knex/knex
{ "createdAt": "2012-12-29T05:18:25Z", "defaultBranch": "master", "description": "A query builder for PostgreSQL, MySQL, CockroachDB, SQL Server, SQLite3 and Oracle, designed to be flexible, portable, and fun to use.", "fullName": "knex/knex", "homepage": "https://knexjs.org/", "language": "JavaScript", "name": "knex", "pushedAt": "2025-08-26T11:41:10Z", "stargazersCount": 20114, "topics": [ "javascript", "knex", "mysql", "postgresql", "sql", "sqlite3" ], "updatedAt": "2025-11-26T00:33:40Z", "url": "https://github.com/knex/knex"}A SQL query builder that is flexible, portable, and fun to use!
A batteries-included, multi-dialect (PostgreSQL, MySQL, CockroachDB, MSSQL, SQLite3, Oracle (including Oracle Wallet Authentication)) query builder for Node.js, featuring:
- transactions
- connection pooling
- streaming queries
- both a promise and callback API
- a thorough test suite
Node.js versions 12+ are supported.
- Take a look at the full documentation to get started!
- Browse the list of plugins and tools built for knex
- Check out our recipes wiki to search for solutions to some specific problems
- In case of upgrading from an older version, see migration guide
You can report bugs and discuss features on the GitHub issues page or send tweets to @kibertoad.
For support and questions, join our Gitter channel.
For knex-based Object Relational Mapper, see:
- https://github.com/Vincit/objection.js
- https://github.com/mikro-orm/mikro-orm
- https://bookshelfjs.org
To see the SQL that Knex will generate for a given query, you can use Knex Query Lab
Examples
Section titled “Examples”We have several examples on the website. Here is the first one to get you started:
const knex = require('knex')({ client: 'sqlite3', connection: { filename: './data.db', },});
try { // Create a table await knex.schema .createTable('users', (table) => { table.increments('id'); table.string('user_name'); }) // ...and another .createTable('accounts', (table) => { table.increments('id'); table.string('account_name'); table.integer('user_id').unsigned().references('users.id'); });
// Then query the table... const insertedRows = await knex('users').insert({ user_name: 'Tim' });
// ...and using the insert id, insert into the other table. await knex('accounts').insert({ account_name: 'knex', user_id: insertedRows[0], });
// Query both of the rows. const selectedRows = await knex('users') .join('accounts', 'users.id', 'accounts.user_id') .select('users.user_name as user', 'accounts.account_name as account');
// map over the results const enrichedRows = selectedRows.map((row) => ({ ...row, active: true }));
// Finally, add a catch statement} catch (e) { console.error(e);}TypeScript example
Section titled “TypeScript example”import { Knex, knex } from 'knex';
interface User { id: number; age: number; name: string; active: boolean; departmentId: number;}
const config: Knex.Config = { client: 'sqlite3', connection: { filename: './data.db', },};
const knexInstance = knex(config);
try { const users = await knex<User>('users').select('id', 'age');} catch (err) { // error handling}Usage as ESM module
Section titled “Usage as ESM module”If you are launching your Node application with --experimental-modules, knex.mjs should be picked up automatically and named ESM import should work out-of-the-box.
Otherwise, if you want to use named imports, you’ll have to import knex like this:
import { knex } from 'knex/knex.mjs';You can also just do the default import:
import knex from 'knex';If you are not using TypeScript and would like the IntelliSense of your IDE to work correctly, it is recommended to set the type explicitly:
/** * @type {Knex} */const database = knex({ client: 'mysql', connection: { host: '127.0.0.1', user: 'your_database_user', password: 'your_database_password', database: 'myapp_test', },});database.migrate.latest();