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A high-performance graph database library with Python bindings written in Rust

Project description

KGLite

PyPI version Python versions License: MIT

A knowledge graph that runs inside your Python process. Load data, query with Cypher, do semantic search — no server, no setup, no infrastructure.

Two APIs: Use Cypher for querying, mutations, and semantic search. Use the fluent API (add_nodes / add_connections) for bulk-loading DataFrames. Most agent and application code only needs cypher().

Embedded, in-process No server, no network; import and go
In-memory Persistence via save()/load() snapshots
Cypher subset Querying + mutations + text_score() for semantic search
Single-label nodes Each node has exactly one type
Fluent bulk loading Import DataFrames with add_nodes() / add_connections()

Requirements: Python 3.10+ (CPython) | macOS (ARM/Intel), Linux (x86_64/aarch64), Windows (x86_64) | pandas >= 1.5

pip install kglite

Table of Contents


Quick Start

import kglite

graph = kglite.KnowledgeGraph()

# Create nodes and relationships
graph.cypher("CREATE (:Person {name: 'Alice', age: 28, city: 'Oslo'})")
graph.cypher("CREATE (:Person {name: 'Bob', age: 35, city: 'Bergen'})")
graph.cypher("CREATE (:Person {name: 'Charlie', age: 42, city: 'Oslo'})")
graph.cypher("""
    MATCH (a:Person {name: 'Alice'}), (b:Person {name: 'Bob'})
    CREATE (a)-[:KNOWS]->(b)
""")

# Query — returns a ResultView (lazy; data stays in Rust until accessed)
result = graph.cypher("""
    MATCH (p:Person) WHERE p.age > 30
    RETURN p.name AS name, p.city AS city
    ORDER BY p.age DESC
""")
for row in result:
    print(row['name'], row['city'])

# Quick peek at first rows
result.head()      # first 5 rows (returns a new ResultView)
result.head(3)     # first 3 rows

# Or get a pandas DataFrame
df = graph.cypher("MATCH (p:Person) RETURN p.name, p.age ORDER BY p.age", to_df=True)

# Persist to disk and reload
graph.save("my_graph.kgl")
loaded = kglite.load("my_graph.kgl")

Loading Data from DataFrames

For bulk loading (thousands of rows), use the fluent API:

import pandas as pd

users_df = pd.DataFrame({
    'user_id': [1001, 1002, 1003],
    'name': ['Alice', 'Bob', 'Charlie'],
    'age': [28, 35, 42]
})

graph.add_nodes(data=users_df, node_type='User', unique_id_field='user_id', node_title_field='name')

edges_df = pd.DataFrame({'source_id': [1001, 1002], 'target_id': [1002, 1003]})
graph.add_connections(data=edges_df, connection_type='KNOWS', source_type='User',
                      source_id_field='source_id', target_type='User', target_id_field='target_id')

graph.cypher("MATCH (u:User) WHERE u.age > 30 RETURN u.name, u.age")

Using with AI Agents

KGLite is designed to work as a self-contained knowledge layer for AI agents. No external database, no server process, no network — just a Python object with a Cypher interface that an agent can query directly.

The idea

  1. Load or build a graph from your data (DataFrames, CSVs, APIs)
  2. Give the agent agent_describe() — a single XML string containing the full schema, Cypher reference, property values, and embedding info
  3. The agent writes Cypher queries using graph.cypher() — no other API to learn
  4. Semantic search works nativelytext_score() in Cypher, backed by any embedding model you wrap

No vector database, no graph database, no infrastructure. The graph lives in memory and persists to a single .kgl file.

Quick setup

xml = graph.agent_describe()  # schema + Cypher reference + property values as XML
prompt = f"You have a knowledge graph:\n{xml}\nAnswer the user's question using graph.cypher()."

