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Prisma Schema File |
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Wasp uses Prisma to interact with the database. Prisma is a "Next-generation Node.js and TypeScript ORM" that provides a type-safe API for working with your database.
With Prisma, you define your application's data model in a schema.prisma
file. Read more about how Wasp Entities relate to Prisma models on the Entities page.
In Wasp, the schema.prisma
file is located in your project's root directory:
.
├── main.wasp
...
// highlight-next-line
├── schema.prisma
├── src
├── tsconfig.json
└── vite.config.ts
Wasp uses the schema.prisma
file to understand your app's data model and generate the necessary code to interact with the database.
Wasp file and Prisma schema file
Let's see how Wasp and Prisma files work together to define your application.
Here's an example schema.prisma
file where we defined some database options and two models (User and Task) with a one-to-many relationship:
datasource db {
provider = "postgresql"
url = env("DATABASE_URL")
}
generator client {
provider = "prisma-client-js"
}
model User {
id Int @id @default(autoincrement())
tasks Task[]
}
model Task {
id Int @id @default(autoincrement())
description String
isDone Boolean @default(false)
user User @relation(fields: [userId], references: [id])
userId Int
}
Wasp reads this schema.prisma
file and extracts the info about your database models and database config.
The datasource
block defines which database you want to use (PostgreSQL in this case) and some other options.
The generator
block defines how to generate the Prisma Client code that you can use in your application to interact with the database.
Finally, Prisma models become Wasp Entities which can be then used in the main.wasp
file:
app myApp {
wasp: {
version: "^0.14.0"
},
title: "My App",
}
...
// Using Wasp Entities in the Wasp file
query getTasks {
fn: import { getTasks } from "@src/queries",
// highlight-next-line
entities: [Task]
}
job myJob {
executor: PgBoss,
perform: {
fn: import { foo } from "@src/workers/bar"
},
// highlight-next-line
entities: [Task],
}
api fooBar {
fn: import { fooBar } from "@src/apis",
// highlight-next-line
entities: [Task],
httpRoute: (GET, "/foo/bar/:email")
}
In the implementation of the getTasks
query, Task
is a Wasp Entity that corresponds to the Task
model defined in the schema.prisma
file.
The same goes for the myJob
job and fooBar
API, where Task
is used as an Entity.
To learn more about the relationship between Wasp Entities and Prisma models, check out the Entities page.
Wasp-specific Prisma configuration
Wasp mostly lets you use the Prisma schema file as you would in any other JS/TS project. However, there are some Wasp-specific rules you need to follow.
The datasource
block
datasource db {
provider = "postgresql"
url = env("DATABASE_URL")
}
Wasp takes the datasource
you write and use it as-is.
There are some rules you need to follow:
- You can only use
"postgresql"
or"sqlite"
as theprovider
because Wasp only supports PostgreSQL and SQLite databases for now. - You must set the
url
field toenv("DATABASE_URL")
so that Wasp can work properly with your database.
The generator
blocks
generator client {
provider = "prisma-client-js"
}
Wasp requires that there is a generator
block with provider = "prisma-client-js"
in the schema.prisma
file.
You can add additional generators if you need them in your project.
The model
blocks
model User {
id Int @id @default(autoincrement())
tasks Task[]
}
model Task {
id Int @id @default(autoincrement())
description String
isDone Boolean @default(false)
user User @relation(fields: [userId], references: [id])
userId Int
}
You can define your models in any way you like, if it's valid Prisma schema code, it will work with Wasp.
:::note Triple slash comments
Wasp doesn't yet fully support /// comment
syntax in the schema.prisma
file. We are tracking it here, let us know if this is something you need.
:::
Prisma preview features
Prisma is still in active development and some of its features are not yet stable. To enable various preview features in Prisma, you need to add the previewFeatures
field to the generator
block in the schema.prisma
file.
For example, one useful Prisma preview feature is PostgreSQL extensions support, which allows you to use PostgreSQL extensions like pg_vector
or pg_trgm
in your database schema:
datasource db {
provider = "postgresql"
url = env("DATABASE_URL")
extensions = [pgvector(map: "vector")]
}
generator client {
provider = "prisma-client-js"
previewFeatures = ["postgresqlExtensions"]
}
// ...
Read more about preview features in the Prisma docs here or about using PostgreSQL extensions here.