Repositories
In this document, you'll learn what repositories are, how to use them within your Medusa backend, and what are some of their common methods.
Overview
Repositories provide generic helper methods for entities. For example, a find
method to retrieve all entities with pagination, or findOne
to retrieve a single entity record.
Repostories are Typeorm repositories, so you can refer to Typeorm's documentation on all available methods.
This guide provides some basic methods you'll need during your custom development with Medusa.
Basic Implementation
Each entity you create needs a repository. A repository is created under the src/repositories
directory of your Medusa backend project. The file name is the name of the repository without Repository
.
For example, to create a repository for a Post
entity, create the file src/repositories/post.ts
with the following content:
The repository is created using the getRepository
method of the data source exported from the core package in Medusa. This method accepts the entity as a parameter.
A data source is Typeorm’s connection settings that allows you to connect to your database. You can learn more about it in Typeorm’s documentation.
Customizing a Repository
If you want to add methods to the repository or override Typeorm's Repository methods, you can do that using the extend
method:
You can learn about available Repository methods in Typeorm's documentation.
Using Repositories in Other Resources
When you want to perform an action or use on an entity in one of your custom resources, such as an endpoint or a service, you need to use its repository.
Endpoints
To access a repository within an endpoint, use the req.scope.resolve
method. For example:
import { PostRepository } from "../repositories/post"
import { EntityManager } from "typeorm"
// ...
export default () => {
// ...
storeRouter.get("/posts", async (req, res) => {
const postRepository: typeof PostRepository =
req.scope.resolve("postRepository")
const manager: EntityManager = req.scope.resolve("manager")
const postRepo = manager.withRepository(postRepository)
return res.json({
posts: await postRepo.find(),
})
})
// ...
}
You can learn more about endpoints here.
Services and Subscribers
As repositories are registered in the dependency container, they can be accessed through dependency injection in the constructor of a service or a subscriber.
For example:
import { PostRepository } from "../repositories/post"
class PostService extends TransactionBaseService {
// ...
protected postRepository_: typeof PostRepository
constructor(container) {
super(container)
// ...
this.postRepository_ = container.postRepository
}
async list(): Promise<Post[]> {
const postRepo = this.activeManager_.withRepository(
this.postRepository_
)
return await postRepo.find()
}
// ...
}
You can learn more about services here.
Other Resources
Resources that have access to the dependency container can access repositories just like any other resources. You can learn more about the dependency container and dependency injection in this documentation.
Common Methods
This section covers some common methods and use cases you'll use with repositories. You can refer to Typeorm's documentation for full details on available methods.
Retrieving a List of Records
To retrieve a list of records of an entity, use the find
method:
You can also filter the retrieved items by passing an object of type FindOption as a first parameter:
In addition, you can pass skip
and take
properties to the object for pagination purposes. skip
's value is a number that indicates how many items to skip before retrieving the results, and take
indicates how many items to return:
To expand relations and retrieve them as part of each item in the result, you can pass the relations
property to the parameter object:
Medusa provides a utility method buildQuery
that allows you to easily format the object to pass to the find
method. buildQuery
accepts two parameters:
- The first parameter is an object whose keys are the attributes of the entity, and their values are the value to filter by.
- The second parameter includes the options related to pagination (such as
skip
andtake
), the relations to expand, and fields to select in each returned item.
For example:
Retrieving a List of Records with Count
You can retrieve a list of records along with their count using the findAndCount
method:
This method also accepts the same options object as a parameter similar to the find method.
Retrieving a Single Record
You can retrieve one record of an entity using the findOne
method:
If the record does not exist, null
will be returned instead.
You can also pass the method an options object similar to the find method to expand relations or specify what fields to select.
Create Record
To create a new record of an entity, use the create
and save
methods of the repository:
The save
method is what actually persists the created record in the database.
Update Record
To update a record of an entity, use the save
method of the repository:
Delete a Record
To delete a record of an entity, use the remove
method of the repository:
This method accepts an array of records to delete.
Soft Delete a Record
If an entity extends the SoftDeletableEntity
class, it can be soft deleted. This means that the entity won't be fully deleted from the database, but it can't be retrieved as a non-deleted entity would.
To soft-delete a record of an entity, use the softRemove
method:
You can later retrieve that entity by passing the withDeleted
option to methods like find
, findAndCount
, or findOne
: