Postgrex v0.14.0 Postgrex View Source
PostgreSQL driver for Elixir.
This module handles the connection to Postgres, providing support for queries, transactions, connection backoff, logging, pooling and more.
Note that the notifications API (pub/sub) supported by Postgres is
handled by Postgrex.Notifications
. Hence, to use this feature,
you need to start a separate (notifications) connection.
Link to this section Summary
Functions
Returns a supervisor child specification for a DBConnection pool
Closes an (extended) prepared query and returns :ok
or raises
Postgrex.Error
if there was an error. See close/3
Closes an (extended) prepared query and returns :ok
or
{:error, %Postgrex.Error{}}
if there was an error. Closing a query releases
any resources held by postgresql for a prepared query with that name. See
Postgrex.Query
for the query data
Runs an (extended) prepared query and returns the result or raises
Postgrex.Error
if there was an error. See execute/4
Runs an (extended) prepared query
Returns a cached map of connection parameters
Prepares an (extended) query and returns the prepared query or raises
Postgrex.Error
if there was an error. See prepare/4
Prepares an (extended) query and returns the result as
{:ok, %Postgrex.Query{}}
or {:error, %Postgrex.Error{}}
if there was an
error. Parameters can be set in the query as $1
embedded in the query
string. To execute the query call execute/4
. To close the prepared query
call close/3
. See Postgrex.Query
for the query data
Prepares and runs a query and returns the result or raises
Postgrex.Error
if there was an error. See prepare_execute/5
Prepares and executes a query in a single step
Runs an (extended) query and returns the result or raises Postgrex.Error
if
there was an error. See query/3
Runs an (extended) query and returns the result as {:ok, %Postgrex.Result{}}
or {:error, %Postgrex.Error{}}
if there was a database error. Parameters can
be set in the query as $1
embedded in the query string. Parameters are given
as a list of elixir values. See the README for information on how Postgrex
encodes and decodes Elixir values by default. See Postgrex.Result
for the
result data
Rollback a transaction, does not return
Start the connection process and connect to postgres
Returns a stream for a query on a connection
Acquire a lock on a connection and run a series of requests inside a
transaction. The result of the transaction fun is return inside an :ok
tuple: {:ok, result}
Link to this section Types
A connection process name, pid or reference.
A connection reference is used when making multiple requests to the same
connection, see transaction/3
.
Link to this section Functions
child_spec(Keyword.t()) :: Supervisor.Spec.spec()
Returns a supervisor child specification for a DBConnection pool.
close!(conn(), Postgrex.Query.t(), Keyword.t()) :: :ok
Closes an (extended) prepared query and returns :ok
or raises
Postgrex.Error
if there was an error. See close/3
.
close(conn(), Postgrex.Query.t(), Keyword.t()) :: :ok | {:error, Exception.t()}
Closes an (extended) prepared query and returns :ok
or
{:error, %Postgrex.Error{}}
if there was an error. Closing a query releases
any resources held by postgresql for a prepared query with that name. See
Postgrex.Query
for the query data.
This function may still raise an exception if there is an issue with types
(ArgumentError
), connection (DBConnection.ConnectionError
), ownership
(DBConnection.OwnershipError
) or other error (RuntimeError
).
Options
:queue
- Whether to wait for connection in a queue (default:true
);:timeout
- Close request timeout (default:15000
);:mode
- set to:savepoint
to use a savepoint to rollback to before the close on error, otherwise set to:transaction
(default::transaction
);
Examples
query = Postgrex.prepare!(conn, "", "CREATE TABLE posts (id serial, title text)")
Postgrex.close(conn, query)
execute!(conn(), Postgrex.Query.t(), list(), Keyword.t()) :: Postgrex.Result.t()
Runs an (extended) prepared query and returns the result or raises
Postgrex.Error
if there was an error. See execute/4
.
execute(conn(), Postgrex.Query.t(), list(), Keyword.t()) :: {:ok, Postgrex.Query.t(), Postgrex.Result.t()} | {:error, Postgrex.Error.t()}
Runs an (extended) prepared query.
