Quarkus - Reactive SQL Clients
The Reactive SQL Clients have a straightforward API focusing on scalability and low-overhead. Currently, the following database servers are supported:
DB2
PostgreSQL
MariaDB/MySQL
In this guide, you will learn how to implement a simple CRUD application exposing data stored in PostgreSQL over a RESTful API.
Extension and connection pool class names for each client can be found at the bottom of this document. |
If you are not familiar with the Quarkus Vert.x extension, consider reading the Using Eclipse Vert.x guide first. |
The application shall manage fruit entities:
public class Fruit {
public Long id;
public String name;
public Fruit() {
}
public Fruit(String name) {
this.name = name;
}
public Fruit(Long id, String name) {
this.id = id;
this.name = name;
}
}
Do you need a ready-to-use PostgreSQL server to try out the examples?
|
Installing
Reactive PostgreSQL Client extension
First, make sure your project has the quarkus-reactive-pg-client
extension enabled. If you are creating a new project, set the extensions
parameter as follows:
mvn io.quarkus:quarkus-maven-plugin:1.7.6.Final:create \
-DprojectGroupId=org.acme \
-DprojectArtifactId=reactive-pg-client-quickstart \
-Dextensions="reactive-pg-client"
cd reactive-pg-client-quickstart
If you have an already created project, the reactive-pg-client
extension can be added to an existing Quarkus project with the add-extension
command:
./mvnw quarkus:add-extension -Dextensions="reactive-pg-client"
Otherwise, you can manually add this to the dependencies section of your pom.xml
file:
<dependency>
<groupId>io.quarkus</groupId>
<artifactId>quarkus-reactive-pg-client</artifactId>
</dependency>
Mutiny
Reactive REST endpoints in your application that return Uni or Multi need Mutiny support for RESTEasy
extension (io.quarkus:quarkus-resteasy-mutiny
) to work properly:
./mvnw quarkus:add-extension -Dextensions="resteasy-mutiny"
In this guide, we will use the Mutiny API of the Reactive PostgreSQL Client. If you’re not familiar with Mutiny reactive types, read the Getting Started with Reactive guide first. |
JSON Binding
We will expose Fruit
instances over HTTP in the JSON format. Consequently, you also need to add the quarkus-resteasy-jsonb
extension:
./mvnw quarkus:add-extension -Dextensions="resteasy-jsonb"
If you prefer not to use the command line, manually add this to the dependencies section of your pom.xml
file:
<dependency>
<groupId>io.quarkus</groupId>
<artifactId>quarkus-resteasy-jsonb</artifactId>
</dependency>
Of course, this is only a requirement for this guide, not any application using the Reactive PostgreSQL Client.
Configuring
The Reactive PostgreSQL Client can be configured with standard Quarkus datasource properties and a reactive URL:
src/main/resources/application.properties
quarkus.datasource.db-kind=postgresql
quarkus.datasource.username=quarkus_test
quarkus.datasource.password=quarkus_test
quarkus.datasource.reactive.url=postgresql://localhost:5432/quarkus_test
With that you may create your FruitResource
skeleton and @Inject
a io.vertx.mutiny.pgclient.PgPool
instance:
src/main/java/org/acme/vertx/FruitResource.java
@Path("fruits")
@Produces(MediaType.APPLICATION_JSON)
@Consumes(MediaType.APPLICATION_JSON)
public class FruitResource {
@Inject
io.vertx.mutiny.pgclient.PgPool client;
}
Database schema and seed data
Before we implement the REST endpoint and data management code, we need to setup the database schema. It would also be convenient to have some data inserted upfront.
