LibreChat/packages/data-schemas
Danny Avila d74a62ecd5
Some checks are pending
Docker Dev Images Build / build (Dockerfile, librechat-dev, node) (push) Waiting to run
Docker Dev Images Build / build (Dockerfile.multi, librechat-dev-api, api-build) (push) Waiting to run
Sync Locize Translations & Create Translation PR / Sync Translation Keys with Locize (push) Waiting to run
Sync Locize Translations & Create Translation PR / Create Translation PR on Version Published (push) Blocked by required conditions
🕰️ fix: Preserve updatedAt Timestamps During Meilisearch Batch Sync (#12084)
* refactor: Add timestamps option to updateMany in createMeiliMongooseModel

- Updated the updateMany call in createMeiliMongooseModel to include a timestamps option set to false, ensuring that the operation does not modify the document's timestamps during the indexing process. This change improves the accuracy of document state management in MongoDB.

* test: Add tests to ensure updatedAt timestamps are preserved during syncWithMeili

- Introduced new test cases for the processSyncBatch function to verify that the original updatedAt timestamps on conversations and messages remain unchanged after synchronization with Meilisearch. This enhancement ensures data integrity during the indexing process.

* docs: Update comments in createMeiliMongooseModel to clarify timestamp preservation

- Enhanced comments in the createMeiliMongooseModel function to explain the use of the { timestamps: false } option in the updateMany call, ensuring that original conversation/message timestamps are preserved during the indexing process. This change improves code clarity and maintains the integrity of document timestamps.

* test: Enhance Meilisearch sync tests to verify updatedAt timestamp preservation

- Added assertions to ensure that the updatedAt timestamps of documents remain unchanged before and after synchronization with Meilisearch. This update improves the test coverage for the syncWithMeili function, reinforcing data integrity during the indexing process.
2026-03-05 10:40:43 -05:00
..
src 🕰️ fix: Preserve updatedAt Timestamps During Meilisearch Batch Sync (#12084) 2026-03-05 10:40:43 -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: Mailgun API Email Configuration (#7742) 2025-06-04 13:12:37 -04:00
LICENSE 🔏 fix: Enhance Two-Factor Authentication (#6247) 2025-03-08 15:28:27 -05:00
package.json v0.8.3-rc2 (#12027) 2026-03-04 09:28:20 -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 🚀 feat: Refactor schema exports and update package version to 0.0.4 (#6455) 2025-03-21 08:20:23 -04:00
tsconfig.json 🏗️ refactor: Extract DB layers to data-schemas for shared use (#7650) 2025-05-30 22:18:13 -04:00
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