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Getting Started |
TinyORM makes interacting with a database extremely simple using raw SQL, a fluent query builder, and the TinyORM. It provides first-party support for four databases MySQL/MariaDB, PostgreSQL, and SQLite. |
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import Link from '@docusaurus/Link'
import TabItem from '@theme/TabItem' import Tabs from '@theme/Tabs'
import ConfigurationSettings from '@theme/ConfigurationSettings' import { shell, bash, pwsh, bash_label, pwsh_label, database, maria, mysql, postgres, sqlite, maria_label, mysql_label, postgres_label, sqlite_label, } from '@theme/constants'
Almost every modern application interacts with a database. TinyORM makes interacting with a database extremely simple using raw SQL, a fluent query builder, and the TinyORM. Currently, TinyORM provides first-party support for four databases:
- MySQL
>=5.7
(Version Policy) - MariaDB
>=10.3
(Version Policy) - PostgreSQL
>=11
(Version Policy) - SQLite
>=3.8.8
- native rename column
>=3.25.0
(docs , release notes) - generated columns
>=3.31.0
(docs, release notes) - native drop column
>=3.35.0
(docs, release notes)
- native rename column
TinyORM internally uses QtSql
module, you can look for supported databases.
:::note TinyORM's code is ready and designed to simply add support for the SQL Server. :::
You can create and configure a new database connection using the create
method provided by the DB
facade:
#include <orm/db.hpp>
using Orm::DB;
// Ownership of a shared_ptr()
auto manager = DB::create({
{"driver", "QMYSQL"},
{"host", qEnvironmentVariable("DB_HOST", "127.0.0.1")},
{"port", qEnvironmentVariable("DB_PORT", "3306")},
{"database", qEnvironmentVariable("DB_DATABASE", "")},
{"username", qEnvironmentVariable("DB_USERNAME", "root")},
{"password", qEnvironmentVariable("DB_PASSWORD", "")},
{"charset", qEnvironmentVariable("DB_CHARSET", "utf8mb4")},
{"collation", qEnvironmentVariable("DB_COLLATION", "utf8mb4_0900_ai_ci")},
{"timezone", "+00:00"},
/* Specifies what time zone all QDateTime-s will have, the overridden default is
the QTimeZone::UTC, set to the QTimeZone::LocalTime or
QtTimeZoneType::DontConvert to use the system local time. */
{"qt_timezone", QVariant::fromValue(QTimeZone::UTC)},
{"prefix", ""},
{"prefix_indexes", false},
{"strict", true},
{"engine", "InnoDB"},
{"options", QVariantHash()},
});
#include <orm/db.hpp>
using Orm::DB;
// Ownership of a shared_ptr()
auto manager = DB::create({
{"driver", "QPSQL"},
{"host", qEnvironmentVariable("DB_HOST", "127.0.0.1")},
{"port", qEnvironmentVariable("DB_PORT", "5432")},
{"database", qEnvironmentVariable("DB_DATABASE", "")},
{"search_path", qEnvironmentVariable("DB_SEARCHPATH", "public")},
{"username", qEnvironmentVariable("DB_USERNAME", "postgres")},
{"password", qEnvironmentVariable("DB_PASSWORD", "")},
{"charset", qEnvironmentVariable("DB_CHARSET", "utf8")},
{"timezone", "UTC"},
/* Specifies what time zone all QDateTime-s will have, the overridden default is
the QTimeZone::UTC, set to the QTimeZone::LocalTime or
QtTimeZoneType::DontConvert to use the system local time. */
{"qt_timezone", QVariant::fromValue(QTimeZone::UTC)},
{"prefix", ""},
{"prefix_indexes", false},
{"options", QVariantHash()},
});
#include <orm/db.hpp>
using Orm::DB;
// Ownership of a shared_ptr()
auto manager = DB::create({
{"driver", "QSQLITE"},
{"database", qEnvironmentVariable("DB_DATABASE", "/example/example.sqlite3")},
{"foreign_key_constraints", qEnvironmentVariable("DB_FOREIGN_KEYS", "true")},
{"check_database_exists", true},
/* Specifies what time zone all QDateTime-s will have, the overridden default is
the QTimeZone::UTC, set to the QTimeZone::LocalTime or
QtTimeZoneType::DontConvert to use the system local time. */
{"qt_timezone", QVariant::fromValue(QTimeZone::UTC)},
/* Return a QDateTime/QDate with the correct time zone instead of the QString,
only works when the qt_timezone isn't set to the DontConvert. */
{"return_qdatetime", true},
{"prefix", ""},
{"prefix_indexes", false},
});
#include <orm/db.hpp>
using Orm::DB;
// Ownership of a shared_ptr()
auto manager = DB::create({
{"driver", "QMYSQL"},
{"host", qEnvironmentVariable("DB_HOST", "127.0.0.1")},
{"port", qEnvironmentVariable("DB_PORT", "3306")},
{"database", qEnvironmentVariable("DB_DATABASE", "")},
{"username", qEnvironmentVariable("DB_USERNAME", "root")},
{"password", qEnvironmentVariable("DB_PASSWORD", "")},
{"charset", qEnvironmentVariable("DB_CHARSET", "utf8mb4")},
{"collation", qEnvironmentVariable("DB_COLLATION", "utf8mb4_unicode_520_ci")},
{"timezone", "+00:00"},
/* Specifies what time zone all QDateTime-s will have, the overridden default is
the QTimeZone::UTC, set to the QTimeZone::LocalTime or
QtTimeZoneType::DontConvert to use the system local time. */
{"qt_timezone", QVariant::fromValue(QTimeZone::UTC)},
{"prefix", ""},
{"prefix_indexes", false},
{"strict", true},
{"engine", "InnoDB"},
{"options", QVariantHash()},
});
#include <orm/db.hpp>
#include <orm/utils/configuration.hpp>
using Orm::DB;
using ConfigUtils = Orm::Utils::Configuration;
using namespace Orm::Constants; // NOLINT(google-build-using-namespace)
// Ownership of a shared_ptr()
auto manager = DB::create({
{driver_, QMYSQL},
{host_, qEnvironmentVariable("DB_HOST", H127001)},
{port_, qEnvironmentVariable("DB_PORT", P3306)},
{database_, qEnvironmentVariable("DB_DATABASE", EMPTY)},
{username_, qEnvironmentVariable("DB_USERNAME", ROOT)},
{password_, qEnvironmentVariable("DB_PASSWORD", EMPTY)},
{charset_, qEnvironmentVariable("DB_CHARSET", UTF8MB4)},
{collation_, qEnvironmentVariable("DB_COLLATION", UTF8MB40900aici)},
// SSL-related
{ssl_ca, QStringLiteral("C:/mysql/data/ca.pem")},
{ssl_cert, QStringLiteral("C:/mysql/data/client-cert.pem")},
{ssl_key, QStringLiteral("C:/mysql/data/client-key.pem")},
{ssl_mode, VerifyCA},
// Or
// {options, ConfigUtils::mysqlSslOptions()},
{timezone_, TZ00},
/* Specifies what time zone all QDateTime-s will have, the overridden default is
the QTimeZone::UTC, set to the QTimeZone::LocalTime or
QtTimeZoneType::DontConvert to use the system local time. */
{qt_timezone, QVariant::fromValue(QTimeZone::UTC)},
{prefix_, EMPTY},
{prefix_indexes, false},
{strict_, true},
// {isolation_level, QStringLiteral("REPEATABLE READ")}, // MySQL default is REPEATABLE READ for InnoDB
{engine_, InnoDB},
{Version, {}}, // Autodetect
{options_, QVariantHash()},
// Examples
// {options_, QStringLiteral("MYSQL_OPT_CONNECT_TIMEOUT = 1 ; MYSQL_OPT_READ_TIMEOUT=1")},
// {options_, QVariantHash {{QStringLiteral("MYSQL_OPT_CONNECT_TIMEOUT"), 1},
// {QStringLiteral("MYSQL_OPT_READ_TIMEOUT"), 1}}},
});
#include <orm/db.hpp>
#include <orm/utils/configuration.hpp>
using Orm::DB;
