Node.js ORM example application
This page documents the preview version (v2.21). Preview includes features under active development and is for development and testing only. For production, use the stable version (v2024.1). To learn more, see Versioning.
The following tutorial implements a REST API server using the Sequelize ORM. The scenario is that of an e-commerce application. Database access in this application is managed through the Sequelize ORM.
The application source is in the repository. You can customize a number of options using the properties file located at config/config.json
.
Prerequisites
This tutorial assumes that you have:
- YugabyteDB up and running. Download and install YugabyteDB by following the steps in Quick start.
- node.js version 16 or later.
Clone the orm-examples repository
$ git clone https://github.com/YugabyteDB-Samples/orm-examples.git
Build the application
$ cd ./node/sequelize/
npm install
Specify SSL configuration
This configuration can be used while connecting to a cluster with SSL enabled.
Use the configuration in the following way in the models/index.js
file when you create the sequelize object:
sequelize = new Sequelize("<db_name>", "<user_name>","<password>" , {
dialect: 'postgres',
port: 5433,
host: "<host_name>",
dialectOptions: {
ssl: {
rejectUnauthorized: true,
ca: fs.readFileSync('<path_to_root_crt>').toString(),
}
}
});
Run the application
Start the Node.js API server at http://localhost:8080 with DEBUG logs on.
$ DEBUG=sequelize:* npm start
Send requests to the application
Create 2 users.
$ curl --data '{ "firstName" : "John", "lastName" : "Smith", "email" : "jsmith@example.com" }' \
-v -X POST -H 'Content-Type:application/json' http://localhost:8080/users
$ curl --data '{ "firstName" : "Tom", "lastName" : "Stewart", "email" : "tstewart@example.com" }' \
-v -X POST -H 'Content-Type:application/json' http://localhost:8080/users
Create 2 products.
$ curl \
--data '{ "productName": "Notebook", "description": "200 page notebook", "price": 7.50 }' \
-v -X POST -H 'Content-Type:application/json' http://localhost:8080/products
$ curl \
--data '{ "productName": "Pencil", "description": "Mechanical pencil", "price": 2.50 }' \
-v -X POST -H 'Content-Type:application/json' http://localhost:8080/products
Create 2 orders.
$ curl \
--data '{ "userId": "2", "products": [ { "productId": 1, "units": 2 } ] }' \
-v -X POST -H 'Content-Type:application/json' http://localhost:8080/orders
$ curl \
--data '{ "userId": "2", "products": [ { "productId": 1, "units": 2 }, { "productId": 2, "units": 4 } ] }' \
-v -X POST -H 'Content-Type:application/json' http://localhost:8080/orders
Query results
Using ysqlsh
$ ./bin/ysqlsh
ysqlsh (11.2)
Type "help" for help.
yugabyte=#
yugabyte=# SELECT count(*) FROM users;
count
-------
2
(1 row)
yugabyte=# SELECT count(*) FROM products;
count
-------
2
(1 row)
yugabyte=# SELECT count(*) FROM orders;
count
-------
2
(1 row)
Using the REST API
$ curl http://localhost:8080/users
{
"content": [
{
"userId": 2,
"firstName": "Tom",
"lastName": "Stewart",
"email": "tstewart@example.com"
},
{
"userId": 1,
"firstName": "John",
"lastName": "Smith",
"email": "jsmith@example.com"
}
],
...
}
$ curl http://localhost:8080/products
{
"content": [
{
"productId": 2,
"productName": "Pencil",
"description": "Mechanical pencil",
"price": 2.5
},
{
"productId": 1,
"productName": "Notebook",
"description": "200 page notebook",
"price": 7.5
}
],
...
}
$ curl http://localhost:8080/orders
{
"content": [
{
"orderTime": "2019-05-10T04:26:54.590+0000",
"orderId": "999ae272-f2f4-46a1-bede-5ab765bb27fe",
"user": {
"userId": 2,
"firstName": "Tom",
"lastName": "Stewart",
"email": "tstewart@example.com"
},
"userId": null,
"orderTotal": 25,
"products": []
},
{
"orderTime": "2019-05-10T04:26:48.074+0000",
"orderId": "1598c8d4-1857-4725-a9ab-14deb089ab4e",
"user": {
"userId": 2,
"firstName": "Tom",
"lastName": "Stewart",
"email": "tstewart@example.com"
},
"userId": null,
"orderTotal": 15,
"products": []
}
],
...
}