LibreChat/packages/data-schemas
Danny Avila a6fb257bcf
📦 refactor: Consolidate DB models, encapsulating Mongoose usage in data-schemas (#11830)
* chore: move database model methods to /packages/data-schemas

* chore: add TypeScript ESLint rule to warn on unused variables

* refactor: model imports to streamline access

- Consolidated model imports across various files to improve code organization and reduce redundancy.
- Updated imports for models such as Assistant, Message, Conversation, and others to a unified import path.
- Adjusted middleware and service files to reflect the new import structure, ensuring functionality remains intact.
- Enhanced test files to align with the new import paths, maintaining test coverage and integrity.

* chore: migrate database models to packages/data-schemas and refactor all direct Mongoose Model usage outside of data-schemas

* test: update agent model mocks in unit tests

- Added `getAgent` mock to `client.test.js` to enhance test coverage for agent-related functionality.
- Removed redundant `getAgent` and `getAgents` mocks from `openai.spec.js` and `responses.unit.spec.js` to streamline test setup and reduce duplication.
- Ensured consistency in agent mock implementations across test files.

* fix: update types in data-schemas

* refactor: enhance type definitions in transaction and spending methods

- Updated type definitions in `checkBalance.ts` to use specific request and response types.
- Refined `spendTokens.ts` to utilize a new `SpendTxData` interface for better clarity and type safety.
- Improved transaction handling in `transaction.ts` by introducing `TransactionResult` and `TxData` interfaces, ensuring consistent data structures across methods.
- Adjusted unit tests in `transaction.spec.ts` to accommodate new type definitions and enhance robustness.

* refactor: streamline model imports and enhance code organization

- Consolidated model imports across various controllers and services to a unified import path, improving code clarity and reducing redundancy.
- Updated multiple files to reflect the new import structure, ensuring all functionalities remain intact.
- Enhanced overall code organization by removing duplicate import statements and optimizing the usage of model methods.

* feat: implement loadAddedAgent and refactor agent loading logic

- Introduced `loadAddedAgent` function to handle loading agents from added conversations, supporting multi-convo parallel execution.
- Created a new `load.ts` file to encapsulate agent loading functionalities, including `loadEphemeralAgent` and `loadAgent`.
- Updated the `index.ts` file to export the new `load` module instead of the deprecated `loadAgent`.
- Enhanced type definitions and improved error handling in the agent loading process.
- Adjusted unit tests to reflect changes in the agent loading structure and ensure comprehensive coverage.

* refactor: enhance balance handling with new update interface

- Introduced `IBalanceUpdate` interface to streamline balance update operations across the codebase.
- Updated `upsertBalanceFields` method signatures in `balance.ts`, `transaction.ts`, and related tests to utilize the new interface for improved type safety.
- Adjusted type imports in `balance.spec.ts` to include `IBalanceUpdate`, ensuring consistency in balance management functionalities.
- Enhanced overall code clarity and maintainability by refining type definitions related to balance operations.

* feat: add unit tests for loadAgent functionality and enhance agent loading logic

- Introduced comprehensive unit tests for the `loadAgent` function, covering various scenarios including null and empty agent IDs, loading of ephemeral agents, and permission checks.
- Enhanced the `initializeClient` function by moving `getConvoFiles` to the correct position in the database method exports, ensuring proper functionality.
- Improved test coverage for agent loading, including handling of non-existent agents and user permissions.

