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Erlang PostgreSQL Database Client

Asynchronous fork of wg/epgsql originally here: mabrek/epgsql and subsequently forked in order to provide a common fork for community development.

pgapp

If you want to get up to speed quickly with code that lets you run Postgres queries, you might consider trying epgsql/pgapp, which adds the following, on top of the epgsql driver:

  • A 'resource pool' (currently poolboy), which lets you decide how many Postgres workers you want to utilize.
  • Resilience against the database going down or other problems. The pgapp code will keep trying to reconnect to the database, but will not propagate the crash up the supervisor tree, so that, for instance, your web site will stay up even if the database is down for some reason. Erlang's "let it crash" is a good idea, but external resources going away might not be a good reason to crash your entire system.

Motivation

When you need to execute several queries, it involves a number network round-trips between the application and the database. The PostgreSQL frontend/backend protocol supports request pipelining. This means that you don't need to wait for the previous command to finish before sending the next command. This version of the driver makes full use of the protocol feature that allows faster execution.

Difference highlights

  • 3 API sets:
    • epgsql maintains backwards compatibility with the original driver API
    • epgsqla delivers complete results as regular erlang messages
    • epgsqli delivers results as messages incrementally (row by row)
  • internal queue of client requests, so you don't need to wait for the response to send the next request
  • single process to hold driver state and receive socket data
  • execution of several parsed statements as a batch
  • binding timestamps in erlang:now() format

see CHANGES for full list.

Differences between current epgsql and mabrek's original async fork:

  • Unnamed statements are used unless specified otherwise. This may cause problems for people attempting to use the same connection concurrently, which will no longer work.

Known problems

  • SSL performance can degrade if the driver process has a large inbox (thousands of messages).

Usage

Connect

connect(Opts) -> {ok, Connection :: epgsql:connection()} | {error, Reason :: epgsql:connect_error()}
    when
  Opts ::
    #{host :=     inet:ip_address() | inet:hostname(),
      username := iodata(),
      password => iodata() | fun( () -> iodata() ),
      database => iodata(),
      port =>     inet:port_number(),
      ssl =>      boolean() | required,
      ssl_opts => [ssl:ssl_option()],    % @see OTP ssl app, ssl_api.hrl
      timeout =>  timeout(),             % socket connect timeout, default: 5000 ms
      async =>    pid() | atom(),        % process to receive LISTEN/NOTIFY msgs
      codecs =>   [{epgsql_codec:codec_mod(), any()}]}
      replication => Replication :: string()} % Pass "database" to connect in replication mode
    | list().

connect(Host, Username, Password, Opts) -> {ok, C} | {error, Reason}.

example:

{ok, C} = epgsql:connect("localhost", "username", "psss", #{
    database => "test_db",
    timeout => 4000
}),
...
ok = epgsql:close(C).

Only host and username are mandatory, but most likely you would need database and password.

  • password - DB user password. It might be provided as string / binary or as a fun that returns string / binary. Internally, plain password is wrapped to anonymous fun before it is sent to connection process, so, if connect command crashes, plain password will not appear in crash logs.
  • {timeout, TimeoutMs} parameter will trigger an {error, timeout} result when the socket fails to connect within TimeoutMs milliseconds.
  • ssl if set to true, perform an attempt to connect in ssl mode, but continue unencrypted if encryption isn't supported by server. if set to required connection will fail if encryption is not available.
  • ssl_opts will be passed as is to ssl:connect/3
  • async see Server notifications
  • codecs see Pluggable datatype codecs
  • replication see Streaming replication protocol

Options may be passed as proplist or as map with the same key names.

Asynchronous connect example (applies to epgsqli too):

  {ok, C} = epgsqla:start_link(),
  Ref = epgsqla:connect(C, "localhost", "username", "psss", #{database => "test_db"}),
  receive
    {C, Ref, connected} ->
        {ok, C};
    {C, Ref, Error = {error, _}} ->
        Error;
    {'EXIT', C, _Reason} ->
        {error, closed}
  end.

