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Crate Data Python client

Project description

CrateDB Python Client

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A Python client library for CrateDB.

This library:

Prerequisites

Recent versions of this library require Python (>= 2.7) to run.

Use library version 0.14 if you’re running Python 2.6.

Installation

The CrateDB Python client is available as a pip package.

To install, run:

$ pip install crate

To update, run:

$ pip install -U crate

Contributing

This project is primarily maintained by Crate.io, but we welcome community contributions!

See the developer docs and the contribution docs for more information.

Help

Looking for more help?

Client Usage

Table of Contents

Connect to a Database

Before we can start we have to import the client:

>>> from crate import client

The client provides a connect() function which is used to establish a connection, the first argument is the url of the server to connect to:

>>> connection = client.connect(crate_host)

CrateDB is a clustered database providing high availability through replication. In order for clients to make use of this property it is recommended to specify all hosts of the cluster. This way if a server does not respond, the request is automatically routed to the next server:

>>> invalid_host = 'http://not_responding_host:4200'
>>> connection = client.connect([invalid_host, crate_host])

If no servers are given, the default one http://127.0.0.1:4200 is used:

>>> connection = client.connect()
>>> connection.client._active_servers
['http://127.0.0.1:4200']

If the option error_trace is set to True, the client will print a whole traceback if a server error occurs:

>>> connection = client.connect([crate_host], error_trace=True)

It’s possible to define a default timeout value in seconds for all servers using the optional parameter timeout:

>>> connection = client.connect([crate_host, invalid_host], timeout=5)

Inserting Data

Before executing any statement a cursor has to be opened to perform database operations:

>>> cursor = connection.cursor()
>>> cursor.execute("""INSERT INTO locations
... (name, date, kind, position) VALUES (?, ?, ?, ?)""",
...                ('Einstein Cross', '2007-03-11', 'Quasar', 7))

To bulk insert data you can use the executemany function:

>>> cursor.executemany("""INSERT INTO locations
... (name, date, kind, position) VALUES (?, ?, ?, ?)""",
...                [('Cloverleaf', '2007-03-11', 'Quasar', 7),
...                 ('Old Faithful', '2007-03-11', 'Quasar', 7)])
[{u'rowcount': 1}, {u'rowcount': 1}]

executemany returns a list of results for every parameter. Each result contains a rowcount. If an error occures the rowcount is -2 and the result may contain an error_message depending on the error.

Selecting Data

To perform the select operation simply execute the statement on the open cursor:

>>> cursor.execute("SELECT name FROM locations where name = ?", ('Algol',))

To retrieve a row we can use one of the cursor’s fetch functions (described below).

fetchone()

fetchone() with each call returns the next row from the results:

>>> result = cursor.fetchone()
>>> pprint(result)
[u'Algol']

If no more data is available, an empty result is returned:

>>> while cursor.fetchone():
...     pass
>>> cursor.fetchone()

fetchmany()

fetch_many() returns a list of all remaining rows, containing no more than the specified size of rows:

>>> cursor.execute("SELECT name FROM locations order by name")
>>> result = cursor.fetchmany(2)
>>> pprint(result)
[[u'Aldebaran'], [u'Algol']]

If a size is not given, the cursor’s arraysize, which defaults to ‘1’, determines the number of rows to be fetched:

>>> cursor.fetchmany()
[[u'Allosimanius Syneca']]

It’s also possible to change the cursors arraysize to an other value:

>>> cursor.arraysize = 3
>>> cursor.fetchmany()
[[u'Alpha Centauri'], [u'Altair'], [u'Argabuthon']]

fetchall()

fetchall() returns a list of all remaining rows:

>>> cursor.execute("SELECT name FROM locations order by name")
>>> result = cursor.fetchall()
>>> pprint(result)
[['Aldebaran'],
 ['Algol'],
 ['Allosimanius Syneca'],
 ['Alpha Centauri'],
 ['Altair'],
 ['Argabuthon'],
 ['Arkintoofle Minor'],
 ['Bartledan'],
 ['Cloverleaf'],
 ['Creameries'],
 ['Double Quasar'],
 ['Einstein Cross'],
 ['Folfanga'],
 ['Galactic Sector QQ7 Active J Gamma'],
 ['Galaxy'],
 ['North West Ripple'],
 ['Old Faithful'],
 ['Outer Eastern Rim']]

