A tutorial for basic database related features.
- Data sources
- Creating
- Configuring
- Models
- Creating
- Automigration
- Instance introspection (Discovery)
Database specific tutorials are on separate branches. The master branch contains the tutorial for MongoDB.
Branch | Connector |
---|---|
master | MongoDB |
mssql | Microsoft SQL Server |
mysql | MySQL |
oracle | Oracle |
postgresql | PostgreSQL |
For example, to view the MySQL example:
git clone https://github.com/strongloop/loopback-example-database
cd loopback-example-database
git checkout mysql
Before starting this tutorial, make sure you have the following installed:
- Node
- NPM
- StrongLoop Controller
git clone https://github.com/strongloop/loopback-example-database
cd loopback-example-database
npm install
npm start
- Name:
loopback-example-database
- Dir to contain the project:
loopback-example-database
slc loopback loopback-example-database
... # follow the prompts
cd loopback-example-database
npm install --save loopback-connector-mongodb
- Data source name:
accountDS
- Select the connector for
accountDS
:MongoDB
slc loopback:datasource accountDS
... # follow the prompts
This creates a new data source named accountDS
that uses the MongoDB
connector.
For the purposes of this example, we will use a preconfigured StrongLoop MongoDB
server. Edit server/datasources.json
to set the MongoDB configs:
{
...
"accountDS": {
"name": "accountDS",
"connector": "mongodb",
"host": "demo.strongloop.com",
"port": 27017,
"database": "demo",
"username": "demo",
"password": "L00pBack"
}
}
Feel free to use your own local MongoDB instance. Simply change the configs above to match your own.
- Model name:
Account
- Attach
Account
to:accountDS (mongodb)
- Base class:
PersistedModel
- Expose via REST:
Yes
- Custom plural form: Leave blank
- Properties:
email
- String
- Not required
createdAt
- Date
- Not required
lastModifiedAt
- Date
- Not required
slc loopback:model Account
... # follow the prompts
With the account
model configured, we can generate the corresponding
MongoDB collection using the info from the Account
metadata in common/models/account.json
via auto-migration.
Start by creating a dir to store general-purpose scripts:
mkdir bin
Inside that dir, create a script named automigrate.js
.
To create the Account
collection and create two sample accounts, run:
node bin/automigrate.js
WARNING
The
automigrate
function creates a new collection if it doesn't exist. If the collection already exists, it will be destroyed and it's data will be deleted. If you want to keep this data, useautoupdate
instead.
You should see:
Created: { email: '[email protected]',
createdAt: Thu Oct 22 2015 17:58:09 GMT-0700 (PDT),
lastModifiedAt: Thu Oct 22 2015 17:58:09 GMT-0700 (PDT),
id: 562986213ea33440575c6588 }
Created: { email: '[email protected]',
createdAt: Thu Oct 22 2015 17:58:09 GMT-0700 (PDT),
lastModifiedAt: Thu Oct 22 2015 17:58:09 GMT-0700 (PDT),
id: 562986213ea33440575c6587 }
If you are using Node 4, it is safe to ignore
Swagger: skipping unknown type "ObjectId"
. This warning will be addressed in a future update.
Projects scaffolded via slc loopback
come with loopback-component-explorer
preconfigured. From the project root, start the server:
node .
Then to view the existing account data, browse to localhost:3000/explorer
and
click:
GET /Accounts
Try it out!
You should see:
[
{
"email": "[email protected]",
"createdAt": "2015-10-23T00:58:09.280Z",
"lastModifiedAt": "2015-10-23T00:58:09.280Z",
"id": "562986213ea33440575c6587"
},
{
"email": "[email protected]",
"createdAt": "2015-10-23T00:58:09.280Z",
"lastModifiedAt": "2015-10-23T00:58:09.280Z",
"id": "562986213ea33440575c6588"
}
]
Try out some of the other endpoints to get a feel for how explorer works.
Discovery is the process of reverse engineering a LoopBack model from an existing database schema.
The LoopBack MongoDB connector does not support discovery. However, you can use instance instrospection, which creates a LoopBack model from an existing JavaScript object.
To do this, create a script named instance-introspections.js
in the bin
dir. Then run:
node bin/instance-introspection
You should see:
Created: { email: '[email protected]',
createdAt: Thu Oct 22 2015 19:38:20 GMT-0700 (PDT),
lastModifiedAt: Thu Oct 22 2015 19:38:20 GMT-0700 (PDT),
id: 56299d9d71c7f600719ca39f }
See the official docs for more info.