git clone https://github.com/majiayu000/claude-skill-registry
T=$(mktemp -d) && git clone --depth=1 https://github.com/majiayu000/claude-skill-registry "$T" && mkdir -p ~/.claude/skills && cp -r "$T/skills/data/epic-database" ~/.claude/skills/majiayu000-claude-skill-registry-epic-database && rm -rf "$T"
skills/data/epic-database/SKILL.mdEpic Stack: Database
When to use this skill
Use this skill when you need to:
- Design database schema with Prisma
- Create migrations
- Work with SQLite and LiteFS
- Optimize queries and performance
- Create seed scripts
- Work with multi-region deployments
- Manage backups and restores
Patterns and conventions
Database Philosophy
Following Epic Web principles:
Do as little as possible - Only fetch the data you actually need. Use
select to fetch specific fields instead of entire models. Avoid over-fetching
data "just in case" - fetch what you need, when you need it.
Pragmatism over purity - Optimize queries when there's a measurable benefit, but don't over-optimize prematurely. Simple, readable queries are often better than complex optimized ones. Add indexes when queries are slow, not before.
Example - Fetch only what you need:
// ✅ Good - Fetch only needed fields const user = await prisma.user.findUnique({ where: { id: userId }, select: { id: true, username: true, name: true, // Only fetch what you actually use }, }) // ❌ Avoid - Fetching everything const user = await prisma.user.findUnique({ where: { id: userId }, // Fetches all fields including password hash, email, etc. })
Example - Pragmatic optimization:
// ✅ Good - Simple query first, optimize if needed const notes = await prisma.note.findMany({ where: { ownerId: userId }, select: { id: true, title: true, updatedAt: true }, orderBy: { updatedAt: 'desc' }, take: 20, }) // Only add indexes if this query is actually slow // Don't pre-optimize // ❌ Avoid - Over-optimizing before measuring // Adding complex indexes, joins, etc. before knowing if it's needed
Prisma Schema
Epic Stack uses Prisma with SQLite as the database.
Basic configuration:
// prisma/schema.prisma generator client { provider = "prisma-client-js" previewFeatures = ["typedSql"] } datasource db { provider = "sqlite" url = env("DATABASE_URL") }
Basic model:
model User { id String @id @default(cuid()) email String @unique username String @unique name String? createdAt DateTime @default(now()) updatedAt DateTime @updatedAt notes Note[] roles Role[] } model Note { id String @id @default(cuid()) title String content String createdAt DateTime @default(now()) updatedAt DateTime @updatedAt owner User @relation(fields: [ownerId], references: [id]) ownerId String @@index([ownerId]) @@index([ownerId, updatedAt]) }
CUID2 for IDs
Epic Stack uses CUID2 to generate unique IDs.
Advantages:
- Globally unique
- Sortable
- Secure (no exposed information)
- URL-friendly
Example:
model User { id String @id @default(cuid()) // Automatically generates CUID2 }
Timestamps
Standard fields:
model User { createdAt DateTime @default(now()) updatedAt DateTime @updatedAt // Automatically updated }
Relationships
One-to-Many:
model User { id String @id @default(cuid()) notes Note[] } model Note { id String @id @default(cuid()) owner User @relation(fields: [ownerId], references: [id]) ownerId String @@index([ownerId]) }
One-to-One:
model User { id String @id @default(cuid()) image UserImage? } model UserImage { id String @id @default(cuid()) user User @relation(fields: [userId], references: [id]) userId String @unique }
Many-to-Many:
model User { id String @id @default(cuid()) roles Role[] } model Role { id String @id @default(cuid()) users User[] }
Indexes
Create indexes:
model Note { id String @id @default(cuid()) ownerId String updatedAt DateTime @@index([ownerId]) // Simple index @@index([ownerId, updatedAt]) // Composite index }
Best practices:
- Index foreign keys
- Index fields used in
frequentlywhere - Index fields used in
orderBy - Use composite indexes for complex queries
Cascade Delete
Configure cascade:
model User { id String @id @default(cuid()) notes Note[] } model Note { id String @id @default(cuid()) owner User @relation(fields: [ownerId], references: [id], onDelete: Cascade) ownerId String }
Options:
- Deletes children when parent is deletedonDelete: Cascade
- Sets to null when parent is deletedonDelete: SetNull
- Prevents deletion if there are childrenonDelete: Restrict
Migrations
Create migration:
npx prisma migrate dev --name add_user_field
Apply migrations in production:
npx prisma migrate deploy
Automatic migrations: Migrations are automatically applied on deploy via
litefs.yml.
