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Connect to TiDB with ORM framework TypeORM

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The following guide will show you how to connect to the TiDB cluster with Node.js ORM framework TypeORM and perform basic SQL operations like create, read, update, and delete.

Note

TiDB is a MySQL-compatible database, which means you can connect to a TiDB cluster in your application using the familiar driver/ORM framework from the MySQL ecosystem.

The only difference is that if you connect to a TiDB Serverless cluster with public endpoint, you MUST enable TLS connection on TypeORM.

Prerequisites

To complete this guide, you need:

  • Node.js >= 16.x installed on your machine
  • Git installed on your machine
  • A TiDB cluster running

If you don't have a TiDB cluster yet, please create one with one of the following methods:

  1. (Recommend) Start up a TiDB Serverless cluster instantly with a few clicks on TiDB Cloud.
  2. Start up a TiDB Playground cluster with TiUP CLI on your local machine.

Getting started

This section demonstrates how to run the sample application code and connect to TiDB with Node.js ORM framework TypeORM.

Step 1. Clone the repository

Run the following command to clone the sample code locally:

git clone https://github.com/tidb-samples/tidb-nodejs-typeorm-quickstart.git
cd tidb-nodejs-typeorm-quickstart

Step 2. Install dependencies

Run the following command to install the dependencies (including the typeorm and mysql2 package) required by the sample code:

npm install
Install dependencies to existing project

For your existing project, run the following command to install the packages:

  • typeorm: The ORM framework for Node.js.
  • mysql2: The MySQL driver for Node.js. (You can also use mysql as the driver)
  • dotenv: The package to load environment variables from .env file.
  • decimal.js: The package to handle decimal numbers.
npm install typeorm mysql2 dotenv decimal.js --save
  • @types/node: The package to provide TypeScript type definitions for Node.js.
  • ts-node: The package to execute TypeScript code directly without compiling.
  • typescript: The package to compile TypeScript code to JavaScript.
npm install @types/node ts-node typescript --save-dev

Step 3. Provide connection parameters

(Option 1) TiDB Serverless
  1. Navigate to the Clusters page, and then click the name of your target cluster to go to its overview page.

  2. Click Connect in the upper-right corner.

  3. In the connection dialog, select General from the Connect With dropdown and keep the default setting of the Endpoint Type as Public.

  4. If you have not set a password yet, click Create password to generate a random password.

    The connection dialog of TiDB Serverless
    The connection dialog of TiDB Serverless
  5. Make a copy of the .env.example file to the .env file:

    cp .env.example .env
  6. Edit the .env file, copy the connection parameters on the connection dialog, and replace the corresponding placeholders {}. The example configuration is as follows:

    TIDB_HOST={host}
    TIDB_PORT=4000
    TIDB_USER={user}
    TIDB_PASSWORD={password}
    TIDB_DATABASE=test
    TIDB_ENABLE_SSL=true

    Note

    Modify TIDB_ENABLE_SSL to true to enable a TLS connection. (Required for public endpoint)

(Option 2) TiDB Dedicated

You can obtain the database connection parameters on TiDB Cloud's Web Console through the following steps:

  1. Navigate to the Clusters page, and then click the name of your target cluster to go to its overview page.

  2. Click Connect in the upper-right corner. A connection dialog is displayed.

  3. Click Allow Access from Anywhere, and then click Download TiDB cluster CA to download the CA certificate.

  4. Select General from the Connect With dropdown and select Public from the Endpoint Type dropdown.

  5. Run the following command to copy .env.example and rename it to .env:

    cp .env.example .env
  6. Edit the .env file, copy the connection parameters on the connection dialog, and replace the corresponding placeholders {}. The example configuration is as follows:

    TIDB_HOST={host}
    TIDB_PORT=4000
    TIDB_USER={user}
    TIDB_PASSWORD={password}
    TIDB_DATABASE=test
    TIDB_ENABLE_SSL=true
    TIDB_CA_PATH=/path/to/ca.pem

    Note

    Modify TIDB_ENABLE_SSL to true to enable a TLS connection and using TIDB_CA_PATH to specify the file path of CA certificate downloaded from the connection dialog.

(Option 3) TiDB Self-Hosted
  1. Make a copy of the .env.example file to the .env file.

    cp .env.example .env
  2. Replace the placeholders for <host>, <user>, and <password> with the connection parameters of your TiDB cluster.

    TIDB_HOST=<host>
    TIDB_PORT=4000
    TIDB_USER=<user>
    TIDB_PASSWORD=<password>
    TIDB_DATABASE=test
    # TIDB_ENABLE_SSL=true
    # TIDB_CA_PATH=/path/to/ca.pem

    The TiDB Self-Hosted cluster using non-encrypted connection between TiDB's server and clients by default.

    If you want to enable TLS connection, please uncomment the TIDB_ENABLE_SSL and TIDB_CA_PATH options and specify the file path of CA certificate defined with ssl-ca option.

