# SQLAlchemy **FastAPI Users** provides the necessary tools to work with SQL databases thanks to [SQLAlchemy ORM with asyncio](https://docs.sqlalchemy.org/en/14/orm/extensions/asyncio.html). !!! warning The previous adapter using `encode/databases` is now deprecated but can still be installed using `fastapi-users[sqlalchemy]`. ## Asynchronous driver To work with your DBMS, you'll need to install the corresponding asyncio driver. The common choices are: * For PostgreSQL: `pip install asyncpg` * For SQLite: `pip install aiosqlite` For the sake of this tutorial from now on, we'll use a simple SQLite databse. ## Setup User table Let's declare our SQLAlchemy `User` table. ```py hl_lines="15 16" --8<-- "docs/src/db_sqlalchemy.py" ``` As you can see, **FastAPI Users** provides a mixin that will include base fields for our `User` table. You can of course add you own fields there to fit to your needs! ## Implement a function to create the tables We'll now create an utility function to create all the defined tables. ```py hl_lines="23-25" --8<-- "docs/src/db_sqlalchemy.py" ``` This function can be called, for example, during the initialization of your FastAPI app. !!! warning In production, it's strongly recommended to setup a migration system to update your SQL schemas. See [Alembic](https://alembic.sqlalchemy.org/en/latest/). ## Create the database adapter dependency The database adapter of **FastAPI Users** makes the link between your database configuration and the users logic. It should be generated by a FastAPI dependency. ```py hl_lines="28-34" --8<-- "docs/src/db_sqlalchemy.py" ``` Notice that we define first a `get_async_session` dependency returning us a fresh SQLAlchemy session to interact with the database. It's then used inside the `get_user_db` dependency to generate our adapter. Notice that we pass it three things: * A reference to your [`UserDB` model](../models.md). * The `session` instance we just injected. * The `UserTable` variable, which is the actual SQLAlchemy model.