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Build a Simple CRUD App with TiDB and Golang

This document describes how to use TiDB and Golang to build a simple CRUD application.

Step 1. Launch your TiDB cluster

The following introduces how to start a TiDB cluster.

Use a TiDB Cloud Serverless Tier cluster

For detailed steps, see Create a Serverless Tier cluster.

Use a local cluster

For detailed steps, see Deploy a local test cluster or Deploy a TiDB Cluster Using TiUP.

See Create a Serverless Tier cluster.

Step 2. Get the code

git clone https://github.com/pingcap-inc/tidb-example-golang.git
  • Using GORM (Recommended)
  • Using go-sql-driver/mysql

Compared with GORM, the go-sql-driver/mysql implementation might be not a best practice, because you need to write error handling logic, close *sql.Rows manually and cannot reuse code easily, which makes your code slightly redundant.

GORM is a popular open-source ORM library for Golang. The following instructions take v1.23.5 as an example.

To adapt TiDB transactions, write a toolkit util according to the following code:

package util import ( "context" "database/sql" ) type TiDBSqlTx struct { *sql.Tx conn *sql.Conn pessimistic bool } func TiDBSqlBegin(db *sql.DB, pessimistic bool) (*TiDBSqlTx, error) { ctx := context.Background() conn, err := db.Conn(ctx) if err != nil { return nil, err } if pessimistic { _, err = conn.ExecContext(ctx, "set @@tidb_txn_mode=?", "pessimistic") } else { _, err = conn.ExecContext(ctx, "set @@tidb_txn_mode=?", "optimistic") } if err != nil { return nil, err } tx, err := conn.BeginTx(ctx, nil) if err != nil { return nil, err } return &TiDBSqlTx{ conn: conn, Tx: tx, pessimistic: pessimistic, }, nil } func (tx *TiDBSqlTx) Commit() error { defer tx.conn.Close() return tx.Tx.Commit() } func (tx *TiDBSqlTx) Rollback() error { defer tx.conn.Close() return tx.Tx.Rollback() }

Change to the gorm directory:

cd gorm

The structure of this directory is as follows:

. ├── Makefile ├── go.mod ├── go.sum └── gorm.go

gorm.go is the main body of the gorm. Compared with go-sql-driver/mysql, GORM avoids differences in database creation between different databases. It also implements a lot of operations, such as AutoMigrate and CRUD of objects, which greatly simplifies the code.

Player is a data entity struct that is a mapping for tables. Each property of a Player corresponds to a field in the player table. Compared with go-sql-driver/mysql, Player in GORM adds struct tags to indicate mapping relationships for more information, such as gorm:"primaryKey;type:VARCHAR(36);column:id".

