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◭ Next-generation ORM for Dart Navtive & Flutter | PostgreSQL, MySQL, MariaDB, SQL Server, SQLite, MongoDB and CockroachDB.

Next-generation ORM for Dart Native & Flutter | PostgreSQL, MySQL, MariaDB, SQL Server, SQLite, MongoDB and CockroachDB.

Pub Version Pub Version (including pre-releases) GitHub license

What is it? #

Prisma is a next-generation ORM that consists of these tools:

  • Prisma CLI - A command line tool that allows you to create and manage your Prisma projects.
  • Prisma Dart Runtime - A Dart package, that allows you to use the ORM in your Dart code.
  • Prisma Query Engine - Prisma query engines wrapper:
    1. Binary Engine - Only for Dart Native.
    2. Dynamic Library Engine - Supported for Dart Native and Flutter Native. ❌ Waiting
    3. Prisma Data Proxy Engint - Supported all platforms. ❌ Waiting

Getting started #

Prerequisites: Dart SDK >=2.17.6 <3.0.0

1. Create Dart project and setup Prisma #

As a first step, create a simple dart console project

dart create hello
cd hello

Next, add orm package to your project.

dart pub add orm

Then, initialize ORM.

dart run orm init

2. Model your data in the Prisma schema #

The Prisma schema provides an intuitive way to model data. Add the following models to your schema.prisma file:

model User {
  id    Int     @id @default(autoincrement())
  email String  @unique
  name  String?
  posts Post[]
}

model Post {
  id        Int     @id @default(autoincrement())
  title     String
  content   String?
  published Boolean @default(false)
  author    User    @relation(fields: [authorId], references: [id])
  authorId  Int
}

Models in the Prisma schema have two main purposes:

  • Represent the tables in the underlying database
  • Serve as foundation for the generated Prisma Client API

3. Generate the Prisma Client API #

dart run orm generate
dart run build_runner build

Model deserialize (Why run build_runner build?) #

Deserialization of data models is currently done using json_annotation and json_serializable.

Note There are currently no plans to remove json_annotation, because json_annotation works very well and we currently do not have the ability to do the development work of deserialization ourselves.

Whenever you run the orm generate command, you must run build_runner build for the Prisma client to work properly. For more information see 👉 json_serializable.

The Prisma schema #

Every project that uses a tool from the Prisma toolkit starts with a Prisma schema file. The Prisma schema allows developers to define their application models in an intuitive data modeling language. It also contains the connection to a database and defines a generator:

// Data source
datasource db {
  provider = "postgresql"
  url      = env("DATABASE_URL")
}

// Generator
generator client {
  provider = "prisma-client-dart"
}

// Data model
model Post {
  id        Int     @id @default(autoincrement())
  title     String
  content   String?
  published Boolean @default(false)
  author    User?   @relation(fields:  [authorId], references: [id])
  authorId  Int?
}

model User {
  id    Int     @id @default(autoincrement())
  email String  @unique
  name  String?
  posts Post[]
}

In this schema, you configure three things:

  • Data source - Specifies your database connection (via an environment variable)
  • Generator - Indicates that you want to generate Prisma Client
  • Data model - Defines your application models

Accessing your database with Prisma Client #

Generating Prisma Client #

Run the following command to generate Prisma Client:

dart run orm generate
dart run build_runner build

Using Prisma Client to send queries to your database #

Once the Prisma Client is generated, you can import it in your code and send queries to your database. This is what the setup code looks like.

Import and instantiate Prisma Client

import 'prisma_client.dart';

final PrismaClient prisma = PrismaClient();

Now you can start sending queries via the generated Prisma Client API, here are few sample queries. Note that all Prisma Client queries return plain old Map<String, dynamic>.

Retrieve all User records from the database

// Run inside `async` function
final allUsers = await prisma.user.findMany();

Filter all Post records that contain "odore"

final filteredPosts = await prisma.post.findMany(
  where: PostFindManyWhereInput(
    OR: [
      PostFindManyWhereInput(
        title: StringFilter(equals: "odore"),
      ),
      PostFindManyWhereInput(
        content: StringFilter(equals: "odore"),
      ),
    ],
  ),
);

Create a new User and a new Post record in the same query

final user = await prisma.user.create({
  data: UserCreateInput(
    name: 'Odore',
    email: 'hello@odore.com',
    posts: UserCreateWithPostInput(
      create: PostCreateInput(
        title: 'My first post',
        content: 'This is my first post',
      ),
    ),
  ),
});

Q&A #

Q: Why does the Prisma query engine process still exist in the program process after I close it?

A: Prisma engine startup is automatic, but shutdown is not, you need to call $disconnect at the end of your program shutdown to stop the engine process.

Q: Why do I get an error when I run a transaction?

A: Because the official version of Prisma is still in preview for interactive transactions, you need to add previewFeatures = ["interactiveTransactions"] to the generator of schema.prisma, the files created by orm init have been added by default.

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◭ Next-generation ORM for Dart Navtive & Flutter | PostgreSQL, MySQL, MariaDB, SQL Server, SQLite, MongoDB and CockroachDB.

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License

unknown (license)

Dependencies

archive, args, http, json_annotation, path, retry, yaml

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