
If you want to keep the database open during the lifetime of your project, you can use the Sqlitex.Server
GenServer module.
Here's a sample from a phoenix projects main supervisor definition.
children = [
# Start the endpoint when the application starts
worker(Golf.Endpoint, []),
worker(Sqlitex.Server, ['golf.sqlite3', [name: Golf.DB]])
]
Now that the GenServer is running you can make queries via
Sqlitex.Server.query(Golf.DB,
"SELECT g.id, g.course_id, g.played_at, c.name AS course
FROM games AS g
INNER JOIN courses AS c ON g.course_id = c.id
ORDER BY g.played_at DESC LIMIT 10")
Configuration
Sqlitex uses the Erlang library esqlite
which accepts a timeout parameter for almost all interactions with the database.
The default value for this timeout is 5000 ms. Many functions in Sqlitex accept
a :db_timeout
option that is passed on to the esqlite calls and also defaults
to 5000 ms. If required, this default value can be overridden globally with the
following in your config.exs
:
config :sqlitex, db_timeout: 10_000 # or other positive integer number of ms
Another esqlite parameter is :db_chunk_size.
This is a count of rows to read from native sqlite and send to erlang process in one bulk.
For example, the table mytable
has 1000 rows. We make the query to get all rows with db_chunk_size: 500
parameter:
Sqlitex.query(db, "select * from mytable", db_chunk_size: 500)
in this case all rows will be passed from native sqlite OS thread to the erlang process in two passes.
Each pass will contain 500 rows.
This parameter decrease overhead of transmitting rows from native OS sqlite thread to the erlang process by
chunking list of result rows.
Please, decrease this value if rows are heavy. Default value is 5000.
If you in doubt what to do with this parameter, please, do nothing. Default value is ok.
config :sqlitex, db_chunk_size: 500 # if most of the database rows are heavy
Looking for Ecto?
Check out the SQLite Ecto2 adapter