FastAPI-SQLModel

Adds simple SQLModel support to FastAPI


License
MIT
Install
pip install FastAPI-SQLModel==0.0.1

Documentation

FastAPI-SQLModel

FastAPI-SQLModel provides a simple integration between FastAPI and SQLModel in your application. It gives access to useful helpers to facilitate the completion of common tasks.

Installing

Install and update using pip:

$ pip install fastapi-sqlmodel

Examples

Usage inside of a route

from fastapi import FastAPI
from fastapi_sqlmodel import DBSessionMiddleware  # middleware helper
from fastapi_sqlmodel import db  # an object to provide global access to a database session

from app.models import User

app = FastAPI()

app.add_middleware(DBSessionMiddleware, db_url="sqlite://")

# once the middleware is applied, any route can then access the database session
# from the global ``db``

@app.get("/users")
def get_users():
    users = db.session.query(User).all()

    return users

Note that the session object provided by db.session is based on the Python3.7+ ContextVar. This means that each session is linked to the individual request context in which it was created.

Usage outside of a route

Sometimes it is useful to be able to access the database outside the context of a request, such as in scheduled tasks which run in the background:

import pytz
from apscheduler.schedulers.asyncio import AsyncIOScheduler  # other schedulers are available
from fastapi import FastAPI
from fastapi_sqlmodel import db

from app.models import User, UserCount

app = FastAPI()

app.add_middleware(DBSessionMiddleware, db_url="sqlite://")


@app.on_event('startup')
async def startup_event():
    scheduler = AsyncIOScheduler(timezone=pytz.utc)
    scheduler.start()
    scheduler.add_job(count_users_task, "cron", hour=0)  # runs every night at midnight


def count_users_task():
    """Count the number of users in the database and save it into the user_counts table."""

    # we are outside of a request context, therefore we cannot rely on ``DBSessionMiddleware``
    # to create a database session for us. Instead, we can use the same ``db`` object and
    # use it as a context manager, like so:

    with db():
        user_count = db.session.query(User).count()

        db.session.add(UserCount(user_count))
        db.session.commit()

    # no longer able to access a database session once the db() context manager has ended

    return users