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235 lines
8.6 KiB
235 lines
8.6 KiB
/* |
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Package pq is a pure Go Postgres driver for the database/sql package. |
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In most cases clients will use the database/sql package instead of |
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using this package directly. For example: |
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import ( |
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"database/sql" |
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_ "github.com/lib/pq" |
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) |
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func main() { |
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db, err := sql.Open("postgres", "user=pqgotest dbname=pqgotest sslmode=verify-full") |
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if err != nil { |
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log.Fatal(err) |
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} |
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age := 21 |
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rows, err := db.Query("SELECT name FROM users WHERE age = $1", age) |
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… |
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} |
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You can also connect to a database using a URL. For example: |
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db, err := sql.Open("postgres", "postgres://pqgotest:password@localhost/pqgotest?sslmode=verify-full") |
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Connection String Parameters |
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Similarly to libpq, when establishing a connection using pq you are expected to |
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supply a connection string containing zero or more parameters. |
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A subset of the connection parameters supported by libpq are also supported by pq. |
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Additionally, pq also lets you specify run-time parameters (such as search_path or work_mem) |
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directly in the connection string. This is different from libpq, which does not allow |
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run-time parameters in the connection string, instead requiring you to supply |
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them in the options parameter. |
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For compatibility with libpq, the following special connection parameters are |
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supported: |
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* dbname - The name of the database to connect to |
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* user - The user to sign in as |
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* password - The user's password |
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* host - The host to connect to. Values that start with / are for unix domain sockets. (default is localhost) |
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* port - The port to bind to. (default is 5432) |
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* sslmode - Whether or not to use SSL (default is require, this is not the default for libpq) |
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* fallback_application_name - An application_name to fall back to if one isn't provided. |
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* connect_timeout - Maximum wait for connection, in seconds. Zero or not specified means wait indefinitely. |
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* sslcert - Cert file location. The file must contain PEM encoded data. |
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* sslkey - Key file location. The file must contain PEM encoded data. |
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* sslrootcert - The location of the root certificate file. The file must contain PEM encoded data. |
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Valid values for sslmode are: |
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* disable - No SSL |
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* require - Always SSL (skip verification) |
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* verify-ca - Always SSL (verify that the certificate presented by the server was signed by a trusted CA) |
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* verify-full - Always SSL (verify that the certification presented by the server was signed by a trusted CA and the server host name matches the one in the certificate) |
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See http://www.postgresql.org/docs/current/static/libpq-connect.html#LIBPQ-CONNSTRING |
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for more information about connection string parameters. |
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Use single quotes for values that contain whitespace: |
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"user=pqgotest password='with spaces'" |
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A backslash will escape the next character in values: |
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"user=space\ man password='it\'s valid' |
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Note that the connection parameter client_encoding (which sets the |
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text encoding for the connection) may be set but must be "UTF8", |
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matching with the same rules as Postgres. It is an error to provide |
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any other value. |
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In addition to the parameters listed above, any run-time parameter that can be |
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set at backend start time can be set in the connection string. For more |
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information, see |
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http://www.postgresql.org/docs/current/static/runtime-config.html. |
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Most environment variables as specified at http://www.postgresql.org/docs/current/static/libpq-envars.html |
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supported by libpq are also supported by pq. If any of the environment |
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variables not supported by pq are set, pq will panic during connection |
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establishment. Environment variables have a lower precedence than explicitly |
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provided connection parameters. |
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The pgpass mechanism as described in http://www.postgresql.org/docs/current/static/libpq-pgpass.html |
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is supported, but on Windows PGPASSFILE must be specified explicitly. |
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Queries |
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database/sql does not dictate any specific format for parameter |
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markers in query strings, and pq uses the Postgres-native ordinal markers, |
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as shown above. The same marker can be reused for the same parameter: |
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rows, err := db.Query(`SELECT name FROM users WHERE favorite_fruit = $1 |
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OR age BETWEEN $2 AND $2 + 3`, "orange", 64) |
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pq does not support the LastInsertId() method of the Result type in database/sql. |
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To return the identifier of an INSERT (or UPDATE or DELETE), use the Postgres |
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RETURNING clause with a standard Query or QueryRow call: |
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var userid int |
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err := db.QueryRow(`INSERT INTO users(name, favorite_fruit, age) |
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VALUES('beatrice', 'starfruit', 93) RETURNING id`).Scan(&userid) |
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For more details on RETURNING, see the Postgres documentation: |
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http://www.postgresql.org/docs/current/static/sql-insert.html |
