So I am making my first attempt with Node and I can’t really wrap my head around how to work with the MySQL connection. The script is somewhat simplified like this
var mysql = require('mysql');
var connection = mysql.createConnection({
host : '192.168.40.1',
user : 'user',
password : 'password',
database : 'database'
});
function DoSomething(connection, item, callback) {
connection.query(
'SELECT COUNT(*) AS count FROM another_table WHERE field=?',
item.field,
function (err, results) {
if (err) throw err;
if (results.length > 0 && results[0].count >= 1) {
callback(err, connection, item, 'Found something')
}
});
}
function DoSomethingElse(connection, item, callback) {
// Similar to DoSomething()
}
function StoreResult(err, connection, item, reason) {
if (err) throw err;
connection.query(
'INSERT INTO result (item_id, reason) VALUES (?, ?)',
[item.id, reason],
function (err, results) {
if (err) throw err;
});
}
connection.query('SELECT * FROM table WHERE deleted=?', [0], function (err, results)
{
if (err) throw err;
results.forEach(function (item, index) {
DoSomething(connection, item, StoreResult);
DoSomethingElse(connection, item, StoreResult);
});
});
connection.end();
What I am having trouble with (as far as I can tell) is that since DoSomething() it seems that connection.end() is called before all of the DoSomething()‘s have finished causing errors that queries can’t be performed when the connection is closed.
I tried playing around with the async library, but I haven’t gotten anywhere so far. Anyone with some good advice on how to do this?
The problem with your code is that you’re closing the connection synchronously while an asynchronous request is still being handled. You should call
connection.end()only after all query callbacks have been called.Since you are doing multiple queries, this means using some way to wait for all their results. The simplest way is to nest every next call into the callback of the previous one, but that way leads to the pyramid of doom. There are a number of popular libraries that solve this, but my own preference is for async.
Using async I would rewrite your code as follows:
This also allows you to solve a possible issue with the order of your queries in the forEach: They are started in order, but are not guaranteed to finish in order due to their asynchronous nature.