This tutorial assumes that the latest version of sqlc is installed and ready to use.
We'll generate Go code here, but other language plugins are available. You'll naturally need the Go toolchain if you want to build and run a program with the code sqlc generates, but sqlc itself has no dependencies.
Create a new directory called sqlc-tutorial
and open it up.
Initialize a new Go module named tutorial.sqlc.dev/app
go mod init tutorial.sqlc.dev/app
sqlc looks for either a sqlc.(yaml|yml)
or sqlc.json
file in the current
directory. In our new directory, create a file named sqlc.yaml
with the
following contents:
version: "2"
sql:
- engine: "mysql"
queries: "query.sql"
schema: "schema.sql"
gen:
go:
package: "tutorial"
out: "tutorial"
sqlc needs to know your database schema and queries in order to generate code.
In the same directory, create a file named schema.sql
with the following
content:
CREATE TABLE authors (
id BIGINT NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT PRIMARY KEY,
name text NOT NULL,
bio text
);
Next, create a query.sql
file with the following four queries:
-- name: GetAuthor :one
SELECT * FROM authors
WHERE id = ? LIMIT 1;
-- name: ListAuthors :many
SELECT * FROM authors
ORDER BY name;
-- name: CreateAuthor :execresult
INSERT INTO authors (
name, bio
) VALUES (
?, ?
);
-- name: DeleteAuthor :exec
DELETE FROM authors
WHERE id = ?;
You are now ready to generate code. You shouldn't see any output when you run
the generate
subcommand, unless something goes wrong:
sqlc generate
You should now have a tutorial
subdirectory with three files containing Go
source code. These files comprise a Go package named tutorial
:
├── go.mod
├── query.sql
├── schema.sql
├── sqlc.yaml
└── tutorial
├── db.go
├── models.go
└── query.sql.go
You can use your newly-generated tutorial
package from any Go program.
Create a file named tutorial.go
and add the following contents:
package main
import (
"context"
"database/sql"
"log"
"reflect"
_ "github.com/go-sql-driver/mysql"
"tutorial.sqlc.dev/app/tutorial"
)
func run() error {
ctx := context.Background()
db, err := sql.Open("mysql", "user:password@/dbname?parseTime=true")
if err != nil {
return err
}
queries := tutorial.New(db)
// list all authors
authors, err := queries.ListAuthors(ctx)
if err != nil {
return err
}
log.Println(authors)
// create an author
result, err := queries.CreateAuthor(ctx, tutorial.CreateAuthorParams{
Name: "Brian Kernighan",
Bio: sql.NullString{String: "Co-author of The C Programming Language and The Go Programming Language", Valid: true},
})
if err != nil {
return err
}
insertedAuthorID, err := result.LastInsertId()
if err != nil {
return err
}
log.Println(insertedAuthorID)
// get the author we just inserted
fetchedAuthor, err := queries.GetAuthor(ctx, insertedAuthorID)
if err != nil {
return err
}
// prints true
log.Println(reflect.DeepEqual(insertedAuthorID, fetchedAuthor.ID))
return nil
}
func main() {
if err := run(); err != nil {
log.Fatal(err)
}
}
Before this code will compile you'll need to fetch the relevant MySQL driver:
go get github.com/go-sql-driver/mysql
go build ./...
The program should compile without errors. To make that possible, sqlc generates
readable, idiomatic Go code that you otherwise would've had to write
yourself. Take a look in tutorial/query.sql.go
.
Of course for this program to run successfully you'll need
to compile after replacing the database connection parameters in the call to
sql.Open()
with the correct parameters for your database. And your
database must have the authors
table as defined in schema.sql
.
You should now have a working program using sqlc's generated Go source code, and hopefully can see how you'd use sqlc in your own real-world applications.