using ConfigUtils = Orm::Utils::Configuration;
using namespace Orm::Constants; // NOLINT(google-build-using-namespace)
// Ownership of a shared_ptr()
auto manager = DB::create({
{driver_, QPSQL},
{application_name, QStringLiteral("Example application")},
{host_, qEnvironmentVariable("DB_HOST", H127001)},
{port_, qEnvironmentVariable("DB_PORT", P5432)},
{database_, qEnvironmentVariable("DB_DATABASE", EMPTY)},
{search_path, qEnvironmentVariable("DB_SEARCHPATH", PUBLIC)},
{username_, qEnvironmentVariable("DB_USERNAME", postgres_)},
{password_, qEnvironmentVariable("DB_PASSWORD", EMPTY)},
{charset_, qEnvironmentVariable("DB_CHARSET", UTF8)},
// SSL-related
{sslmode_, QStringLiteral("verify-full")},
{sslcert, QStringLiteral("C:/example/postgres.crt")},
{sslkey, QStringLiteral("C:/example/postgres.key")},
{sslrootcert, QStringLiteral("C:/example/root.crt")},
// Or
// {options_, ConfigUtils::postgresSslOptions()},
{timezone_, UTC},
/* Specifies what time zone all QDateTime-s will have, the overridden default is
the QTimeZone::UTC, set to the QTimeZone::LocalTime or
QtTimeZoneType::DontConvert to use the system local time. */
{qt_timezone, QVariant::fromValue(QTimeZone::UTC)},
{prefix_, EMPTY},
{prefix_indexes, false},
// {isolation_level, QStringLiteral("REPEATABLE READ")}, // Postgres default is READ COMMITTED
// {synchronous_commit, QStringLiteral("off")}, // Postgres default is on
// ConnectionFactory provides a default value for this, this is only for reference
// {dont_drop, QStringList {spatial_ref_sys}},
{options_, QVariantHash()},
});
#include <orm/db.hpp>
#include <orm/utils/configuration.hpp>
using Orm::DB;
using ConfigUtils = Orm::Utils::Configuration;
using namespace Orm::Constants; // NOLINT(google-build-using-namespace)
// Ownership of a shared_ptr()
auto manager = DB::create({
{driver_, QSQLITE},
{database_, qEnvironmentVariable("DB_DATABASE", "C:/SQLite/example.sqlite3")},
{foreign_key_constraints, qEnvironmentVariable("DB_FOREIGN_KEYS", "true")},
{check_database_exists, true},
/* Specifies what time zone all QDateTime-s will have, the overridden default is
the QTimeZone::UTC, set to the QTimeZone::LocalTime or
QtTimeZoneType::DontConvert to use the system local time. */
{qt_timezone, QVariant::fromValue(QTimeZone::UTC)},
/* Return a QDateTime/QDate with the correct time zone instead of the QString,
only works when the qt_timezone isn't set to the DontConvert. */
{return_qdatetime, true},
{prefix_, EMPTY},
{prefix_indexes, false},
});
#include <orm/db.hpp>
#include <orm/utils/configuration.hpp>
using Orm::DB;
using ConfigUtils = Orm::Utils::Configuration;
using namespace Orm::Constants; // NOLINT(google-build-using-namespace)
// Ownership of a shared_ptr()
auto manager = DB::create({
{driver_, QMYSQL},
{host_, qEnvironmentVariable("DB_HOST", H127001)},
{port_, qEnvironmentVariable("DB_PORT", P3306)},
{database_, qEnvironmentVariable("DB_DATABASE", EMPTY)},
{username_, qEnvironmentVariable("DB_USERNAME", ROOT)},
{password_, qEnvironmentVariable("DB_PASSWORD", EMPTY)},
{charset_, qEnvironmentVariable("DB_CHARSET", UTF8MB4)},
{collation_, qEnvironmentVariable("DB_COLLATION", UTF8MB4Unicode520ci)},
// SSL-related
{ssl_ca, QStringLiteral("C:/maria/data/ca.pem")},
{ssl_cert, QStringLiteral("C:/maria/data/client-cert.pem")},
{ssl_key, QStringLiteral("C:/maria/data/client-key.pem")},
// Or
// {options, ConfigUtils::mariaSslOptions()},
