🥇Features

  • Aligned to SQLite 3.46.0;

  • A single executable file (written in Go);

  • HTTP/JSON access, with client libraries for convenience;

  • Directly call ws4sqlite on a database (as above), many options available using a YAML companion file;

  • In-memory DBs are supported;

  • Serving of multiple databases in the same server instance;

  • Batching of multiple value sets for a single statement;

  • Parameters may be passed to statements positionally (lists) or by name (maps);

  • Results of queries may be returned as key-value maps, or as values lists;

  • All queries of a call are executed in a transaction;

  • For each query/statement, specify if a failure should rollback the whole transaction, or the failure is limited to that query;

  • "Stored Statements": define SQL in the server, and call it from the client;

  • CORS mode, configurable per-db;

  • Scheduled tasks (VACUUM, sql or backups), also configurable per-db;

  • Provide initialization statements to execute when a DB is created;

  • WAL mode enabled by default, can be disabled;

  • Embedded web server to directly serve web pages that can access ws4sqlite without CORS;

  • Quite fast!

  • Compact codebase;

  • Comprehensive test suite (make test);

  • 11 os's/arch's directly supported;

  • Docker images, for amd64, arm and arm64.

Security Features

  • Authentication can be configured

    • on the client, either using HTTP Basic Authentication or specifying the credentials in the request;

    • on the server, either by specifying credentials (also with hashed passwords) or providing a query to look them up in the db itself;

  • A database can be opened in read-only mode (only queries will be allowed);

  • It's possible to enforce using only stored statements, to avoid some forms of SQL injection and receiving SQL from the client altogether;

  • CORS Allowed Origin can be configured and enforced;

  • It's possible to bind to a network interface, to limit access.

Some design choices:

  • Very thin layer over SQLite. Errors and type translation, for example, are those provided by the SQLite driver;

  • Doesn't include HTTPS, as this can be done easily (and much more securely) with a reverse proxy;

  • Doesn't support SQLite extensions, to improve portability.

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