Gathering detailed insights and metrics for @tdole/better-sqlite3-multiple-ciphers
Gathering detailed insights and metrics for @tdole/better-sqlite3-multiple-ciphers
better-sqlite3 with multiple-cipher encryption support 🔒
npm install @tdole/better-sqlite3-multiple-ciphers
Typescript
Module System
Node Version
NPM Version
68
Supply Chain
97.1
Quality
73.2
Maintenance
100
Vulnerability
99.3
License
C++ (54.27%)
JavaScript (45.48%)
Python (0.19%)
Dockerfile (0.06%)
Verify real, reachable, and deliverable emails with instant MX records, SMTP checks, and disposable email detection.
Total Downloads
605
Last Day
1
Last Week
8
Last Month
13
Last Year
254
MIT License
167 Stars
1,583 Commits
29 Forks
4 Watchers
13 Branches
30 Contributors
Updated on Mar 14, 2025
Minified
Minified + Gzipped
Latest Version
8.0.2-beta.2
Package Id
@tdole/better-sqlite3-multiple-ciphers@8.0.2-beta.2
Unpacked Size
11.24 MB
Size
2.74 MB
File Count
29
NPM Version
9.1.2
Node Version
18.12.1
Published on
Feb 04, 2023
Cumulative downloads
Total Downloads
Last Day
0%
1
Compared to previous day
Last Week
166.7%
8
Compared to previous week
Last Month
-48%
13
Compared to previous month
Last Year
76.4%
254
Compared to previous year
The fastest and simplest library for SQLite3 in Node.js. This particular fork supports multiple-cipher encryption using SQLite3MultipleCiphers. Check usage to learn more.
8.0.2-beta.0
8.0.1
3.40.1
1.5.5
better-sqlite3
is used by thousands of developers and engineers on a daily basis. Long nights and weekends were spent keeping this project strong and dependable, with no ask for compensation or funding, until now. If your company uses better-sqlite3
, ask your manager to consider supporting the project:
Also head over to SQLite3MultipleCiphers repo and give some support to the developer to keep this very useful extension alive.
You can also support me (the maintainer of this fork) by buying me a coffee. 😊
select 1 row get() | select 100 rows all() | select 100 rows iterate() 1-by-1 | insert 1 row run() | insert 100 rows in a transaction | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
better-sqlite3 | 1x | 1x | 1x | 1x | 1x |
sqlite and sqlite3 | 11.7x slower | 2.9x slower | 24.4x slower | 2.8x slower | 15.6x slower |
You can verify these results by running the benchmark yourself.
1npm install better-sqlite3-multiple-ciphers
1npm install better-sqlite3-multiple-ciphers@beta
You must be using Node.js v14.21.1 or above. Prebuilt binaries are available for Node.js LTS versions and Electron. If you have trouble installing, check the troubleshooting guide.
1const db = require('better-sqlite3-multiple-ciphers')('foobar.db', options); 2 3const row = db.prepare('SELECT * FROM users WHERE id = ?').get(userId); 4console.log(row.firstName, row.lastName, row.email);
Though not required, it is generally important to set the WAL pragma for performance reasons.
1db.pragma('journal_mode = WAL');
1import Database from 'better-sqlite3-multiple-ciphers'; 2const db = new Database('foobar.db', options); 3db.pragma('journal_mode = WAL');
A database can be encrypted and decrypted simply using key
and rekey
PRAGMA
statements.
Running this will encrypt the database using the default cipher:
1const db = require('better-sqlite3-multiple-ciphers')('foobar.db', options); 2 3db.pragma("rekey='secret-key'"); 4db.close();
To read an encrypted database (assuming default cipher):
1const db = require('better-sqlite3-multiple-ciphers')('foobar.db', options); 2 3db.pragma("key='secret-key'"); 4const row = db.prepare("SELECT * FROM users WHERE id = ?").get(userId); 5console.log(row.firstName, row.lastName, row.email);
To read an encrypted database (legacy SQLCipher) created by tools like DB Browser for SQLite:
1const db = require('better-sqlite3-multiple-ciphers')('foobar.db', options); 2 3db.pragma(`cipher='sqlcipher'`) 4db.pragma(`legacy=4`) 5db.pragma("key='secret-key'"); 6const row = db.prepare("SELECT * FROM users WHERE id = ?").get(userId); 7console.log(row.firstName, row.lastName, row.email);
The same method should be used if you want to create a new encrypted database that can be opened using DB Browser for SQLite.
node-sqlite3
uses asynchronous APIs for tasks that are either CPU-bound or serialized. That's not only bad design, but it wastes tons of resources. It also causes mutex thrashing which has devastating effects on performance.node-sqlite3
exposes low-level (C language) memory management functions. better-sqlite3
does it the JavaScript way, allowing the garbage collector to worry about memory management.better-sqlite3
is simpler to use, and it provides nice utilities for some operations that are very difficult or impossible in node-sqlite3
.better-sqlite3
is much faster than node-sqlite3
in most cases, and just as fast in all other cases.In most cases, if you're attempting something that cannot be reasonably accomplished with better-sqlite3
, it probably cannot be reasonably accomplished with SQLite3 in general. For example, if you're executing queries that take one second to complete, and you expect to have many concurrent users executing those queries, no amount of asynchronicity will save you from SQLite3's serialized nature. Fortunately, SQLite3 is very very fast. With proper indexing, we've been able to achieve upward of 2000 queries per second with 5-way-joins in a 60 GB database, where each query was handling 5–50 kilobytes of real data.
If you have a performance problem, the most likely causes are inefficient queries, improper indexing, or a lack of WAL mode—not better-sqlite3
itself. However, there are some cases where better-sqlite3
could be inappropriate:
For these situations, you should probably use a full-fledged RDBMS such as PostgreSQL.
No vulnerabilities found.
No security vulnerabilities found.