It returns the result as {:ok, %Postgrex.Query{}, %Postgrex.Result{}}
or
{:error, %Postgrex.Error{}}
if there was an error. Parameters are given as
part of the prepared query, %Postgrex.Query{}
.
See the README for information on how Postgrex encodes and decodes Elixir
values by default. See Postgrex.Query
for the query data and
Postgrex.Result
for the result data.
Options
:queue
- Whether to wait for connection in a queue (default:true
);:timeout
- Execute request timeout (default:15000
);:decode_mapper
- Fun to map each row in the result to a term after decoding, (default:fn x -> x end
);:mode
- set to:savepoint
to use a savepoint to rollback to before the execute on error, otherwise set to:transaction
(default::transaction
);
Examples
query = Postgrex.prepare!(conn, "", "CREATE TABLE posts (id serial, title text)")
Postgrex.execute(conn, query, [])
query = Postgrex.prepare!(conn, "", "SELECT id FROM posts WHERE title like $1")
Postgrex.execute(conn, query, ["%my%"])
Returns a cached map of connection parameters.
Options
:timeout
- Call timeout (default:15000
)
prepare!(conn(), iodata(), iodata(), Keyword.t()) :: Postgrex.Query.t()
Prepares an (extended) query and returns the prepared query or raises
Postgrex.Error
if there was an error. See prepare/4
.
prepare(conn(), iodata(), iodata(), Keyword.t()) :: {:ok, Postgrex.Query.t()} | {:error, Exception.t()}
Prepares an (extended) query and returns the result as
{:ok, %Postgrex.Query{}}
or {:error, %Postgrex.Error{}}
if there was an
error. Parameters can be set in the query as $1
embedded in the query
string. To execute the query call execute/4
. To close the prepared query
call close/3
. See Postgrex.Query
for the query data.
This function may still raise an exception if there is an issue with types
(ArgumentError
), connection (DBConnection.ConnectionError
), ownership
(DBConnection.OwnershipError
) or other error (RuntimeError
).
Options
:queue
- Whether to wait for connection in a queue (default:true
);:timeout
- Prepare request timeout (default:15000
);:mode
- set to:savepoint
to use a savepoint to rollback to before the prepare on error, otherwise set to:transaction
(default::transaction
);
Examples
Postgrex.prepare(conn, "", "CREATE TABLE posts (id serial, title text)")
prepare_execute!(conn(), iodata(), iodata(), list(), Keyword.t()) :: {Postgrex.Query.t(), Postgrex.Result.t()}
Prepares and runs a query and returns the result or raises
Postgrex.Error
if there was an error. See prepare_execute/5
.
prepare_execute(conn(), iodata(), iodata(), list(), Keyword.t()) :: {:ok, Postgrex.Query.t(), Postgrex.Result.t()} | {:error, Postgrex.Error.t()}
Prepares and executes a query in a single step.
It returns the result as {:ok, %Postgrex.Query{}, %Postgrex.Result{}}
or
{:error, %Postgrex.Error{}}
if there was an error. Parameters are given as
part of the prepared query, %Postgrex.Query{}
.
See the README for information on how Postgrex encodes and decodes Elixir
values by default. See Postgrex.Query
for the query data and
Postgrex.Result
for the result data.
Options
:queue
- Whether to wait for connection in a queue (default:true
);:timeout
- Execute request timeout (default:15000
);:decode_mapper
- Fun to map each row in the result to a term after decoding, (default:fn x -> x end
);:mode
- set to:savepoint
to use a savepoint to rollback to before the execute on error, otherwise set to:transaction
(default::transaction
);
Examples
Postgrex.prepare_and_execute(conn, "", "SELECT id FROM posts WHERE title like $1", ["%my%"])
query!(conn(), iodata(), list(), Keyword.t()) :: Postgrex.Result.t()
Runs an (extended) query and returns the result or raises Postgrex.Error
if
there was an error. See query/3
.
query(conn(), iodata(), list(), Keyword.t()) :: {:ok, Postgrex.Result.t()} | {:error, Exception.t()}
Runs an (extended) query and returns the result as {:ok, %Postgrex.Result{}}
or {:error, %Postgrex.Error{}}
if there was a database error. Parameters can
be set in the query as $1
embedded in the query string. Parameters are given
as a list of elixir values. See the README for information on how Postgrex
encodes and decodes Elixir values by default. See Postgrex.Result
for the
result data.
