PGX is a pure-OCaml PostgreSQL client library, supporting Async, LWT, or synchronous operations.
This is an early release. The API is likely to change significantly before the 1.0 release.
This library focuses on correctness and safety, with features like:
- It is nearly impossible to try to execute a prepared statement that hasn't been prepared.
- Trying to run multiple queries at the same time will work properly (although there's no performance benefit, since we currently don't send queries in parallel).
- Lots of automated tests.
Pgx.Value
for parameters and returned data, encouraging people to use the built-in converters instead of trying to handle everything as a string.- Async and LWT support are built in, no need to write your own IO module.
We also provide a relatively high-level interface, like Pgx_async.execute_pipe
,
which prepares a statement, executes it with the given parameters, returns an
Async.Pipe.Reader.t
(so you can stream results), and unprepares the statement
when the query is finished.
Significant portions of the code come from PG'Ocaml.
opam pin add pgx https://github.com/arenadotio/pgx.git
See pgx_async/bin/pgx_async_example.ml for
a complete example of the high-level functional interface. To translate the
example to Lwt, replace Pgx_async
with Pgx_lwt
and >>|
with >|=
. To
translate it to synchronous IO / standard-library-only, use Pgx_unix
and
replace both >>|
and >>=
with |>
, or just replace >>| fun () ->
with ;
.
I.e. in Pgx_unix
, you can replace:
Pgx_async.execute ~params "INSERT INTO ..."
>>| fun () ->
... with:
Pgx_unix.execute ~params "INSERT INTO ...";