Class Transaction

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The transaction object is used to identify a running transaction. It is created by calling Sequelize.transaction().

To run a query under a transaction, you should pass the transaction in the options object.

Params:

Name Type Description
sequelize Sequelize A configured sequelize Instance
options Object An object with options
options.autocommit=true Boolean Sets the autocommit property of the transaction.
options.type=true String Sets the type of the transaction.
options.isolationLevel=true String Sets the isolation level of the transaction.
options.deferrable String Sets the constraints to be deferred or immediately checked.

TYPES

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Types can be set per-transaction by passing options.type to sequelize.transaction. Default to DEFERRED but you can override the default type by passing options.transactionType in new Sequelize. Sqlite only.

The possible types to use when starting a transaction:

{
  DEFERRED: "DEFERRED",
  IMMEDIATE: "IMMEDIATE",
  EXCLUSIVE: "EXCLUSIVE"
}

Pass in the desired level as the first argument:

return sequelize.transaction({
  type: Sequelize.Transaction.EXCLUSIVE
}, function (t) {

 // your transactions

}).then(function(result) {
  // transaction has been committed. Do something after the commit if required.
}).catch(function(err) {
  // do something with the err.
});

ISOLATION_LEVELS

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Isolations levels can be set per-transaction by passing options.isolationLevel to sequelize.transaction. Default to REPEATABLE_READ but you can override the default isolation level by passing options.isolationLevel in new Sequelize.

The possible isolations levels to use when starting a transaction:

{
  READ_UNCOMMITTED: "READ UNCOMMITTED",
  READ_COMMITTED: "READ COMMITTED",
  REPEATABLE_READ: "REPEATABLE READ",
  SERIALIZABLE: "SERIALIZABLE"
}

Pass in the desired level as the first argument:

return sequelize.transaction({
  isolationLevel: Sequelize.Transaction.SERIALIZABLE
}, function (t) {

 // your transactions

}).then(function(result) {
  // transaction has been committed. Do something after the commit if required.
}).catch(function(err) {
  // do something with the err.
});

LOCK

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Possible options for row locking. Used in conjunction with find calls:

t1 // is a transaction
t1.LOCK.UPDATE,
t1.LOCK.SHARE,
t1.LOCK.KEY_SHARE, // Postgres 9.3+ only
t1.LOCK.NO_KEY_UPDATE // Postgres 9.3+ only

Usage:

t1 // is a transaction
Model.findAll({
  where: ...,
  transaction: t1,
  lock: t1.LOCK...
});

Postgres also supports specific locks while eager loading by using OF:

UserModel.findAll({
  where: ...,
  include: [TaskModel, ...],
  transaction: t1,
  lock: {
    level: t1.LOCK...,
    of: UserModel
  }
});

UserModel will be locked but TaskModel won't!


commit() -> Promise

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Commit the transaction


rollback() -> Promise

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Rollback (abort) the transaction


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