Using sql.js-httpvfs with browser <script type=module>
Daniel Holth
Posted on February 22, 2022
https://www.npmjs.com/package/sql.js-httpvfs is an amazing package that lets us perform SQL queries against a remote database hosted anywhere range requests are supported. A special .wasm SQLite runs in the browser; a typical query might only need to fetch half a dozen 4kb pages from a 1GB database file.
It is normally used with webpack. What if we want to distribute it as a JavaScript module so we can just import it from our browser-native <script type=module>
and develop a simple project in pure JavaScript?
I edited the example's webpack.config.js
(https://github.com/phiresky/sql.js-httpvfs/tree/master/example) to output a module:
module.exports = {
entry: "./src/index.ts",
module: {
rules: [
{
test: /\.tsx?$/,
use: "ts-loader",
exclude: /node_modules/,
},
],
},
resolve: {
extensions: [".tsx", ".ts", ".js"],
},
output: {
filename: "sql-httpvfs.js",
library: {
type: "module" // output a JavaScript module
},
module: true, // truly
},
experiments: {
outputModule: true // yes, we really want one
},
optimization: {
minimize: true
},
};
index.ts
is changed to export a useful function:
import { createDbWorker } from "sql.js-httpvfs";
const workerUrl = new URL(
"sql.js-httpvfs/dist/sqlite.worker.js",
import.meta.url
);
const wasmUrl = new URL("sql.js-httpvfs/dist/sql-wasm.wasm", import.meta.url);
async function load(url: string) {
const worker = await createDbWorker(
[
{
from: "inline",
config: {
serverMode: "full",
url: url,
requestChunkSize: 4096,
},
},
],
workerUrl.toString(),
wasmUrl.toString()
);
return worker;
}
export { load }; // only `load` is visible to the importer
Run webpack. In this example it will write 3 files to ./dist/
. We can copy those files to wherever we want to use our new module.
Now we can import that module directly in index.html
, and play around with loading database URLs in the browser console:
<script type="module">
import { load } from "./dist/sql-httpvfs.js";
window.loadDB = load;
</script>
Modules are automatically deferred, and won't run until the document has been parsed. Our module code can start manipulating the page right away without having to e.g. register a load
or $(document).ready
handler.
Posted on February 22, 2022
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