MCP server

Expose the graph to any MCP-compatible agent (Claude, etc.) with a thin server:

from mcp.server.fastmcp import FastMCP
import kglite

graph = kglite.load("my_graph.kgl")
mcp = FastMCP("knowledge-graph")

@mcp.tool()
def describe() -> str:
    """Get the graph schema and Cypher reference."""
    return graph.agent_describe()

@mcp.tool()
def query(cypher: str) -> str:
    """Run a Cypher query and return results."""
    result = graph.cypher(cypher, to_df=True)
    return result.to_markdown()

mcp.run(transport="stdio")

The agent calls describe() once to learn the schema, then uses query() for everything — traversals, aggregations, filtering, and semantic search via text_score().

Adding semantic search (5-minute setup)

Semantic search lets agents find nodes by meaning, not just exact property matches. Here's the minimal path:

# 1. Wrap any embedding model (local or remote)
class Embedder:
    dimension = 384
    def embed(self, texts: list[str]) -> list[list[float]]:
        from sentence_transformers import SentenceTransformer
        model = SentenceTransformer("all-MiniLM-L6-v2")
        return model.encode(texts).tolist()

# 2. Register it on the graph
graph.set_embedder(Embedder())

# 3. Embed a text column (one-time, incremental on re-run)
graph.embed_texts("Article", "summary")

# 4. Now agents can search by meaning in Cypher — no extra API
graph.cypher("""
    MATCH (a:Article)
    WHERE text_score(a, 'summary', 'climate policy') > 0.5
    RETURN a.title, text_score(a, 'summary', 'climate policy') AS score
    ORDER BY score DESC LIMIT 10
""")

The model wrapper works with any provider — OpenAI, Cohere, local sentence-transformers, Ollama. See Semantic Search for the full API including load/unload lifecycle, incremental embedding, and low-level vector access.

Semantic search in agent workflows

# Wrap any local or remote model — only needs .dimension and .embed()
class OpenAIEmbedder:
    dimension = 1536
    def embed(self, texts: list[str]) -> list[list[float]]:
        response = client.embeddings.create(input=texts, model="text-embedding-3-small")
        return [e.embedding for e in response.data]

graph.set_embedder(OpenAIEmbedder())
graph.embed_texts("Article", "summary")  # one-time: vectorize all articles

# Now agents can use text_score() in Cypher — no extra API needed
graph.cypher("""
    MATCH (a:Article)
    WHERE text_score(a, 'summary', 'climate policy') > 0.5
    RETURN a.title, text_score(a, 'summary', 'climate policy') AS score
    ORDER BY score DESC LIMIT 10
""")

The model wrapper pattern works with any provider (OpenAI, Cohere, local sentence-transformers, Ollama) — see the Semantic Search section for a full load/unload lifecycle example.

Tips for agent prompts

  1. Start with agent_describe() — gives the agent schema, types, property names with sample values, counts, and full Cypher syntax in one XML string
  2. Use properties(type) for deeper column discovery — shows types, nullability, unique counts, and sample values
  3. Use sample(type, n=3) before writing queries — lets the agent see real data shapes
  4. Prefer Cypher over the fluent API in agent contexts — closer to natural language, easier for LLMs to generate
  5. Use parameters (params={'x': val}) to prevent injection when passing user input to queries
  6. ResultView is lazy — agents can call len(result) to check row count without converting all rows

What agent_describe() returns

  • Dynamic (per-graph): node types with counts, property names/types/sample values, connection types with endpoints, indexes, field aliases, embedding stores
  • Static (always the same): supported Cypher clauses, WHERE operators, functions (including spatial and semantic), mutation syntax, notes

Core Concepts

Nodes have three built-in fields — type (label), title (display name), id (unique within type) — plus arbitrary properties. Each node has exactly one type.

Relationships connect two nodes with a type (e.g., :KNOWS) and optional properties. The Cypher API calls them "relationships"; the fluent API calls them "connections" — same thing.

Selections (fluent API) are lightweight views — a set of node indices that flow through chained operations like type_filter().filter().traverse(). They don't copy data.

Atomicity. Each cypher() call is atomic — if any clause fails, the graph remains unchanged. For multi-statement atomicity, use graph.begin() transactions. Durability only via explicit save().


How It Works

KGLite stores nodes and relationships in a Rust graph structure (petgraph). Python only sees lightweight handles — data converts to Python objects on access, not on query.

