π Non-blocking, event-driven Swift client for PostgreSQL built on SwiftNIO.
Features:
- A
PostgresConnectionwhich allows you to connect to, authorize with, query, and retrieve results from a PostgreSQL server - A
PostgresClientwhich pools and manages connections - An async/await interface that supports backpressure
- Automatic conversions between Swift primitive types and the Postgres wire format
- Integrated with the Swift server ecosystem, including use of SwiftLog and ServiceLifecycle.
- Designed to run efficiently on all supported platforms (tested extensively on Linux and Darwin systems)
- Support for
Network.frameworkwhen available (e.g. on Apple platforms) - Supports running on Unix Domain Sockets
Check out the PostgresNIO API docs for a detailed look at all of the classes, structs, protocols, and more.
Interested in an example? We prepared a simple Birthday example in the Snippets folder.
Add PostgresNIO as dependency to your Package.swift:
dependencies: [
.package(url: "https://github.com/vapor/postgres-nio.git", from: "1.21.0"),
...
]Add PostgresNIO to the target you want to use it in:
targets: [
.target(name: "MyFancyTarget", dependencies: [
.product(name: "PostgresNIO", package: "postgres-nio"),
])
]To create a PostgresClient, which pools connections for you, first create a configuration object:
import PostgresNIO
let config = PostgresClient.Configuration(
host: "localhost",
port: 5432,
username: "my_username",
password: "my_password",
database: "my_database",
tls: .disable
)Next you can create you client with it:
let client = PostgresClient(configuration: config)Once you have create your client, you must run() it:
await withTaskGroup(of: Void.self) { taskGroup in
taskGroup.addTask {
await client.run() // !important
}
// You can use the client while the `client.run()` method is not cancelled.
// To shutdown the client, cancel its run method, by cancelling the taskGroup.
taskGroup.cancelAll()
}Once a client is running, queries can be sent to the server. This is straightforward:
let rows = try await client.query("SELECT id, username, birthday FROM users")The query will return a PostgresRowSequence, which is an AsyncSequence of PostgresRows.
The rows can be iterated one-by-one:
for try await row in rows {
// do something with the row
}However, in most cases it is much easier to request a row's fields as a set of Swift types:
for try await (id, username, birthday) in rows.decode((Int, String, Date).self) {
// do something with the datatypes.
}A type must implement the PostgresDecodable protocol in order to be decoded from a row. PostgresNIO provides default implementations for most of Swift's builtin types, as well as some types provided by Foundation:
BoolBytes,Data,ByteBufferDateUInt8,Int16,Int32,Int64,IntFloat,DoubleStringUUID
Sending parameterized queries to the database is also supported (in the coolest way possible):
let id = 1
let username = "fancyuser"
let birthday = Date()
try await client.query("""
INSERT INTO users (id, username, birthday) VALUES (\(id), \(username), \(birthday))
""",
logger: logger
)While this looks at first glance like a classic case of SQL injection π±, PostgresNIO's API ensures that this usage is safe. The first parameter of the query(_:logger:) method is not a plain String, but a PostgresQuery, which implements Swift's ExpressibleByStringInterpolation protocol. PostgresNIO uses the literal parts of the provided string as the SQL query and replaces each interpolated value with a parameter binding. Only values which implement the PostgresEncodable protocol may be interpolated in this way. As with PostgresDecodable, PostgresNIO provides default implementations for most common types.
Some queries do not receive any rows from the server (most often INSERT, UPDATE, and DELETE queries with no RETURNING clause, not to mention most DDL queries). To support this, the query(_:logger:) method is marked @discardableResult, so that the compiler does not issue a warning if the return value is not used.
Please see SECURITY.md for details on the security process.