For production we would recommend to use something like the Flyway database migration tool. But for development we can simply drop and create the tables on startup, and then insert a few fruits.
src/main/java/org/acme/vertx/FruitResource.java
@Inject
@ConfigProperty(name = "myapp.schema.create", defaultValue = "true") (1)
boolean schemaCreate;
@PostConstruct
void config() {
if (schemaCreate) {
initdb();
}
}
private void initdb() {
// TODO
}
You may override the default value of the myapp.schema.create property in the application.properties file. |
Almost ready! To initialize the DB in development mode, we will use the client simple query
method. It returns a Uni
and thus can be composed to execute queries sequentially:
client.query("DROP TABLE IF EXISTS fruits").execute()
.flatMap(r -> client.query("CREATE TABLE fruits (id SERIAL PRIMARY KEY, name TEXT NOT NULL)").execute())
.flatMap(r -> client.query("INSERT INTO fruits (name) VALUES ('Orange')").execute())
.flatMap(r -> client.query("INSERT INTO fruits (name) VALUES ('Pear')").execute())
.flatMap(r -> client.query("INSERT INTO fruits (name) VALUES ('Apple')").execute())
.await().indefinitely();
Breaking Change in Quarkus 1.5 Vert.x 3.9, integrated in Quarkus 1.5, introduces a breaking change regarding the |
Wondering why we need block until the latest query is completed? This code is part of a @PostConstruct method and Quarkus invokes it synchronously. As a consequence, returning prematurely could lead to serving requests while the database is not ready yet. |
That’s it! So far we have seen how to configure a pooled client and execute simple queries. We are now ready to develop the data management code and implement our RESTful endpoint.
Using
Query results traversal
In development mode, the database is set up with a few rows in the fruits
table. To retrieve all the data, we will use the query
method again:
Uni<RowSet<Row>> rowSet = client.query("SELECT id, name FROM fruits ORDER BY name ASC").execute();
When the operation completes, we will get a RowSet
that has all the rows buffered in memory. A RowSet
is an java.lang.Iterable<Row>
and thus can be converted to a Multi
:
Multi<Fruit> fruits = rowSet
.onItem().transformToMulti(set -> Multi.createFrom().iterable(set))
.onItem().transform(Fruit::from);
The Fruit#from
method converts a Row
instance to a Fruit
instance. It is extracted as a convenience for the implementation of the other data management methods:
src/main/java/org/acme/vertx/Fruit.java
private static Fruit from(Row row) {
return new Fruit(row.getLong("id"), row.getString("name"));
}
Putting it all together, the Fruit.findAll
method looks like:
src/main/java/org/acme/vertx/Fruit.java
public static Multi<Fruit> findAll(PgPool client) {
return client.query("SELECT id, name FROM fruits ORDER BY name ASC").execute()
.onItem().transformToMulti(set -> Multi.createFrom().iterable(set))
.onItem().transform(Fruit::from);
}
And the endpoint to get all fruits from the backend:
src/main/java/org/acme/vertx/FruitResource.java
@GET
public Multi<Fruit> get() {
return Fruit.findAll(client);
}
Now start Quarkus in dev
mode with:
./mvnw compile quarkus:dev
Lastly, open your browser and navigate to http://localhost:8080/fruits, you should see:
[{"id":3,"name":"Apple"},{"id":1,"name":"Orange"},{"id":2,"name":"Pear"}]
Prepared queries
The Reactive PostgreSQL Client can also prepare queries and take parameters that are replaced in the SQL statement at execution time:
client.preparedQuery("SELECT id, name FROM fruits WHERE id = $1").execute(Tuple.of(id))
The SQL string can refer to parameters by position, using $1, $2, …etc. |
Similar to the simple query
