Sqlite.Ecto is a SQLite3 Adapter for Ecto.
Read the tutorial for a detailed example of how to setup and use a SQLite repo with Ecto, or just check-out the CliffsNotes in the sections below if you want to get started quickly.
Sqlite.Ecto relies on Sqlitex and
esqlite. Since esqlite uses
Erlang NIFs, you will need a valid C compiler to build the library.
Here is an example usage:
# In your config/config.exs file
config :my_app, Repo,
adapter: Sqlite.Ecto,
database: "ecto_simple.sqlite3"
# In your application code
defmodule Repo do
use Ecto.Repo,
otp_app: :my_app,
adapter: Sqlite.Ecto
end
defmodule Weather do
use Ecto.Model
schema "weather" do
field :city # Defaults to type :string
field :temp_lo, :integer
field :temp_hi, :integer
field :prcp, :float, default: 0.0
end
end
defmodule Simple do
import Ecto.Query
def sample_query do
query = from w in Weather,
where: w.prcp > 0 or is_nil(w.prcp),
select: w
Repo.all(query)
end
endAdd Sqlite.Ecto as a dependency in your mix.exs file.
def deps do
[{:sqlite_ecto, "~> 1.0.0"}]
endYou should also update your applications list to include both projects:
def application do
[applications: [:logger, :sqlite_ecto, :ecto]]
endTo use the adapter in your repo:
defmodule MyApp.Repo do
use Ecto.Repo,
otp_app: :my_app,
adapter: Sqlite.Ecto
endThe changeset functions
foreign_key_constraint/3
and
unique_constraint/3
are not supported by Sqlite.Ecto because the underlying SQLite database does
not provide enough information when such constraints are violated to support
the features.
Note that SQLite does support both unique and foreign key constraints via
unique_index/3
and references/2,
respectively. When such constraints are violated, they will raise
Sqlite.Ecto.Error exceptions.
There are a few Ecto options which Sqlite.Ecto silently ignores because
SQLite does not support them and raising an error on them does not make sense:
- Most column options will ignore
size,precision, andscaleconstraints on types because columns in SQLite have no types, and SQLite will not coerce any stored value. Thus, all "strings" areTEXTand "numerics" will have arbitrary precision regardless of the declared column constraints. The lone exception to this rule are Decimal types which acceptprecisionandscaleoptions because these constraints are handled in the driver software, not the SQLite database. - If we are altering a table to add a
DATETIMEcolumn with aNOT NULLconstraint, SQLite will require a default value to be provided. The only default value which would make sense in this situation isCURRENT_TIMESTAMP; however, when adding a column to a table, defaults must be constant values. Therefore, in this situation theNOT NULLconstraint will be ignored so that a default value does not need to be provided. - When creating an index,
concurrentlyandusingvalues are silently ignored since they do not apply to SQLite.