{timezone_, TZ00},
/* Specifies what time zone all QDateTime-s will have, the overridden default is
the QTimeZone::UTC, set to the QTimeZone::LocalTime or
QtTimeZoneType::DontConvert to use the system local time. */
{qt_timezone, QVariant::fromValue(QTimeZone::UTC)},
{prefix_, EMPTY},
{prefix_indexes, false},
{strict_, true},
// {isolation_level, QStringLiteral("REPEATABLE READ")}, // MariaDB default is REPEATABLE READ for InnoDB
{engine_, InnoDB},
{Version, {}}, // Autodetect
{options_, QVariantHash()},
// Examples
// {options_, QStringLiteral("MYSQL_OPT_CONNECT_TIMEOUT = 1 ; MYSQL_OPT_READ_TIMEOUT=1")},
// {options_, QVariantHash {{QStringLiteral("MYSQL_OPT_CONNECT_TIMEOUT"), 1},
// {QStringLiteral("MYSQL_OPT_READ_TIMEOUT"), 1}}},
});
The first argument is configuration hash which is of type QVariantHash
and the second argument specifies the name of the connection, this connection will also be a default connection. You can configure multiple database connections at once and choose the needed one before executing SQL query, section Using Multiple Database Connections describes how to create and use multiple database connections.
You may also configure connection options by options
key as QVariantHash
or QString
, you can pass any connection options supported by QSqlDatabase
.
You can also configure Transaction Isolation Levels for MySQL connection with the isolation_level
configuration option.
The version
option is relevant only for the MySQL connections and you can save/avoid one database query (select version()) if you provide it manually. Based on this version will be decided which session variables will be set if strict mode is enabled and whether to use an alias during the upsert
method call.
Breaking values are as follows; use an upsert alias on the MySQL >=8.0.19 and remove the NO_AUTO_CREATE_USER
sql mode on the MySQL >=8.0.11 if the strict mode is enabled.
:::info
A database connection is resolved lazily, which means that the connection configuration is only saved after the DB::create
method call. The connection will be resolved after you run some query or you can create it using the DB::connection
method.
:::
:::tip
You can also use predefined string constants to avoid unnecessary QString
instantiations, as used in the tom
migrations example.
:::
:::info
See Date Casting, Serialization & Timezones if you have problems with qt_timezone
configuration option and QTimeZone
value on older Qt <6.5
versions.
:::
SQLite databases are contained within a single file on your filesystem. You can create a new SQLite database using the touch
command in your terminal: touch database.sqlite3
. After the database has been created, you may configure SQLite database connection:
#include <orm/db.hpp>
// Ownership of a shared_ptr()
auto manager = DB::create({
{"driver", "QSQLITE"},
{"database", qEnvironmentVariable("DB_DATABASE", "/absolute/path/to/database.sqlite3")},
{"foreign_key_constraints", qEnvironmentVariable("DB_FOREIGN_KEYS", "true")},
{"check_database_exists", true},
{"prefix", ""},
});
The database
configuration value is the absolute path to the database. To enable foreign key constraints for SQLite connections, you should set the foreign_key_constraints
configuration value to true
, if this configuration value is not set, then the default of the SQLite driver will be used (currently the default is disabled).
