mohs8421 fe6c40dd75
Introducing sqlx-error feature (#750)
* feat: Introducing feature "sqlx-error"

Purpose of this feature is to not convert errors given from sqlx into strings to ease further analysis of the error and react to it accordingly. This implementation uses a feature switch and an additional error kind to avoid interfering with existing implementations without this feature enabled.
See discussion https://github.com/SeaQL/sea-orm/discussions/709

* fix: Align feature "sqlx-error" with merged Migration error kind

Due to the merge, an other error kind had been introduced and the DbErr became Eq and Clone, however Eq cannot easily be derived from, so I went back to PartialEq, and since the sqlx error does not implement clone, this was converted into an Arc, to allow cloning of the new kind too.

* fix: Repairing failing jobs

Several jobs had failed as I missed to correct the return values of a few methods in transaction.rs and had a wrong understanding of map_err at that point.

* feat: realigning with latest changes in sea-orm, different approach

Instead of the former approach to introduce a new error kind, now the existing error types get extended, for now only Exec and Query, because these are the most relevant for the requirement context.
Afterwards it might still be possible to add some further detail information.
See discussion https://github.com/SeaQL/sea-orm/discussions/709

* Update src/driver/sqlx_mysql.rs

Integrating fixes done by @Sculas

Co-authored-by: Sculas <contact@sculas.xyz>

* Update src/driver/sqlx_postgres.rs

Integrating fixes done by @Sculas

Co-authored-by: Sculas <contact@sculas.xyz>

* Update src/driver/sqlx_sqlite.rs

Integrating fixes done by @Sculas

Co-authored-by: Sculas <contact@sculas.xyz>

* feat: reworking feature with thiserror

Following the latest suggestions I changed the implementation to utilize `thiserror`.
Now there are more error kinds to be able to see the different kinds directly in src/error.rs
To ensure the behaviour is as expected, I also introduce a further test, which checks for a uniqueness failure.

Co-authored-by: Sculas <contact@sculas.xyz>
2022-08-28 11:13:51 +08:00
2022-08-01 18:30:43 +08:00
2021-06-22 22:29:34 +08:00
2022-08-20 22:47:31 +08:00
2022-08-20 22:47:31 +08:00
2022-08-20 22:47:31 +08:00
2022-08-20 22:47:31 +08:00
2022-08-20 22:47:31 +08:00
2022-08-28 11:13:51 +08:00
2022-06-12 20:20:28 +08:00
2022-08-20 22:46:08 +08:00
2022-05-13 18:19:25 +08:00
2021-08-31 16:02:26 +08:00
2021-06-14 23:58:53 +08:00
2021-07-17 21:50:11 +08:00
2022-08-11 15:39:50 +08:00
2021-09-03 14:56:27 +08:00

SeaORM

🐚 An async & dynamic ORM for Rust

crate docs build status

SeaORM

SeaORM is a relational ORM to help you build web services in Rust with the familiarity of dynamic languages.

Getting Started

GitHub stars If you like what we do, consider starring, commenting, sharing and contributing!

Discord Join our Discord server to chat with others in the SeaQL community!

Integration examples

Features

  1. Async

    Relying on SQLx, SeaORM is a new library with async support from day 1.

  2. Dynamic

    Built upon SeaQuery, SeaORM allows you to build complex queries without 'fighting the ORM'.

  3. Testable

    Use mock connections to write unit tests for your logic.

  4. Service Oriented

    Quickly build services that join, filter, sort and paginate data in APIs.