"Widen then Narrow" strategy for zero-downtime:
- Widen app - App accepts A or B
- Widen db - DB provides A and B, app writes to both
- Narrow app - App only uses B
- Narrow db - DB only provides B
Example: Rename field
to name
and firstName
:lastName
// Step 1: Widen app (accepts both) model User { id String @id @default(cuid()) name String? // Deprecated firstName String? // New lastName String? // New } // Step 2: Widen db (migration copies data) // In SQL migration: ALTER TABLE User ADD COLUMN firstName TEXT; ALTER TABLE User ADD COLUMN lastName TEXT; UPDATE User SET firstName = name; // Step 3: Narrow app (only uses new fields) // Code only uses firstName and lastName // Step 4: Narrow db (removes old field) ALTER TABLE User DROP COLUMN name;
Prisma Client
Import Prisma Client:
import { prisma } from '#app/utils/db.server.ts'
Basic query:
const user = await prisma.user.findUnique({ where: { id: userId }, })
Specific select:
const user = await prisma.user.findUnique({ where: { id: userId }, select: { id: true, email: true, username: true, // Don't include password or sensitive data }, })
Include relations:
const user = await prisma.user.findUnique({ where: { id: userId }, include: { notes: { select: { id: true, title: true, }, orderBy: { updatedAt: 'desc' }, }, roles: true, }, })
Complex queries:
const notes = await prisma.note.findMany({ where: { ownerId: userId, title: { contains: searchTerm }, }, select: { id: true, title: true, updatedAt: true, }, orderBy: { updatedAt: 'desc' }, take: 20, skip: (page - 1) * 20, })
Transactions
Use transactions:
await prisma.$transaction(async (tx) => { const user = await tx.user.create({ data: { email, username, roles: { connect: { name: 'user' } }, }, }) await tx.note.create({ data: { title: 'Welcome', content: 'Welcome to the app!', ownerId: user.id, }, }) return user })
SQLite con LiteFS
Multi-region with LiteFS:
- Only the primary instance can write
- Replicas can only read
- Writes are automatically replicated
Check primary instance:
import { ensurePrimary, getInstanceInfo } from '#app/utils/litefs.server.ts' export async function action({ request }: Route.ActionArgs) { // Ensure we're on primary instance for writes await ensurePrimary() // Now we can write safely await prisma.user.create({ data: { /* ... */ }, }) }
Get instance information:
import { getInstanceInfo } from '#app/utils/litefs.server.ts' const { currentIsPrimary, primaryInstance } = await getInstanceInfo() if (currentIsPrimary) { // Can write } else { // Read-only, redirect to primary if necessary }
Seed Scripts
Create seed:
// prisma/seed.ts import { prisma } from '#app/utils/db.server.ts' async function seed() { // Create roles await prisma.role.createMany({ data: [ { name: 'user', description: 'Standard user' }, { name: 'admin', description: 'Administrator' }, ], }) // Create users const user = await prisma.user.create({ data: { email: 'user@example.com', username: 'testuser', roles: { connect: { name: 'user' } }, }, }) console.log('Seed complete!') } seed() .catch((e) => { console.error(e) process.exit(1) }) .finally(async () => { await prisma.$disconnect() })
Run seed:
npx prisma db seed # Or directly: npx tsx prisma/seed.ts
Query Optimization
Guidelines (pragmatic approach):
- Use
to fetch only needed fields - do as little as possibleselect - Use selective
- only include relations you actually useinclude - Index fields used in
andwhere
- but only if queries are sloworderBy - Use composite indexes for complex queries - when you have a real performance problem
- Avoid
(fetches everything) - be explicit about what you needselect: true - Measure first, optimize second - don't pre-optimize
Optimized example (do as little as possible):
// ❌ Avoid: Fetches everything unnecessarily const user = await prisma.user.findUnique({ where: { id: userId }, // Fetches password hash, email, all relations, etc. }) // ✅ Good: Only needed fields - do as little as possible const user = await prisma.user.findUnique({ where: { id: userId }, select: { id: true, username: true, name: true, // Only what you actually use }, }) // ✅ Better: With selective relations (only if you need them) const user = await prisma.user.findUnique({ where: { id: userId }, select: { id: true, username: true, notes: { select: { id: true, title: true, }, take: 10, // Only fetch what you need }, }, })
Prisma Query Logging
Configure logging:
// app/utils/db.server.ts const client = new PrismaClient({ log: [ { level: 'query', emit: 'event' }, { level: 'error', emit: 'stdout' }, { level: 'warn', emit: 'stdout' }, ], }) client.$on('query', async (e) => { if (e.duration < 20) return // Only log slow queries console.info(`prisma:query - ${e.duration}ms - ${e.query}`) })
Database URL
