0.28.0
Breaking changes
Removed support for filtering by nested relations
Current example won't work in 0.28.0
:
const usersWithPosts = await db.query.users.findMany({
where: (table, { sql }) => (sql`json_array_length(${table.posts}) > 0`),
with: {
posts: true,
},
});
The table
object in the where
callback won't have fields from with
and extras
. We removed them to be able to build more efficient relational queries, which improved row reads and performance.
If you have used those fields in the where
callback before, there are several workarounds:
- Applying those filters manually on the code level after the rows are fetched;
- Using the core API.
Added Relational Queries mode
config for mysql2
driver
Drizzle relational queries always generate exactly one SQL statement to run on the database and it has certain caveats. To have best in class support for every database out there we've introduced modes.
Drizzle relational queries use lateral joins of subqueries under the hood and for now PlanetScale does not support them.
When using mysql2
driver with regular MySQL database - you should specify mode: "default".
When using mysql2
driver with PlanetScale - you need to specify mode: "planetscale".
import { drizzle } from 'drizzle-orm/mysql2';
import mysql from 'mysql2/promise';
import * as schema from './schema';
const connection = await mysql.createConnection({
uri: process.env.PLANETSCALE_DATABASE_URL,
});
const db = drizzle(connection, { schema, mode: 'planetscale' });
Improved IntelliSense performance for large schemas
We've run the diagnostics on a database schema with 85 tables, 666 columns, 26 enums, 172 indexes and 133 foreign keys. We've optimized internal types which resulted in 430% speed up in IntelliSense.
Improved Relational Queries Permormance and Read Usage
In this release we've fully changed a way query is generated for Relational Queri API.
As a summary we've made current set of changes in query generation startegy:
-
Lateral Joins: In the new version we're utilizing lateral joins, denoted by the "LEFT JOIN LATERAL" clauses, to retrieve specific data from related tables efficiently For MySQL in PlanetScale and SQLite, we've used simple subquery selects, which improved a query plan and overall performance
-
Selective Data Retrieval: In the new version we're retrieving only the necessary data from tables. This targeted data retrieval reduces the amount of unnecessary information fetched, resulting in a smaller dataset to process and faster execution.
-
Reduced Aggregations: In the new version we've reduced the number of aggregation functions (e.g., COUNT, json_agg). By using json_build_array directly within the lateral joins, drizzle is aggregating the data in a more streamlined manner, leading to improved query performance.
-
Simplified Grouping: In the new version the GROUP BY clause is removed, as the lateral joins and subqueries already handle data aggregation more efficiently.
For this drizzle query
const items = await db.query.comments.findMany({
limit,
orderBy: comments.id,
with: {
user: {
columns: { name: true },
},
post: {
columns: { title: true },
with: {
user: {
columns: { name: true },
},
},
},
},
});
Query that Drizzle generates now
select "comments"."id",
"comments"."user_id",
"comments"."post_id",
"comments"."content",
"comments_user"."data" as "user",
"comments_post"."data" as "post"
from "comments"
left join lateral (select json_build_array("comments_user"."name") as "data"
from (select *
from "users" "comments_user"
where "comments_user"."id" = "comments"."user_id"
limit 1) "comments_user") "comments_user" on true
left join lateral (select json_build_array("comments_post"."title", "comments_post_user"."data") as "data"
from (select *
from "posts" "comments_post"
where "comments_post"."id" = "comments"."post_id"
limit 1) "comments_post"
left join lateral (select json_build_array("comments_post_user"."name") as "data"
from (select *
from "users" "comments_post_user"
where "comments_post_user"."id" = "comments_post"."user_id"
limit 1) "comments_post_user") "comments_post_user"
on true) "comments_post" on true
order by "comments"."id"
limit 1
Query generated before:
SELECT "id",
"user_id",
"post_id",
"content",
"user"::JSON,
"post"::JSON
FROM
(SELECT "comments".*,
CASE
WHEN count("comments_post"."id") = 0 THEN '[]'
ELSE json_agg(json_build_array("comments_post"."title", "comments_post"."user"::JSON))::text
END AS "post"
FROM
(SELECT "comments".*,
CASE
WHEN count("comments_user"."id") = 0 THEN '[]'
ELSE json_agg(json_build_array("comments_user"."name"))::text
END AS "user"
FROM "comments"
LEFT JOIN
(SELECT "comments_user".*
FROM "users" "comments_user") "comments_user" ON "comments"."user_id" = "comments_user"."id"
GROUP BY "comments"."id",
"comments"."user_id",
"comments"."post_id",
"comments"."content") "comments"
LEFT JOIN
(SELECT "comments_post".*
FROM
(SELECT "comments_post".*,
CASE
WHEN count("comments_post_user"."id") = 0 THEN '[]'
ELSE json_agg(json_build_array("comments_post_user"."name"))
END AS "user"
FROM "posts" "comments_post"
LEFT JOIN
(SELECT "comments_post_user".*
FROM "users" "comments_post_user") "comments_post_user" ON "comments_post"."user_id" = "comments_post_user"."id"
GROUP BY "comments_post"."id") "comments_post") "comments_post" ON "comments"."post_id" = "comments_post"."id"
GROUP BY "comments"."id",
"comments"."user_id",
"comments"."post_id",
"comments"."content",
"comments"."user") "comments"
LIMIT 1
Possibility to insert rows with default values for all columns
You can now provide an empty object or an array of empty objects, and Drizzle will insert all defaults into the database.
// Insert 1 row with all defaults
await db.insert(usersTable).values({});
// Insert 2 rows with all defaults
await db.insert(usersTable).values([{}, {}]);