/pentagon

Prisma-like ORM built on top of Deno KV. Allows you to write your database schemas and relations using Zod schemas, and run queries using familiar syntax from Prisma.

Primary LanguageTypeScriptMIT LicenseMIT

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pentagon

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Prisma like ORM built on top of Deno KV. Allows you to write your database schemas and relations using Zod schemas, and run queries using familiar syntax from Prisma.

Features

  • No codegen required, everything is inferred using Zod and TypeScript
  • All same functions as Prisma supported (not all yet implemented)
  • Support for include
  • Support for select
  • Pagination (todo)

💻 Example usage

import { z } from "https://deno.land/x/zod@v3.21.4/mod.ts";
import { createPentagon } from "https://deno.land/x/pentagon/mod.ts";
const kv = await Deno.openKv();

export const User = z.object({
  id: z.string().uuid().describe("primary"),
  createdAt: z.date(),
  name: z.string(),
});

export const Order = z.object({
  id: z.string().uuid().describe("primary"),
  createdAt: z.date(),
  name: z.string(),
  userId: z.string().uuid(),
});

const db = createPentagon(kv, {
  users: {
    schema: User,
    relations: {
      myOrders: ["orders", [Order], "id", "userId"],
    },
  },
  orders: {
    schema: Order,
    relations: {
      user: ["users", User, "userId", "id"],
    },
  },
});

// Now we have unlocked the magic of Pentagon
const user = await db.users.findFirst({
  where: { name: "John Doe" },
  select: { name: true, id: true },
});

// We can also do `include` queries, fully typed!
const userWithOrders = await db.users.findFirst({
  where: { name: "John Doe" },
  include: {
    myOrders: true, // 👈 if we want the whole object
    /* myOrders: { name: true }, 👈 if we want just some parts to be included */
  },
});

Relations

Defining relations works by defining the relations key in the table definition. This allows us to include the values of relations, the same way as we are familiar with from Prisma.

The type signature RelationDefinition explains what each of the array values represent.

Basically, we have [relation name, schema, local key, foreign key].

For instance, a many-to-one relation could look like this:

users: {
  schema: User,
  relations: {
    myOrders: ["orders", [Order], undefined, "userId"],
  },
},
orders: {
  schema: Order,
  relations: {
    user: ["users", User, "userId", "id"],
  },
},

💻 Development

Help is always appreciated, especially with getting the types right! Here's how you can contribute:

  • Clone this repository
  • Fix types / add feature
  • Run the tests using deno test --unstable
  • Open PR

Running tests

$ deno test --unstable

License

Made with ❤️ in Helsinki, Finland.

Published under MIT License.