If the check_database_exists
configuration value is set to the true
value, then the database connection throws an Orm::InvalidArgumentError
exception, when the SQLite database file doesn't exist. If it is set to the false
value and the SQLite database file doesn't exist, then it will be created for you by SQLite driver. The default value is true
.
SSL connections are supported for the MySQL
and PostgreSQL
databases. They can be set using the options
configuration option.
:::info
This feature is heavily dependent on the underlying QSqlDatabase
module. What means that you can pass the same connection options to the TinyORM
that the QSqlDatabase
accepts.
:::
You have to pass the SSL_CA
, SSL_CERT
, SSL_KEY
, and MYSQL_OPT_SSL_MODE
options.
#include <orm/db.hpp>
using Orm::DB;
// Ownership of a shared_ptr()
auto manager = DB::create({
{"driver", "QMYSQL"},
{"host", qEnvironmentVariable("DB_MYSQL_HOST", "127.0.0.1")},
...
// highlight-start
{"options", QVariantHash({{"SSL_CA", "C:/mysql/data/ca.pem"},
{"SSL_CERT", "C:/mysql/data/client-cert.pem"},
{"SSL_KEY", "C:/mysql/data/client-key.pem"},
{"MYSQL_OPT_SSL_MODE", "VERIFY_CA"}})},
// highlight-end
});
#include <orm/db.hpp>
using Orm::DB;
// Ownership of a shared_ptr()
auto manager = DB::create({
{"driver", "QMYSQL"},
{"host", qEnvironmentVariable("DB_MYSQL_HOST", "127.0.0.1")},
...
// highlight-start
{"options", QVariantHash({{"SSL_CA", "~/.local/share/TinyORM/ssl/ca.pem"},
{"SSL_CERT", "~/.local/share/TinyORM/ssl/client-cert.pem"},
{"SSL_KEY", "~/.local/share/TinyORM/ssl/client-key.pem"},
{"MYSQL_OPT_SSL_MODE", "VERIFY_CA"}})},
// highlight-end
});
You may also use the ConfigUtils::mysqlSslOptions()
or the ConfigUtils::insertMySqlSslOptions()
methods to insert these options for you and define them using the DB_MYSQL_SSL_CA
, DB_MYSQL_SSL_CERT
, DB_MYSQL_SSL_KEY
, and DB_MYSQL_SSL_MODE
environment variables.
#include <orm/db.hpp>
#include <orm/utils/configuration.hpp>
using Orm::DB;
using ConfigUtils = Orm::Utils::Configuration;
// Ownership of a shared_ptr()
auto manager = DB::create({
{"driver", "QMYSQL"},
{"host", qEnvironmentVariable("DB_MYSQL_HOST", "127.0.0.1")},
...
// highlight-next-line
{"options", ConfigUtils::mysqlSslOptions()},
});
You can define these SSL-related options in the top-level configuration, they will be copied to the options
option hash during configuration parsing. The top-level configuration takes precedence and overwrites the options in the options
hash.
#include <orm/db.hpp>
using Orm::DB;
// Ownership of a shared_ptr()
auto manager = DB::create({
{"driver", "QMYSQL"},
{"host", qEnvironmentVariable("DB_MYSQL_HOST", "127.0.0.1")},
...
// highlight-start
{"SSL_CA", "C:/mysql/data/ca.pem"},
{"SSL_CERT", "C:/mysql/data/client-cert.pem"},
{"SSL_KEY", "C:/mysql/data/client-key.pem"},
{"MYSQL_OPT_SSL_MODE", "VERIFY_CA"},
// highlight-end
});
#include <orm/db.hpp>
using Orm::DB;
// Ownership of a shared_ptr()
auto manager = DB::create({
{"driver", "QMYSQL"},
{"host", qEnvironmentVariable("DB_MYSQL_HOST", "127.0.0.1")},
...
