Create a Multi-tenancy Application In Nest.js - Part 3
It's the 3rd part of our multi-tenancy application series and today we will see how to let the application connect to multiple databases depending on the request.
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In the first part, create a Multi-tenancy Application In Nest.js - Part 1, we set up the Nest.js framework and configured and tested the microservices architecture application using Nest.js. In its second part, we used Sequelize and Mongoose to access the database and tested for both MySQL database and MongoDB.
Async Connection
In this part; we will see how to let the application connect to multiple databases depending on the request. Since it is a multi-tenancy application, each tenant has their own database containing their data accessing the same application, thus the application needs to connect to different databases. We will change the pass repository option method and use forRootAsync()
instead of forRoot()
, we need to use a custom class for configuration.
For both Sequelize and Mongoose, add the following:
MongooseModule.forRootAsync({
useClass:MongooseConfigService
}),
SequelizeModule.forRootAsync({
useClass:SequelizeConfigService
})
We will create a config file and two classes: MongooseConfigService
and SequelizeConfigService
. The plan here is to add injection for each incoming request and use a domain to switch between connections.
So we need to use @Injectable({scope:Scope.REQUEST})
, and on the class constructor, we use @Inject(REQUEST) private read-only request
in order for us to get host information from request data.
For example, let say the domain is example.com, and we have a tenant called company1
, then the domain will be company1.example.com. The same thing for company2
tenant, the domain will be company2.example.com, and so on.
config/MongooseConfigService.ts
import { Inject, Injectable, Scope } from "@nestjs/common";
import { REQUEST } from "@nestjs/core";
import { MongooseModuleOptions, MongooseOptionsFactory } from "@nestjs/mongoose";
@Injectable({scope:Scope.REQUEST})
export class MongooseConfigService implements MongooseOptionsFactory {
constructor(@Inject(REQUEST) private readonly request,){}
createMongooseOptions(): MongooseModuleOptions {
let domain:string[]
let database='database_development'
if(this.request.data ){
domain=this.request.data['host'].split('.')
console.log(this.request)
}
else{
domain=this.request['headers']['host'].split('.')
}
console.log(domain)
if(domain[0]!='127' && domain[0]!='www' && domain.length >2){
database='tenant_'+domain[0]
console.log('current DB',database)
}
return {
uri: 'mongodb://localhost:27017/'+database,
};
}
}
config/SequelizeConfigService.ts
import { Inject, Injectable, Scope } from "@nestjs/common";
import { REQUEST } from "@nestjs/core";
import { CONTEXT, RedisContext, RequestContext } from "@nestjs/microservices";
import { SequelizeModuleOptions, SequelizeOptionsFactory} from "@nestjs/sequelize";
@Injectable({scope:Scope.REQUEST})
export class SequelizeConfigService implements SequelizeOptionsFactory {
constructor(@Inject(REQUEST) private readonly request:RequestContext){}
createSequelizeOptions(): SequelizeModuleOptions {
let domain:string[]
let database='database_development'
if(this.request.data ){
domain=this.request.data['host'].split('.')
console.log(this.request)
}
else{
domain=this.request['headers']['host'].split('.')
}
console.log(domain)
if(domain[0]!='127' && domain[0]!='www' && domain.length >2){
database='tenant_'+domain[0]
console.log('current DB',database)
}
return {
dialect: 'mysql',
host: 'localhost',
port: 3306,
username: 'ismaeil',
password: 'root',
database: database,
autoLoadModels: true,
synchronize: true,
};
}
}
Performance - Production
In production, we need to avoid creating connections in every request so we will do some edits in the user module and services.
Solution
Our problem here is connection was created for every request and this connection is not close and also I don't reuse it. So we can use an even close connection or use the existing connection in a new request or use both and manage when creating and when close.
Closing Connection
To close the connection first we need to access it. by naming connections we can access the connection using @InjectConnection then in service, we can close the connection every time after finishing. So we need these edits in:
user-service.module.ts
SequelizeModule.forRootAsync({
name: 'development',
useClass:SequelizeConfigService
}),
SequelizeModule.forFeature([Users], 'development')], // use connection name in forFeature
And in:
user-service.service.ts
export class UserServiceService {
constructor(
@InjectConnection('development') private readonly sequelize: Sequelize, // access connection by name 'development'
@InjectModel(Users, 'development')
private readonly userModel: typeof Users){}
async findAll() {
let result =await this.userModel.findAll()
this.sequelize.close() // after every use will close connection
return result;
}
/// the rest
}
Use Existing Connection
In order to prevent the creation of SequelizeConfigService inside SequelizeModule and use a provider imported from a different module, you can use the `useExisting` syntax.
Additionally, we need to create an external module that provides sequelize configuration.
Create a new file named user-config.module.ts
@Module({
providers: [SequelizeConfigService],
exports:[SequelizeConfigService]
})
export class UserConfigModule {}
Then edit user-service.module.ts
SequelizeModule.forRootAsync({
imports:[UserConfigModule],
useExisting: SequelizeConfigService,
}),
Use Both
if we add the ability to use both ways, code will be like this:
user-service.module.ts
@Module({
imports: [
SequelizeModule.forRootAsync({
imports:[UserConfigModule],
name: 'development',
useExisting: SequelizeConfigService,
}),
SequelizeModule.forFeature([Users], 'development')],
controllers: [UserServiceController],
providers: [UserServiceService],
})
export class UserServiceModule {}
user-service.service.ts
@Injectable()
export class UserServiceService {
constructor(@InjectConnection('development') private readonly sequelize: Sequelize,
@InjectModel(Users, 'development')
private readonly userModel: typeof Users){}
async findAll() {
let result =await this.userModel.findAll()
//console.log(this.sequelize.close()) // optional or you can manage it
return result;
}
async create( createUserDto:CreateUserDto):Promise<Users> {
return this.userModel.create(<Users>createUserDto)
}
}
And we have a new module:
user-config.module.ts
import { Module } from '@nestjs/common';
import { SequelizeConfigService } from './sequelize-config-service';
@Module({
providers: [SequelizeConfigService],
exports:[SequelizeConfigService]
})
export class UserConfigModule {}
Testing
After finishing the configuration, we need to do some work to test it because we need to map our localhost and IP to a domain. I will try to use two ways to test the application locally but for the production, it will be a configuration in your domain provider.
1- Edit the Hosts File in Your Local Machine and Edit This File Every Time You Add a Tenant
Go to the following file in Linux: /etc/hosts
and in windows c:\windows\system32\drivers\etc\hosts
and add:
## lines
127.0.0.1 example.com
127.0.0.1 company1.example.com
127.0.0.1 company2.example.com
2- Use Local DNS
In Linux, you can install Dnsmasq and follow these steps:
1- Install dnsmasq in NetworkManager.
2- Add the configuration file sudo nano /etc/NetworkManager/dnsmasq.d/dnsmasq-localhost.conf
.
Add this line in the file:
address=/.example.com/127.0.0.1
3- Restart the service sudo systemctl reload NetworkManager
.
The source code is available in the Git branch multi-database.
That's all! In part 4, we are going to add a security level and user roles.
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