Transactions

To execute a transaction with node-postgres you simply execute BEGIN / COMMIT / ROLLBACK queries yourself through a client. Because node-postgres strives to be low level and un-opinionated, it doesn't provide any higher level abstractions specifically around transactions.

You must use the same client instance for all statements within a transaction. PostgreSQL isolates a transaction to individual clients. This means if you initialize or use transactions with the pool.query method you will have problems. Do not use transactions with the pool.query method.

Examples

A pooled client with callbacks

const { Pool } = require('pg')
const pool = new Pool()
pool.connect((err, client, done) => {
const shouldAbort = err => {
if (err) {
console.error('Error in transaction', err.stack)
client.query('ROLLBACK', err => {
if (err) {
console.error('Error rolling back client', err.stack)
}
// release the client back to the pool
done()
})
}
return !!err
}
client.query('BEGIN', err => {
if (shouldAbort(err)) return
const queryText = 'INSERT INTO users(name) VALUES($1) RETURNING id'
client.query(queryText, ['brianc'], (err, res) => {
if (shouldAbort(err)) return
const insertPhotoText = 'INSERT INTO photos(user_id, photo_url) VALUES ($1, $2)'
const insertPhotoValues = [res.rows[0].id, 's3.bucket.foo']
client.query(insertPhotoText, insertPhotoValues, (err, res) => {
if (shouldAbort(err)) return
client.query('COMMIT', err => {
if (err) {
console.error('Error committing transaction', err.stack)
}
done()
})
})
})
})
})
I omitted any additional libraries from the example for clarity, but if you're using callbacks you'd typically be using a flow control library like async.

A pooled client with async/await

Things are considerably more straightforward if you're using async/await:

const { Pool } = require('pg')
const pool = new Pool()
;(async () => {
// note: we don't try/catch this because if connecting throws an exception
// we don't need to dispose of the client (it will be undefined)
const client = await pool.connect()
try {
await client.query('BEGIN')
const queryText = 'INSERT INTO users(name) VALUES($1) RETURNING id'
const res = await client.query(queryText, ['brianc'])
const insertPhotoText = 'INSERT INTO photos(user_id, photo_url) VALUES ($1, $2)'
const insertPhotoValues = [res.rows[0].id, 's3.bucket.foo']
await client.query(insertPhotoText, insertPhotoValues)
await client.query('COMMIT')
} catch (e) {
await client.query('ROLLBACK')
throw e
} finally {
client.release()
}
})().catch(e => console.error(e.stack))