Client Libraries
EdgeDB implements libraries for popular languages that make it easier to work with EdgeDB. These libraries provide a common set of functionality.
-
Instantiating clients. Most libraries implement a
Client
class that internally manages a pool of physical connections to your EdgeDB instance. -
Resolving connections. All client libraries implement a standard protocol for determining how to connect to your database. In most cases, this will involve checking for special environment variables like
EDGEDB_DSN
or, in the case of EdgeDB Cloud instances,EDGEDB_INSTANCE
andEDGEDB_SECRET_KEY
. (More on this in the Connection section below.) -
Executing queries. A
Client
will provide some methods for executing queries against your database. Under the hood, this query is executed using EdgeDB’s efficient binary protocol.
For some use cases, you may not need a client library. EdgeDB allows you to execute queries over HTTP. This is slower than the binary protocol and lacks support for transactions and rich data types, but may be suitable if a client library isn’t available for your language of choice.
Available libraries
To execute queries from your application code, use one of EdgeDB’s client libraries for the following languages.
Usage
To follow along with the guide below, first create a new directory and initialize a project.
$
mydir myproject
$
cd myproject
$
edgedb project init
Configure the environment as needed for your preferred language.
$
npm init -y
$
tsc --init # (TypeScript only)
$
touch index.ts
$
touch index.ts
$
python -m venv venv
$
source venv/bin/activate
$
touch main.py
$
cargo init
$
go mod init example/quickstart
$
touch hello.go
$
dotnet new console -o . -f net6.0
$
touch Main.java
$
touch Main.java
$
mix new edgedb_quickstart
Install the EdgeDB client library.
$
npm install edgedb # npm
$
yarn add edgedb # yarn
n/a
$
pip install edgedb
# Cargo.toml
[dependencies]
edgedb-tokio = "0.5.0"
# Additional dependency
tokio = { version = "1.28.1", features = ["macros", "rt-multi-thread"] }
$
go get github.com/edgedb/edgedb-go
$
dotnet add package EdgeDB.Net.Driver
// pom.xml
<dependency>
<groupId>com.edgedb</groupId>
<artifactId>driver</artifactId>
</dependency>
// build.gradle
implementation 'com.edgedb:driver'
# mix.exs
{:edgedb, "~> 0.6.0"}
Copy and paste the following simple script. This script initializes a
Client
instance. Clients manage an internal pool of connections to your
database and provide a set of methods for executing queries.
Note that we aren’t passing connection information (say, a connection URL) when creating a client. The client libraries can detect that they are inside a project directory and connect to the project-linked instance automatically. For details on configuring connections, refer to the Connection section below.
import {createClient} from 'edgedb';
const client = createClient();
client.querySingle(`select random()`).then((result) => {
console.log(result);
});
import {createClient} from 'https://deno.land/x/edgedb/mod.ts';
const client = createClient();
const result = await client.querySingle(`select random()`);
console.log(result);
from edgedb import create_client
client = create_client()
result = client.query_single("select random()")
print(result)
// src/main.rs
#[tokio::main]
async fn main() {
let conn = edgedb_tokio::create_client()
.await
.expect("Client initiation");
let val = conn
.query_required_single::<f64, _>("select random()", &())
.await
.expect("Returning value");
println!("Result: {}", val);
}
// hello.go
package main
import (
"context"
"fmt"
"log"
"github.com/edgedb/edgedb-go"
)
func main() {
ctx := context.Background()
client, err := edgedb.CreateClient(ctx, edgedb.Options{})
if err != nil {
log.Fatal(err)
}
defer client.Close()
var result float64
err = client.
