Raw

Sometimes you may need to use a raw expression in a query. Raw query object may be injected pretty much anywhere you want, and using proper bindings can ensure your values are escaped properly, preventing SQL-injection attacks.

Raw Parameter Binding

One can parameterize sql given to knex.raw(sql, bindings). Parameters can be positional named. One can also choose if parameter should be treated as value or as sql identifier e.g. in case of 'TableName.ColumnName' reference.

knex('users')
  .select(knex.raw('count(*) as user_count, status'))
  .where(knex.raw(1))
  .orWhere(knex.raw('status <> ?', [1]))
  .groupBy('status');

Positional bindings ? are interpreted as values and ?? are interpreted as identifiers.

knex('users').where(knex.raw('?? = ?', ['user.name', 1]));

Named bindings such as :name are interpreted as values and :name: interpreted as identifiers. Named bindings are processed so long as the value is anything other than undefined.

const raw =
  ':name: = :thisGuy or :name: = :otherGuy or :name: = :undefinedBinding';

knex('users').where(
  knex.raw(raw, {
    name: 'users.name',
    thisGuy: 'Bob',
    otherGuy: 'Jay',
    undefinedBinding: undefined,
  })
);

For simpler queries where one only has a single binding, .raw can accept said binding as its second parameter.

knex('users')
  .where(knex.raw('LOWER("login") = ?', 'knex'))
  .orWhere(knex.raw('accesslevel = ?', 1))
  .orWhere(knex.raw('updtime = ?', '01-01-2016'));

Since there is no unified syntax for array bindings, instead you need to treat them as multiple values by adding ? directly in your query.

const myArray = [1, 2, 3];
knex.raw(
  'select * from users where id in (' + myArray.map((_) => '?').join(',') + ')',
  [...myArray]
);

query will become:

select * from users where id in (?, ?, ?) /* with bindings [1,2,3] */

To prevent replacement of ? one can use the escape sequence \\?.

knex
  .select('*')
  .from('users')
  .where('id', '=', 1)
  .whereRaw('?? \\? ?', ['jsonColumn', 'jsonKey']);

To prevent replacement of named bindings one can use the escape sequence \\:.

knex
  .select('*')
  .from('users')
  .whereRaw(":property: = '\\:value' OR \\:property: = :value", {
    property: 'name',
    value: 'Bob',
  });

Raw Expressions

Raw expressions are created by using knex.raw(sql, [bindings]) and passing this as a value for any value in the query chain.

knex('users')
  .select(knex.raw('count(*) as user_count, status'))
  .where(knex.raw(1))
  .orWhere(knex.raw('status <> ?', [1]))
  .groupBy('status');

Raw Queries

The knex.raw may also be used to build a full query and execute it, as a standard query builder query would be executed. The benefit of this is that it uses the connection pool and provides a standard interface for the different client libraries.

knex.raw('select * from users where id = ?', [1]).then(function (resp) {
  /*...*/
});

Note that the response will be whatever the underlying sql library would typically return on a normal query, so you may need to look at the documentation for the base library the queries are executing against to determine how to handle the response.

Wrapped Queries

The raw query builder also comes with a wrap method, which allows wrapping the query in a value:

const subcolumn = knex
  .raw('select avg(salary) from employee where dept_no = e.dept_no')
  .wrap('(', ') avg_sal_dept');

knex
  .select('e.lastname', 'e.salary', subcolumn)
  .from('employee as e')
  .whereRaw('dept_no = e.dept_no');

Note that the example above be achieved more easily using the as method.

const subcolumn = knex
  .avg('salary')
  .from('employee')
  .whereRaw('dept_no = e.dept_no')
  .as('avg_sal_dept');

knex
  .select('e.lastname', 'e.salary', subcolumn)
  .from('employee as e')
  .whereRaw('dept_no = e.dept_no');