method, preparedQuery
returns an instance of PreparedQuery<RowSet<Row>>
. Equipped with this tooling, we are able to safely use an id
provided by the user to get the details of a particular fruit:
src/main/java/org/acme/vertx/Fruit.java
public static Uni<Fruit> findById(PgPool client, Long id) {
return client.preparedQuery("SELECT id, name FROM fruits WHERE id = $1").execute(Tuple.of(id)) (1)
.onItem().transform(RowSet::iterator) (2)
.onItem().transform(iterator -> iterator.hasNext() ? from(iterator.next()) : null); (3)
}
1 | Create a Tuple to hold the prepared query parameters. |
2 | Get an Iterator for the RowSet result. |
3 | Create a Fruit instance from the Row if an entity was found. |
And in the JAX-RS resource:
src/main/java/org/acme/vertx/FruitResource.java
@GET
@Path("{id}")
public Uni<Response> getSingle(@PathParam Long id) {
return Fruit.findById(client, id)
.onItem().transform(fruit -> fruit != null ? Response.ok(fruit) : Response.status(Status.NOT_FOUND)) (1)
.onItem().transform(ResponseBuilder::build); (2)
}
1 | Prepare a JAX-RS response with either the Fruit instance if found or the 404 status code. |
2 | Build and send the response. |
The same logic applies when saving a Fruit
:
src/main/java/org/acme/vertx/Fruit.java
public Uni<Long> save(PgPool client) {
return client.preparedQuery("INSERT INTO fruits (name) VALUES ($1) RETURNING (id)").execute(Tuple.of(name))
.onItem().transform(pgRowSet -> pgRowSet.iterator().next().getLong("id"));
}
And in the web resource we handle the POST
request:
src/main/java/org/acme/vertx/FruitResource.java
@POST
public Uni<Response> create(Fruit fruit) {
return fruit.save(client)
.onItem().transform(id -> URI.create("/fruits/" + id))
.onItem().transform(uri -> Response.created(uri).build());
}
Result metadata
A RowSet
does not only hold your data in memory, it also gives you some information about the data itself, such as:
the number of rows affected by the query (inserted/deleted/updated/retrieved depending on the query type),
the column names.
Let’s use this to support removal of fruits in the database:
src/main/java/org/acme/vertx/Fruit.java
public static Uni<Boolean> delete(PgPool client, Long id) {
return client.preparedQuery("DELETE FROM fruits WHERE id = $1").execute(Tuple.of(id))
.onItem().transform(pgRowSet -> pgRowSet.rowCount() == 1); (1)
}
1 | Inspect metadata to determine if a fruit has been actually deleted. |
And to handle the HTTP DELETE
method in the web resource:
src/main/java/org/acme/vertx/FruitResource.java
@DELETE
@Path("{id}")
public Uni<Response> delete(@PathParam Long id) {
return Fruit.delete(client, id)
.onItem().transform(deleted -> deleted ? Status.NO_CONTENT : Status.NOT_FOUND)
.onItem().transform(status -> Response.status(status).build());
}
With GET
, POST
and DELETE
methods implemented, we may now create a minimal web page to try the RESTful application out. We will use jQuery to simplify interactions with the backend:
<!doctype html>
<html>
<head>
<meta charset="utf-8"/>
<title>Reactive PostgreSQL Client - Quarkus</title>
<script src="https://code.jquery.com/jquery-3.3.1.min.js"
integrity="sha256-FgpCb/KJQlLNfOu91ta32o/NMZxltwRo8QtmkMRdAu8=" crossorigin="anonymous"></script>
<script type="application/javascript" src="fruits.js"></script>
</head>
<body>
<h1>Fruits API Testing</h1>
<h2>All fruits</h2>
<div id="all-fruits"></div>
<h2>Create Fruit</h2>
<input id="fruit-name" type="text">
<button id="create-fruit-button" type="button">Create</button>
<div id="create-fruit"></div>
</body>
</html>
In the Javascript code, we need a function to refresh the list of fruits when:
the page is loaded, or
a fruit is added, or
a fruit is deleted.