  • Cypher queries parse, optimize, and execute entirely in Rust, then return a ResultView (lazy — rows convert to Python dicts only when accessed)
  • Fluent API chains build a selection (a set of node indices) — no data is copied until you call get_nodes(), to_df(), etc.
  • Persistence is via save()/load() binary snapshots — there is no WAL or auto-save

Return Types

All node-related methods use a consistent key order: type, title, id, then other properties.

Cypher

Query type Returns
Read (MATCH...RETURN) ResultView — lazy container, rows converted on access
Read with to_df=True pandas.DataFrame
Mutation (CREATE, SET, DELETE, MERGE) ResultView with .stats dict
EXPLAIN prefix str (query plan, not executed)

Spatial return types: point() values are returned as {'latitude': float, 'longitude': float} dicts.

ResultView

ResultView is a lazy result container returned by cypher(), centrality methods, get_nodes(), and sample(). Data stays in Rust and is only converted to Python objects when you access it — making cypher() calls fast even for large result sets.

result = graph.cypher("MATCH (n:Person) RETURN n.name, n.age ORDER BY n.age")

len(result)        # row count (O(1), no conversion)
result[0]          # single row as dict (converts that row only)
result[-1]         # negative indexing works

for row in result: # iterate rows as dicts (one at a time)
    print(row)

result.head()      # first 5 rows → new ResultView
result.head(3)     # first 3 rows → new ResultView
result.tail(2)     # last 2 rows → new ResultView

result.to_list()   # all rows as list[dict] (full conversion)
result.to_df()     # pandas DataFrame (full conversion)

result.columns     # column names: ['n.name', 'n.age']
result.stats       # mutation stats (None for read queries)

Because ResultView supports iteration and indexing, it works anywhere you'd use a list of dicts — existing code that iterates over cypher() results continues to work unchanged.

Node dicts

Every method that returns node data uses the same dict shape:

{'type': 'Person', 'title': 'Alice', 'id': 1, 'age': 28, 'city': 'Oslo'}
#  ^^^^             ^^^^^             ^^^       ^^^ other properties

Retrieval methods (cheapest to most expensive)

Method Returns Notes
node_count() int No materialization
indices() list[int] Raw graph indices
id_values() list[Any] Flat list of IDs
get_ids() list[{type, title, id}] Identification only
get_titles() list[str] Flat list (see below)
get_properties(['a','b']) list[tuple] Flat list (see below)
get_nodes() ResultView or grouped dict Full node dicts
to_df() DataFrame Columns: type, title, id, ...props
get_node_by_id(type, id) dict | None O(1) hash lookup

Flat vs. grouped results

get_titles(), get_properties(), and get_nodes() automatically flatten when there is only one parent group (the common case). After a traversal with multiple parent groups, they return grouped dicts instead:

# No traversal (single group) → flat list
graph.type_filter('Person').get_titles()
# ['Alice', 'Bob', 'Charlie']

# After traversal (multiple groups) → grouped dict
graph.type_filter('Person').traverse('KNOWS').get_titles()
# {'Alice': ['Bob'], 'Bob': ['Charlie']}

# Override with flatten_single_parent=False to always get grouped
graph.type_filter('Person').get_titles(flatten_single_parent=False)
# {'Root': ['Alice', 'Bob', 'Charlie']}

Centrality methods

All centrality methods (pagerank, betweenness_centrality, closeness_centrality, degree_centrality) return:

Mode Returns
Default ResultView of {type, title, id, score} sorted by score desc
as_dict=True {id: score} — keyed by node ID (unique per type)
to_df=True DataFrame with columns type, title, id, score

Schema Introspection

Methods for exploring graph structure — what types exist, what properties they have, and how they connect. Useful for discovering an unfamiliar graph or building dynamic UIs.

