Fork of node-sqlite3, modified to use SQLCipher.
While the node-sqlite3 project does include support for compiling against sqlcipher, it requires manual work, and does not work out-of-the-box on Electron on Windows. This fork changes the default configuration to bundle SQLCipher directly, as well as OpenSSL where required.
Tested on Node v8.x, and Electron 1.7.9.
yarn install "@journeyapps/sqlcipher"
# Or: npm install --save "@journeyapps/sqlcipher"For electron, this should work with electron-rebuild.
var sqlite3 = require('@journeyapps/sqlcipher').verbose();
var db = new sqlite3.Database('test.db');
db.serialize(function() {
db.run("PRAGMA key = 'mysecret'");
db.run("CREATE TABLE lorem (info TEXT)");
var stmt = db.prepare("INSERT INTO lorem VALUES (?)");
for (var i = 0; i < 10; i++) {
stmt.run("Ipsum " + i);
}
stmt.finalize();
db.each("SELECT rowid AS id, info FROM lorem", function(err, row) {
console.log(row.id + ": " + row.info);
});
});
db.close();A copy of the source for SQLCipher 3.4.1 is bundled, based on SQLite 3.15.2.
On Windows, OpenSSL 1.0.2n is additionally bundled. This is specifically used for Electron builds. Pre-built libraries are used from https://slproweb.com/products/Win32OpenSSL.html.
On other platforms, OpenSSL is provided by NodeJS.
See the API documentation in the wiki.
mocha is required to run unit tests.
In sqlite3's directory (where its package.json resides) run the following:
npm install mocha
npm test
Most of the work in this library is from the node-sqlite3 library by MapBox.
Additionally, some of the SQLCipher-related changes are based on a fork by liubiggun.
node-sqlcipher is BSD licensed.