This function may still raise an exception if there is an issue with types
(ArgumentError
), connection (DBConnection.ConnectionError
), ownership
(DBConnection.OwnershipError
) or other error (RuntimeError
).
Options
:queue
- Whether to wait for connection in a queue (default:true
);:timeout
- Query request timeout (default:15000
);:decode_mapper
- Fun to map each row in the result to a term after decoding, (default:fn x -> x end
);:mode
- set to:savepoint
to use a savepoint to rollback to before the query on error, otherwise set to:transaction
(default::transaction
);
Examples
Postgrex.query(conn, "CREATE TABLE posts (id serial, title text)", [])
Postgrex.query(conn, "INSERT INTO posts (title) VALUES ('my title')", [])
Postgrex.query(conn, "SELECT title FROM posts", [])
Postgrex.query(conn, "SELECT id FROM posts WHERE title like $1", ["%my%"])
Postgrex.query(conn, "COPY posts TO STDOUT", [])
rollback(DBConnection.t(), any()) :: no_return()
Rollback a transaction, does not return.
Aborts the current transaction fun. If inside multiple transaction/3
functions, bubbles up to the top level.
Example
{:error, :oops} = Postgrex.transaction(pid, fn(conn) ->
DBConnection.rollback(conn, :bar)
IO.puts "never reaches here!"
end)
start_link(Keyword.t()) :: {:ok, pid()} | {:error, Postgrex.Error.t() | term()}
Start the connection process and connect to postgres.
Options
:hostname
- Server hostname (default: PGHOST env variable, then localhost);:socket_dir
- Connect to Postgres via UNIX sockets in the given directory; The socket name is derived based on the port. This is the preferred method for configuring sockets and it takes precedence over the hostname. If you are connecting to a socket outside of the Postgres convention, use:socket
instead;:socket
- Connect to Postgres via UNIX sockets in the given path. This option takes precedence over the:hostname
and:socket_dir
;:port
- Server port (default: PGPORT env variable, then 5432);:database
- Database (default: PGDATABASE env variable; otherwise required);:username
- Username (default: PGUSER env variable, then USER env var);:password
- User password (default: PGPASSWORD env variable);:parameters
- Keyword list of connection parameters;:timeout
- Socket receive timeout when idle in milliseconds (default:15000
);:connect_timeout
- Socket connect timeout in milliseconds (defaults to:timeout
value);:handshake_timeout
- Connection handshake timeout in milliseconds (defaults to:timeout
value);:ssl
- Set totrue
if ssl should be used (default:false
);:ssl_opts
- A list of ssl options, see ssl docs;:socket_options
- Options to be given to the underlying socket (applies to both TCP and UNIX sockets);:prepare
- How to prepare queries, either:named
to use named queries or:unnamed
to force unnamed queries (default::named
);:transactions
- Set to:strict
to error on unexpected transaction state, otherwise set to:naive
(default::strict
);:pool
- The pool module to use, defaults toDBConnection.ConnectionPool
. See the pool documentation for more options. The default:pool_size
for the default pool is 1. If you set a different pool, this option must be included with all requests contacting the pool;:types
- The types module to use, seePostgrex.TypeModule
, this option is only required when using custom encoding or decoding (default:Postgrex.DefaultTypes
);:disconnect_on_error_codes
- List of error code atoms that when encountered will disconnect the connection (default:[]
);
Postgrex
uses the DBConnection
library and supports all DBConnection
options like :idle
, :after_connect
etc. See DBConnection.start_link/2
for more information.