package main import ( "fmt" "math/rand" "github.com/google/uuid" "github.com/pingcap-inc/tidb-example-golang/util" "gorm.io/driver/mysql" "gorm.io/gorm" "gorm.io/gorm/clause" "gorm.io/gorm/logger" ) type Player struct { ID string `gorm:"primaryKey;type:VARCHAR(36);column:id"` Coins int `gorm:"column:coins"` Goods int `gorm:"column:goods"` } func (*Player) TableName() string { return "player" } func main() { // 1. Configure the example database connection. db := createDB() // AutoMigrate for player table db.AutoMigrate(&Player{}) // 2. Run some simple examples. simpleExample(db) // 3. Explore more. tradeExample(db) } func tradeExample(db *gorm.DB) { // Player 1: id is "1", has only 100 coins. // Player 2: id is "2", has 114514 coins, and 20 goods. player1 := &Player{ID: "1", Coins: 100} player2 := &Player{ID: "2", Coins: 114514, Goods: 20} // Create two players "by hand", using the INSERT statement on the backend. db.Clauses(clause.OnConflict{UpdateAll: true}).Create(player1) db.Clauses(clause.OnConflict{UpdateAll: true}).Create(player2) // Player 1 wants to buy 10 goods from player 2. // It will cost 500 coins, but player 1 cannot afford it. fmt.Println("\nbuyGoods:\n => this trade will fail") if err := buyGoods(db, player2.ID, player1.ID, 10, 500); err == nil { panic("there shouldn't be success") } // So player 1 has to reduce the incoming quantity to two. fmt.Println("\nbuyGoods:\n => this trade will success") if err := buyGoods(db, player2.ID, player1.ID, 2, 100); err != nil { panic(err) } } func simpleExample(db *gorm.DB) { // Create a player, who has a coin and a goods. if err := db.Clauses(clause.OnConflict{UpdateAll: true}). Create(&Player{ID: "test", Coins: 1, Goods: 1}).Error; err != nil { panic(err) } // Get a player. var testPlayer Player db.Find(&testPlayer, "id = ?", "test") fmt.Printf("getPlayer: %+v\n", testPlayer) // Create players with bulk inserts. Insert 1919 players totally, with 114 players per batch. bulkInsertPlayers := make([]Player, 1919, 1919) total, batch := 1919, 114 for i := 0; i < total; i++ { bulkInsertPlayers[i] = Player{ ID: uuid.New().String(), Coins: rand.Intn(10000), Goods: rand.Intn(10000), } } if err := db.Session(&gorm.Session{Logger: db.Logger.LogMode(logger.Error)}). CreateInBatches(bulkInsertPlayers, batch).Error; err != nil { panic(err) } // Count players amount. playersCount := int64(0) db.Model(&Player{}).Count(&playersCount) fmt.Printf("countPlayers: %d\n", playersCount) // Print 3 players. threePlayers := make([]Player, 3, 3) db.Limit(3).Find(&threePlayers) for index, player := range threePlayers { fmt.Printf("print %d player: %+v\n", index+1, player) } } func createDB() *gorm.DB { dsn := "root:@tcp(127.0.0.1:4000)/test?charset=utf8mb4" db, err := gorm.Open(mysql.Open(dsn), &gorm.Config{ Logger: logger.Default.LogMode(logger.Info), }) if err != nil { panic(err) } return db } func buyGoods(db *gorm.DB, sellID, buyID string, amount, price int) error { return util.TiDBGormBegin(db, true, func(tx *gorm.DB) error { var sellPlayer, buyPlayer Player if err := tx.Clauses(clause.Locking{Strength: "UPDATE"}). Find(&sellPlayer, "id = ?", sellID).Error; err != nil { return err } if sellPlayer.ID != sellID || sellPlayer.Goods < amount { return fmt.Errorf("sell player %s goods not enough", sellID) } if err := tx.Clauses(clause.Locking{Strength: "UPDATE"}). Find(&buyPlayer, "id = ?", buyID).Error; err != nil { return err } if buyPlayer.ID != buyID || buyPlayer.Coins < price { return fmt.Errorf("buy player %s coins not enough", buyID) } updateSQL := "UPDATE player set goods = goods + ?, coins = coins + ? WHERE id = ?" if err := tx.Exec(updateSQL, -amount, price, sellID).Error; err != nil { return err } if err := tx.Exec(updateSQL, amount, -price, buyID).Error; err != nil { return err } fmt.Println("\n[buyGoods]:\n 'trade success'") return nil }) }

Change to the sqldriver directory:

cd sqldriver

The structure of this directory is as follows:

. ├── Makefile ├── dao.go ├── go.mod ├── go.sum ├── sql │   └── dbinit.sql ├── sql.go └── sqldriver.go

You can find initialization statements for the table creation in dbinit.sql:

USE test; DROP TABLE IF EXISTS player; CREATE TABLE player ( `id` VARCHAR(36), `coins` INTEGER, `goods` INTEGER, PRIMARY KEY (`id`) );

sqldriver.go is the main body of the sqldriver. TiDB is highly compatible with the MySQL protocol, so you need to initialize a MySQL source instance db, err := sql.Open("mysql", dsn) to connect to TiDB. Then, you can use dao.go to read, edit, add, and delete data.