Step 4. Create the database schema

Run following command to invoke TypeORM CLI] to initialize the database with the SQL statements written in the migration files:

npm run migration:run
Expected execution output

The following SQL statements create a players table and a profiles table, and the two tables are associated through foreign keys.

query: SELECT VERSION() AS `version`
query: SELECT * FROM `INFORMATION_SCHEMA`.`COLUMNS` WHERE `TABLE_SCHEMA` = 'test' AND `TABLE_NAME` = 'migrations'
query: CREATE TABLE `migrations` (`id` int NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT, `timestamp` bigint NOT NULL, `name` varchar(255) NOT NULL, PRIMARY KEY (`id`)) ENGINE=InnoDB
query: SELECT * FROM `test`.`migrations` `migrations` ORDER BY `id` DESC
0 migrations are already loaded in the database.
1 migrations were found in the source code.
1 migrations are new migrations must be executed.
query: START TRANSACTION
query: CREATE TABLE `profiles` (`player_id` int NOT NULL, `biography` text NOT NULL, PRIMARY KEY (`player_id`)) ENGINE=InnoDB
query: CREATE TABLE `players` (`id` int NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT, `name` varchar(50) NOT NULL, `coins` decimal NOT NULL, `goods` int NOT NULL, `created_at` datetime NOT NULL, `profilePlayerId` int NULL, UNIQUE INDEX `uk_players_on_name` (`name`), UNIQUE INDEX `REL_b9666644b90ccc5065993425ef` (`profilePlayerId`), PRIMARY KEY (`id`)) ENGINE=InnoDB
query: ALTER TABLE `players` ADD CONSTRAINT `fk_profiles_on_player_id` FOREIGN KEY (`profilePlayerId`) REFERENCES `profiles`(`player_id`) ON DELETE NO ACTION ON UPDATE NO ACTION
query: INSERT INTO `test`.`migrations`(`timestamp`, `name`) VALUES (?, ?) -- PARAMETERS: [1693814724825,"Init1693814724825"]
Migration Init1693814724825 has been  executed successfully.
query: COMMIT

The migration files are generated based on the entities defined in src/entities folder. To learn how to define entities in TypeORM, please check the Entities documentation.

Step 5. Run the sample code

Run the following command to execute the sample code:

npm start

Expected execution output

If the connection is successful, the terminal will output the version of the TiDB cluster as follows:

🔌 Connected to TiDB cluster! (TiDB version: 5.7.25-TiDB-v7.1.0)
🆕 Created a new player with ID 2.
ℹ️ Got Player 2: Player { id: 2, coins: 100, goods: 100 }
🔢 Added 50 coins and 50 goods to player 2, now player 2 has 100 coins and 150 goods.
🚮 Deleted 1 player data.

Sample code snippets

Connect with connection options

The following code establish a connection to TiDB with options defined in environment variables:

// src/dataSource.ts

// Load environment variables from .env file to process.env.
require('dotenv').config();

export const AppDataSource = new DataSource({
  type: "mysql",
  host: process.env.TIDB_HOST || '127.0.0.1',
  port: process.env.TIDB_PORT ? Number(process.env.TIDB_PORT) : 4000,
  username: process.env.TIDB_USER || 'root',
  password: process.env.TIDB_PASSWORD || '',
  database: process.env.TIDB_DATABASE || 'test',
  ssl: process.env.TIDB_ENABLE_SSL === 'true' ? {
    minVersion: 'TLSv1.2',
    ca: process.env.TIDB_CA_PATH ? fs.readFileSync(process.env.TIDB_CA_PATH) : undefined
  } : null,
  synchronize: process.env.NODE_ENV === 'development',
  logging: false,
  entities: [Player, Profile],
  migrations: [__dirname + "/migrations/**/*{.ts,.js}"],
});

Note

For TiDB Serverless, you MUST enable TLS connection when using public endpoint. In this sample code, please set up the environment variable TIDB_ENABLE_SSL in the .env file to true.

However, you don't have to specify an SSL CA certificate via TIDB_CA_PATH, because Node.js uses the built-in Mozilla CA certificate by default, which is trusted by TiDB Serverless.

Insert data

The following query creates a single Player record, and returns the created player object, which contains the id field that is automatically generated by TiDB:

const player = new Player('Alice', 100, 100);
await this.dataSource.manager.save(player);

For more information, refer to Insert data.

Query data

The following query returns a single Player object with ID 101 or null if no record is found:

const player: Player | null = await this.dataSource.manager.findOneBy(Player, {
  id: id
});

For more information, refer to the Query data.

Update data

The following query adds 50 goods to the Player with ID 101:

const player = await this.dataSource.manager.findOneBy(Player, {
  id: 101
});
player.goods += 50;
await this.dataSource.manager.save(player);

For more information, refer to Update data.

Delete data

The following query deletes the Player with ID 101:

await this.dataSource.manager.delete(Player, {
  id: 101
});

For more information, refer to Delete data.

Execute raw queries

The following query executes a raw SQL query and returns the version of the TiDB cluster:

const rows = await dataSource.query('SELECT VERSION() AS tidb_version;');
console.log(rows[0]['tidb_version']);

For more information, refer to the documentation of TypeORM DataSource API.

Best practices

Foreign key constraint

Using foreign key constraints can add checks on the database side to ensure the referential integrity of data, but they might lead to serious performance issues when there is a large amount of data.

You can control whether foreign key constraints are created when constructing relationships between entities by using the createForeignKeyConstraints option (default true).

@Entity()
export class ActionLog {
    @PrimaryColumn()
    id: number

    @ManyToOne((type) => Person, {
        createForeignKeyConstraints: false,
    })
    person: Person
}

For more information, refer to the TypeORM FAQ and FOREIGN KEY constraints.

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