QuerySingle(ctx, "select random();", &result)
if err != nil {
log.Fatal(err)
}
fmt.Println(result)
}
using EdgeDB;
var client = new EdgeDBClient();
var result = await client.QuerySingleAsync<double>("select random();");
Console.WriteLine(result);
import com.edgedb.driver.EdgeDBClient;
import java.util.concurrent.CompletableFuture;
public class Main {
public static void main(String[] args) {
var client = new EdgeDBClient();
client.querySingle(String.class, "select random();")
.thenAccept(System.out::println)
.toCompletableFuture().get();
}
}
import com.edgedb.driver.EdgeDBClient;
import reactor.core.publisher.Mono;
public class Main {
public static void main(String[] args) {
var client = new EdgeDBClient();
Mono.fromFuture(client.querySingle(String.class, "select random();"))
.doOnNext(System.out::println)
.block();
}
}
# lib/edgedb_quickstart.ex
defmodule EdgeDBQuickstart do
def run do
{:ok, client} = EdgeDB.start_link()
result = EdgeDB.query_single!(client, "select random()")
IO.inspect(result)
end
end
Finally, execute the file.
$
npx tsx index.ts
$
deno run --allow-all --unstable index.deno.ts
$
python index.py
$
cargo run
$
go run .
$
dotnet run
$
javac Main.java
$
java Main
$
mix run -e EdgeDBQuickstart.run
You should see a random number get printed to the console. This number was
generated inside your EdgeDB instance using EdgeQL’s built-in
random()
function.
Connection
All client libraries implement a standard protocol for determining how to connect to your database.
Using projects
In development, we recommend initializing a project in the root of your codebase.
$
edgedb project init
Once the project is initialized, any code that uses an official client library will automatically connect to the project-linked instance—no need for environment variables or hard-coded credentials. Follow the Using projects guide to get started.
Using environment variables
For EdgeDB Cloud
In production, connection information can be securely passed to the client
library via environment variables. For EdgeDB Cloud instances, the recommended
variables to set are EDGEDB_INSTANCE
and EDGEDB_SECRET_KEY
.
Set EDGEDB_INSTANCE
to <org-name>/<instance-name>
where
<instance-name>
is the name you set when you created the EdgeDB Cloud
instance.
If you have not yet created a secret key, you can do so in the EdgeDB Cloud UI or by running edgedb cloud secretkey create via the CLI.
For self-hosted instances
Most commonly for self-hosted remote instances, you set a value for the
EDGEDB_DSN
environment variable.
If environment variables like EDGEDB_DSN
are defined inside a project
directory, the environment variables will take precedence.
A DSN is also known as a “connection string” and takes the following form.
edgedb://<username>:<password>@<hostname>:<port>
Each element of the DSN is optional; in fact edgedb://
is a technically a
valid DSN. Any unspecified element will default to the following values.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
A typical DSN may look like this:
edgedb://username:pas$$word@db.domain.com:8080
DSNs can also contain the following query parameters.
|
The database branch to connect to within the given instance. Defaults to
|
|
The TLS security mode. Accepts the following values.
|
|
A filesystem path pointing to a CA root certificate. This is usually only necessary when attempting to connect via TLS to a remote instance with a self-signed certificate. |
These parameters can be added to any DSN using web-standard query string notation.
edgedb://user:pass@example.com:8080?branch=my_branch&tls_security=insecure
For a more comprehensive guide to DSNs, see the DSN Specification.
Using multiple environment variables
If needed for your deployment pipeline, each element of the DSN can be specified independently.
-
EDGEDB_HOST
-
EDGEDB_PORT
-
EDGEDB_USER
-
EDGEDB_PASSWORD
-
EDGEDB_BRANCH
-
EDGEDB_TLS_CA_FILE
-
EDGEDB_CLIENT_TLS_SECURITY
If a value for EDGEDB_DSN
is defined, it will override these variables!
Other mechanisms
EDGEDB_CREDENTIALS_FILE
-
A path to a
.json
file containing connection information. In some scenarios (including local Docker development) its useful to represent connection information with files.Copy{ "host": "localhost", "port": 10700, "user": "testuser", "password": "testpassword", "branch": "main", "tls_cert_data": "-----BEGIN CERTIFICATE-----\nabcdef..." }
EDGEDB_INSTANCE
(local/EdgeDB Cloud only)-
The name of an instance. Useful only for local or EdgeDB Cloud instances.
For more on EdgeDB Cloud instances, see the EdgeDB Cloud instance connection section above.
Reference
These are the most common ways to connect to an instance, however EdgeDB supports several other options for advanced use cases. For a complete reference on connection configuration, see Reference > Connection Parameters.