package main import ( "database/sql" "fmt" _ "github.com/go-sql-driver/mysql" ) func main() { // 1. Configure the example database connection. dsn := "root:@tcp(127.0.0.1:4000)/test?charset=utf8mb4" openDB("mysql", dsn, func(db *sql.DB) { // 2. Run some simple examples. simpleExample(db) // 3. Explore more. tradeExample(db) }) } func simpleExample(db *sql.DB) { // Create a player, who has a coin and a goods. err := createPlayer(db, Player{ID: "test", Coins: 1, Goods: 1}) if err != nil { panic(err) } // Get a player. testPlayer, err := getPlayer(db, "test") if err != nil { panic(err) } fmt.Printf("getPlayer: %+v\n", testPlayer) // Create players with bulk inserts. Insert 1919 players totally, with 114 players per batch. err = bulkInsertPlayers(db, randomPlayers(1919), 114) if err != nil { panic(err) } // Count players amount. playersCount, err := getCount(db) if err != nil { panic(err) } fmt.Printf("countPlayers: %d\n", playersCount) // Print 3 players. threePlayers, err := getPlayerByLimit(db, 3) if err != nil { panic(err) } for index, player := range threePlayers { fmt.Printf("print %d player: %+v\n", index+1, player) } } func tradeExample(db *sql.DB) { // Player 1: id is "1", has only 100 coins. // Player 2: id is "2", has 114514 coins, and 20 goods. player1 := Player{ID: "1", Coins: 100} player2 := Player{ID: "2", Coins: 114514, Goods: 20} // Create two players "by hand", using the INSERT statement on the backend. if err := createPlayer(db, player1); err != nil { panic(err) } if err := createPlayer(db, player2); err != nil { panic(err) } // Player 1 wants to buy 10 goods from player 2. // It will cost 500 coins, but player 1 cannot afford it. fmt.Println("\nbuyGoods:\n => this trade will fail") if err := buyGoods(db, player2.ID, player1.ID, 10, 500); err == nil { panic("there shouldn't be success") } // So player 1 has to reduce the incoming quantity to two. fmt.Println("\nbuyGoods:\n => this trade will success") if err := buyGoods(db, player2.ID, player1.ID, 2, 100); err != nil { panic(err) } } func openDB(driverName, dataSourceName string, runnable func(db *sql.DB)) { db, err := sql.Open(driverName, dataSourceName) if err != nil { panic(err) } defer db.Close() runnable(db) }

To adapt TiDB transactions, write a toolkit util according to the following code:

package util import ( "context" "database/sql" ) type TiDBSqlTx struct { *sql.Tx conn *sql.Conn pessimistic bool } func TiDBSqlBegin(db *sql.DB, pessimistic bool) (*TiDBSqlTx, error) { ctx := context.Background() conn, err := db.Conn(ctx) if err != nil { return nil, err } if pessimistic { _, err = conn.ExecContext(ctx, "set @@tidb_txn_mode=?", "pessimistic") } else { _, err = conn.ExecContext(ctx, "set @@tidb_txn_mode=?", "optimistic") } if err != nil { return nil, err } tx, err := conn.BeginTx(ctx, nil) if err != nil { return nil, err } return &TiDBSqlTx{ conn: conn, Tx: tx, pessimistic: pessimistic, }, nil } func (tx *TiDBSqlTx) Commit() error { defer tx.conn.Close() return tx.Tx.Commit() } func (tx *TiDBSqlTx) Rollback() error { defer tx.conn.Close() return tx.Tx.Rollback() }

dao.go defines a set of data manipulation methods to provide the ability to write data. This is also the core part of this example.

