convert your database tables to structs easily
A small and convenient tool supporting development against a changing database schema.
Tables change, run the tool, get your structs!
- Go 1.20+
This project provides a make file but can also simply be installed with the go-install command:
go install github.com/fraenky8/tables-to-go@master
To enable SQLite3 support, clone the repo manually and run the make file:
make sqlite3
See this PR why it's disabled by default.
tables-to-go -v -of ../path/to/my/models
This gets all tables of a local running PostgreSQL database. Therefore, it uses
the database postgres
, schema public
and user postgres
with no password.
Flag -v
is verbose mode, -of
is the output file path where the go files
containing the structs will get created (default: current working directory).
- convert your tables to structs
- table with name
a_foo_bar
will become fileAFooBar.go
with structAFooBar
- properly formatted files with imports
- automatically typed struct fields, either with
sql.Null*
or primitive pointer types - struct fields with
db
-tags for ready to use in database code - partial support for Masterminds/structable
- only primary key & auto increment columns supported
- struct fields with
stbl
tags - ability to generate structs only for Masterminds/structable:
- without
db
-tags - with or without
structable.Recorder
- without
- currently supported:
- PostgreSQL (9.5 tested)
- MySQL (5.5+, 8 tested)
- SQLite (3 tested)
- currently, the following basic data types are supported:
- numeric: integer, serial, double, real, float
- character: varying, text, char, varchar, binary, varbinary, blob
- date/time: timestamp, date, datetime, year, time with time zone, timestamp with time zone, time without time zone, timestamp without time zone
- others: boolean
Assuming you have the following table definition (PostgreSQL):
CREATE TABLE some_user_info (
id SERIAL NOT NULL PRIMARY KEY,
first_name VARCHAR(20),
last_name VARCHAR(20) NOT NULL,
height DECIMAL
);
Run the following command (default local PostgreSQL instance):
tables-to-go
The following file SomeUserInfo.go
with default package dto
(data transfer
object) will be created:
package dto
import (
"database/sql"
)
type SomeUserInfo struct {
ID int `db:"id"`
FirstName sql.NullString `db:"first_name"`
LastName string `db:"last_name"`
Height sql.NullFloat64 `db:"height"`
}
The column id
got automatically converted to upper-case to follow the idiomatic
go guidelines.
See here
for more details.
Words which gets converted can be found
here.
This behaviour can be disabled by providing the command-line flag -no-initialism
.
Running on remote database server (eg. Mysql@Docker)
tables-to-go -v -t mysql -h 192.168.99.100 -d testdb -u root -p mysecretpassword
PostgreSQL example with different default schema but default database postgres
:
tables-to-go -v -t pg -h 192.168.99.100 -s test -u postgres -p mysecretpassword
Note: since database type pg
is default, following command will be equivalent:
tables-to-go -v -h 192.168.99.100 -s test -u postgres -p mysecretpassword
You can also specify the package or prefix and suffix.
tables-to-go -v -t mysql -h 192.168.99.100 -d testdb -u root -p mysecretpassword -pn models -pre model_ -suf _model
With same table given above, following file with Name ModelSomeUserInfoModel.go
will be created:
package models
import (
"database/sql"
)
type ModelSomeUserInfoModel struct {
ID int `db:"id"`
FirstName sql.NullString `db:"first_name"`
LastName string `db:"last_name"`
Height sql.NullFloat64 `db:"height"`
}
This is a common question asked by contributors and bug reporters.
Fetching data from a database and representation of this data in the end
(JSON, HTML template, cli, ...) are two different concerns and should be
decoupled. Therefore, this tool will not generate json
tags for the structs.
There are tools like gomodifytags which
enables you to generate json
tags for existing structs.
The call for this tool applied to the example above looks like the following:
gomodifytags -file SomeUserInfo.go -w -all -add-tags json
This adds the json
tags directly to the file:
type SomeUserInfo struct {
ID int `db:"id" json:"id"`
FirstName sql.NullString `db:"first_name" json:"first_name"`
LastName string `db:"last_name" json:"last_name"`
Height sql.NullFloat64 `db:"height" json:"height"`
}
Print usage with -?
or -help
Usage of tables-to-go:
-? shows help and usage
-d string
database name (default "postgres")
-f force; skip tables that encounter errors
-fn-format string
format of the filename: camelCase (c, default) or snake_case (s) (default c)
-format string
format of struct fields (columns): camelCase (c) or original (o) (default c)
-h string
host of database (default "127.0.0.1")
-help
shows help and usage
-no-initialism
disable the conversion to upper-case words in column names
-null string
representation of NULL columns: sql.Null* (sql) or primitive pointers (native|primitive) (default sql)
-of string
output file path (default "current working directory")
-p string
password of user
-pn string
package name (default "dto")
-port string
port of database host, if not specified, it will be the default ports for the supported databases
-pre string
prefix for file- and struct names
-s string
schema name (default "public")
-socket string
The socket file to use for connection. Takes precedence over host:port.
-structable-recorder
generate a structable.Recorder field
-suf string
suffix for file- and struct names
-t string
type of database to use, currently supported: [pg mysql sqlite3] (default pg)
-tags-no-db
do not create db-tags
-tags-structable
generate struct with tags for use in Masterminds/structable (https://github.com/Masterminds/structable)
-tags-structable-only
generate struct with tags ONLY for use in Masterminds/structable (https://github.com/Masterminds/structable)
-u string
user to connect to the database (default "postgres")
-v verbose output
-vv
more verbose output
If you find any issues or missing a feature, feel free to contribute or make suggestions! You can fork the repository and use a feature branch too. Feel free to send me a pull request. The PRs have to come with appropriate unit tests, documentation of the added functionality and updated README with optional examples.
To start developing clone via git
or use go's get command to fetch this
project.
This project uses go modules so
make sure when adding new dependencies to update the go.mod
file and the
vendor directory:
go mod tidy
go mod vendor
The code in this project is licensed under MIT license.