Gathering detailed insights and metrics for typeorm-transactional-cls-hooked
Gathering detailed insights and metrics for typeorm-transactional-cls-hooked
Gathering detailed insights and metrics for typeorm-transactional-cls-hooked
Gathering detailed insights and metrics for typeorm-transactional-cls-hooked
typeorm-transactional
A Transactional Method Decorator for typeorm that uses cls-hooked to handle and propagate transactions between different repositories and service methods. Inpired by Spring Trasnactional Annotation and Sequelize CLS
typeorm-test-transactions
A transactional wrapper for tests that use TypeORM that automatically rolls back the transaction at the end of the test.
@types/cls-hooked
TypeScript definitions for cls-hooked
cls-hooked
CLS using AsynWrap instead of async-listener - Node >= 4.7.0
npm install typeorm-transactional-cls-hooked
Module System
Min. Node Version
Typescript Support
Node Version
NPM Version
524 Stars
100 Commits
86 Forks
14 Watching
12 Branches
11 Contributors
Updated on 19 Nov 2024
TypeScript (99.69%)
JavaScript (0.31%)
Cumulative downloads
Total Downloads
Last day
-4.6%
4,182
Compared to previous day
Last week
1%
20,990
Compared to previous week
Last month
30%
82,256
Compared to previous month
Last year
-28.6%
956,347
Compared to previous year
A Transactional
Method Decorator for typeorm that uses cls-hooked to handle and propagate transactions between different repositories and service methods.
Inspired by Spring Transactional Annotation and Sequelize CLS
See Changelog
1npm install --save typeorm-transactional-cls-hooked 2## Needed dependencies 3npm install --save typeorm reflect-metadata
Or
1yarn add typeorm-transactional-cls-hooked 2## Needed dependencies 3yarn add typeorm reflect-metadata
Note: You will need to import
reflect-metadata
somewhere in the global place of your app - https://github.com/typeorm/typeorm#installation
In order to use it, you will first need to initialize the cls-hooked namespace before your application is started
1import { initializeTransactionalContext } from 'typeorm-transactional-cls-hooked'; 2 3initializeTransactionalContext() // Initialize cls-hooked 4... 5app = express() 6...
Since this is an external library, all your typeorm repositories will need to be a custom repository extending either the BaseRepository
(when using TypeORM's Entity
) or the BaseTreeRepository
class (when using TypeORM's TreeEntity
).
1// Post.entity.ts 2@Entity() 3export class Post{ 4 @PrimaryGeneratedColumn() 5 id: number 6 7 @Column 8 message: string 9 ... 10} 11 12// Post.repository.ts 13import { EntityRepository } from 'typeorm'; 14import { BaseRepository } from 'typeorm-transactional-cls-hooked'; 15 16@EntityRepository(Post) 17export class PostRepository extends BaseRepository<Post> {}
The only purpose of the BaseRepository
class is to make sure the manager
property of the repository will always be the right one. In cases where inheritance is not possible, you can always Patch the Repository/TreeRepository to enable the same functionality as the BaseRepository
Sometimes there is a need to keep using the TypeORM Repository instead of using the BaseRepository
.
For this cases, you will need to "mixin/patch" the original Repository
with the BaseRepository
.
By doing so, you will be able to use the original Repository
and not change the code or use BaseRepository
.
This method was taken from https://gist.github.com/Diluka/87efbd9169cae96a012a43d1e5695667 (Thanks @Diluka)
In order to do that, the following should be done during initialization:
1import { initializeTransactionalContext, patchTypeORMRepositoryWithBaseRepository } from 'typeorm-transactional-cls-hooked'; 2 3initializeTransactionalContext() // Initialize cls-hooked 4patchTypeORMRepositoryWithBaseRepository() // patch Repository with BaseRepository.
If there is a need to keep using the TypeORM TreeRepository
instead of using BaseTreeRepository
, use patchTypeORMTreeRepositoryWithBaseTreeRepository
.
IMPORTANT NOTE
Calling initializeTransactionalContext and patchTypeORMRepositoryWithBaseRepository must happen BEFORE any application context is initialized!