Cursor Description

The description property of the cursor returns a sequence of 7-item sequences containing the column name as first parameter. Just the name field is supported, all other fields are ‘None’:

>>> cursor.execute("SELECT * FROM locations order by name")
>>> result = cursor.fetchone()
>>> pprint(result)
[1373932800000,
 None,
 u'Max Quordlepleen claims that the only thing left ...',
 None,
 None,
 u'Star System',
 u'Aldebaran',
 None,
 None,
 1]

>>> result = cursor.description
>>> pprint(result)
((u'date', None, None, None, None, None, None),
 (u'datetime', None, None, None, None, None, None),
 (u'description', None, None, None, None, None, None),
 (u'details', None, None, None, None, None, None),
 (u'flag', None, None, None, None, None, None),
 (u'kind', None, None, None, None, None, None),
 (u'name', None, None, None, None, None, None),
 (u'nullable_date', None, None, None, None, None, None),
 (u'nullable_datetime', None, None, None, None, None, None),
 (u'position', None, None, None, None, None, None))

Closing the Cursor

The following command closes the cursor:

>>> cursor.close()

If a cursor is closed, it will be unusable from this point forward. If any operation is attempted to a closed cursor an ProgrammingError will be raised.

>>> cursor.execute("SELECT * FROM locations")
Traceback (most recent call last):
...
ProgrammingError: Cursor closed

Closing the Connection

The following command closes the connection:

>>> connection.close()

If a connection is closed, it will be unusable from this point forward. If any operation using the connection is attempted to a closed connection an ProgrammingError will be raised:

>>> cursor.execute("SELECT * FROM locations")
Traceback (most recent call last):
...
ProgrammingError: Connection closed

>>> cursor = connection.cursor()
Traceback (most recent call last):
...
ProgrammingError: Connection closed

CrateDB BLOB API

The CrateDB client library provides an API to access the powerful Blob storage capabilities of the CrateDB server.

First, a connection object is required. This can be retrieved by importing the client module and then connecting to one or more CrateDB server:

>>> from crate import client
>>> connection = client.connect(crate_host)

Every table which has Blob support enabled, may act as a container for Blobs. The BlobContainer object for a specific table can be retrieved like this:

>>> blob_container = connection.get_blob_container('myfiles')
>>> blob_container
<BlobContainer 'myfiles'>

The returned container object can now be used to manage the contained Blobs.

Table of Contents

Uploading Blobs

To upload a Blob the put method can be used. This method takes a file like object and an optional SHA-1 digest as argument.

In this example we upload a file without specifying the SHA-1 digest:

>>> from tempfile import TemporaryFile
>>> f = TemporaryFile()
>>> _ = f.write(b"this is the content of the file")
>>> f.flush()

The actual put - it returns the computed SHA-1 digest upon completion:

>>> print(blob_container.put(f))
6d46af79aa5113bd7e6a67fae9ab5228648d3f81

Here is another example, which provides the digest in the call:

>>> _ = f.seek(0)
>>> blob_container.put(f, digest='6d46af79aa5113bd7e6a67fae9ab5228648d3f81')
False

Retrieving Blobs

Retrieving a blob can be done by using the get method like this:

>>> res = blob_container.get('6d46af79aa5113bd7e6a67fae9ab5228648d3f81')

The result is a generator object which returns one chunk per iteration:

>>> print(next(res))
this is the content of the file

It is also possible to check if a blob exists like this:

>>> blob_container.exists('6d46af79aa5113bd7e6a67fae9ab5228648d3f81')
True

Deleting Blobs

To delete a blob just call the delete method, the resulting boolean states whether a blob existed under the given digest or not:

>>> blob_container.delete('6d46af79aa5113bd7e6a67fae9ab5228648d3f81')
True

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