schema() — Full graph overview

s = graph.schema()
# {
#   'node_types': {
#     'Person': {'count': 500, 'properties': {'age': 'Int64', 'city': 'String'}},
#     'Company': {'count': 50, 'properties': {'founded': 'Int64'}},
#   },
#   'connection_types': {
#     'KNOWS': {'count': 1200, 'source_types': ['Person'], 'target_types': ['Person']},
#     'WORKS_AT': {'count': 500, 'source_types': ['Person'], 'target_types': ['Company']},
#   },
#   'indexes': ['Person.city', 'Person.(city, age)'],
#   'node_count': 550,
#   'edge_count': 1700,
# }

connection_types() — Edge type inventory

graph.connection_types()
# [
#   {'type': 'KNOWS', 'count': 1200, 'source_types': ['Person'], 'target_types': ['Person']},
#   {'type': 'WORKS_AT', 'count': 500, 'source_types': ['Person'], 'target_types': ['Company']},
# ]

properties(node_type, max_values=20) — Property details

Per-property statistics for a single node type. Only properties that exist on at least one node are included. The values list is included when the unique count is at or below max_values (default 20). Set max_values=0 to never include values, or raise it to see more (e.g., max_values=100).

graph.properties('Person')
# {
#   'type':  {'type': 'str', 'non_null': 500, 'unique': 1, 'values': ['Person']},
#   'title': {'type': 'str', 'non_null': 500, 'unique': 500},
#   'id':    {'type': 'int', 'non_null': 500, 'unique': 500},
#   'city':  {'type': 'str', 'non_null': 500, 'unique': 3, 'values': ['Bergen', 'Oslo', 'Stavanger']},
#   'age':   {'type': 'int', 'non_null': 500, 'unique': 45},
#   'email': {'type': 'str', 'non_null': 250, 'unique': 250},
# }

# See all values even for higher-cardinality properties
graph.properties('Person', max_values=100)

Raises KeyError if the node type doesn't exist.

neighbors_schema(node_type) — Connection topology

Outgoing and incoming connections grouped by (connection type, endpoint type):

graph.neighbors_schema('Person')
# {
#   'outgoing': [
#     {'connection_type': 'KNOWS', 'target_type': 'Person', 'count': 1200},
#     {'connection_type': 'WORKS_AT', 'target_type': 'Company', 'count': 500},
#   ],
#   'incoming': [
#     {'connection_type': 'KNOWS', 'source_type': 'Person', 'count': 1200},
#   ],
# }

Raises KeyError if the node type doesn't exist.

sample(node_type, n=5) — Quick data peek

Returns the first N nodes of a type as a ResultView:

result = graph.sample('Person', n=3)
result[0]          # {'type': 'Person', 'title': 'Alice', 'id': 1, 'age': 28, 'city': 'Oslo'}
result.to_list()   # all rows as list[dict]
result.to_df()     # as DataFrame

Returns fewer than N if the type has fewer nodes. Raises KeyError if the node type doesn't exist.

indexes() — Unified index list

graph.indexes()
# [
#   {'node_type': 'Person', 'property': 'city', 'type': 'equality'},
#   {'node_type': 'Person', 'properties': ['city', 'age'], 'type': 'composite'},
# ]

agent_describe() — AI agent context

Returns a self-contained XML string summarizing the graph structure and supported Cypher syntax. Designed to be included directly in an LLM prompt:

xml = graph.agent_describe()
prompt = f"You have a knowledge graph:\n{xml}\nAnswer the user's question using cypher()."

The output includes:

  • Dynamic (per-graph): node types with counts and property schemas, connection types, indexes
  • Static (always the same): supported Cypher subset, key API methods, single-label model notes

Cypher Queries

A substantial Cypher subset. See CYPHER.md for the full reference with examples of every clause.

Single-label note: Each node has exactly one type. labels(n) returns a string, not a list. SET n:OtherLabel is not supported.

result = graph.cypher("""
    MATCH (p:Person)-[:KNOWS]->(f:Person)
    WHERE p.age > 30 AND f.city = 'Oslo'
    RETURN p.name AS person, f.name AS friend, p.age AS age
    ORDER BY p.age DESC
    LIMIT 10
""")

# Read queries → ResultView (iterate, index, or convert)
for row in result:
    print(f"{row['person']} knows {row['friend']}")

