nestjs-openapi3
MikroORM
nestjs-openapi3 | MikroORM | |
---|---|---|
1 | 48 | |
24 | 7,174 | |
- | 1.7% | |
0.0 | 9.9 | |
over 1 year ago | 2 days ago | |
TypeScript | TypeScript | |
- | MIT License |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
nestjs-openapi3
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Show HN: Remult – a CRUD framework for full-stack TypeScript
So I spent a lot of time in the Nest ecosystem, and I wrote some nontrivial libraries with a little (not a lot) of uptake (and neither are actively maintained at this point, so these are here mostly for completeness):
https://github.com/eropple/nestjs-auth
https://github.com/eropple/nestjs-openapi3
I was pretty excited by NestJS when I ran into it because, well--I don't mind magic, when it's done right. I quite like Spring Boot, for example. But NestJS's magic is...incorrect, in a lot of ways. The DI container is a little bit scary, with oddly hardcoded ways to register interceptors into request scope (itself necessary because NestJS's logging facilities aren't--or weren't at the time--decorating requests with X-Request-Id or similar, so you had to register your own) and no way to then define interceptor order.
It also has a lot of really overlapping nouns; guards are interceptors but less capable (and @eropple/nestjs-auth didn't use them at all) and the "pipe" concept for validation was itself inscrutable. To make it usable, I ended up just doing everything with decorators and interceptors, all living in request scope. And once I'd gotten it going, it was pretty nice. But it also meant broad incompatibilities with much of the NestJS ecosystem.
MikroORM
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Rust GraphQL APIs for NodeJS Developers: Introduction
In my usual NodeJS tech stack, which includes GraphQL, NestJS, SQL (predominantly PostgreSQL with MikroORM), I encountered these limitations. To overcome them, I've developed a new stack utilizing Rust, which still offers some ease of development:
- MikroORM 6: Polished – MikroORM
- I Hate NestJS
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What's wrong with Node.js ORMs? Thousands of issues? Why?
https://www.npmjs.com/package/mikro-orm - 44 issues
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Top 6 ORMs for Modern Node.js App Development
Mikro-ORM is a TypeScript ORM that focuses on simplicity and efficiency. It supports various SQL databases and MongoDB. Mikro-ORM is known for its simplicity and developer-friendly APIs. It provides a concise syntax for defining data models and relationships, making it easy to use.
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We migrated to SQL. Our biggest learning? Don't use Prisma
I found MikroORM [0] to be quite reasonable if you're in the TS ecosystem already. It was also easy to do custom, raw queries, and really just felt like it wasn't in the way.
[0] https://mikro-orm.io/
- Mikro-ORM – TypeScript ORM for Node.js
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The Epic Stack by Kent C. Dodds
It also does code generation into its own module, so good luck with hoisting in a monorepo where you want multiple independent prisma schemas. MikroORM[1] is a much better alternative to Prisma in my opinion but any ORM carries some form of baggage.
[1] https://mikro-orm.io/
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MikroORM v6 gets a strict partial loading support
More about v6 development can be found here.
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Announcing a new TypeScript ORM
I recommend looking at https://mikro-orm.io/
What are some alternatives?
json-schema-to-typescript - Compile JSONSchema to TypeScript type declarations
Prisma - Next-generation ORM for Node.js & TypeScript | PostgreSQL, MySQL, MariaDB, SQL Server, SQLite, MongoDB and CockroachDB
openapi-typescript - Generate TypeScript types from OpenAPI 3 specs
TypeORM - ORM for TypeScript and JavaScript. Supports MySQL, PostgreSQL, MariaDB, SQLite, MS SQL Server, Oracle, SAP Hana, WebSQL databases. Works in NodeJS, Browser, Ionic, Cordova and Electron platforms.
remult - Full-stack CRUD, simplified, with SSOT TypeScript entities
Mongoose - MongoDB object modeling designed to work in an asynchronous environment.
nestjs-auth - Comprehensive handling of authentication and authorization for NestJS.
Sequelize - Feature-rich ORM for modern Node.js and TypeScript, it supports PostgreSQL (with JSON and JSONB support), MySQL, MariaDB, SQLite, MS SQL Server, Snowflake, Oracle DB (v6), DB2 and DB2 for IBM i.
graphql - GraphQL (TypeScript) module for Nest framework (node.js) 🍷
drizzle-orm - Headless TypeScript ORM with a head. Runs on Node, Bun and Deno. Lives on the Edge and yes, it's a JavaScript ORM too 😅
prisma-examples - 🚀 Ready-to-run Prisma example projects