The MySQL connector enables LoopBack applications to connect to MySQL data sources.
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loopback-connector-mysql

MySQL is a popular open-source relational database management system (RDBMS). The loopback-connector-mysql module provides the MySQL connector module for the LoopBack framework.

See also LoopBack MySQL Connector in LoopBack documentation.

NOTE: The MySQL connector requires MySQL 5.0+.

Installation

In your application root directory, enter this command to install the connector:

npm install loopback-connector-mysql --save

This installs the module from npm and adds it as a dependency to the application’s package.json file.

If you create a MySQL data source using the data source generator as described below, you don’t have to do this, since the generator will run npm install for you.

Creating a MySQL data source

Use the Data source generator to add a MySQL data source to your application.
The generator will prompt for the database server hostname, port, and other settings required to connect to a MySQL database. It will also run the npm install command above for you.

The entry in the application’s /server/datasources.json will look like this:

"mydb": {
  "name": "mydb",
  "connector": "mysql",
  "host": "myserver",
  "port": 3306,
  "database": "mydb",
  "password": "mypassword",
  "user": "admin"
 }

Edit datasources.json to add any other additional properties that you require.

Properties

Property Type Description
collation String Determines the charset for the connection. Default is utf8_general_ci.
connector String Connector name, either “loopback-connector-mysql” or “mysql”.
connectionLimit Number The maximum number of connections to create at once. Default is 10.
database String Database name
debug Boolean If true, turn on verbose mode to debug database queries and lifecycle.
host String Database host name
password String Password to connect to database
port Number Database TCP port
socketPath String The path to a unix domain socket to connect to. When used host and port are ignored.
supportBigNumbers Boolean Enable this option to deal with big numbers (BIGINT and DECIMAL columns) in the database. Default is false.
timeZone String The timezone used to store local dates. Default is ‘local’.
url String Connection URL of form mysql://user:password@host/db. Overrides other connection settings.
username String Username to connect to database

NOTE: In addition to these properties, you can use additional parameters supported by node-mysql.

Type mappings

See LoopBack types for details on LoopBack’s data types.

LoopBack to MySQL types

LoopBack Type MySQL Type
String/JSON VARCHAR
Text TEXT
Number INT
Date DATETIME
Boolean TINYINT(1)
GeoPoint object POINT
Custom Enum type
(See Enum below)
ENUM

MySQL to LoopBack types

MySQL Type LoopBack Type
CHAR String
BIT(1)
CHAR(1)
TINYINT(1)
Boolean
VARCHAR
TINYTEXT
MEDIUMTEXT
LONGTEXT
TEXT
ENUM
SET
String
TINYBLOB
MEDIUMBLOB
LONGBLOB
BLOB
BINARY
VARBINARY
BIT
Node.js Buffer object
TINYINT
SMALLINT
INT
MEDIUMINT
YEAR
FLOAT
DOUBLE
NUMERIC
DECIMAL

Number
For FLOAT and DOUBLE, see Floating-point types.

For NUMERIC and DECIMAL, see Fixed-point exact value types

DATE
TIMESTAMP
DATETIME
Date

NOTE as of v3.0.0 of MySQL Connector, the following flags were introduced:

  • treatCHAR1AsString default false - treats CHAR(1) as a String instead of a Boolean
  • treatBIT1AsBit default true - treats BIT(1) as a Boolean instead of a Binary
  • treatTINYINT1AsTinyInt default true - treats TINYINT(1) as a Boolean instead of a Number

Using the datatype field/column option with MySQL

Use the mysql model property to specify additional MySQL-specific properties for a LoopBack model.

For example:

/common/models/model.json

"locationId":{
    "type":"String",
    "required":true,
    "length":20,
    "mysql":
    {
        "columnName":"LOCATION_ID",
        "dataType":"VARCHAR",
        "dataLength":20,
        "nullable":"N"
    }
}

You can also use the dataType column/property attribute to specify what MySQL column type to use for many loopback-datasource-juggler types.  The following type-dataType combinations are supported:

  • Number
  • integer
  • tinyint
  • smallint
  • mediumint
  • int
  • bigint

Use the limit option to alter the display width. Example:

{ userName : {
    type: String,
    dataType: 'char',
    limit: 24
  }
}

Default Clause/Constant

Use the default property to have MySQL handle setting column DEFAULT value.

"status": {
  "type": "string",
  "mysql": {
    "default": "pending"
  }
},
"number": {
  "type": "number",
  "mysql": {
    "default": 256
  }
}

For the date or timestamp types use CURRENT_TIMESTAMP or now:

"last_modified": {
  "type": "date",
  "mysql": {
    "default":"CURRENT_TIMESTAMP"
  }
}

NOTE: The following column types do NOT supported MySQL Default Values:

  • BLOB
  • TEXT
  • GEOMETRY
  • JSON

Floating-point types

For Float and Double data types, use the precision and scale options to specify custom precision. Default is (16,8). For example:

{ average :
  { type: Number,
    dataType: 'float',
    precision: 20,
    scale: 4
  }
}

Fixed-point exact value types

For Decimal and Numeric types, use the precision and scale options to specify custom precision. Default is (9,2). These aren’t likely to function as true fixed-point.