@Transactional()
decoratorconnectionName
as argument (by default it is default
)
propagation
as argument to define the propagation behaviourisolationLevel
as argument to define the isolation level (by default it will use your database driver's default isolation level.)1export class PostService { 2 constructor(readonly repository: PostRepository) 3 4 @Transactional() // Will open a transaction if one doesn't already exist 5 async createPost(id, message): Promise<Post> { 6 const post = this.repository.create({ id, message }) 7 return this.repository.save(post) 8 } 9}
The following propagation options can be specified:
MANDATORY
- Support a current transaction, throw an exception if none exists.NESTED
- Execute within a nested transaction if a current transaction exists, behave like REQUIRED
else.NEVER
- Execute non-transactionally, throw an exception if a transaction exists.NOT_SUPPORTED
- Execute non-transactionally, suspend the current transaction if one exists.REQUIRED
(default behaviour) - Support a current transaction, create a new one if none exists.REQUIRES_NEW
- Create a new transaction, and suspend the current transaction if one exists.SUPPORTS
- Support a current transaction, execute non-transactionally if none exists.The following isolation level options can be specified:
READ_UNCOMMITTED
- A constant indicating that dirty reads, non-repeatable reads and phantom reads can occur.READ_COMMITTED
- A constant indicating that dirty reads are prevented; non-repeatable reads and phantom reads can occur.REPEATABLE_READ
- A constant indicating that dirty reads and non-repeatable reads are prevented; phantom reads can occur.SERIALIZABLE
= A constant indicating that dirty reads, non-repeatable reads and phantom reads are prevented.NOTE: If a transaction already exist and a method is decorated with @Transactional
and propagation
does not equal to REQUIRES_NEW
, then the declared isolationLevel
value will not be taken into account.
Because you hand over control of the transaction creation to this library, there is no way for you to know whether or not the current transaction was sucessfully persisted to the database.
To circumvent that, we expose three helper methods that allow you to hook into the transaction lifecycle and take appropriate action after a commit/rollback.
runOnTransactionCommit(cb)
takes a callback to be executed after the current transaction was sucessfully committedrunOnTransactionRollback(cb)
takes a callback to be executed after the current transaction rolls back. The callback gets the error that initiated the roolback as a parameter.runOnTransactionComplete(cb)
takes a callback to be executed at the completion of the current transactional context. If there was an error, it gets passed as an argument.1export class PostService { 2 constructor(readonly repository: PostRepository, readonly events: EventService) {} 3 4 @Transactional() 5 async createPost(id, message): Promise<Post> { 6 const post = this.repository.create({ id, message }) 7 const result = await this.repository.save(post) 8 runOnTransactionCommit(() => this.events.emit('post created')) 9 return result 10 } 11}
@Transactional
and BaseRepository
can be mocked to prevent running any of the transactional code in unit tests.
This can be accomplished in Jest with:
1jest.mock('typeorm-transactional-cls-hooked', () => ({ 2 Transactional: () => () => ({}), 3 BaseRepository: class {}, 4}));
Repositories, services, etc. can be mocked as usual.
The Transactional
uses the Typeorm Connection logger to emit log
messages.
In order to enable logs, you should set logging: ["log"]
or logging: ["all"]
to your typeorm logging configuration.
The Transactional log message structure looks as follows:
Transactional@UNIQ_ID|CONNECTION_NAME|METHOD_NAME|ISOLATION|PROPAGATION - MESSAGE
During initialization and patching repositories, the Typeorm Connection logger is not available yet.
For this reason, the console.log()
is being used, but only if TRANSACTIONAL_CONSOLE_DEBUG
environment variable is defined.
No vulnerabilities found.
Reason
no dangerous workflow patterns detected
Reason
no binaries found in the repo
Reason
license file detected
Details
Reason
Found 3/27 approved changesets -- score normalized to 1
Reason
0 commit(s) and 0 issue activity found in the last 90 days -- score normalized to 0
Reason
detected GitHub workflow tokens with excessive permissions
Details
Reason
dependency not pinned by hash detected -- score normalized to 0
Details
Reason
no effort to earn an OpenSSF best practices badge detected
Reason
security policy file not detected
Details
Reason
project is not fuzzed
Details
Reason
SAST tool is not run on all commits -- score normalized to 0
Details
Reason
34 existing vulnerabilities detected
Details
Score
Last Scanned on 2024-11-18
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