Better than parameterized queries. Yes, we have stuff like query("INSERT INTO table(status, name) VALUES ($1, $2);").bind(ent.status).bind(ent.name).execute..., but that’s kind of awful isn’t it?
With XML queries, we could use any of the XML libraries we have to create and manipulate XML queries without risking ‘XML injection’. e.g we could convert ordinary structs/classes into column values automatically without having to use any ORM.
Typescript can add type safety on top of that, of course. And there’s the option to prepare a query once and execute it multiple times.
Honestly, the idea of manipulating XML queries, if you mean anything more fancy than the equivalent of parameter injection, sounds over-complicated, but I’d love to see a more concrete example of what you mean by that.
Better than parameterized queries. Yes, we have stuff like
query("INSERT INTO table(status, name) VALUES ($1, $2);").bind(ent.status).bind(ent.name).execute...
, but that’s kind of awful isn’t it? With XML queries, we could use any of the XML libraries we have to create and manipulate XML queries without risking ‘XML injection’. e.g we could convert ordinary structs/classes into column values automatically without having to use any ORM.I mean, that’s just a bad library interface. With a halfway decent interface, you can do something like
query('insert into foo (status, name) values (:status, :name)', ent)
No orm required. With tagged templates in JS, you can do
q`insert into foo (status, name) values (${ent.status}, ${ent.name})`
Even wrap it in a function with destructuring to get rid of
ent
:const addFoo = (q, {status, name}) => q`insert into foo (status, name) values (${status}, ${name})`
Typescript can add type safety on top of that, of course. And there’s the option to prepare a query once and execute it multiple times.
Honestly, the idea of manipulating XML queries, if you mean anything more fancy than the equivalent of parameter injection, sounds over-complicated, but I’d love to see a more concrete example of what you mean by that.
I was thinking along the lines of
Plenty of libraries can build the XML using structs/classes. e.g. with serde:
//Data type for row #[derive(serde::Serialize)] pub struct Foo { pub status: String, pub name: String, } //Example row let ent = Foo { status: "paid".into(), name: "bob".into(), } //Example execution sqlx::query(&serde_xml_rs::to_string(&InsertStmt{ table: "foo".into(), value: &ent, })?).execute(&conn)?;
Or with jackson-dataformat-xml:
//Data type for row public class Foo { public string status; public string name; } //Example row Foo ent = new Foo(); foo.status = "paid"; foo.value = "bob"; //Example execution XmlMapper xmlMapper = new XmlMapper(); String xml = xmlMapper.writeValueAsString(new InsertStmt("foo", ent)); try (Statement stmt = conn.createStatement()) { stmt.executeUpdate(xml) }
I don’t do JS (yet) but maybe JSX could also do similar things with XML queries.
No more matching $1, $2, … (or
?
for mysql) with individual columns, I could dump entire structs/objects into a query and it would work.