// highlight-start
{"SSL_CA", "~/.local/share/TinyORM/ssl/ca.pem"},
{"SSL_CERT", "~/.local/share/TinyORM/ssl/client-cert.pem"},
{"SSL_KEY", "~/.local/share/TinyORM/ssl/client-key.pem"},
{"MYSQL_OPT_SSL_MODE", "VERIFY_CA"},
// highlight-end
});
:::tip
You can take a look at the GitHub actions how the MySQL
certificates are generated in the CI pipeline for Windows and Linux.
:::
:::tip
You can also pass the QString
to the options
configuration separated by the ;
semicolon character and use the =
to assign values.
:::
You have to pass the sslmode
or the deprecated requiressl
options.
#include <orm/db.hpp>
using Orm::DB;
// Ownership of a shared_ptr()
auto manager = DB::create({
{"driver", "QPSQL"},
{"host", qEnvironmentVariable("DB_PGSQL_HOST", "127.0.0.1")},
...
// highlight-next-line
{"options", QVariantHash({{"sslmode", "verify-full"}})},
});
And place your client certificates to the ~/.postgres/
on Linux and $env:APPDATA/postgres/
on Windows. Everything is described in the PostgreSQL's libpq client and server documentation.
If you want to keep your client certificates in your own location, you can set the sslcert
, sslkey
, and sslrootcert
options.
#include <orm/db.hpp>
using Orm::DB;
// Ownership of a shared_ptr()
auto manager = DB::create({
{"driver", "QPSQL"},
{"host", qEnvironmentVariable("DB_PGSQL_HOST", "127.0.0.1")},
...
// highlight-next-line
{"options", QVariantHash({{"sslmode", "verify-full"},
// highlight-start
{"sslcert", "C:/example/postgres.crt"},
{"sslkey", "C:/example/postgres.key"},
{"sslrootcert", "C:/example/root.crt"}})},
// highlight-end
});
#include <orm/db.hpp>
using Orm::DB;
// Ownership of a shared_ptr()
auto manager = DB::create({
{"driver", "QPSQL"},
{"host", qEnvironmentVariable("DB_PGSQL_HOST", "127.0.0.1")},
...
// highlight-next-line
{"options", QVariantHash({{"sslmode", "verify-full"},
// highlight-start
{"sslcert", "/example/postgres.crt"},
{"sslkey", "/example/postgres.key"},
{"sslrootcert", "/example/root.crt"}})},
// highlight-end
});
You can define these SSL-related options in the top-level configuration, they will be copied to the options
option hash during a configuration parsing. The top-level configuration takes precedence and overwrites the options in the options
hash.
#include <orm/db.hpp>
using Orm::DB;
// Ownership of a shared_ptr()
auto manager = DB::create({
{"driver", "QPSQL"},
{"host", qEnvironmentVariable("DB_PGSQL_HOST", "127.0.0.1")},
...
// highlight-start
{"sslmode", "verify-full"},
{"sslcert", "C:/example/postgres.crt"},
{"sslkey", "C:/example/postgres.key"},
{"sslrootcert", "C:/example/root.crt"},
// highlight-end
});
#include <orm/db.hpp>
using Orm::DB;
// Ownership of a shared_ptr()
auto manager = DB::create({
{"driver", "QPSQL"},
{"host", qEnvironmentVariable("DB_PGSQL_HOST", "127.0.0.1")},
...
// highlight-start
{"sslmode", "verify-full"},
{"sslcert", "/example/postgres.crt"},
{"sslkey", "/example/postgres.key"},
{"sslrootcert", "/example/root.crt"},
// highlight-end
});
You may also use the ConfigUtils::postgresSslOptions()
or the ConfigUtils::insertPostgresSslOptions()
methods to insert the sslmode
, sslcert
, sslkey
, and sslrootcert
options for you and define them using the DB_PGSQL_SSLMODE
, DB_PGSQL_SSLCERT
, DB_PGSQL_SSLKEY
, and DB_PGSQL_SSLROOTCERT
environment variable.
