/mariadb-connector-nodejs

MariaDB Connector/Node.js is used to connect applications developed on Node.js to MariaDB and MySQL databases. MariaDB Connector/Node.js is LGPL licensed.

Primary LanguageJavaScriptGNU Lesser General Public License v2.1LGPL-2.1

MariaDB Node.js connector

npm package Test Build License (LGPL version 2.1) codecov

Non-blocking MariaDB and MySQL client for Node.js.

MariaDB and MySQL client, 100% JavaScript, with TypeScript definition, with the Promise API, distributed under the LGPL license version 2.1 or later (LGPL-2.1-or-later)

Documentation

See promise documentation for detailed API.

Callback documentation describe the callback wrapper for compatibility with existing drivers.

See dedicated part for migration from mysql/mysql2 or from 2.x version.

Why a New Client?

While there are existing MySQL clients that work with MariaDB, (such as the mysql and mysql2 clients), the MariaDB Node.js Connector offers new functionality, like Insert Streaming, Pipelining, ed25519 plugin authentication while making no compromises on performance.

Connector is production grade quality, with multiple features:

  • superfast batching
  • fast pool
  • easy debugging, trace pointing to code line on error
  • allows data streaming without high memory consumption
  • pipelining
  • metadata skipping (for MariaDB server only)
  • sql file import
  • ...

see some of those features:

Insert Streaming

Using a Readable stream in your application, you can stream INSERT statements to MariaDB through the Connector.

    
    https.get('https://someContent', readableStream => {
        //readableStream implement Readable, driver will stream data to database 
        connection.query("INSERT INTO myTable VALUE (?)", [readableStream]);
    });

Pipelining

With Pipelining, the Connector sends commands without waiting for server results, preserving order. For instance, consider the use of executing two INSERT statements.

pipelining example

The Connector doesn't wait for query results before sending the next INSERT statement. Instead, it sends queries one after the other, avoiding much of the network latency.

For more information, see the Pipelining documentation.

Bulk insert

Some use cases require a large amount of data to be inserted into a database table. By using batch processing, these queries can be sent to the database in one call, thus improving performance.

For more information, see the Batch documentation.

Benchmarks

MariaDB provides benchmarks comparing the Connector with other Node.js MariaDB/MySQL clients, including:

See the Benchmarks page for multiple results.

query

select 100 int
            mysql :  2,738.7 ops/s ± 1.3% 
           mysql2 :  2,404.9 ops/s ± 1.3%  (  -12.2% )
          mariadb :  5,650.8 ops/s ± 1.4%  ( +106.3% )

select 100 int benchmark results

execute

select 100 int - BINARY

select 100 int - BINARY
           mysql2 :  2,473.4 ops/s ± 1.3% 
          mariadb :   10,533 ops/s ± 1.7%  ( +325.9% )

select 100 int - BINARY benchmark results

Quick Start

The MariaDB Connector is available through the Node.js repositories. You can install it using npm :

$ npm install mariadb

example:

const mariadb = require('mariadb');
const pool = mariadb.createPool({host: process.env.DB_HOST, user: process.env.DB_USER, connectionLimit: 5});

async function asyncFunction() {
  let conn;
  try {

	conn = await pool.getConnection();
	const rows = await conn.query("SELECT 1 as val");
	// rows: [ {val: 1}, meta: ... ]

	const res = await conn.query("INSERT INTO myTable value (?, ?)", [1, "mariadb"]);
	// res: { affectedRows: 1, insertId: 1, warningStatus: 0 }

  } finally {
	if (conn) conn.release(); //release to pool
  }
}

Contributors

A big thanks to all contributors

contributors list

Contributing

If you would like to contribute to the MariaDB Node.js Connector, please follow the instructions given in the contributing guide.

To file an issue or follow the development, see JIRA.