# Pass to_df=True for a DataFrame
df = graph.cypher("MATCH (n:Person) RETURN n.name, n.age ORDER BY n.age", to_df=True)

Mutations

# CREATE
result = graph.cypher("CREATE (n:Person {name: 'Alice', age: 30, city: 'Oslo'})")
print(result.stats['nodes_created'])  # 1

# SET
graph.cypher("MATCH (n:Person {name: 'Bob'}) SET n.age = 26")

# DELETE / DETACH DELETE
graph.cypher("MATCH (n:Person {name: 'Alice'}) DETACH DELETE n")

# MERGE
graph.cypher("""
    MERGE (n:Person {name: 'Alice'})
    ON CREATE SET n.created = 'today'
    ON MATCH SET n.updated = 'today'
""")

Transactions

with graph.begin() as tx:
    tx.cypher("CREATE (:Person {name: 'Alice', age: 30})")
    tx.cypher("CREATE (:Person {name: 'Bob', age: 25})")
    tx.cypher("""
        MATCH (a:Person {name: 'Alice'}), (b:Person {name: 'Bob'})
        CREATE (a)-[:KNOWS]->(b)
    """)
    # Commits on exit; rolls back on exception

Parameters

graph.cypher(
    "MATCH (n:Person) WHERE n.age > $min_age RETURN n.name, n.age",
    params={'min_age': 25}
)

Semantic search in Cypher

text_score() enables semantic search directly in Cypher. Requires set_embedder() + embed_texts():

graph.cypher("""
    MATCH (n:Article)
    WHERE text_score(n, 'summary', 'machine learning') > 0.8
    RETURN n.title, text_score(n, 'summary', 'machine learning') AS score
    ORDER BY score DESC LIMIT 10
""")

Supported Cypher Subset

Category Supported
Clauses MATCH, OPTIONAL MATCH, WHERE, RETURN, WITH, ORDER BY, SKIP, LIMIT, UNWIND, UNION/UNION ALL, CREATE, SET, DELETE, DETACH DELETE, REMOVE, MERGE, EXPLAIN
Patterns Node (n:Type), relationship -[:REL]->, variable-length *1..3, undirected -[:REL]-, properties {key: val}, p = shortestPath(...)
WHERE =, <>, <, >, <=, >=, =~ (regex), AND, OR, NOT, IS NULL, IS NOT NULL, IN [...], CONTAINS, STARTS WITH, ENDS WITH, EXISTS { pattern }, EXISTS(( pattern ))
Functions toUpper, toLower, toString, toInteger, toFloat, size, type, id, labels, coalesce, count, sum, avg, min, max, collect, std, text_score
Spatial point, distance, wkt_contains, wkt_intersects, wkt_centroid, latitude, longitude
Not supported CALL/stored procedures, FOREACH, subqueries, SET n:Label (label mutation), multi-label

See CYPHER.md for full examples of every feature.


Fluent API: Data Loading

For most use cases, use Cypher queries. The fluent API is for bulk operations from DataFrames or complex data pipelines.

Adding Nodes

products_df = pd.DataFrame({
    'product_id': [101, 102, 103],
    'title': ['Laptop', 'Phone', 'Tablet'],
    'price': [999.99, 699.99, 349.99],
    'stock': [45, 120, 30]
})

report = graph.add_nodes(
    data=products_df,
    node_type='Product',
    unique_id_field='product_id',
    node_title_field='title',
    columns=['product_id', 'title', 'price', 'stock'],       # whitelist columns (None = all)
    column_types={'launch_date': 'datetime'},                  # explicit type hints
    conflict_handling='update'  # 'update' | 'replace' | 'skip' | 'preserve'
)
print(f"Created {report['nodes_created']} nodes in {report['processing_time_ms']}ms")

Property Mapping

When adding nodes, unique_id_field and node_title_field are mapped to id and title. The original column names become aliases — they work in Cypher queries and filter(), but results always use the canonical names.

