# PostgreSQL connection pool Let's see how we can write a simple web application that uses a [PostgreSQL](https://www.postgresql.org/) database to store simple textual messages, just like in the SQLite cookbook recipe. The main difference, besides the database technology, is that in this example we will be using a pool of connections to talk to the database server. The pool abstraction will be provided by the [resource-pool](https://hackage.haskell.org/package/resource-pool) library. As usual, we start with a little bit of throat clearing. ``` haskell {-# LANGUAGE DataKinds #-} {-# LANGUAGE OverloadedStrings #-} {-# LANGUAGE TypeOperators #-} import Data.ByteString (ByteString) import Control.Concurrent import Control.Exception (bracket) import Control.Monad.IO.Class import Data.Pool import Database.PostgreSQL.Simple import Network.HTTP.Client (newManager, defaultManagerSettings) import Network.Wai.Handler.Warp import Servant import Servant.Client type DBConnectionString = ByteString ``` We will only care about a single type here, the messages. We want to be able to add a new one and retrieve them all, using two different endpoints. ``` haskell type Message = String type API = ReqBody '[PlainText] Message :> Post '[JSON] NoContent :<|> Get '[JSON] [Message] api :: Proxy API api = Proxy ``` We proceed with a simple function for creating a table for holding our messages if it doesn't already exist, given a PostgreSQL connection string. ``` haskell initDB :: DBConnectionString -> IO () initDB connstr = bracket (connectPostgreSQL connstr) close $ \conn -> do execute_ conn "CREATE TABLE IF NOT EXISTS messages (msg text not null)" return () ``` Next, our server implementation. It will be parametrised (take as argument) by the pool of database connections that handlers can use to talk to the PostgreSQL database. The resource pool abstraction allows us to flexibly set up a whole bunch of PostgreSQL connections tailored to our needs and then to forget about it all by simply asking for a connection using `withResource`. The handlers are straighforward. One takes care of inserting a new value in the database while the other fetches all messages and returns them. We also provide a function for serving our web app given a PostgreSQL connection pool, which simply calls servant-server's `serve` function. ``` haskell server :: Pool Connection -> Server API server conns = postMessage :<|> getMessages where postMessage :: Message -> Handler NoContent postMessage msg = do liftIO . withResource conns $ \conn -> execute conn "INSERT INTO messages VALUES (?)" (Only msg) return NoContent getMessages :: Handler [Message] getMessages = fmap (map fromOnly) . liftIO $ withResource conns $ \conn -> query_ conn "SELECT msg FROM messages" runApp :: Pool Connection -> IO () runApp conns = run 8080 (serve api $ server conns) ``` We will also need a function for initialising our connection pool. `resource-pool` is quite configurable, feel free to wander in [its documentation](https://hackage.haskell.org/package/resource-pool) to gain a better understanding of how it works and what the configuration knobs are. I will be using some dummy values in this example. ``` haskell initConnectionPool :: DBConnectionString -> IO (Pool Connection) initConnectionPool connStr = createPool (connectPostgreSQL connStr) close 2 -- stripes 60 -- unused connections are kept open for a minute 10 -- max. 10 connections open per stripe ``` Let's finally derive some clients for our API and use them to insert two messages and retrieve them in `main`, after setting up our pool of database connections. ``` haskell postMsg :: Message -> ClientM NoContent getMsgs :: ClientM [Message] postMsg :<|> getMsgs = client api main :: IO () main = do -- you could read this from some configuration file, -- environment variable or somewhere else instead. -- you will need to either change this connection string OR -- set some environment variables (see -- https://www.postgresql.org/docs/9.5/static/libpq-envars.html) -- to point to a running PostgreSQL server for this example to work. let connStr = "" pool <- initConnectionPool connStr initDB connStr mgr <- newManager defaultManagerSettings bracket (forkIO $ runApp pool) killThread $ \_ -> do ms <- flip runClientM (mkClientEnv mgr (BaseUrl Http "localhost" 8080 "")) $ do postMsg "hello" postMsg "world" getMsgs print ms ``` This program prints `Right ["hello","world"]` the first time it is executed, `Right ["hello","world","hello","world"]` the second time and so on. You could alternatively have the handlers live in `ReaderT (Pool Connection)` and access the pool using e.g `ask`, but this would be more complicated than simply taking the pool as argument. The entire source for this example is available as a cabal project [here](https://github.com/haskell-servant/servant/tree/master/doc/cookbook/db-postgres-pool).