Getting Started

In this tutorial you will learn to make a simple setup of Sequelize.

Installing

Sequelize is available via npm (or yarn).

  1. npm install --save sequelize

You’ll also have to manually install the driver for your database of choice:

  1. # One of the following:
  2. $ npm install --save pg pg-hstore # Postgres
  3. $ npm install --save mysql2
  4. $ npm install --save mariadb
  5. $ npm install --save sqlite3
  6. $ npm install --save tedious # Microsoft SQL Server

Connecting to a database

To connect to the database, you must create a Sequelize instance. This can be done by either passing the connection parameters separately to the Sequelize constructor or by passing a single connection URI:

  1. const { Sequelize } = require('sequelize');
  2. // Option 1: Passing a connection URI
  3. const sequelize = new Sequelize('sqlite::memory:') // Example for sqlite
  4. const sequelize = new Sequelize('postgres://user:[email protected]:5432/dbname') // Example for postgres
  5. // Option 2: Passing parameters separately (sqlite)
  6. const sequelize = new Sequelize({
  7. dialect: 'sqlite',
  8. storage: 'path/to/database.sqlite'
  9. });
  10. // Option 2: Passing parameters separately (other dialects)
  11. const sequelize = new Sequelize('database', 'username', 'password', {
  12. host: 'localhost',
  13. dialect: /* one of 'mysql' | 'mariadb' | 'postgres' | 'mssql' */
  14. });

The Sequelize constructor accepts a lot of options. They are documented in the API Reference.

Testing the connection

You can use the .authenticate() function to test if the connection is OK:

  1. try {
  2. await sequelize.authenticate();
  3. console.log('Connection has been established successfully.');
  4. } catch (error) {
  5. console.error('Unable to connect to the database:', error);
  6. }

Closing the connection

Sequelize will keep the connection open by default, and use the same connection for all queries. If you need to close the connection, call sequelize.close() (which is asynchronous and returns a Promise).

Terminology convention

Observe that, in the examples above, Sequelize refers to the library itself while sequelize refers to an instance of Sequelize, which represents a connection to one database. This is the recommended convention and it will be followed throughout the documentation.

Tip for reading the docs

You are encouraged to run code examples locally while reading the Sequelize docs. This will help you learn faster. The easiest way to do this is using the SQLite dialect:

  1. const { Sequelize, Op, Model, DataTypes } = require("sequelize");
  2. const sequelize = new Sequelize("sqlite::memory:");
  3. // Code here! It works!

To experiment with the other dialects, which are harder to setup locally, you can use the Sequelize SSCCE GitHub repository, which allows you to run code on all supported dialects directly from GitHub, for free, without any setup!

New databases versus existing databases

If you are starting a project from scratch, and your database does not exist yet, Sequelize can be used since the beginning in order to automate the creation of every table in your database.

Also, if you want to use Sequelize to connect to a database that is already filled with tables and data, that works as well! Sequelize has got you covered in both cases.

Logging

By default, Sequelize will log to console every SQL query it performs. The options.logging option can be used to customize this behavior, by defining the function that gets executed every time Sequelize would log something. The default value is console.log and when using that only the first log parameter of log function call is displayed. For example, for query logging the first parameter is the raw query and the second (hidden by default) is the Sequelize object.

Common useful values for options.logging:

  1. const sequelize = new Sequelize('sqlite::memory:', {
  2. // Choose one of the logging options
  3. logging: console.log, // Default, displays the first parameter of the log function call
  4. logging: (...msg) => console.log(msg), // Displays all log function call parameters
  5. logging: false, // Disables logging
  6. logging: msg => logger.debug(msg), // Use custom logger (e.g. Winston or Bunyan), displays the first parameter
  7. logging: logger.debug.bind(logger) // Alternative way to use custom logger, displays all messages
  8. });

Promises and async/await

Most of the methods provided by Sequelize are asynchronous and therefore return Promises. They are all Promises , so you can use the Promise API (for example, using then, catch, finally) out of the box.

Of course, using async and await works normally as well.