Generate typescript definitions from your pocketbase.io schema.
npx pocketbase-typegen --db ./pb_data/data.db --out pocketbase-types.ts
This will produce types for all your PocketBase collections to use in your frontend typescript codebase.
PocketBase | pocketbase-typegen | npx command |
---|---|---|
v0.23.x | v1.3.x | npx pocketbase-typegen --db ./pb_data/data.db --out pocketbase-types.ts |
v0.18.x | v1.2.x | npx [email protected] --db ./pb_data/data.db --out pocketbase-types.ts |
v0.8.x | v1.1.x | npx [email protected] --db ./pb_data/data.db --out pocketbase-types.ts |
v0.7.x | v1.0.x | npx [email protected] --db ./pb_data/data.db --out pocketbase-types.ts |
Options:
-V, --version output the version number
-d, --db <char> path to the pocketbase SQLite database
-j, --json <char> path to JSON schema exported from pocketbase admin UI
-u, --url <char> URL to your hosted pocketbase instance. When using this options you must also provide email and password options.
--email <char> email for an admin pocketbase user. Use this with the --url option
-p, --password <char> password for an admin pocketbase user. Use this with the --url option
-o, --out <char> path to save the typescript output file (default: "pocketbase-types.ts")
--no-sdk remove the pocketbase package dependency. A typed version of the SDK will not be generated.
--env [path] flag to use environment variables for configuration. Add PB_TYPEGEN_URL, PB_TYPEGEN_EMAIL, PB_TYPEGEN_PASSWORD to your .env file. Optionally provide a path to your .env file
-h, --help display help for command
DB example:
npx pocketbase-typegen --db ./pb_data/data.db
JSON example (export JSON schema from the pocketbase admin dashboard):
npx pocketbase-typegen --json ./pb_schema.json
URL example:
npx pocketbase-typegen --url https://myproject.pockethost.io --email [email protected] --password 'secr3tp@ssword!'
ENV example (add PB_TYPEGEN_URL, PB_TYPEGEN_EMAIL and PB_TYPEGEN_PASSWORD to your .env file):
npx pocketbase-typegen --env
.env:
PB_TYPEGEN_URL=https://myproject.pockethost.io
[email protected]
PB_TYPEGEN_PASSWORD=secr3tp@ssword!
Add it to your projects package.json
:
"scripts": {
"typegen": "pocketbase-typegen --db ./pb_data/data.db",
},
The output is a typescript file pocketbase-types.ts
(example) which will contain:
Collections
An enum of all collections.[CollectionName]Record
One type for each collection (eg ProfilesRecord).[CollectionName]Response
One response type for each collection (eg ProfilesResponse) which includes system fields. This is what is returned from the PocketBase API.[CollectionName][FieldName]Options
If the collection contains a select field with set values, an enum of the options will be generated.
CollectionRecords
A type mapping each collection name to the record type.CollectionResponses
A type mapping each collection name to the response type.TypedPocketBase
A type for usage with type asserted PocketBase instance.
Using PocketBase SDK v0.18.3+, collections can be automatically typed using the generated TypedPocketBase
type:
import { TypedPocketBase } from "./pocketbase-types"
const pb = new PocketBase("http://127.0.0.1:8090") as TypedPocketBase
await pb.collection("tasks").getOne("RECORD_ID") // -> results in TaskResponse
await pb.collection("posts").getOne("RECORD_ID") // -> results in PostResponse
Alternatively, you can use generic types for each request, eg:
import { Collections, TasksResponse } from "./pocketbase-types"
await pb.collection(Collections.Tasks).getOne<TasksResponse>("RECORD_ID") // -> results in TaskResponse
You can provide types for JSON fields and expanded relations by passing generic arguments to the Response types:
import { Collections, CommentsResponse, UserResponse } from "./pocketbase-types"
/**
type CommentsRecord<Tmetadata = unknown> = {
text: string
metadata: null | Tmetadata // This is a json field
user: RecordIdString // This is a relation field
}
*/
type Tmetadata = {
likes: number
}
type Texpand = {
user: UsersResponse
}
const result = await pb
.collection(Collections.Comments)
.getOne<CommentsResponse<Tmetadata, Texpand>>("RECORD_ID", { expand: "user" })
// Now you can access the expanded relation with type safety and hints in your IDE
result.expand?.user.username