Simple Query

-type query() :: string() | iodata().
-type squery_row() :: {binary()}.

-record(column, {
    name :: binary(),
    type :: epgsql_type(),
    size :: -1 | pos_integer(),
    modifier :: -1 | pos_integer(),
    format :: integer()
}).

-type ok_reply(RowType) ::
    {ok, ColumnsDescription :: [#column{}], RowsValues :: [RowType]} |                            % select
    {ok, Count :: non_neg_integer()} |                                                            % update/insert/delete
    {ok, Count :: non_neg_integer(), ColumnsDescription :: [#column{}], RowsValues :: [RowType]}. % update/insert/delete + returning
-type error_reply() :: {error, query_error()}.
-type reply(RowType) :: ok_reply() | error_reply().

-spec squery(connection(), query()) -> reply(squery_row()) | [reply(squery_row())].
%% @doc runs simple `SqlQuery' via given `Connection'
squery(Connection, SqlQuery) -> ...

examples:

epgsql:squery(C, "insert into account (name) values  ('alice'), ('bob')").
> {ok,2}
epgsql:squery(C, "select * from account").
> {ok,
    [{column,<<"id">>,int4,4,-1,0},{column,<<"name">>,text,-1,-1,0}],
    [{<<"1">>,<<"alice">>},{<<"2">>,<<"bob">>}]
}
epgsql:squery(C,
    "insert into account(name)"
    "    values ('joe'), (null)"
    "    returning *").
> {ok,2,
    [{column,<<"id">>,int4,4,-1,0}, {column,<<"name">>,text,-1,-1,0}],
    [{<<"3">>,<<"joe">>},{<<"4">>,null}]
}
-include_lib("epgsql/include/epgsql.hrl").
epgsql:squery(C, "SELECT * FROM _nowhere_").
> {error,
   #error{severity = error,code = <<"42P01">>,
          codename = undefined_table,
          message = <<"relation \"_nowhere_\" does not exist">>,
          extra = [{file,<<"parse_relation.c">>},
                   {line,<<"1160">>},
                   {position,<<"15">>},
                   {routine,<<"parserOpenTable">>}]}}

The simple query protocol returns all columns as binary strings and does not support parameters binding.

Several queries separated by semicolon can be executed by squery.

[{ok, _, [{<<"1">>}]}, {ok, _, [{<<"2">>}]}] = epgsql:squery(C, "select 1; select 2").

epgsqla:squery/2 returns result as a single message:

  Ref = epgsqla:squery(C, Sql),
  receive
    {C, Ref, Result} -> Result
  end.

Result has the same format as return value of epgsql:squery/2.

epgsqli:squery/2 returns results incrementally for each query inside Sql and for each row:

Ref = epgsqli:squery(C, Sql),
receive
  {C, Ref, {columns, Columns}} ->
      %% columns description
      Columns;
  {C, Ref, {data, Row}} ->
      %% single data row
      Row;
  {C, Ref, {error, _E} = Error} ->
      Error;
  {C, Ref, {complete, {_Type, Count}}} ->
      %% execution of one insert/update/delete has finished
      {ok, Count}; % affected rows count
  {C, Ref, {complete, _Type}} ->
      %% execution of one select has finished
      ok;
  {C, Ref, done} ->
      %% execution of all queries from Sql has been finished
      done;
end.

Extended Query

{ok, Columns, Rows}        = epgsql:equery(C, "select ...", [Parameters]).
{ok, Count}                = epgsql:equery(C, "update ...", [Parameters]).
{ok, Count, Columns, Rows} = epgsql:equery(C, "insert ... returning ...", [Parameters]).
{error, Error}             = epgsql:equery(C, "invalid SQL", [Parameters]).

Parameters - optional list of values to be bound to $1, $2, $3, etc.

