Skip to content

A Go wrapper for prisma to turn databases into GraphQL APIs using Go.

License

Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

jensneuse/goprisma

Repository files navigation

GoPrisma - a Go wrapper for the Prisma Engines

What's this?

Introspect a database and use it as a GraphQL API using Go.

Supported Databases:

  • SQLite
  • PostgreSQL
  • MySQL
  • MongoDB
  • MS SQL Server
  • CockroachDB

How to use this in production?

It might be obvious, but I just want to make it clear that you should NOT publicly expose your database with this library. This is only intended for use cases where the GraphQL API is shielded by some other component.

We're using goprisma internally in WunderGraph which adds such a shielding layer, with authentication, authorization, role-based access control, caching and more.

Additionally, WunderGraph comes with a TypeScript SDK, so you can introspect multiple databases as well as GraphQL and REST APIs and join them together.

Check out WunderGraph if you're interested in a production-grade solution. Here's a link to the docs on all supported DataSources.

Otherwise, feel free to use this as a go package in your own projects.

go get

go get github.com/jensneuse/goprisma

Introspect a database

prismaSchema := "datasource db {provider = \"postgresql\" url = \"postgresql://admin:admin@localhost:54321/example?schema=public&connection_limit=20&pool_timeout=5\"}"
schema, sdl, err := Introspect(prismaSchema)

Make a Query

query := "{\"query\": \"query Messages {findManymessages(take: 20 orderBy: [{id: desc}]){id message users {id name}}}","variables\": {}}"
engine, err := NewEngine(schema)
if err != nil {
	return
}
defer engine.Close()
response := engine.Execute(query)

Why?

GraphQL is a nice abstraction layer on top of other APIs. Making databases available can be a productivity gainer when no direct database access is required and GraphQL clients already exist in the codebase.

How does it work

Prisma is a really powerful ORM. If you look closely, you'll realize that internally, Prisma 2 is powered by a GraphQL Engine to abstract away the database layer.

The GraphQL Engine is written in Rust.

This library is a CGO wrapper to make the Prisma Rust GraphQL Engine available to write Go programs on top of it.

Is it fast?

I've measured ~0.3ms latency (Go -> Rust -> Database -> Go) on my laptop using a database in docker.

goos: darwin
goarch: amd64
pkg: github.com/jensneuse/goprisma/pkg/prisma
cpu: Intel(R) Core(TM) i9-9980HK CPU @ 2.40GHz
BenchmarkEngine_Execute
BenchmarkEngine_Execute-16    	   43815	    304507 ns/op	     144 B/op	       3 allocs/op
PASS

You can find the benchmark in the prisma package tests and run it yourself.

What architectures are supported?

  • darwin x86_64
  • darwin aarch64
  • linux x86_64
  • windows x86_64 (needs verification)

Other targets can be added.

Where is the Rust wrapper?

https://github.com/jensneuse/prisma-engines/tree/goprisma

Example / How to run the tests?

First, clone the repo.

cd docker-example
docker-compose up

Now you're able to run the tests.

How can you help?

Testing

You can help by running the tests and architectures that need verification. Please report any issues and tell me if it works.

Automate building the C-Wrapper

You might want to increase the level of trust by adding a github action to automate building the Rust C-Wrapper. Currently, I'm building it on my MacBook.

Ideally, this github action would fetch the latest stable of prisma-engines, compile the C-Wrapper and updates the lib folder via PR. A blueprint how to do this can be found here: https://github.com/rogchap/v8go/blob/master/.github/workflows/v8build.yml

If you're interested in adding this, please open a PR. That said, you can always build the Rust part yourself to increase the level of trust.