Your DataFrame Column Stored As Alias?
unique_id_field (e.g., user_id) id n.user_id resolves to n.id
node_title_field (e.g., name) title n.name resolves to n.title
All other columns Same name
# After adding with unique_id_field='user_id', node_title_field='name':
graph.cypher("MATCH (u:User) WHERE u.user_id = 1001 RETURN u")  # OK — alias resolves to id
graph.type_filter('User').filter({'user_id': 1001})              # OK — alias works here too
graph.type_filter('User').filter({'id': 1001})                   # Also OK — canonical name

# Results always use canonical names:
# {'id': 1001, 'title': 'Alice', 'type': 'User', ...}  — NOT 'user_id' or 'name'

Creating Connections

purchases_df = pd.DataFrame({
    'user_id': [1001, 1001, 1002],
    'product_id': [101, 103, 102],
    'date': ['2023-01-15', '2023-02-10', '2023-01-20'],
    'quantity': [1, 2, 1]
})

graph.add_connections(
    data=purchases_df,
    connection_type='PURCHASED',
    source_type='User',
    source_id_field='user_id',
    target_type='Product',
    target_id_field='product_id',
    columns=['date', 'quantity']
)

source_type and target_type each refer to a single node type. To connect nodes of the same type, set both to the same value (e.g., source_type='Person', target_type='Person').

Working with Dates

graph.add_nodes(
    data=estimates_df,
    node_type='Estimate',
    unique_id_field='estimate_id',
    node_title_field='name',
    column_types={'valid_from': 'datetime', 'valid_to': 'datetime'}
)

graph.type_filter('Estimate').filter({'valid_from': {'>=': '2020-06-01'}})
graph.type_filter('Estimate').valid_at('2020-06-15')
graph.type_filter('Estimate').valid_during('2020-01-01', '2020-06-30')

Batch Property Updates

result = graph.type_filter('Prospect').filter({'status': 'Inactive'}).update({
    'is_active': False,
    'deactivation_reason': 'status_inactive'
})

updated_graph = result['graph']
print(f"Updated {result['nodes_updated']} nodes")

Operation Reports

Operations that modify the graph return detailed reports:

report = graph.add_nodes(data=df, node_type='Product', unique_id_field='product_id')
# report keys: operation, timestamp, nodes_created, nodes_updated, nodes_skipped,
#              processing_time_ms, has_errors, errors

graph.get_last_report()       # most recent operation report
graph.get_operation_index()   # sequential index of last operation
graph.get_report_history()    # all reports

Fluent API: Querying

For most queries, prefer Cypher. The fluent API is for building reusable query chains or when you need explain() and selection-based workflows.

Filtering

graph.type_filter('Product').filter({'price': 999.99})
graph.type_filter('Product').filter({'price': {'<': 500.0}, 'stock': {'>': 50}})
graph.type_filter('Product').filter({'id': {'in': [101, 103]}})
graph.type_filter('Product').filter({'category': {'is_null': True}})

# Orphan nodes (no connections)
graph.filter_orphans(include_orphans=True)

Sorting

graph.type_filter('Product').sort('price')
graph.type_filter('Product').sort('price', ascending=False)
graph.type_filter('Product').sort([('stock', False), ('price', True)])

Traversing the Graph

alice = graph.type_filter('User').filter({'title': 'Alice'})
alice_products = alice.traverse(connection_type='PURCHASED', direction='outgoing')

# Filter and sort traversal targets
expensive = alice.traverse(
    connection_type='PURCHASED',
    filter_target={'price': {'>=': 500.0}},
    sort_target='price',
    max_nodes=10
)

# Get connection information
alice.get_connections(include_node_properties=True)

Set Operations

n3 = graph.type_filter('Prospect').filter({'geoprovince': 'N3'})
m3 = graph.type_filter('Prospect').filter({'geoprovince': 'M3'})

n3.union(m3)                    # all nodes from both (OR)
n3.intersection(m3)             # nodes in both (AND)
n3.difference(m3)               # nodes in n3 but not m3
n3.symmetric_difference(m3)     # nodes in exactly one (XOR)

Retrieving Results

people = graph.type_filter('Person')

# Lightweight (no property materialization)
people.node_count()                     # → 3
people.indices()                        # → [0, 1, 2]
people.id_values()                      # → [1, 2, 3]

# Medium (partial materialization)
people.get_ids()                        # → [{'type': 'Person', 'title': 'Alice', 'id': 1}, ...]
people.get_titles()                     # → ['Alice', 'Bob', 'Charlie']
people.get_properties(['age', 'city'])  # → [(28, 'Oslo'), (35, 'Bergen'), (42, 'Oslo')]

# Full materialization
people.get_nodes()                      # → [{'type': 'Person', 'title': 'Alice', 'id': 1, 'age': 28, ...}, ...]
people.to_df()                          # → DataFrame with columns type, title, id, age, city, ...