Development:
DATABASE_URL=file:./data/db.sqlite
Production (Fly.io):
DATABASE_URL=file:/litefs/data/sqlite.db
Connecting to DB in Production
SSH to Fly instance:
fly ssh console --app [YOUR_APP_NAME]
Connect to DB CLI:
fly ssh console -C database-cli --app [YOUR_APP_NAME]
Prisma Studio:
# Terminal 1: Start Prisma Studio fly ssh console -C "npx prisma studio" -s --app [YOUR_APP_NAME] # Terminal 2: Local proxy fly proxy 5556:5555 --app [YOUR_APP_NAME] # Open in browser # http://localhost:5556
Common examples
Example 1: Create model with relations
model Post { id String @id @default(cuid()) title String content String published Boolean @default(false) createdAt DateTime @default(now()) updatedAt DateTime @updatedAt author User @relation(fields: [authorId], references: [id], onDelete: Cascade) authorId String comments Comment[] tags Tag[] @@index([authorId]) @@index([authorId, published]) @@index([published, updatedAt]) } model Comment { id String @id @default(cuid()) content String createdAt DateTime @default(now()) post Post @relation(fields: [postId], references: [id], onDelete: Cascade) postId String author User @relation(fields: [authorId], references: [id]) authorId String @@index([postId]) @@index([authorId]) }
Example 2: Complex query with pagination
export async function getPosts({ userId, page = 1, perPage = 20, published, }: { userId?: string page?: number perPage?: number published?: boolean }) { const where: Prisma.PostWhereInput = {} if (userId) { where.authorId = userId } if (published !== undefined) { where.published = published } const [posts, total] = await Promise.all([ prisma.post.findMany({ where, select: { id: true, title: true, updatedAt: true, author: { select: { id: true, username: true, }, }, }, orderBy: { updatedAt: 'desc' }, take: perPage, skip: (page - 1) * perPage, }), prisma.post.count({ where }), ]) return { posts, total, pages: Math.ceil(total / perPage), } }
Example 3: Transaction with multiple operations
export async function createPostWithTags({ authorId, title, content, tagNames, }: { authorId: string title: string content: string tagNames: string[] }) { return await prisma.$transaction(async (tx) => { // Create tags if they don't exist await Promise.all( tagNames.map((name) => tx.tag.upsert({ where: { name }, update: {}, create: { name }, }), ), ) // Create post const post = await tx.post.create({ data: { title, content, authorId, tags: { connect: tagNames.map((name) => ({ name })), }, }, }) return post }) }
Example 4: Seed with related data
async function seed() { // Create permissions const permissions = await Promise.all([ prisma.permission.create({ data: { action: 'create', entity: 'note', access: 'own', description: 'Can create own notes', }, }), prisma.permission.create({ data: { action: 'read', entity: 'note', access: 'own', description: 'Can read own notes', }, }), ]) // Create roles with permissions const userRole = await prisma.role.create({ data: { name: 'user', description: 'Standard user', permissions: { connect: permissions.map((p) => ({ id: p.id })), }, }, }) // Create user with role const user = await prisma.user.create({ data: { email: 'user@example.com', username: 'testuser', roles: { connect: { id: userRole.id }, }, }, }) console.log('Seed complete!') }
Common mistakes to avoid
- ❌ Fetching unnecessary data: Use
to fetch only what you need - do as little as possibleselect - ❌ Over-optimizing prematurely: Measure first, then optimize. Don't add indexes "just in case"
- ❌ Not using indexes when needed: Index foreign keys and fields used in frequent queries, but only if they're actually slow
- ❌ N+1 queries: Use
to fetch relations in a single query when you need theminclude - ❌ Not using transactions for related operations: Always use transactions when multiple operations must be atomic
- ❌ Writing from replicas: Verify
before writes in productionensurePrimary() - ❌ Breaking migrations without strategy: Use "widen then narrow" for zero-downtime
- ❌ Not validating data before inserting: Always validate with Zod before create/update
- ❌ Forgetting
in relations: Explicitly decide what to do when parent is deletedonDelete - ❌ Not using CUID2: Epic Stack uses CUID2 by default, don't use UUID or others
- ❌ Not closing Prisma Client: Prisma handles this automatically, but ensure in scripts
- ❌ Complex queries when simple ones work: Prefer simple, readable queries over complex optimized ones unless there's a real problem
References
- Epic Stack Database Docs
- Epic Web Principles
- Prisma Documentation
- LiteFS Documentation
- SQLite Documentation
- Complete schemaprisma/schema.prisma
- Seed exampleprisma/seed.ts
- Prisma Client setupapp/utils/db.server.ts
- LiteFS utilitiesapp/utils/litefs.server.ts