#include <orm/db.hpp>
#include <orm/utils/configuration.hpp>
using Orm::DB;
using ConfigUtils = Orm::Utils::Configuration;
// Ownership of a shared_ptr()
auto manager = DB::create({
{"driver", "QPSQL"},
{"host", qEnvironmentVariable("DB_PGSQL_HOST", "127.0.0.1")},
...
// highlight-next-line
{"options", ConfigUtils::postgresSslOptions()},
});
:::info
The PostgreSQL's libpq client library provides the PGSSLMODE
, PGSSLCERT
, PGSSLKEY
, and PGSSLROOTCERT
environment variables, so you don't have to use TinyORM's options
configuration and may use these environment variables instead.
:::
:::tip
You can take a look at the GitHub actions how the PostgreSQL
certificates are generated in the CI pipeline for Windows and Linux.
:::
Once you have configured your database connection, you may run queries using the DB
facade. The DB
facade provides methods for each type of query: select
, update
, insert
, delete
, and statement
.
To run a basic SELECT query, you may use the select
method on the DB
facade:
auto users = DB::select("select * from users where active = ?", {1});
The first argument passed to the select
method is the SQL query, while the second argument is any parameter bindings that need to be bound to the query. Typically, these are the values of the where
clause constraints. Parameter binding provides protection against SQL injection.
The select
method returns a QSqlQuery
containing the results of the query, where each result can be accessed by QSqlQuery::next
method. Look into the QSqlQuery
documentation on how to obtain results from the "query". You may access each column's value by QSqlQuery::value
method. The first bool
return value is the value returned from QSqlQuery::exec
method:
#include <QDebug>
#include <orm/db.hpp>
auto users = DB::select("select * from users");
while(users.next())
qDebug() << users.value("name").toString();
Sometimes your database query may result in a single, scalar value. Instead of being required to retrieve the query's scalar result from a record instance, TinyORM allows you to retrieve this value directly using the scalar
shortcut method:
#include <orm/db.hpp>
auto states = DB::scalar(
"select count(case when state = 'pending' then 1 end) as states "
"from comments"
);
// With binding
auto states = DB::scalar(
"select count(case when state = ? then 1 end) as states from comments",
{"pending"}
);
To execute an insert
statement, you may use the insert
method on the DB
facade. Like select
, this method accepts the SQL query as its first argument and bindings as its second argument and returns QSqlQuery
:
#include <orm/db.hpp>
DB::insert("insert into users (id, name) values (?, ?)", {1, "Marc"});
The update
method should be used to update existing records in the database. The number of rows affected by the statement and QSqlQuery
is returned by the method as std::tuple<int, QSqlQuery>
:
#include <QDateTime>
#include <orm/db.hpp>
auto [affected, query] = DB::update(
"update users set updated_at = ? where name = ?",
{QDateTime::currentDateTimeUtc(), "Anita"}
);
if (!affected)
qDebug() << "Any record was updated.";
The remove
method should be used to delete records from the database. Like update
, the number of affected rows and QSqlQuery
will be returned by the method as std::tuple<int, QSqlQuery>
:
#include <orm/db.hpp>
auto [affected, query] = DB::remove("delete from users");
:::note
delete
can not be used as the method name because it is the reserved word.
:::
Some database statements do not return any value. For these types of operations, you may use the statement
method on the DB
facade:
DB::statement("drop table users");
:::tip
DB::statement
method should be used for DDL queries, don't use it for "select" queries because it internally calls recordsHaveBeenModified
method.