A quick taste of SeaORM

Entity

use sea_orm::entity::prelude::*;

#[derive(Clone, Debug, PartialEq, DeriveEntityModel)]
#[sea_orm(table_name = "cake")]
pub struct Model {
    #[sea_orm(primary_key)]
    pub id: i32,
    pub name: String,
}

#[derive(Copy, Clone, Debug, EnumIter, DeriveRelation)]
pub enum Relation {
    #[sea_orm(has_many = "super::fruit::Entity")]
    Fruit,
}

impl Related<super::fruit::Entity> for Entity {
    fn to() -> RelationDef {
        Relation::Fruit.def()
    }
}

Select

// find all models
let cakes: Vec<cake::Model> = Cake::find().all(db).await?;

// find and filter
let chocolate: Vec<cake::Model> = Cake::find()
    .filter(cake::Column::Name.contains("chocolate"))
    .all(db)
    .await?;

// find one model
let cheese: Option<cake::Model> = Cake::find_by_id(1).one(db).await?;
let cheese: cake::Model = cheese.unwrap();

// find related models (lazy)
let fruits: Vec<fruit::Model> = cheese.find_related(Fruit).all(db).await?;

// find related models (eager)
let cake_with_fruits: Vec<(cake::Model, Vec<fruit::Model>)> =
    Cake::find().find_with_related(Fruit).all(db).await?;

Insert

let apple = fruit::ActiveModel {
    name: Set("Apple".to_owned()),
    ..Default::default() // no need to set primary key
};

let pear = fruit::ActiveModel {
    name: Set("Pear".to_owned()),
    ..Default::default()
};

// insert one
let pear = pear.insert(db).await?;

// insert many
Fruit::insert_many(vec![apple, pear]).exec(db).await?;

Update

use sea_orm::sea_query::{Expr, Value};

let pear: Option<fruit::Model> = Fruit::find_by_id(1).one(db).await?;
let mut pear: fruit::ActiveModel = pear.unwrap().into();

pear.name = Set("Sweet pear".to_owned());

// update one
let pear: fruit::Model = pear.update(db).await?;

// update many: UPDATE "fruit" SET "cake_id" = NULL WHERE "fruit"."name" LIKE '%Apple%'
Fruit::update_many()
    .col_expr(fruit::Column::CakeId, Expr::value(Value::Int(None)))
    .filter(fruit::Column::Name.contains("Apple"))
    .exec(db)
    .await?;

Save

let banana = fruit::ActiveModel {
    id: NotSet,
    name: Set("Banana".to_owned()),
    ..Default::default()
};

// create, because primary key `id` is `NotSet`
let mut banana = banana.save(db).await?;

banana.name = Set("Banana Mongo".to_owned());

// update, because primary key `id` is `Set`
let banana = banana.save(db).await?;

Delete

// delete one
let orange: Option<fruit::Model> = Fruit::find_by_id(1).one(db).await?;
let orange: fruit::Model = orange.unwrap();
fruit::Entity::delete(orange.into_active_model())
    .exec(db)
    .await?;

// or simply
let orange: Option<fruit::Model> = Fruit::find_by_id(1).one(db).await?;
let orange: fruit::Model = orange.unwrap();
orange.delete(db).await?;

// delete many: DELETE FROM "fruit" WHERE "fruit"."name" LIKE 'Orange'
fruit::Entity::delete_many()
    .filter(fruit::Column::Name.contains("Orange"))
    .exec(db)
    .await?;

Learn More

  1. Design
  2. Architecture
  3. Release Model
  4. Change Log

Who's using SeaORM?

The following products are powered by SeaORM:



A lightweight web security auditing toolkit

A Bitcoin lightning node implementation

The enterprise ready webhooks service

SeaORM is the foundation of StarfishQL, an experimental graph database and query engine developed by SeaQL.

For more projects, see Built with SeaORM.

License

Licensed under either of

at your option.

Contribution

Unless you explicitly state otherwise, any contribution intentionally submitted for inclusion in the work by you, as defined in the Apache-2.0 license, shall be dual licensed as above, without any additional terms or conditions.

SeaORM is a community driven project. We welcome you to participate, contribute and together build for Rust's future.

A big shout out to our contributors:

Contributors

Description
No description provided
Readme 16 MiB
Languages
Rust 98.4%
HTML 1.3%
Shell 0.3%