The extended query protocol combines parse, bind, and execute using the unnamed prepared statement and portal. A select statement returns {ok, Columns, Rows}, insert/update/delete returns {ok, Count} or {ok, Count, Columns, Rows} when a returning clause is present. When an error occurs, all statements result in {error, #error{}}.

epgsql:equery(C, "select id from account where name = $1", ["alice"]),
> {ok,
    [{column,<<"id">>,int4,4,-1,1}],
    [{1}]
}

PostgreSQL's binary format is used to return integers as Erlang integers, floats as floats, bytes/text/varchar columns as binaries, bools as true/false, etc. For details see pgsql_binary.erl and the Data Representation section below.

Asynchronous API epgsqla:equery/3 requires you to parse statement beforehand

#statement{types = Types} = Statement,
TypedParameters = lists:zip(Types, Parameters),
Ref = epgsqla:equery(C, Statement, [TypedParameters]),
receive
  {C, Ref, Res} -> Res
end.
  • Statement - parsed statement (see parse below)
  • Res has same format as return value of epgsql:equery/3.

epgsqli:equery(C, Statement, [TypedParameters]) sends same set of messages as squery including final {C, Ref, done}.

Prepared Query

{ok, Columns, Rows}        = epgsql:prepared_query(C, StatementName, [Parameters]).
{ok, Count}                = epgsql:prepared_query(C, StatementName, [Parameters]).
{ok, Count, Columns, Rows} = epgsql:prepared_query(C, StatementName, [Parameters]).
{error, Error}             = epgsql:prepared_query(C, "non_existent_query", [Parameters]).

Parameters - optional list of values to be bound to $1, $2, $3, etc. StatementName - name of query given with erlang epgsql:parse(C, StatementName, "select ...", []).

With prepared query one can parse a query giving it a name with epgsql:parse on start and reuse the name for all further queries with different parameters.

epgsql:parse(C, "inc", "select $1+1", []).
epgsql:prepared_query(C, "inc", [4]).
epgsql:prepared_query(C, "inc", [1]).

Asynchronous API epgsqla:prepared_query/3 requires you to parse statement beforehand

#statement{types = Types} = Statement,
TypedParameters = lists:zip(Types, Parameters),
Ref = epgsqla:prepared_query(C, Statement, [TypedParameters]),
receive
  {C, Ref, Res} -> Res
end.
  • Statement - parsed statement (see parse below)
  • Res has same format as return value of epgsql:prepared_query/3.

epgsqli:prepared_query(C, Statement, [TypedParameters]) sends same set of messages as squery including final {C, Ref, done}.

Parse/Bind/Execute

{ok, Statement} = epgsql:parse(C, [StatementName], Sql, [ParameterTypes]).
  • StatementName - optional, reusable, name for the prepared statement.
  • ParameterTypes - optional list of PostgreSQL types for each parameter.

For valid type names see pgsql_types.erl.

epgsqla:parse/2 sends {C, Ref, {ok, Statement} | {error, Reason}}. epgsqli:parse/2 sends:

  • {C, Ref, {types, Types}}
  • {C, Ref, {columns, Columns}}
  • {C, Ref, no_data} if statement will not return rows
  • {C, Ref, {error, Reason}}
ok = epgsql:bind(C, Statement, [PortalName], ParameterValues).
  • PortalName - optional name for the result portal.

both epgsqla:bind/3 and epgsqli:bind/3 send {C, Ref, ok | {error, Reason}}

{ok | partial, Rows} = epgsql:execute(C, Statement, [PortalName], [MaxRows]).
{ok, Count}          = epgsql:execute(C, Statement, [PortalName]).
{ok, Count, Rows}    = epgsql:execute(C, Statement, [PortalName]).
  • PortalName - optional portal name used in epgsql:bind/4.
  • MaxRows - maximum number of rows to return (0 for all rows).

epgsql:execute/3 returns {partial, Rows} when more rows are available.

epgsqla:execute/3 sends {C, Ref, Result} where Result has same format as return value of epgsql:execute/3.

epgsqli:execute/3 sends

  • {C, Ref, {data, Row}}
  • {C, Ref, {error, Reason}}
  • {C, Ref, suspended} partial result was sent, more rows are available
  • {C, Ref, {complete, {_Type, Count}}}
  • {C, Ref, {complete, _Type}}
ok = epgsql:close(C, Statement).
ok = epgsql:close(C, statement | portal, Name).
ok = epgsql:sync(C).