Example:

{ stdDev :
  { type: Number, 
    dataType: 'decimal',
    precision: 12,
    scale: 8
  }
}

Other types

Convert String / DataSource.Text / DataSource.JSON to the following MySQL types:

  • varchar
  • char
  • text
  • mediumtext
  • tinytext
  • longtext

Example: 

{ userName :
  { type: String,
    dataType: 'char',
    limit: 24
  }
}

Example: 

{ biography :
  { type: String,
  dataType: 'longtext'
  }
}

Convert JSON Date types to  datetime or timestamp

Example: 

{ startTime :
  { type: Date,
    dataType: 'timestamp'
  }
}

Enum

Enums are special. Create an Enum using Enum factory:

var MOOD = dataSource.EnumFactory('glad', 'sad', 'mad'); 
MOOD.SAD; // 'sad' 
MOOD(2); // 'sad' 
MOOD('SAD'); // 'sad' 
MOOD('sad'); // 'sad'
{ mood: { type: MOOD }}
{ choice: { type: dataSource.EnumFactory('yes', 'no', 'maybe'), null: false }}

Discovery and auto-migration

Model discovery

The MySQL connector supports model discovery that enables you to create LoopBack models based on an existing database schema using the unified database discovery API. For more information on discovery, see Discovering models from relational databases.

Auto-migration

The MySQL connector also supports auto-migration that enables you to create a database schema from LoopBack models using the LoopBack automigrate method.

For more information on auto-migration, see Creating a database schema from models for more information.

Auto-migrate/Auto-update models with foreign keys

MySQL handles the foreign key integrity of the related models upon auto-migrate or auto-update operation. It first deletes any related models before calling delete on the models with the relationship.

Example:

model-definiton.json

{
  "name": "Book",
  "base": "PersistedModel",
  "idInjection": false,
  "properties": {
    "bId": {
      "type": "number",
      "id": true,
      "required": true
    },
    "name": {
      "type": "string"
    },
    "isbn": {
      "type": "string"
    }
  },
  "validations": [],
  "relations": {
    "author": {
      "type": "belongsTo",
      "model": "Author",
      "foreignKey": "authorId"
    }
  },
  "acls": [],
  "methods": {},
  "foreignKeys": {
    "authorId": {
      "name": "authorId",
      "foreignKey": "authorId",
      "entityKey": "aId",
      "entity": "Author"
    }
  }
}
{
  "name": "Author",
  "base": "PersistedModel",
  "idInjection": false,
  "properties": {
    "aId": {
      "type": "number",
      "id": true,
      "required": true
    },
    "name": {
      "type": "string"
    },
    "dob": {
      "type": "date"
    }
  },
  "validations": [],
  "relations": {},
  "acls": [],
  "methods": {}
}

boot-script.js

module.exports = function(app) {
  var mysqlDs = app.dataSources.mysqlDS;
  var Book = app.models.Book;
  var Author = app.models.Author;

  // first autoupdate the `Author` model to avoid foreign key constraint failure
  mysqlDs.autoupdate('Author', function(err) {
    if (err) throw err;
    console.log('\nAutoupdated table `Author`.');

    mysqlDs.autoupdate('Book', function(err) {
      if (err) throw err;
      console.log('\nAutoupdated table `Book`.');
      // at this point the database table `Book` should have one foreign key `authorId` integrated
    });
  });
};

Breaking Changes with GeoPoint since 5.x

Prior to loopback-connector-mysql@5.x, MySQL connector was saving and loading GeoPoint properties from the MySQL database in reverse. MySQL expects values to be POINT(X, Y) or POINT(lng, lat), but the connector was saving them in the opposite order(i.e. POINT(lat,lng)). If you have an application with a model that has a GeoPoint property using previous versions of this connector, you can migrate your models using the following programmatic approach: NOTE Please back up the database tables that have your application data before performing any of the steps.

  1. Create a boot script under server/boot/ directory with the following: ```js ‘use strict’; module.exports = function(app) { function findAndUpdate() { var teashop = app.models.teashop; //find all instances of the model we’d like to migrate teashop.find({}, function(err, teashops) { teashops.forEach(function(teashopInstance) { //what we fetch back from the db is wrong, so need to revert it here var newLocation = {lng: teashopInstance.location.lat, lat: teashopInstance.location.lng}; //only update the GeoPoint property for the model teashopInstance.updateAttribute(‘location’, newLocation, function(err, inst) { if (err) console.log(‘update attribute failed ‘, err); else console.log(‘updateAttribute successful’); }); }); }); }

findAndUpdate(); };

2. Run the boot script by simply running your application or `node .`

For the above example, the model definition is as follows:
```json
{
  "name": "teashop",
  "base": "PersistedModel",
  "idInjection": true,
  "options": {
    "validateUpsert": true
  },
  "properties": {
    "name": {
      "type": "string",
      "default": "storename"
    },
    "location": {
      "type": "geopoint"
    }
  },
  "validations": [],
  "relations": {},
  "acls": [],
  "methods": {}
}

Running tests

Own instance

If you have a local or remote MySQL instance and would like to use that to run the test suite, use the following command:

  • Linux
    MYSQL_HOST=<HOST> MYSQL_PORT=<PORT> MYSQL_USER=<USER> MYSQL_PASSWORD=<PASSWORD> MYSQL_DATABASE=<DATABASE> CI=true npm test
    
  • Windows
    SET MYSQL_HOST=<HOST> SET MYSQL_PORT=<PORT> SET MYSQL_USER=<USER> SET MYSQL_PASSWORD=<PASSWORD> SET MYSQL_DATABASE=<DATABASE> SET CI=true npm test
    

Docker

If you do not have a local MySQL instance, you can also run the test suite with very minimal requirements.

  • Assuming you have Docker installed, run the following script which would spawn a MySQL instance on your local:
    source setup.sh <HOST> <PORT> <USER> <PASSWORD> <DATABASE>
    

    where <HOST>, <PORT>, <USER>, <PASSWORD> and <DATABASE> are optional parameters. The default values are localhost, 3306, root, pass and testdb respectively.

  • Run the test:
    npm test
    
Tags: connectors