-
Notifications
You must be signed in to change notification settings - Fork 217
Integration
Vitaly Tomilov edited this page Jun 19, 2016
·
53 revisions
This document is the guidelines for integrating pg-promise
into reusable libraries.
The standard way is by adding pg-promise
as a dependency in your package.json
.
advantages:
- isolated use of promise libraries
- coding only for the referenced version of
pg-promise
- providing your own Initialization Options
disadvantages:
- requires separate database connection parameters
- requires creation of a separate instance of the Database object
If the client module creates its own Database object from the same connection parameters, it will result in a duplicate Database object warning, as explained in the Database API.
You can accept db
- Database object as a parameter, to use it directly. And you can access all pg-promise
features via property db.$config.
advantages:
- consistent use of the Initialization Options, as configured by the client
- no dependencies: reusing
pg-promise
and the promise library as configured by the client - no duplicate Database objects, optimal use of the connection and event listeners
disadvantages:
- cannot set your own Initialization Options, and you can break the client's code, if you try
- can only use the basic promise methods as exposed via
db.$config.promise
You can support pg-promise
by reference (for the default), and via db
parameter as an option.
This is the recommended approach, to let your library meet demands of both client types:
- clients that use
pg-promise
internally will be able to pass indb
as a parameter - clients that do use
pg-promise
internally will rely on your library's defaults
pg-promise