Skills knex

install
source · Clone the upstream repo
git clone https://github.com/TerminalSkills/skills
Claude Code · Install into ~/.claude/skills/
T=$(mktemp -d) && git clone --depth=1 https://github.com/TerminalSkills/skills "$T" && mkdir -p ~/.claude/skills && cp -r "$T/skills/knex" ~/.claude/skills/terminalskills-skills-knex && rm -rf "$T"
manifest: skills/knex/SKILL.md
safety · automated scan (low risk)
This is a pattern-based risk scan, not a security review. Our crawler flagged:
  • references .env files
Always read a skill's source content before installing. Patterns alone don't mean the skill is malicious — but they warrant attention.
source content

Knex.js — SQL Query Builder for Node.js

You are an expert in Knex.js, the flexible SQL query builder for Node.js that supports PostgreSQL, MySQL, SQLite, and MSSQL. You help developers write type-safe queries with a chainable API, manage database migrations and seeds, build complex joins and subqueries, and use transactions — providing direct SQL control without the overhead of a full ORM.

Core Capabilities

Query Building

import knex from "knex";

const db = knex({
  client: "pg",
  connection: process.env.DATABASE_URL,
  pool: { min: 2, max: 20 },
});

// Select with joins
const posts = await db("posts")
  .join("users", "posts.author_id", "users.id")
  .select("posts.*", "users.name as author_name")
  .where("posts.published", true)
  .orderBy("posts.created_at", "desc")
  .limit(10)
  .offset(20);

// Insert
const [user] = await db("users")
  .insert({ name: "Alice", email: "alice@example.com", role: "user" })
  .returning("*");

// Update
await db("users").where({ id: 42 }).update({ name: "Alice Updated" });

// Delete
await db("users").where({ id: 42 }).del();

// Aggregation
const stats = await db("orders")
  .select(db.raw("DATE_TRUNC('month', created_at) as month"))
  .sum("amount as total")
  .count("* as count")
  .groupByRaw("DATE_TRUNC('month', created_at)")
  .orderBy("month", "desc");

// Subquery
const activeUsers = await db("users")
  .whereIn("id", db("posts").select("author_id").where("created_at", ">", thirtyDaysAgo))
  .select("*");

// Transaction
await db.transaction(async (trx) => {
  const [order] = await trx("orders").insert({ user_id: 1, total: 99.99 }).returning("*");
  await trx("order_items").insert(items.map(i => ({ ...i, order_id: order.id })));
  await trx("users").where({ id: 1 }).decrement("balance", 99.99);
});

// Raw SQL when needed
const result = await db.raw(`
  SELECT u.*, COUNT(p.id) as post_count
  FROM users u LEFT JOIN posts p ON u.id = p.author_id
  WHERE u.created_at > ?
  GROUP BY u.id
  HAVING COUNT(p.id) > ?
`, [startDate, minPosts]);

Migrations

npx knex migrate:make create_users_table
npx knex migrate:latest
npx knex migrate:rollback
npx knex seed:make seed_users
npx knex seed:run
// migrations/20260101_create_users.ts
export async function up(knex) {
  await knex.schema.createTable("users", (t) => {
    t.increments("id").primary();
    t.string("name", 100).notNullable();
    t.string("email").notNullable().unique();
    t.enum("role", ["user", "admin"]).defaultTo("user");
    t.jsonb("profile").defaultTo("{}");
    t.timestamps(true, true);
  });
  await knex.schema.createTable("posts", (t) => {
    t.increments("id").primary();
    t.string("title").notNullable();
    t.text("body").notNullable();
    t.boolean("published").defaultTo(false);
    t.integer("author_id").unsigned().references("id").inTable("users").onDelete("CASCADE");
    t.timestamps(true, true);
    t.index(["author_id", "published"]);
  });
}
export async function down(knex) {
  await knex.schema.dropTable("posts");
  await knex.schema.dropTable("users");
}

Installation

npm install knex pg                       # PostgreSQL

Best Practices

  1. Knex over raw SQL — Use the query builder for parameterized queries (prevents SQL injection); fall back to
    knex.raw()
    for complex cases
  2. Migrations for schema — Never modify schema manually; use migrations for reproducible, version-controlled changes
  3. Transactions for consistency — Wrap multi-table operations in
    db.transaction()
    ; auto-rollback on error
  4. Connection pooling — Set pool
    min/max
    based on expected concurrency and database connection limits
  5. Seeds for test data — Create seed files for development/testing; separate from migrations
  6. Returning for inserts — Use
    .returning("*")
    on PostgreSQL to get inserted rows without a second query
  7. Knex + TypeScript — Use generic types:
    db<User>("users")
    for type-safe select results
  8. Knex as foundation — Knex powers Objection.js and Bookshelf; learn Knex first, add ORM features as needed