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Ian Sam Mungai
Ian Sam Mungai

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Create Custom Database Module in NestJS with TypeORM MySQL/PostgreSQL

Intro

First, Check out these articles for
Custom Database Setup for Sequelize: https://www.freecodecamp.org/news/build-web-apis-with-nestjs-beginners-guide/
Custom Database Setup for MongoDB: https://dev.to/10xtarun/create-custom-database-module-in-nestjs-4kim
I got a lot of inspiration from these articles especially from the first by Victor

Setup Project

We Create new nest project as,

$ nest new custom-db-project
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We will also install all we need,

$ npm install --save @nestjs/typeorm @nestjs/config typeorm mysql2 dotenv

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Now generate the custom database module as,

$ nest generate module core/database
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...
Let's Code

Database Interface

Inside the database folder, create an interfaces folder, then create a dbConfig.interface.ts file inside it. This is for the database configuration interface.

Each of the database environments should optionally have the following properties.

export interface IDatabaseConfigAttributes {
    username?: string;
    password?: string;
    database?: string;
    host?: string;
    port?: number;
    type?: string;
    urlDatabase?: string;
    entities?: string[];
    migrationsTableName?: string;
    migrations?: string[];
    cli?: {
        migrationsDir?: string;
    }
    synchronize?: boolean;
}

export interface IDatabaseConfig {
    development: IDatabaseConfigAttributes;
    test: IDatabaseConfigAttributes;
    production: IDatabaseConfigAttributes;
}
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Database Configuration

Now, let’s create a database environment configuration. Inside the database folder, create a database.config.ts file.

import * as dotenv from 'dotenv';
import { IDatabaseConfig } from './interfaces/dbConfig.interface';

dotenv.config();

let entities = [__dirname + '/**/*.entity{.ts,.js}']

let migrationsDir = 'src/migration';
let migrations = [migrationsDir + '/*.ts']

export const databaseConfig: IDatabaseConfig = {
    development: {
        username: process.env.DB_USER,
        password: process.env.DB_PASS,
        database: process.env.DB_NAME_DEVELOPMENT,
        host: process.env.DB_HOST,
        port: +process.env.DB_PORT,
        type: process.env.DB_DIALECT,
        entities: entities,
        migrationsTableName: process.env.DB_MIGRATION_TABLE_NAME,
        migrations: migrations,
        cli: {
            migrationsDir: migrationsDir
        },
        synchronize: true
    },
    test: {
        username: process.env.DB_USER,
        password: process.env.DB_PASS,
        database: process.env.DB_NAME_TEST,
        host: process.env.DB_HOST,
        port: +process.env.DB_PORT,
        type: process.env.DB_DIALECT,
        entities: entities,
        migrationsTableName: process.env.DB_MIGRATION_TABLE_NAME,
        migrations: migrations,
        cli: {
            migrationsDir: migrationsDir
        },
        synchronize: true
    },
    production: {
        username: process.env.DB_USER,
        password: process.env.DB_PASS,
        database: process.env.DB_NAME_PRODUCTION,
        host: process.env.DB_HOST,
        port: +process.env.DB_PORT,
        type: process.env.DB_DIALECT,
        entities: entities,
        migrationsTableName: process.env.DB_MIGRATION_TABLE_NAME,
        migrations: migrations,
        cli: {
            migrationsDir: migrationsDir
        },
        synchronize: true
    },
};
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The environment will determine which configuration should be used.

.env file

On our project root folder, create a .env file

DB_HOST=localhost
DB_PORT=3306
DB_USER=database_user_name
DB_PASS=database_password
DB_DIALECT=postgres
DB_NAME_TEST=test_database_name
DB_NAME_DEVELOPMENT=development_database_name
DB_NAME_PRODUCTION=production_database_name
DB_MIGRATION_TABLE_NAME=migration

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Don't forget to add .env to your .gitignore file.

Import the @nestjs/config

Import the @nestjs/config into your app root module:

import { Module } from '@nestjs/common';
import { ConfigModule } from '@nestjs/config';
import { AppController } from './app.controller';
import { AppService } from './app.service';
import { DatabaseModule } from './core/database/database.module';

@Module({
  imports: [
    ConfigModule.forRoot({ isGlobal: true }),
    DatabaseModule
  ],
  controllers: [AppController],
  providers: [AppService],
})
export class AppModule {}
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Victor Pointed out that Setting the ConfigModule.forRoot({ isGlobal: true }) to isGlobal: true will make the .env properties available throughout the application.

Database Provider

Let’s create a database provider. Inside the database folder, create a file called database.providers.ts.

The core directory will contain all our core setups, configuration, shared modules, pipes, guards, and middlewares.

In the database.providers.ts let's add

import { TypeOrmModule } from '@nestjs/typeorm';
import { TYPEORM ,DEVELOPMENT, TEST, PRODUCTION } from '../constants';
import { databaseConfig } from './database.config';

export const databaseProviders = [{
    provide: TYPEORM,
    useFactory: async () => {
      let config;
      switch (process.env.NODE_ENV) {
      case DEVELOPMENT:
         config = databaseConfig.development;
         break;
      case TEST:
         config = databaseConfig.test;
         break;
      case PRODUCTION:
         config = databaseConfig.production;
         break;
      default:
         config = databaseConfig.development;
      }

      const typeOrm = TypeOrmModule.forRoot(config);

      return typeOrm
    },
}];

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Here, the application decides what environment we are currently running on and then chooses the environment configuration.

Best practice: It is a good idea to keep all string values in a constant file and export it to avoid misspelling those values. You'll also have a single place to change things.

Inside the core folder, create a constants folder and inside it create an index.ts file. Paste the following code:

export const TYPEORM = 'TYPEORM';
export const DEVELOPMENT = 'development';
export const TEST = 'test';
export const PRODUCTION = 'production';
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I hope this article helps someone. Check out the article by Victor to get started with Nestjs

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