LitePal for Android

Logo

LitePal is an open source Android library that allows developers to use SQLite database extremely easy. You can finish most of the database operations without writing even a SQL statement, including create or upgrade tables, crud operations, aggregate functions, etc. The setup of LitePal is quite simple as well, you can integrate it into your project in less than 5 minutes.

Experience the magic right now and have fun!

Features

Quick Setup

1. Include library

Edit your build.gradle file and add below dependency.

dependencies {
    implementation 'org.litepal.guolindev:core:3.1.1'
}

2. Configure litepal.xml

Create a file in the assets folder of your project and name it as litepal.xml. Then copy the following codes into it.

<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<litepal>
    <!--
        Define the database name of your application. 
        By default each database name should be end with .db. 
        If you didn't name your database end with .db, 
        LitePal would plus the suffix automatically for you.
        For example:    
        <dbname value="demo" />
    -->
    <dbname value="demo" />

    <!--
        Define the version of your database. Each time you want 
        to upgrade your database, the version tag would helps.
        Modify the models you defined in the mapping tag, and just 
        make the version value plus one, the upgrade of database
        will be processed automatically without concern.
            For example:    
        <version value="1" />
    -->
    <version value="1" />

    <!--
        Define your models in the list with mapping tag, LitePal will
        create tables for each mapping class. The supported fields
        defined in models will be mapped into columns.
        For example:    
        <list>
            <mapping class="com.test.model.Reader" />
            <mapping class="com.test.model.Magazine" />
        </list>
    -->
    <list>
    </list>

    <!--
        Define where the .db file should be. "internal" means the .db file
        will be stored in the database folder of internal storage which no
        one can access. "external" means the .db file will be stored in the
        path to the directory on the primary external storage device where
        the application can place persistent files it owns which everyone
        can access. "internal" will act as default.
        For example:
        <storage value="external" />
    -->

</litepal>

This is the only configuration file, and the properties are simple.

3. Configure LitePalApplication

You don't want to pass the Context param all the time. To makes the APIs simple, just configure the LitePalApplication in AndroidManifest.xml as below:

<manifest>
    <application
        android:name="org.litepal.LitePalApplication"
        ...
    >
        ...
    </application>
</manifest>

Of course you may have your own Application and has already configured here, like:

<manifest>
    <application
        android:name="com.example.MyOwnApplication"
        ...
    >
        ...
    </application>
</manifest>

That's OK. LitePal can still live with that. Just call LitePal.initialize(context) in your own Application:

public class MyOwnApplication extends Application {

    @Override
    public void onCreate() {
        super.onCreate();
        LitePal.initialize(this);
    }
    ...
}

Make sure to call this method as early as you can. In the onCreate() method of Application will be fine. And always remember to use the application context as parameter. Do not use any instance of activity or service as parameter, or memory leaks might happen.

Get Started

After setup, you can experience the powerful functions now.

1. Create tables

Define the models first. For example you have two models, Album and Song. The models can be defined as below:

public class Album extends LitePalSupport {

    @Column(unique = true, defaultValue = "unknown")
    private String name;

    private float price;

    private List<Song> songs = new ArrayList<Song>();

    // generated getters and setters.
    ...
}
public class Song extends LitePalSupport {

    @Column(nullable = false)
    private String name;

    private int duration;

    @Column(ignore = true)
    private String uselessField;

    private Album album;

    // generated getters and setters.
    ...
}

Then add these models into the mapping list in litepal.xml:

<list>
    <mapping class="org.litepal.litepalsample.model.Album" />
    <mapping class="org.litepal.litepalsample.model.Song" />
</list>

OK! The tables will be generated next time you operate database. For example, gets the SQLiteDatabase with following codes:

SQLiteDatabase db = LitePal.getDatabase();

Now the tables will be generated automatically with SQLs like this:

CREATE TABLE album (
    id integer primary key autoincrement,
    name text unique default 'unknown',
    price real
);

CREATE TABLE song (
    id integer primary key autoincrement,
    name text not null,
    duration integer,
    album_id integer
);

2. Upgrade tables

Upgrade tables in LitePal is extremely easy. Just modify your models anyway you want:

public class Album extends LitePalSupport {

    @Column(unique = true, defaultValue = "unknown")
    private String name;

    @Column(ignore = true)
    private float price;

    private Date releaseDate;

    private List<Song> songs = new ArrayList<Song>();

    // generated getters and setters.
    ...
}

A releaseDate field was added and price field was annotated to ignore. Then increase the version number in litepal.xml:

<!--
    Define the version of your database. Each time you want 
    to upgrade your database, the version tag would helps.
    Modify the models you defined in the mapping tag, and just 
    make the version value plus one, the upgrade of database
    will be processed automatically without concern.
    For example:    
    <version value="1" />
-->
<version value="2" />

The tables will be upgraded next time you operate database. A releasedate column will be added into album table and the original price column will be removed. All the data in album table except those removed columns will be retained.

But there are some upgrading conditions that LitePal can't handle and all data in the upgrading table will be cleaned:

Be careful of the above conditions which will cause losing data.