Examples
iex> {:ok, pid} = Postgrex.start_link(database: "postgres")
{:ok, #PID<0.69.0>}
Run a query after connection has been established:
iex> {:ok, pid} = Postgrex.start_link(after_connect: &Postgrex.query!(&1, "SET TIME ZONE 'UTC';", []))
{:ok, #PID<0.69.0>}
Connect to postgres instance through a unix domain socket
iex> {:ok, pid} = Postgrex.start_link(socket_dir: "/tmp", database: "postgres")
{:ok, #PID<0.69.0>}
PgBouncer
When using PgBouncer with transaction or statement pooling named prepared
queries can not be used because the bouncer may route requests from
the same postgrex connection to different PostgreSQL backend processes
and discards named queries after the transactions closes.
To force unnamed prepared queries set the :prepare
option to :unnamed
.
Handling failover
Some services, such as AWS Aurora, support failovers. This means the database you are currently connected to may suddenly become read-only, and an attempt to do any write operation, such as INSERT/UPDATE/DELETE will lead to errors such as:
11:11:03.089 [error] Postgrex.Protocol (#PID<0.189.0>) disconnected:
** (Postgrex.Error) ERROR 25006 (read_only_sql_transaction)
cannot execute INSERT in a read-only transaction
Luckily, you can instruct Postgrex
to disconnect in such cases by
using the following configuration:
disconnect_on_error_codes: [:read_only_sql_transaction]
This cause the connection process to attempt to reconnect according to the backoff configuration.
stream(DBConnection.t(), iodata() | Postgrex.Query.t(), list(), Keyword.t()) :: Postgrex.Stream.t()
Returns a stream for a query on a connection.
Stream consumes memory in chunks of at most max_rows
rows (see Options).
This is useful for processing large datasets.
A stream must be wrapped in a transaction and may be used as an Enumerable
or a Collectable
.
When used as an Enumerable
with a COPY .. TO STDOUT
SQL query no other
queries or streams can be interspersed until the copy has finished. Otherwise
it is possible to intersperse enumerable streams and queries.
When used as a Collectable
the values are passed as copy data with the
query. No other queries or streams can be interspersed until the copy has
finished. If the query is not copying to the database the copy data will still
be sent but is silently discarded.
Options
:max_rows
- Maximum numbers of rows in a result (default to500
):decode_mapper
- Fun to map each row in the result to a term after decoding, (default:fn x -> x end
);:mode
- set to:savepoint
to use a savepoint to rollback to before an execute on error, otherwise set to:transaction
(default::transaction
);
Examples
Postgrex.transaction(pid, fn(conn) ->
query = Postgrex.prepare!(conn, "", "COPY posts TO STDOUT")
stream = Postgrex.stream(conn, query, [])
result_to_iodata = fn(%Postgrex.Result{rows: rows}) -> rows end
Enum.into(stream, File.stream!("posts"), result_to_iodata)
end)
Postgrex.transaction(pid, fn(conn) ->
stream = Postgrex.stream(conn, "COPY posts FROM STDIN", [])
Enum.into(File.stream!("posts"), stream)
end)
transaction(conn(), (DBConnection.t() -> result), Keyword.t()) :: {:ok, result} | {:error, any()} when result: var
Acquire a lock on a connection and run a series of requests inside a
transaction. The result of the transaction fun is return inside an :ok
tuple: {:ok, result}
.
To use the locked connection call the request with the connection
reference passed as the single argument to the fun
. If the
connection disconnects all future calls using that connection
reference will fail.
rollback/2
rolls back the transaction and causes the function to
return {:error, reason}
.
transaction/3
can be nested multiple times if the connection
reference is used to start a nested transaction. The top level
transaction function is the actual transaction.
Options
:queue
- Whether to wait for connection in a queue (default:true
);:timeout
- Transaction timeout (default:15000
);:mode
- Set to:savepoint
to use savepoints instead of an SQL transaction, otherwise set to:transaction
(default::transaction
);
The :timeout
is for the duration of the transaction and all nested
transactions and requests. This timeout overrides timeouts set by internal
transactions and requests. The :mode
will be used for all requests inside
the transaction function.
Example
{:ok, res} = Postgrex.transaction(pid, fn(conn) ->
Postgrex.query!(conn, "SELECT title FROM posts", [])
end)