PlanetScale
Create a new TypeScript project from scratch by connecting Prisma ORM to PlanetScale and generating a Prisma Client for database access
PlanetScale is a serverless database platform. This guide covers both PlanetScale MySQL and PlanetScale Postgres. In this guide, you will learn how to set up a new TypeScript project from scratch, connect it to PlanetScale using Prisma ORM, and generate a Prisma Client for easy, type-safe access to your database.
Prerequisites
You also need:
- A PlanetScale account
- A PlanetScale database (MySQL or Postgres)
- Database connection credentials from PlanetScale
1. Create a new project
mkdir hello-prisma
cd hello-prismaInitialize a TypeScript project:
npm init -y
npm install typescript tsx @types/node --save-dev
npx tsc --init2. Install required dependencies
Install the packages needed for this quickstart:
MySQL
npm install prisma @types/node --save-dev
npm install @prisma/client @prisma/adapter-planetscale undici dotenvPostgres
npm install prisma @types/node @types/pg --save-dev
npm install @prisma/client @prisma/adapter-pg pg dotenv3. Configure ESM support
Update tsconfig.json for ESM compatibility:
{
"compilerOptions": {
"module": "ESNext",
"moduleResolution": "bundler",
"target": "ES2023",
"strict": true,
"esModuleInterop": true,
"ignoreDeprecations": "6.0"
}
}Update package.json to enable ESM:
{
"type": "module"
}4. Initialize Prisma ORM
You can now invoke the Prisma CLI by prefixing it with npx:
npx prismaNext, set up your Prisma ORM project by creating your Prisma Schema file with the following command:
MySQL
npx prisma init --datasource-provider mysql --output ../generated/prismaPostgres
npx prisma init --datasource-provider postgresql --output ../generated/prismaThis command does a few things:
- Creates a
prisma/directory with aschema.prismafile containing your database connection and schema models - Creates a
.envfile in the root directory for environment variables - Creates a
prisma.config.tsfile for Prisma configuration
The generated prisma.config.ts file looks like this:
import "dotenv/config";
import { defineConfig, env } from "prisma/config";
export default defineConfig({
schema: "prisma/schema.prisma",
migrations: {
path: "prisma/migrations",
},
datasource: {
url: env("DATABASE_URL"),
},
});The generated schema uses the ESM-first prisma-client generator with a custom output path:
generator client {
provider = "prisma-client"
output = "../generated/prisma"
}
datasource db {
provider = "mysql"
relationMode = "prisma"
}PlanetScale MySQL requires relationMode = "prisma" because it doesn't support foreign key constraints.
5. Configure your connection
Update your .env file with your PlanetScale connection string:
DATABASE_URL="mysql://username:password@host.connect.psdb.cloud/mydb?sslaccept=strict"Replace with your actual PlanetScale credentials from your database dashboard.
PlanetScale Postgres connection types:
| Type | Port | Use case |
|---|---|---|
| Direct | 5432 | Prisma CLI commands (migrations, introspection), Prisma Studio |
| PgBouncer | 6432 | Application connections, serverless environments |
For production applications, we recommend using PgBouncer (port 6432) for application connections while keeping a direct connection for Prisma CLI commands.
6. Define your data model
Open prisma/schema.prisma and add the following models:
generator client {
provider = "prisma-client"
output = "../generated/prisma"
}
datasource db {
provider = "mysql"
relationMode = "prisma"
}
model User {
id Int @id @default(autoincrement())
email String @unique
name String?
posts Post[]
}
model Post {
id Int @id @default(autoincrement())
title String
content String? @db.Text
published Boolean @default(false)
author User @relation(fields: [authorId], references: [id])
authorId Int
@@index([authorId])
} Note the @@index([authorId]) on the Post model for MySQL. PlanetScale MySQL requires indexes on foreign keys when using relationMode = "prisma".
7. Apply your schema to the database
MySQL
npx prisma db pushPostgres
npx prisma migrate dev --name initThis command creates the database tables based on your schema.
Now run the following command to generate the Prisma Client:
npx prisma generatePlanetScale MySQL uses a branching workflow instead of traditional migrations, so we use prisma db push. PlanetScale Postgres supports standard migrations with prisma migrate dev.
8. Instantiate Prisma Client
Now that you have all the dependencies installed, you can instantiate Prisma Client. You need to pass an instance of the Prisma ORM driver adapter adapter to the PrismaClient constructor:
import "dotenv/config";
import { PrismaPlanetScale } from "@prisma/adapter-planetscale";
import { PrismaClient } from "../generated/prisma/client";
import { fetch as undiciFetch } from "undici";
const adapter = new PrismaPlanetScale({ url: process.env.DATABASE_URL, fetch: undiciFetch });
const prisma = new PrismaClient({ adapter });
export { prisma };9. Write your first query
Create a script.ts file to test your setup:
import { prisma } from "./lib/prisma";
async function main() {
// Create a new user with a post
const user = await prisma.user.create({
data: {
name: "Alice",
email: "alice@prisma.io",
posts: {
create: {
title: "Hello World",
content: "This is my first post!",
published: true,
},
},
},
include: {
posts: true,
},
});
console.log("Created user:", user);
// Fetch all users with their posts
const allUsers = await prisma.user.findMany({
include: {
posts: true,
},
});
console.log("All users:", JSON.stringify(allUsers, null, 2));
}
main()
.then(async () => {
await prisma.$disconnect();
})
.catch(async (e) => {
console.error(e);
await prisma.$disconnect();
process.exit(1);
});Run the script:
npx tsx script.tsYou should see the created user and all users printed to the console!
10. Explore your data with Prisma Studio
Prisma Studio is a visual editor for your database. Launch it with:
npx prisma studioNext steps
You've successfully set up Prisma ORM. Here's what you can explore next:
- Learn more about Prisma Client: Explore the Prisma Client API for advanced querying, filtering, and relations
- Database migrations: Learn about Prisma Migrate for evolving your database schema
- Performance optimization: Discover query optimization techniques
- Build a full application: Check out our framework guides to integrate Prisma ORM with Next.js, Express, and more
- Join the community: Connect with other developers on Discord