3. Save data

The saving API is quite object oriented. Each model which inherits from LitePalSupport would have the save() method for free.

Java:

Album album = new Album();
album.setName("album");
album.setPrice(10.99f);
album.setCover(getCoverImageBytes());
album.save();
Song song1 = new Song();
song1.setName("song1");
song1.setDuration(320);
song1.setAlbum(album);
song1.save();
Song song2 = new Song();
song2.setName("song2");
song2.setDuration(356);
song2.setAlbum(album);
song2.save();

Kotlin:

val album = Album()
album.name = "album"
album.price = 10.99f
album.cover = getCoverImageBytes()
album.save()
val song1 = Song()
song1.name = "song1"
song1.duration = 320
song1.album = album
song1.save()
val song2 = Song()
song2.name = "song2"
song2.duration = 356
song2.album = album
song2.save()

This will insert album, song1 and song2 into database with associations.

4. Update data

The simplest way, use save() method to update a record found by find().

Java:

Album albumToUpdate = LitePal.find(Album.class, 1);
albumToUpdate.setPrice(20.99f); // raise the price
albumToUpdate.save();

Kotlin:

val albumToUpdate = LitePal.find<Album>(1)
albumToUpdate.price = 20.99f // raise the price
albumToUpdate.save()

Each model which inherits from LitePalSupport would also have update() and updateAll() method. You can update a single record with a specified id.

Java:

Album albumToUpdate = new Album();
albumToUpdate.setPrice(20.99f); // raise the price
albumToUpdate.update(id);

Kotlin:

val albumToUpdate = Album()
albumToUpdate.price = 20.99f // raise the price
albumToUpdate.update(id)

Or you can update multiple records with a where condition.

Java:

Album albumToUpdate = new Album();
albumToUpdate.setPrice(20.99f); // raise the price
albumToUpdate.updateAll("name = ?", "album");

Kotlin:

val albumToUpdate = Album()
albumToUpdate.price = 20.99f // raise the price
albumToUpdate.updateAll("name = ?", "album")

5. Delete data

You can delete a single record using the static delete() method in LitePal.

Java:

LitePal.delete(Song.class, id);

Kotlin:

LitePal.delete<Song>(id)

Or delete multiple records using the static deleteAll() method in LitePal.

Java:

LitePal.deleteAll(Song.class, "duration > ?" , "350");

Kotlin:

LitePal.deleteAll<Song>("duration > ?" , "350")

6. Query data

Find a single record from song table with specified id.

Java:

Song song = LitePal.find(Song.class, id);

Kotlin:

val song = LitePal.find<Song>(id)

Find all records from song table.

Java:

List<Song> allSongs = LitePal.findAll(Song.class);

Kotlin:

val allSongs = LitePal.findAll<Song>()

Constructing complex query with fluent query.

Java:

List<Song> songs = LitePal.where("name like ? and duration < ?", "song%", "200").order("duration").find(Song.class);

Kotlin:

val songs = LitePal.where("name like ? and duration < ?", "song%", "200").order("duration").find<Song>()

7. Multiple databases

If your app needs multiple databases, LitePal support it completely. You can create as many databases as you want at runtime. For example:

LitePalDB litePalDB = new LitePalDB("demo2", 1);
litePalDB.addClassName(Singer.class.getName());
litePalDB.addClassName(Album.class.getName());
litePalDB.addClassName(Song.class.getName());
LitePal.use(litePalDB);

This will create a demo2 database with singer, album and song tables.

If you just want to create a new database but with same configuration as litepal.xml, you can do it with:

LitePalDB litePalDB = LitePalDB.fromDefault("newdb");
LitePal.use(litePalDB);

You can always switch back to default database with:

LitePal.useDefault();

And you can delete any database by specified database name:

LitePal.deleteDatabase("newdb");

8. Transaction

LitePal support transaction for atomic db operations. All operations in the transaction will be committed or rolled back together.

Java usage:

LitePal.beginTransaction();
boolean result1 = // db operation1
boolean result2 = // db operation2
boolean result3 = // db operation3
if (result1 && result2 && result3) {
    LitePal.setTransactionSuccessful();
}
LitePal.endTransaction();

Kotlin usage:

LitePal.runInTransaction {
    val result1 = // db operation1
    val result2 = // db operation2
    val result3 = // db operation3
    result1 && result2 && result3
}

ProGuard

If you are using ProGuard you might need to add the following option:

-keep class org.litepal.** {
    *;
}

-keep class * extends org.litepal.crud.DataSupport {
    *;
}

-keep class * extends org.litepal.crud.LitePalSupport {
    *;
}

Bugs Report

If you find any bug when using LitePal, please report here. Thanks for helping us making better.

Change logs

3.1.1

3.0.0

2.0.0

1.6.1

1.5.1

1.4.1

1.4.0

1.3.2

1.3.1

1.3.0

License

Copyright (C)  Tony Green, LitePal Framework Open Source Project

Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
You may obtain a copy of the License at

     http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0

Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
limitations under the License.