All epgsql functions return {error, Error} when an error occurs.

epgsqla/epgsqli modules' close and sync functions send {C, Ref, ok}.

Batch execution

Batch execution is bind + execute for several prepared statements. It uses unnamed portals and MaxRows = 0.

Results = epgsql:execute_batch(C, Batch).
  • Batch - list of {Statement, ParameterValues}
  • Results - list of {ok, Count} or {ok, Count, Rows}

example:

{ok, S1} = epgsql:parse(C, "one", "select $1", [int4]),
{ok, S2} = epgsql:parse(C, "two", "select $1 + $2", [int4, int4]),
[{ok, [{1}]}, {ok, [{3}]}] = epgsql:execute_batch(C, [{S1, [1]}, {S2, [1, 2]}]).

epgsqla:execute_batch/3 sends {C, Ref, Results} epgsqli:execute_batch/3 sends

  • {C, Ref, {data, Row}}
  • {C, Ref, {error, Reason}}
  • {C, Ref, {complete, {_Type, Count}}}
  • {C, Ref, {complete, _Type}}
  • {C, Ref, done} - execution of all queries from Batch has finished

Data Representation

Data representation may be configured using pluggable datatype codecs, so following is just default mapping:

PG type Representation
null null
bool true
char $A
intX 1
floatX 1.0
date {Year, Month, Day}
time {Hour, Minute, Second.Microsecond}
timetz {time, Timezone}
timestamp {date, time}
timestamptz {date, time}
interval {time, Days, Months}
text <<"a">>
varchar <<"a">>
bytea <<1, 2>>
array [1, 2, 3]
record {int2, time, text, ...} (decode only)
point {10.2, 100.12}
int4range [1,5)
hstore {[ {binary(), binary() | null} ]}
json/jsonb <<"{ \"key\": [ 1, 1.0, true, \"string\" ] }">>
uuid <<"123e4567-e89b-12d3-a456-426655440000">>
inet inet:ip_address()
cidr {ip_address(), Mask :: 0..32}
macaddr(8) tuple of 6 or 8 byte()
geometry ewkb:geometry()
tsrange {{Hour, Minute, Second.Microsecond}, {Hour, Minute, Second.Microsecond}}
tstzrange {{Hour, Minute, Second.Microsecond}, {Hour, Minute, Second.Microsecond}}
daterange {{Year, Month, Day}, {Year, Month, Day}}

timestamp and timestamptz parameters can take erlang:now() format: {MegaSeconds, Seconds, MicroSeconds}

int4range is a range type for ints that obeys inclusive/exclusive semantics, bracket and parentheses respectively. Additionally, infinities are represented by the atoms minus_infinity and plus_infinity

tsrange, tstzrange, daterange are range types for timestamp, timestamptz and date respectively. They can return empty atom as the result from a database if bounds are equal

Errors

Errors originating from the PostgreSQL backend are returned as {error, #error{}}, see epgsql.hrl for the record definition. epgsql functions may also return {error, What} where What is one of the following:

  • {unsupported_auth_method, Method} - required auth method is unsupported
  • timeout - request timed out
  • closed - connection was closed
  • sync_required - error occured and epgsql:sync must be called

Server Notifications

PostgreSQL may deliver two types of asynchronous message: "notices" in response to notice and warning messages generated by the server, and notifications which are generated by the LISTEN/NOTIFY mechanism.

Passing the {async, PidOrName} option to epgsql:connect/3 will result in these async messages being sent to the specified pid or registered process, otherwise they will be dropped.

Another way to set notification receiver is to use set_notice_receiver/2 function. It returns previous async value. Use undefined to disable notifications.