function refresh() {
$.get('/fruits', function (fruits) {
var list = '';
(fruits || []).forEach(function (fruit) { (1)
list = list
+ '<tr>'
+ '<td>' + fruit.id + '</td>'
+ '<td>' + fruit.name + '</td>'
+ '<td><a href="#" onclick="deleteFruit(' + fruit.id + ')">Delete</a></td>'
+ '</tr>'
});
if (list.length > 0) {
list = ''
+ '<table><thead><th>Id</th><th>Name</th><th></th></thead>'
+ list
+ '</table>';
} else {
list = "No fruits in database"
}
$('#all-fruits').html(list);
});
}
function deleteFruit(id) {
$.ajax('/fruits/' + id, {method: 'DELETE'}).then(refresh);
}
$(document).ready(function () {
$('#create-fruit-button').click(function () {
var fruitName = $('#fruit-name').val();
$.post({
url: '/fruits',
contentType: 'application/json',
data: JSON.stringify({name: fruitName})
}).then(refresh);
});
refresh();
});
1 | The fruits parameter is not defined when the database is empty. |
All done! Navigate to http://localhost:8080/fruits.html and read/create/delete some fruits.
Database Clients details
Database | Extension name | Pool class name |
---|---|---|
DB2 |
|
|
MariaDB/MySQL |
|
|
PostgreSQL |
|
|
Transactions
The reactive SQL clients support transactions. A transaction is started with client.begin()
and terminated with either tx.commit()
or tx.rollback()
. All these operations are asynchronous:
client.begin()
returns aUni<Transaction>
client.commit()
andclient.rollback()
returnUni<Void>
Managing transactions in the reactive programming world can be cumbersome. Instead of writing repetitive and complex (thus error-prone!) code, you can use the io.vertx.mutiny.sqlclient.SqlClientHelper
.
The following snippet shows how to run 2 insertions in the same transaction:
public static Uni<Void> insertTwoFruits(PgPool client, Fruit fruit1, Fruit fruit2) {
return SqlClientHelper.inTransactionUni(client, tx -> {
Uni<RowSet<Row>> insertOne = tx.preparedQuery("INSERT INTO fruits (name) VALUES ($1) RETURNING (id)")
.execute(Tuple.of(fruit1.name));
Uni<RowSet<Row>> insertTwo = tx.preparedQuery("INSERT INTO fruits (name) VALUES ($1) RETURNING (id)")
.execute(Tuple.of(fruit2.name));
return insertOne.and(insertTwo)
// Ignore the results (the two ids)
.onItem().ignore().andContinueWithNull();
});
}
In this example, the transaction is automatically committed on success or rolled back on failure.
You can also create dependent actions as follows:
return SqlClientHelper.inTransactionUni(client, tx -> tx
.preparedQuery("INSERT INTO person (firstname,lastname) VALUES ($1,$2) RETURNING (id)")
.execute(Tuple.of(person.getFirstName(), person.getLastName()))
.onItem().transformToUni(id -> tx.preparedQuery("INSERT INTO addr (person_id,addrline1) VALUES ($1,$2)")
.execute(Tuple.of(id.iterator().next().getLong("id"), person.getLastName())))
.onItem().ignore().andContinueWithNull());
UNIX Domain Socket connections
The PostgreSQL and MariaDB/MySQL clients can be configured to connect to the server through a UNIX domain socket.
First make sure that native transport support is enabled.
Then configure the database connection url. This step depends on the database type.
PostgreSQL
PostgresSQL domain socket paths have the following form: <directory>/.s.PGSQL.<port>
The database connection url must be configured so that:
the
host
is thedirectory
in the socket paththe
port
is theport
in the socket path
Consider the following socket path: /var/run/postgresql/.s.PGSQL.5432
.
In application.properties
add:
quarkus.datasource.reactive.url=postgresql://:5432/quarkus_test?host=/var/run/postgresql
MariaDB/MySQL
The database connection url must be configured so that the host
is the socket path.
Consider the following socket path: /var/run/mysqld/mysqld.sock
.
In application.properties
add:
quarkus.datasource.reactive.url=mysql:///quarkus_test?host=/var/run/mysqld/mysqld.sock
Configuration Reference
Common Datasource
Reactive Datasource
About the Duration format The format for durations uses the standard You can also provide duration values starting with a number. In this case, if the value consists only of a number, the converter treats the value as seconds. Otherwise, |