* chore: reorder memory method exports for consistency

- Moved `deleteAllUserMemories` to the correct position in the exported memory methods, ensuring a consistent and logical order of method exports in `memory.ts`.
2026-02-18 00:31:36 -05:00
..
misc/ferretdb 🗑️ chore: Remove Deprecated Project Model and Associated Fields (#11773) 2026-02-18 00:31:36 -05:00
src 📦 refactor: Consolidate DB models, encapsulating Mongoose usage in data-schemas (#11830) 2026-02-18 00:31:36 -05:00
.gitignore 📦 refactor: Move DB Models to @librechat/data-schemas (#6210) 2025-03-07 11:55:44 -05:00
babel.config.cjs 📦 refactor: Move DB Models to @librechat/data-schemas (#6210) 2025-03-07 11:55:44 -05:00
jest.config.mjs 🐘 feat: FerretDB Compatibility (#11769) 2026-02-18 00:31:36 -05:00
LICENSE 🔏 fix: Enhance Two-Factor Authentication (#6247) 2025-03-08 15:28:27 -05:00
package.json v0.8.2 (#11547) 2026-01-28 17:18:33 -05:00
README.md 🔐 feat: Granular Role-based Permissions + Entra ID Group Discovery (#7804) 2025-08-13 16:24:17 -04:00
rollup.config.js 📦 refactor: Consolidate DB models, encapsulating Mongoose usage in data-schemas (#11830) 2026-02-18 00:31:36 -05:00
tsconfig.build.json 📦 refactor: Consolidate DB models, encapsulating Mongoose usage in data-schemas (#11830) 2026-02-18 00:31:36 -05:00
tsconfig.json 📦 refactor: Consolidate DB models, encapsulating Mongoose usage in data-schemas (#11830) 2026-02-18 00:31:36 -05:00
tsconfig.spec.json 📦 refactor: Move DB Models to @librechat/data-schemas (#6210) 2025-03-07 11:55:44 -05:00

LibreChat Data Schemas Package

This package provides the database schemas, models, types, and methods for LibreChat using Mongoose ODM.

📁 Package Structure

packages/data-schemas/
├── src/
│   ├── schema/         # Mongoose schema definitions
│   ├── models/         # Model factory functions
│   ├── types/          # TypeScript type definitions
│   ├── methods/        # Database operation methods
│   ├── common/         # Shared constants and enums
│   ├── config/         # Configuration files (winston, etc.)
│   └── index.ts        # Main package exports

🏗️ Architecture Patterns

1. Schema Files (src/schema/)

Schema files define the Mongoose schema structure. They follow these conventions:

  • Naming: Use lowercase filenames (e.g., user.ts, accessRole.ts)
  • Imports: Import types from ~/types for TypeScript support
  • Exports: Export only the schema as default

Example:

import { Schema } from 'mongoose';
import type { IUser } from '~/types';

const userSchema = new Schema<IUser>(
  {
    name: { type: String },
    email: { type: String, required: true },
    // ... other fields
  },
  { timestamps: true }
);

export default userSchema;

2. Type Definitions (src/types/)

Type files define TypeScript interfaces and types. They follow these conventions:

  • Base Type: Define a plain type without Mongoose Document properties
  • Document Interface: Extend the base type with Document and _id
  • Enums/Constants: Place related enums in the type file or common/ if shared

Example:

import type { Document, Types } from 'mongoose';

export type User = {
  name?: string;
  email: string;
  // ... other fields
};

export type IUser = User &
  Document & {
    _id: Types.ObjectId;
  };

3. Model Factory Functions (src/models/)

Model files create Mongoose models using factory functions. They follow these conventions:

  • Function Name: create[EntityName]Model
  • Singleton Pattern: Check if model exists before creating
  • Type Safety: Use the corresponding interface from types

Example:

import userSchema from '~/schema/user';
import type * as t from '~/types';

export function createUserModel(mongoose: typeof import('mongoose')) {
  return mongoose.models.User || mongoose.model<t.IUser>('User', userSchema);
}

4. Database Methods (src/methods/)

Method files contain database operations for each entity. They follow these conventions:

  • Function Name: create[EntityName]Methods
  • Return Type: Export a type for the methods object
  • Operations: Include CRUD operations and entity-specific queries

Example:

import type { Model } from 'mongoose';
import type { IUser } from '~/types';

export function createUserMethods(mongoose: typeof import('mongoose')) {
  async function findUserById(userId: string): Promise<IUser | null> {
    const User = mongoose.models.User as Model<IUser>;
    return await User.findById(userId).lean();
  }

  async function createUser(userData: Partial<IUser>): Promise<IUser> {
    const User = mongoose.models.User as Model<IUser>;
    return await User.create(userData);
  }

  return {
    findUserById,
    createUser,
    // ... other methods
  };
}

export type UserMethods = ReturnType<typeof createUserMethods>;