% receiver is pid()
{ok, Previous} = epgsql:set_notice_receiver(C, self()).

% receiver is registered process
register(notify_receiver, self()).
{ok, Previous1} = epgsqla:set_notice_receiver(C, notify_receiver).

% disable notifications
{ok, Previous2} = epgsqli:set_notice_receiver(C, undefined).

Message formats:

{epgsql, Connection, {notification, Channel, Pid, Payload}}
  • Connection - connection the notification occurred on
  • Channel - channel the notification occurred on
  • Pid - database session pid that sent notification
  • Payload - optional payload, only available from PostgreSQL >= 9.0
{epgsql, Connection, {notice, Error}}
  • Connection - connection the notice occurred on
  • Error - an #error{} record, see epgsql.hrl

Utility functions

Transaction helpers

with_transaction(connection(), fun((connection()) -> Result :: any()), Opts) ->
    Result | {rollback, Reason :: any()} when
Opts :: [{reraise, boolean()},
         {ensure_committed, boolean()},
         {begin_opts, iodata()}] | map().

Executes a function in a PostgreSQL transaction. It executes BEGIN prior to executing the function, ROLLBACK if the function raises an exception and COMMIT if the function returns without an error. If it is successful, it returns the result of the function. The failure case may differ, depending on the options passed. Options (proplist or map):

  • reraise (default true): when set to true, the original exception will be re-thrown after rollback, otherwise {rollback, ErrorReason} will be returned
  • ensure_committed (default false): even when the callback returns without exception, check that transaction was committed by checking the CommandComplete status of the COMMIT command. If the transaction was rolled back, the status will be rollback instead of commit and an ensure_committed_failed error will be generated.
  • begin_opts (default ""): append extra options to BEGIN command (see https://www.postgresql.org/docs/current/static/sql-begin.html) as a string by just appending them to "BEGIN " string. Eg {begin_opts, "ISOLATION LEVEL SERIALIZABLE"}. Beware of SQL injection! The value of begin_opts is not escaped!

Command status

epgsql{a,i}:get_cmd_status(C) -> undefined | atom() | {atom(), integer()}

This function returns the last executed command's status information. It's usualy the name of SQL command and, for some of them (like UPDATE or INSERT) the number of affected rows. See libpq PQcmdStatus. But there is one interesting case: if you execute COMMIT on a failed transaction, status will be rollback, not commit. This is how you can detect failed transactions:

{ok, _, _} = epgsql:squery(C, "BEGIN").
{error, _} = epgsql:equery(C, "SELECT 1 / $1::integer", [0]).
{ok, _, _} = epgsql:squery(C, "COMMIT").
{ok, rollback} = epgsql:get_cmd_status(C).

Server parameters

epgsql{a,i}:get_parameter(C, Name) -> binary() | undefined

Retrieve actual value of server-side parameters, such as character endoding, date/time format and timezone, server version and so on. See libpq PQparameterStatus. Parameter's value may change during connection's lifetime.

Streaming replication protocol

See streaming.md.

Pluggable commands

See pluggable_commands.md

Pluggable datatype codecs

See pluggable_types.md

Mailing list

Google groups

Contributing

epgsql is a community driven effort - we welcome contributions! Here's how to create a patch that's easy to integrate:

  • Create a new branch for the proposed fix.
  • Make sure it includes a test and documentation, if appropriate.
  • Open a pull request against the devel branch of epgsql.
  • Passing build in travis

Test Setup

In order to run the epgsql tests, you will need to install local Postgres database.

NOTE: you will need the postgis and hstore extensions to run these tests! On Ubuntu, you can install them with a command like this:

  1. apt-get install postgresql-9.3-postgis-2.1 postgresql-contrib

  2. make test # Runs the tests

NOTE 2: It's possible to run tests on exact postgres version by changing $PATH like

PATH=$PATH:/usr/lib/postgresql/9.5/bin/ make test

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