:::
Sometimes you may want to execute an SQL statement without binding any values. You may use the DB
facade's unprepared
method to accomplish this:
DB::unprepared("update users set votes = 100 where name = 'Dries'");
:::warning Since unprepared statements do not bind parameters, they may be vulnerable to SQL injection. You should never allow user controlled values within an unprepared statement. :::
When using the DB
facade's statement
methods within transactions, you must be careful to avoid statements that cause implicit commits. These statements will cause the database engine to indirectly commit the entire transaction, leaving TinyORM unaware of the database's transaction level. An example of such a statement is creating a database table:
DB::statement("create table users (name varchar(255) null)");
Please refer to the MySQL manual for a list of all statements that trigger implicit commits.
You can configure multiple database connections at once during DatabaseManager
instantiation using the DB::create
overload, where the first argument is a hash of multiple connections and is of type QHash<QString, QVariantHash>
and the second argument is the name of the default connection:
#include <orm/db.hpp>
// Ownership of a shared_ptr()
auto manager = DB::create({
{"mysql", {
{"driver", "QMYSQL"},
{"host", qEnvironmentVariable("DB_MYSQL_HOST", "127.0.0.1")},
{"port", qEnvironmentVariable("DB_MYSQL_PORT", "3306")},
{"database", qEnvironmentVariable("DB_MYSQL_DATABASE", "")},
{"username", qEnvironmentVariable("DB_MYSQL_USERNAME", "root")},
{"password", qEnvironmentVariable("DB_MYSQL_PASSWORD", "")},
{"charset", qEnvironmentVariable("DB_MYSQL_CHARSET", "utf8mb4")},
{"collation", qEnvironmentVariable("DB_MYSQL_COLLATION", "utf8mb4_0900_ai_ci")},
{"strict", true},
{"options", QVariantHash()},
}},
{"sqlite", {
{"driver", "QSQLITE"},
{"database", qEnvironmentVariable("DB_SQLITE_DATABASE", "")},
{"foreign_key_constraints", qEnvironmentVariable("DB_SQLITE_FOREIGN_KEYS", "true")},
{"check_database_exists", true},
{"prefix", ""},
}},
}, "mysql");
If your application needs to use multiple connections, you may access each connection via the connection
method provided by the DB
facade. The connection name passed to the connection
method should correspond to one of the connections key listed in your configuration:
#include <orm/db.hpp>
auto query = DB::connection("mysql_test").select(...);
You may access the raw underlying QSqlQuery
instance of a connection using the getSqlQuery
method on a connection instance:
auto query = DB::connection().getSqlQuery();
Or you can use the shortcut method sqlQuery
provided by the DB
facade:
auto query = DB::sqlQuery();
If you would like to begin a transaction manually and have complete control over rollbacks and commits, you may use the beginTransaction
method provided by the DB
facade:
#include <orm/db.hpp>
DB::beginTransaction();
You can rollback the transaction via the rollBack
method:
DB::rollBack();
Lastly, you can commit a transaction via the commit
method:
DB::commit();
All transaction methods accept a connection name as the optional argument:
DB::beginTransaction("mysql_test");
:::tip
The DB
facade's transaction methods control the transactions for both the query builder and TinyORM.
:::
The TinyORM
supports multi-threading for the MSVC
and GCC
on Linux compilers. Multi-threading is disabled for the Clang <14.0.3
compiler on MSYS2, Clang <14.0.4
on Linux and for the GCC
compiler on MSYS2. The reason are bugs in the TLS
wrapper that is generated by the thread_local
keyword.
A connection can only be used from within the thread that created it. Moving connections between threads or creating queries from a different thread where the connection was created is not supported.
In addition, the third party libraries used by the QSqlDrivers
can impose further restrictions on using the SQL Module in a multithreaded program.
In short, if you create a DB::connection
in some thread then you have to use this connection only from this particular thread and of course all queries that will be executed on this connection.
If you want to execute some query from another thread for the same connection then you have to create a new connection first and if you have a new connection you can send a query from this new thread to the database.
:::warning
The schema builder
and migrations
don't support multi-threading.
:::