![npm version](https://img.shields.io/node/v/xmysql.svg) [![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/o1lab/xmysql.svg?branch=master)](https://travis-ci.org/o1lab/xmysql) [![GitHub stars](https://img.shields.io/github/stars/o1lab/xmysql.svg?style=plastic)](https://github.com/o1lab/xmysql/stargazers) [![Twitter](https://img.shields.io/twitter/url/https/github.com/o1lab/xmysql.svg?style=social)](https://twitter.com/intent/tweet?text=Wow:&url=%5Bobject%20Object%5D) [![GitHub license](https://img.shields.io/badge/license-MIT-blue.svg)](https://raw.githubusercontent.com/o1lab/xmysql/master/LICENSE) # xmysql: one command to generate REST APIs for **any** MySql database ## Why this ? Generating REST APIs quickly for a MySql database which does not follow conventions of frameworks such as rails, django etc is a small adventure that one rather like to avoid ..

Rick & Morty

Hence this. Powered by node packages : ([express](https://github.com/expressjs/express), [mysql](https://github.com/mysqljs/mysql)) => { [xmysql](https://github.com/o1lab/xmysql) } ## Setup and Usage ``` npm install -g xmysql ``` ``` xmysql -h localhost -u mysqlUsername -p mysqlPassword -d databaseName ``` ``` http://localhost:3000 ``` That's it! ## Features * Generates API for **ANY** MySql database * Serves APIs irrespective of naming conventions of primary keys, foreign keys, tables etc * CRUD : Usual suspects * Support for composite primary keys * Pagination * Sorting * Fields * Relations * Run dynamic queries Use HTTP clients like [Postman](https://www.getpostman.com/) or [similar tools](https://chrome.google.com/webstore/search/http%20client?_category=apps) to invoke REST API calls ____ Download [node](https://nodejs.org/en/download/current/), [mysql](https://dev.mysql.com/downloads/mysql/) [(setup mysql)](https://dev.mysql.com/doc/mysql-getting-started/en/#mysql-getting-started-installing), [sample database](https://dev.mysql.com/doc/employee/en/employees-installation.html) - if you haven't on your system. ## Root URL Root URL (localhost:3000/) returns all REST API urls for each table in schema. ## CRUD APIs Usual Suspects * GET       /api/:tableName * POST      /api/:tableName * GET       /api/:tableName/:id * PUT       /api/:tableName/:id * GET       /api/:tableName/count * GET       /api/:tableName/exists * GET       /api/:parentTable/:id/:childTable * DELETE  /api/:tableName/:id * POST     /dynamic ## Other APIS * GET      /api/:tableName/describe * GET      /api/tables ## Support for composite primary keys #### ___ (three underscores) ``` /api/payments/103___JM555205 ``` *___* : If there are multiple primary keys - seperate them by three underscores as shown ## Pagination #### _p & _size _p indicates page and _size indicates size of response rows By default 20 records and max of 100 are returned per GET request on a table. ``` /api/payments?_size=50 ``` ``` /api/payments?_p=2 ``` ``` /api/payments?_p=2&_size=50 ``` ## Sorting #### _sort ``` /api/payments?_sort=column1 ``` eg: sorts ascending by column1 ``` /api/payments?_sort=-column1 ``` eg: sorts descending by column1 ``` /api/payments?_sort=column1,-column2 ``` eg: sorts ascending by column1 and descending by column2 ## Fields ``` /api/payments?_fields=customerNumber,checkNumber ``` eg: gets only customerNumber and checkNumber in response of each record ``` /api/payments?_fields=-checkNumber ``` eg: gets all fields in table row but not checkNumber ## Run dynamic queries Dynamic queries on a database can be run by POST method to URL localhost:3000/dynamic This is enabled only in local i.e -h localhost or -h 127.0.0.1 option. Post body takes two fields : query and params. >query: SQL query or SQL prepared query (ones with ?? and ?) >params : parameters for SQL prepared query ``` POST /dynamic { "query": "select * from ?? limit 1,20", "params": ["customers"] } ``` ## Relational Tables xmysql identifies foreign key relations automatically and provides GET api. ``` /api/customers/103/payments ``` eg: Customers is parent table and payments is child table. API invocation will result in all payments with customer 103. ## When to use ? * You need just REST APIs without much hassle for (ANY) MySql database. * You are learning new frontend frameworks and need REST APIs for your MySql database. * You are working on a demo, hacks etc ## When NOT to use ? * If you are in need of a full blown MVC framework, ACL, Authorisation etc - Not this. * Other times not mentioned in when to use section