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Rafael Andrade
Rafael Andrade

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Ecto for Elixir: A Beginner's Guide to Database Interactions

Introduction

During my journey learning Elixir, I discovered Ecto, a powerful database wrapper and query generator that enables seamless interaction with SQL databases. While often compared to ORMs like Entity Framework Core or Ruby on Rails' ActiveRecord, Ecto diverges by avoiding automatic state tracking, requiring developers to manage changes explicitly. This article explores Ecto's core concepts, including repositories, schemas, migrations, and CRUD operations. For advanced features, refer to Ecto’s official documentation.

What is Ecto?

Ecto is a database wrapper and query generator for Elixir, designed to work with relational databases like PostgreSQL and MySQL. It provides:

  • Map database tables to Elixir structs (via schemas).
  • Generate type-safe queries using Elixir syntax.
  • Validate data before persistence (via changesets).
  • Manage schema evolution with version-controlled migrations .

Why Ecto Isn’t a Traditional ORM

Ecto avoids the pitfalls of traditional ORMs by:

  1. No Automatic State Tracking: Unlike ORMs, Ecto does not track entity states (e.g., dirty or changed fields).
  2. Explicit Data Flow: Developers must manually pass data through changesets before persistence.
  3. Functional Paradigm: Ecto aligns with Elixir’s functional programming model, avoiding the "impedance mismatch" of object-relational mapping.

Requirement

  • Elixir 1.18+ (adjust for older versions if needed)
  • Dependencies in mix.exs
{:ecto_sql, "~> 3.0"},  # Ecto
{:postgrex, ">= 0.0.0"} # PostgreSQL driver
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Setting Up a Repository

A repository (or repo) is Ecto's interface to the database, similar to Entity Framework's DbContext.

Manual Setup

  1. Define a repo module:
defmodule Friends.Repo do
  use Ecto.Repo,
      otp_app: :friend,
      adapter: Ecto.Adapters.Postgres
end
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  1. Configure in config/config.exs:
config :friends, Friends.Repo,
  database: "friends",
  username: "user",
  password: "pass",
  hostname: "localhost"
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Automatic Setup via Mix Task

Run:

mix ecto.gen.repo -r Friends.Repo
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Running Ecto at Startup

Add the repo to your application supervisor in lib/<app_name>/application.ex:

def start(_type, _args) do
  children = [Friends.Repo]
  ...
end
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Then update the config/config.exs

config :friends, ecto_repos: [Friends.Repo]
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Creating a Schema

A schema maps a database table to an Elixir struct. For example, a Person schema:

defmodule Friends.Person do
  use Ecto.Schema
  import Ecto.Changeset

  schema "people" do
    field :first_name, :string
    field :last_name, :string
    field :age, :integer
  end

  def changeset(person, params \\ %{}) do
    person
    |> cast(params, [:first_name, :last_name, :age])
    |> validate_required([:first_name, :last_name])
  end
end
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Migrations

Migrations define database schema changes incrementally.

Manual Migration

Create a file in priv/repo/migrations/<datetime>_create_people.exs:

defmodule Friends.Repo.Migrations.CreatePeople do
  use Ecto.Migration

  def change do
    create table(:people) do
      add :first_name, :string
      add :last_name, :string
      add :age, :integer
    end
  end
end
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Automatic Migration via Mix Task

Run:

mix ecto.gen.migration create_people
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This command will create and empty migration file.

defmodule Friends.Repo.Migrations.CreatePeople do
  use Ecto.Migration

  def change do

  end
end
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Execute the migration

Run:

mix ecto.create # create the your database
mix ecto.migrate # run your migrations
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CRUD Operations

Create

Insert a new record:

person = %Friends.Person{first_name: "Alice", last_name: "Smith", age: 30}
{:ok, inserted_person} = Friends.Repo.insert(person)
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With validation:

changeset = Friends.Person.changeset(%Friends.Person{}, %{first_name: "Alice"})
case Friends.Repo.insert(changeset) do
  {:ok, person} -> # Success
  {:error, changeset} -> # Handle errors
end
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Read

Fetch records:

# By ID
Friends.Repo.get(Friends.Person, 1)

# First record
Friends.Repo.one(from p in Friends.Person, order_by: [asc: p.id], limit: 1)

# All records matching a condition
Friends.Repo.all(from p in Friends.Person, where: like(p.first_name, "A%"))
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Update

Update an existing record:

person = Friends.Repo.get!(Friends.Person, 1)
changeset = Friends.Person.changeset(person, %{age: 31})
Friends.Repo.update(changeset)
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Delete

Delete a record:

person = Friends.Repo.get!(Friends.Person, 1)
Friends.Repo.delete(person)
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That method will return a similar value as creating, but change the action to :delete

Conclusion

Ecto strikes a balance between abstraction and control, offering:

  • Type-Safe Queries: Compile-time macro-generated queries prevent runtime errors.
  • Explicit Workflows: Changesets enforce data validation before persistence.
  • Community Backing: Widely adopted in the Elixir ecosystem.

While not a traditional ORM, Ecto’s functional design avoids leaky abstractions common in object-relational mappers. For advanced patterns (e.g., associations), explore its support for has_many, belongs_to, and many_to_many relationships.

Reference

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