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Co-authored-by: dependabot[bot] <49699333+dependabot[bot]@users.noreply.github.com>
194 lines
6.9 KiB
Go
194 lines
6.9 KiB
Go
// Package pgx is a PostgreSQL database driver.
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/*
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pgx provides a native PostgreSQL driver and can act as a database/sql driver. The native PostgreSQL interface is similar
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to the database/sql interface while providing better speed and access to PostgreSQL specific features. Use
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github.com/jackc/pgx/v5/stdlib to use pgx as a database/sql compatible driver. See that package's documentation for
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details.
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Establishing a Connection
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The primary way of establishing a connection is with [pgx.Connect]:
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conn, err := pgx.Connect(context.Background(), os.Getenv("DATABASE_URL"))
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The database connection string can be in URL or DSN format. Both PostgreSQL settings and pgx settings can be specified
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here. In addition, a config struct can be created by [ParseConfig] and modified before establishing the connection with
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[ConnectConfig] to configure settings such as tracing that cannot be configured with a connection string.
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Connection Pool
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[*pgx.Conn] represents a single connection to the database and is not concurrency safe. Use package
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github.com/jackc/pgx/v5/pgxpool for a concurrency safe connection pool.
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Query Interface
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pgx implements Query in the familiar database/sql style. However, pgx provides generic functions such as CollectRows and
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ForEachRow that are a simpler and safer way of processing rows than manually calling rows.Next(), rows.Scan, and
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rows.Err().
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CollectRows can be used collect all returned rows into a slice.
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rows, _ := conn.Query(context.Background(), "select generate_series(1,$1)", 5)
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numbers, err := pgx.CollectRows(rows, pgx.RowTo[int32])
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if err != nil {
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return err
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}
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// numbers => [1 2 3 4 5]
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ForEachRow can be used to execute a callback function for every row. This is often easier than iterating over rows
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directly.
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var sum, n int32
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rows, _ := conn.Query(context.Background(), "select generate_series(1,$1)", 10)
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_, err := pgx.ForEachRow(rows, []any{&n}, func() error {
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sum += n
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return nil
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})
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if err != nil {
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return err
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}
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pgx also implements QueryRow in the same style as database/sql.
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var name string
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var weight int64
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err := conn.QueryRow(context.Background(), "select name, weight from widgets where id=$1", 42).Scan(&name, &weight)
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if err != nil {
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return err
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}
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Use Exec to execute a query that does not return a result set.
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commandTag, err := conn.Exec(context.Background(), "delete from widgets where id=$1", 42)
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if err != nil {
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return err
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}
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if commandTag.RowsAffected() != 1 {
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return errors.New("No row found to delete")
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}
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PostgreSQL Data Types
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pgx uses the pgtype package to converting Go values to and from PostgreSQL values. It supports many PostgreSQL types
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directly and is customizable and extendable. User defined data types such as enums, domains, and composite types may
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require type registration. See that package's documentation for details.
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Transactions
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Transactions are started by calling Begin.
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tx, err := conn.Begin(context.Background())
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if err != nil {
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return err
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}
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// Rollback is safe to call even if the tx is already closed, so if
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// the tx commits successfully, this is a no-op
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defer tx.Rollback(context.Background())
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_, err = tx.Exec(context.Background(), "insert into foo(id) values (1)")
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if err != nil {
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return err
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}
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err = tx.Commit(context.Background())
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if err != nil {
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return err
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}
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The Tx returned from Begin also implements the Begin method. This can be used to implement pseudo nested transactions.
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These are internally implemented with savepoints.
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Use BeginTx to control the transaction mode. BeginTx also can be used to ensure a new transaction is created instead of
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a pseudo nested transaction.
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BeginFunc and BeginTxFunc are functions that begin a transaction, execute a function, and commit or rollback the
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transaction depending on the return value of the function. These can be simpler and less error prone to use.
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err = pgx.BeginFunc(context.Background(), conn, func(tx pgx.Tx) error {
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_, err := tx.Exec(context.Background(), "insert into foo(id) values (1)")
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return err
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})
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if err != nil {
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return err
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}
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Prepared Statements
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Prepared statements can be manually created with the Prepare method. However, this is rarely necessary because pgx
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includes an automatic statement cache by default. Queries run through the normal Query, QueryRow, and Exec functions are
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automatically prepared on first execution and the prepared statement is reused on subsequent executions. See ParseConfig
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for information on how to customize or disable the statement cache.
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Copy Protocol
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Use CopyFrom to efficiently insert multiple rows at a time using the PostgreSQL copy protocol. CopyFrom accepts a
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CopyFromSource interface. If the data is already in a [][]any use CopyFromRows to wrap it in a CopyFromSource interface.
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Or implement CopyFromSource to avoid buffering the entire data set in memory.
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rows := [][]any{
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{"John", "Smith", int32(36)},
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{"Jane", "Doe", int32(29)},
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}
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copyCount, err := conn.CopyFrom(
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context.Background(),
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pgx.Identifier{"people"},
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[]string{"first_name", "last_name", "age"},
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pgx.CopyFromRows(rows),
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)
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When you already have a typed array using CopyFromSlice can be more convenient.
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rows := []User{
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{"John", "Smith", 36},
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{"Jane", "Doe", 29},
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}
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copyCount, err := conn.CopyFrom(
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context.Background(),
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pgx.Identifier{"people"},
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[]string{"first_name", "last_name", "age"},
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pgx.CopyFromSlice(len(rows), func(i int) ([]any, error) {
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return []any{rows[i].FirstName, rows[i].LastName, rows[i].Age}, nil
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}),
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)
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CopyFrom can be faster than an insert with as few as 5 rows.
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Listen and Notify
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pgx can listen to the PostgreSQL notification system with the `Conn.WaitForNotification` method. It blocks until a
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notification is received or the context is canceled.
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_, err := conn.Exec(context.Background(), "listen channelname")
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if err != nil {
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return err
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}
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notification, err := conn.WaitForNotification(context.Background())
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if err != nil {
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return err
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}
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// do something with notification
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Tracing and Logging
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pgx supports tracing by setting ConnConfig.Tracer.
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In addition, the tracelog package provides the TraceLog type which lets a traditional logger act as a Tracer.
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For debug tracing of the actual PostgreSQL wire protocol messages see github.com/jackc/pgx/v5/pgproto3.
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Lower Level PostgreSQL Functionality
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github.com/jackc/pgx/v5/pgconn contains a lower level PostgreSQL driver roughly at the level of libpq. pgx.Conn in
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implemented on top of pgconn. The Conn.PgConn() method can be used to access this lower layer.
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PgBouncer
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By default pgx automatically uses prepared statements. Prepared statements are incompaptible with PgBouncer. This can be
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disabled by setting a different QueryExecMode in ConnConfig.DefaultQueryExecMode.
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*/
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package pgx
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