5. Main Exports (src/index.ts)

The main index file exports:

  • createModels() - Factory function for all models
  • createMethods() - Factory function for all methods
  • Type exports from ~/types
  • Shared utilities and constants

🚀 Adding a New Entity

To add a new entity to the data-schemas package, follow these steps:

Step 1: Create the Type Definition

Create src/types/[entityName].ts:

import type { Document, Types } from 'mongoose';

export type EntityName = {
  /** Field description */
  fieldName: string;
  // ... other fields
};

export type IEntityName = EntityName &
  Document & {
    _id: Types.ObjectId;
  };

Step 2: Update Types Index

Add to src/types/index.ts:

export * from './entityName';

Step 3: Create the Schema

Create src/schema/[entityName].ts:

import { Schema } from 'mongoose';
import type { IEntityName } from '~/types';

const entityNameSchema = new Schema<IEntityName>(
  {
    fieldName: { type: String, required: true },
    // ... other fields
  },
  { timestamps: true }
);

export default entityNameSchema;

Step 4: Create the Model Factory

Create src/models/[entityName].ts:

import entityNameSchema from '~/schema/entityName';
import type * as t from '~/types';

export function createEntityNameModel(mongoose: typeof import('mongoose')) {
  return (
    mongoose.models.EntityName || 
    mongoose.model<t.IEntityName>('EntityName', entityNameSchema)
  );
}

Step 5: Update Models Index

Add to src/models/index.ts:

  1. Import the factory function:
import { createEntityNameModel } from './entityName';
  1. Add to the return object in createModels():
EntityName: createEntityNameModel(mongoose),

Step 6: Create Database Methods

Create src/methods/[entityName].ts:

import type { Model, Types } from 'mongoose';
import type { IEntityName } from '~/types';

export function createEntityNameMethods(mongoose: typeof import('mongoose')) {
  async function findEntityById(id: string | Types.ObjectId): Promise<IEntityName | null> {
    const EntityName = mongoose.models.EntityName as Model<IEntityName>;
    return await EntityName.findById(id).lean();
  }

  // ... other methods

  return {
    findEntityById,
    // ... other methods
  };
}

export type EntityNameMethods = ReturnType<typeof createEntityNameMethods>;

Step 7: Update Methods Index

Add to src/methods/index.ts:

  1. Import the methods:
import { createEntityNameMethods, type EntityNameMethods } from './entityName';
  1. Add to the return object in createMethods():
...createEntityNameMethods(mongoose),
  1. Add to the AllMethods type:
export type AllMethods = UserMethods &
  // ... other methods
  EntityNameMethods;

📝 Best Practices

  1. Consistent Naming: Use lowercase for filenames, PascalCase for types/interfaces
  2. Type Safety: Always use TypeScript types, avoid any
  3. JSDoc Comments: Document complex fields and methods
  4. Indexes: Define database indexes in schema files for query performance
  5. Validation: Use Mongoose schema validation for data integrity
  6. Lean Queries: Use .lean() for read operations when you don't need Mongoose document methods

🔧 Common Patterns

Enums and Constants

Place shared enums in src/common/:

// src/common/permissions.ts
export enum PermissionBits {
  VIEW = 1,
  EDIT = 2,
  DELETE = 4,
  SHARE = 8,
}

Compound Indexes

For complex queries, add compound indexes:

schema.index({ field1: 1, field2: 1 });
schema.index(
  { uniqueField: 1 },
  { 
    unique: true, 
    partialFilterExpression: { uniqueField: { $exists: true } }
  }
);

Virtual Properties

Add computed properties using virtuals:

schema.virtual('fullName').get(function() {
  return `${this.firstName} ${this.lastName}`;
});

🧪 Testing

When adding new entities, ensure:

  • Types compile without errors
  • Models can be created successfully
  • Methods handle edge cases (null checks, validation)
  • Indexes are properly defined for query patterns

📚 Resources