package main import ( "database/sql" "fmt" "math/rand" "strings" "github.com/google/uuid" "github.com/pingcap-inc/tidb-example-golang/util" ) type Player struct { ID string Coins int Goods int } // createPlayer create a player func createPlayer(db *sql.DB, player Player) error { _, err := db.Exec(CreatePlayerSQL, player.ID, player.Coins, player.Goods) return err } // getPlayer get a player func getPlayer(db *sql.DB, id string) (Player, error) { var player Player rows, err := db.Query(GetPlayerSQL, id) if err != nil { return player, err } defer rows.Close() if rows.Next() { err = rows.Scan(&player.ID, &player.Coins, &player.Goods) if err == nil { return player, nil } else { return player, err } } return player, fmt.Errorf("can not found player") } // getPlayerByLimit get players by limit func getPlayerByLimit(db *sql.DB, limit int) ([]Player, error) { var players []Player rows, err := db.Query(GetPlayerByLimitSQL, limit) if err != nil { return players, err } defer rows.Close() for rows.Next() { player := Player{} err = rows.Scan(&player.ID, &player.Coins, &player.Goods) if err == nil { players = append(players, player) } else { return players, err } } return players, nil } // bulk-insert players func bulkInsertPlayers(db *sql.DB, players []Player, batchSize int) error { tx, err := util.TiDBSqlBegin(db, true) if err != nil { return err } stmt, err := tx.Prepare(buildBulkInsertSQL(batchSize)) if err != nil { return err } defer stmt.Close() for len(players) > batchSize { if _, err := stmt.Exec(playerToArgs(players[:batchSize])...); err != nil { tx.Rollback() return err } players = players[batchSize:] } if len(players) != 0 { if _, err := tx.Exec(buildBulkInsertSQL(len(players)), playerToArgs(players)...); err != nil { tx.Rollback() return err } } if err := tx.Commit(); err != nil { tx.Rollback() return err } return nil } func getCount(db *sql.DB) (int, error) { count := 0 rows, err := db.Query(GetCountSQL) if err != nil { return count, err } defer rows.Close() if rows.Next() { if err := rows.Scan(&count); err != nil { return count, err } } return count, nil } func buyGoods(db *sql.DB, sellID, buyID string, amount, price int) error { var sellPlayer, buyPlayer Player tx, err := util.TiDBSqlBegin(db, true) if err != nil { return err } buyExec := func() error { stmt, err := tx.Prepare(GetPlayerWithLockSQL) if err != nil { return err } defer stmt.Close() sellRows, err := stmt.Query(sellID) if err != nil { return err } defer sellRows.Close() if sellRows.Next() { if err := sellRows.Scan(&sellPlayer.ID, &sellPlayer.Coins, &sellPlayer.Goods); err != nil { return err } } sellRows.Close() if sellPlayer.ID != sellID || sellPlayer.Goods < amount { return fmt.Errorf("sell player %s goods not enough", sellID) } buyRows, err := stmt.Query(buyID) if err != nil { return err } defer buyRows.Close() if buyRows.Next() { if err := buyRows.Scan(&buyPlayer.ID, &buyPlayer.Coins, &buyPlayer.Goods); err != nil { return err } } buyRows.Close() if buyPlayer.ID != buyID || buyPlayer.Coins < price { return fmt.Errorf("buy player %s coins not enough", buyID) } updateStmt, err := tx.Prepare(UpdatePlayerSQL) if err != nil { return err } defer updateStmt.Close() if _, err := updateStmt.Exec(-amount, price, sellID); err != nil { return err } if _, err := updateStmt.Exec(amount, -price, buyID); err != nil { return err } return nil } err = buyExec() if err == nil { fmt.Println("\n[buyGoods]:\n 'trade success'") tx.Commit() } else { tx.Rollback() } return err } func playerToArgs(players []Player) []interface{} { var args []interface{} for _, player := range players { args = append(args, player.ID, player.Coins, player.Goods) } return args } func buildBulkInsertSQL(amount int) string { return CreatePlayerSQL + strings.Repeat(",(?,?,?)", amount-1) } func randomPlayers(amount int) []Player { players := make([]Player, amount, amount) for i := 0; i < amount; i++ { players[i] = Player{ ID: uuid.New().String(), Coins: rand.Intn(10000), Goods: rand.Intn(10000), } } return players }

sql.go defines SQL statements as constants:

package main const ( CreatePlayerSQL = "INSERT INTO player (id, coins, goods) VALUES (?, ?, ?)" GetPlayerSQL = "SELECT id, coins, goods FROM player WHERE id = ?" GetCountSQL = "SELECT count(*) FROM player" GetPlayerWithLockSQL = GetPlayerSQL + " FOR UPDATE" UpdatePlayerSQL = "UPDATE player set goods = goods + ?, coins = coins + ? WHERE id = ?" GetPlayerByLimitSQL = "SELECT id, coins, goods FROM player LIMIT ?" )

Step 3. Run the code

The following content introduces how to run the code step by step.