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http://www.postgresql.org/docs/current/static/sql-update.html |
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http://www.postgresql.org/docs/current/static/sql-delete.html |
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For additional instructions on querying see the documentation for the database/sql package. |
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Data Types |
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Parameters pass through driver.DefaultParameterConverter before they are handled |
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by this package. When the binary_parameters connection option is enabled, |
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[]byte values are sent directly to the backend as data in binary format. |
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This package returns the following types for values from the PostgreSQL backend: |
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- integer types smallint, integer, and bigint are returned as int64 |
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- floating-point types real and double precision are returned as float64 |
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- character types char, varchar, and text are returned as string |
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- temporal types date, time, timetz, timestamp, and timestamptz are returned as time.Time |
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- the boolean type is returned as bool |
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- the bytea type is returned as []byte |
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All other types are returned directly from the backend as []byte values in text format. |
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Errors |
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pq may return errors of type *pq.Error which can be interrogated for error details: |
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if err, ok := err.(*pq.Error); ok { |
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fmt.Println("pq error:", err.Code.Name()) |
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} |
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See the pq.Error type for details. |
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Bulk imports |
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You can perform bulk imports by preparing a statement returned by pq.CopyIn (or |
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pq.CopyInSchema) in an explicit transaction (sql.Tx). The returned statement |
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handle can then be repeatedly "executed" to copy data into the target table. |
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After all data has been processed you should call Exec() once with no arguments |
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to flush all buffered data. Any call to Exec() might return an error which |
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should be handled appropriately, but because of the internal buffering an error |
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returned by Exec() might not be related to the data passed in the call that |
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failed. |
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CopyIn uses COPY FROM internally. It is not possible to COPY outside of an |
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explicit transaction in pq. |
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Usage example: |
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txn, err := db.Begin() |
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if err != nil { |
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log.Fatal(err) |
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} |
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stmt, err := txn.Prepare(pq.CopyIn("users", "name", "age")) |
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if err != nil { |
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log.Fatal(err) |
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} |
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for _, user := range users { |
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_, err = stmt.Exec(user.Name, int64(user.Age)) |
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if err != nil { |
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log.Fatal(err) |
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} |
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} |
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_, err = stmt.Exec() |
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if err != nil { |
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log.Fatal(err) |
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} |
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err = stmt.Close() |
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if err != nil { |
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log.Fatal(err) |
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} |
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err = txn.Commit() |
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if err != nil { |
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log.Fatal(err) |
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} |
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Notifications |
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PostgreSQL supports a simple publish/subscribe model over database |
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connections. See http://www.postgresql.org/docs/current/static/sql-notify.html |
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for more information about the general mechanism. |
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To start listening for notifications, you first have to open a new connection |
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to the database by calling NewListener. This connection can not be used for |
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anything other than LISTEN / NOTIFY. Calling Listen will open a "notification |
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channel"; once a notification channel is open, a notification generated on that |
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channel will effect a send on the Listener.Notify channel. A notification |
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channel will remain open until Unlisten is called, though connection loss might |
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result in some notifications being lost. To solve this problem, Listener sends |
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a nil pointer over the Notify channel any time the connection is re-established |
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following a connection loss. The application can get information about the |
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state of the underlying connection by setting an event callback in the call to |
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NewListener. |
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A single Listener can safely be used from concurrent goroutines, which means |
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that there is often no need to create more than one Listener in your |
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application. However, a Listener is always connected to a single database, so |
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you will need to create a new Listener instance for every database you want to |
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receive notifications in. |
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The channel name in both Listen and Unlisten is case sensitive, and can contain |
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any characters legal in an identifier (see |
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http://www.postgresql.org/docs/current/static/sql-syntax-lexical.html#SQL-SYNTAX-IDENTIFIERS |
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for more information). Note that the channel name will be truncated to 63 |
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bytes by the PostgreSQL server. |
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You can find a complete, working example of Listener usage at |
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http://godoc.org/github.com/lib/pq/listen_example. |
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*/ |
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package pq
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