docs/1.19/get-started/01-setting-up-prisma-new-database-JAVASCRIPT-j002.mdx
import QueryChooser from 'components/Markdown/QueryChooser' import Code from 'components/Markdown/Code'
export const meta = { title: 'Setting up Prisma', position: 1, gettingStartedOrder: 1, gettingStartedTitle: 'New database', nextText: 'Great work! 👏 Move on to learn how you can change your datamodel and (re-)generate your Prisma client.', technology: 'node', technologyOrder: 1, articleGroup: 'Setting up Prisma', }
On this page, you will learn how to:
The Prisma CLI is used for various Prisma workflows. You can install it using Homebrew or NPM:
<Code languages={["Homebrew", "NPM"]}>
brew tap prisma/prisma
brew install prisma
npm install -g prisma
To use Prisma locally, you need to have Docker installed on your machine. If you don't have Docker yet, you can download the Docker Community Edition for your operating system here.
Don't want to use Docker? You can also get started with a demo database for now.
mkdir hello-world
cd hello-world
To launch Prisma on your machine, you need a Docker Compose file that configures Prisma and specifies the database it can connect to.
touch docker-compose.yml
Paste the following contents into the Docker Compose file you just created:
<Code languages={["MySQL", "PostgreSQL"]}>
version: '3'
services:
prisma:
image: prismagraphql/prisma:1.19
restart: always
ports:
- "4466:4466"
environment:
PRISMA_CONFIG: |
port: 4466
databases:
default:
connector: mysql
host: mysql
port: 3306
user: root
password: prisma
migrations: true
mysql:
image: mysql:5.7
restart: always
environment:
MYSQL_ROOT_PASSWORD: prisma
volumes:
- mysql:/var/lib/mysql
volumes:
mysql: ~
version: '3'
services:
prisma:
image: prismagraphql/prisma:1.19
restart: always
ports:
- "4466:4466"
environment:
PRISMA_CONFIG: |
port: 4466
databases:
default:
connector: postgres
host: postgres
port: 5432
user: prisma
password: prisma
migrations: true
postgres:
image: postgres:10.5
restart: always
environment:
POSTGRES_USER: prisma
POSTGRES_PASSWORD: prisma
volumes:
- postgres:/var/lib/postgresql/data
volumes:
postgres: ~
You can switch between MySQL and PostgreSQL by using the tabs above the code block.
To start Prisma and launch the connected database, run the following command:
docker-compose up -d
Your local Prisma server is now running on http://localhost:4466.
To bootstrap the configuration files for your Prisma client run the following command:
prisma init --endpoint http://localhost:4466
The
endpointneeds to match the URL of a running Prisma server.
The prisma init command created the minimal setup needed to deploy the Prisma API: prisma.yml and datamodel.prisma.
With these configuration files, you can now deploy the Prisma API:
prisma deploy
Congratulations, you have successfully set up Prisma. You can now start using the Prisma client to talk to your database from code.
The Prisma client is a custom, auto-generated library that connects to your Prisma API. Append the following lines to the end of your prisma.yml:
generate:
- generator: javascript-client
output: ./generated/prisma-client/
Now generate the client with this command:
prisma generate
The CLI now stored your Prisma client inside the prisma-client directory as specified in prisma.yml.
Run the following command to create an empty Node script:
touch index.js
Next, initialize an empty NPM project in the current directory and install the required dependencies:
npm init -y
npm install --save prisma-client-lib [email protected]
Now add the following code to index.js and save it afterwards:
const { prisma } = require('./generated/prisma-client')
// A `main` function so that we can use async/await
async function main() {
// Create a new user called `Alice`
const newUser = await prisma.createUser({ name: 'Alice' })
console.log(`Created new user: ${newUser.name} (ID: ${newUser.id})`)
// Read all users from the database and print them to the console
const allUsers = await prisma.users()
console.log(allUsers)
}
main().catch(e => console.error(e))
Execute the script with the following command:
node index.js
Whenever you run this script with that command, a new user record is created in the database (because of the call to createUser).
Feel free to play around with the Prisma client API and try out some of the following operations by adding the following code snippets to the file (at the end of the main function) and re-executing the script:
<QueryChooser titles={["Fetch single user", "Filter user list", "Update a user's name", "Delete user"]}>
const user = await prisma
.user({ id: '__USER_ID__' })
const usersCalledAlice = await prisma
.users({
where: {
name: 'Alice'
}
})
const updatedUser = await prisma
.updateUser({
where: { id: '__USER_ID__' },
data: { name: 'Bob' }
})
const deletedUser = await prisma
.deleteUser({ id: '__USER_ID__' })
In some snippets, you need to replace the
__USER__ID__placeholder with the ID of an actual user.