Step 3.1 Table initialization

  • Using GORM (Recommended)
  • Using go-sql-driver/mysql

No need to initialize tables manually.

When using go-sql-driver/mysql, you need to initialize the database tables manually. If you are using a local cluster, and MySQL client has been installed locally, you can run it directly in the sqldriver directory:

make mysql

Or you can execute the following command:

mysql --host 127.0.0.1 --port 4000 -u root<sql/dbinit.sql

If you are using a non-local cluster or MySQL client has not been installed, connect to your cluster and run the statement in the sql/dbinit.sql file.

When using go-sql-driver/mysql, you need to connect to your cluster and run the statement in the sql/dbinit.sql file to initialize the database tables manually.

Step 3.2 Modify parameters for TiDB Cloud

  • Using GORM (Recommended)
  • Using go-sql-driver/mysql

If you are using a TiDB Cloud Serverless Tier cluster, modify the value of the dsn in gorm.go:

dsn := "root:@tcp(127.0.0.1:4000)/test?charset=utf8mb4"

Suppose that the password you set is 123456, and the connection parameters you get from the cluster details page are the following:

  • Endpoint: xxx.tidbcloud.com
  • Port: 4000
  • User: 2aEp24QWEDLqRFs.root

In this case, you can modify the mysql.RegisterTLSConfig and dsn as follows:

mysql.RegisterTLSConfig("register-tidb-tls", &tls.Config { MinVersion: tls.VersionTLS12, ServerName: "xxx.tidbcloud.com", }) dsn := "2aEp24QWEDLqRFs.root:123456@tcp(xxx.tidbcloud.com:4000)/test?charset=utf8mb4&tls=register-tidb-tls"

If you are using a TiDB Cloud Serverless Tier cluster, modify the value of the dsn in sqldriver.go:

dsn := "root:@tcp(127.0.0.1:4000)/test?charset=utf8mb4"

Suppose that the password you set is 123456, and the connection parameters you get from the cluster details page are the following:

  • Endpoint: xxx.tidbcloud.com
  • Port: 4000
  • User: 2aEp24QWEDLqRFs.root

In this case, you can modify the mysql.RegisterTLSConfig and dsn as follows:

mysql.RegisterTLSConfig("register-tidb-tls", &tls.Config { MinVersion: tls.VersionTLS12, ServerName: "xxx.tidbcloud.com", }) dsn := "2aEp24QWEDLqRFs.root:123456@tcp(xxx.tidbcloud.com:4000)/test?charset=utf8mb4&tls=register-tidb-tls"

Step 3.3 Run

  • Using GORM (Recommended)
  • Using go-sql-driver/mysql

To run the code, you can run make build and make run respectively:

make build # this command executes `go build -o bin/gorm-example` make run # this command executes `./bin/gorm-example`

Or you can use the native commands:

go build -o bin/gorm-example ./bin/gorm-example

Or run the make command directly, which is a combination of make build and make run.

To run the code, you can run make mysql, make build and make run respectively:

make mysql # this command executes `mysql --host 127.0.0.1 --port 4000 -u root<sql/dbinit.sql` make build # this command executes `go build -o bin/sql-driver-example` make run # this command executes `./bin/sql-driver-example`

Or you can use the native commands:

mysql --host 127.0.0.1 --port 4000 -u root<sql/dbinit.sql go build -o bin/sql-driver-example ./bin/sql-driver-example

Or run the make all command directly, which is a combination of make mysql, make build and make run.

Step 4. Expected output

  • Using GORM (Recommended)
  • Using go-sql-driver/mysql
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