# Single node lookup (O(1))
graph.get_node_by_id('Person', 1)       # → {'type': 'Person', 'title': 'Alice', ...} or None

Debugging Selections

result = graph.type_filter('User').filter({'id': 1001})
print(result.explain())
# TYPE_FILTER User (1000 nodes) -> FILTER (1 nodes)

Pattern Matching

For simpler pattern-based queries without full Cypher clause support:

results = graph.match_pattern(
    '(p:Play)-[:HAS_PROSPECT]->(pr:Prospect)-[:BECAME_DISCOVERY]->(d:Discovery)'
)

for match in results:
    print(f"Play: {match['p']['title']}, Discovery: {match['d']['title']}")

# With property conditions
graph.match_pattern('(u:User)-[:PURCHASED]->(p:Product {category: "Electronics"})')

# Limit results for large graphs
graph.match_pattern('(a:Person)-[:KNOWS]->(b:Person)', max_matches=100)

Semantic Search

Store embedding vectors alongside nodes and query them with fast similarity search. Embeddings are stored separately from node properties — they don't appear in get_nodes(), to_df(), or regular Cypher property access.

Text-Level API (Recommended)

Register an embedding model once, then embed and search using text column names. The model runs on the Python side — KGLite only stores the resulting vectors.

from sentence_transformers import SentenceTransformer

class Embedder:
    def __init__(self, model_name="all-MiniLM-L6-v2"):
        self._model_name = model_name
        self._model = None
        self._timer = None
        self.dimension = 384  # set in load() if unknown

    def load(self):
        """Called automatically before embedding. Loads model on demand."""
        import threading
        if self._timer:
            self._timer.cancel()
            self._timer = None
        if self._model is None:
            self._model = SentenceTransformer(self._model_name)
            self.dimension = self._model.get_sentence_embedding_dimension()

    def unload(self, cooldown=60):
        """Called automatically after embedding. Releases after cooldown."""
        import threading
        def _release():
            self._model = None
            self._timer = None
        self._timer = threading.Timer(cooldown, _release)
        self._timer.start()

    def embed(self, texts: list[str]) -> list[list[float]]:
        return self._model.encode(texts).tolist()

# Register once on the graph
graph.set_embedder(Embedder())

# Embed a text column — stores vectors as "summary_emb" automatically
graph.embed_texts("Article", "summary")
# Embedding Article.summary: 100%|████████| 1000/1000 [00:05<00:00]
# → {'embedded': 1000, 'skipped': 3, 'skipped_existing': 0, 'dimension': 384}

# Search with text — resolves "summary" → "summary_emb" internally
results = graph.type_filter("Article").search_text("summary", "machine learning", top_k=10)
# [{'id': 42, 'title': '...', 'type': 'Article', 'score': 0.95, ...}, ...]

Key details:

  • Auto-naming: text column "summary" → embedding store key "summary_emb" (auto-derived)
  • Incremental: re-running embed_texts skips nodes that already have embeddings — only new nodes get embedded. Pass replace=True to force re-embed.
  • Progress bar: shows a tqdm progress bar by default. Disable with show_progress=False.
  • Load/unload lifecycle: if the model has optional load() / unload() methods, they are called automatically before and after each embedding operation. Use this to load on demand and release after a cooldown.
  • Not serialized: the model is not saved with save() — call set_embedder() again after deserializing.
# Add new articles, then re-embed — only new ones are processed
graph.embed_texts("Article", "summary")
# → {'embedded': 50, 'skipped': 0, 'skipped_existing': 1000, ...}

# Force full re-embed
graph.embed_texts("Article", "summary", replace=True)

# Combine with filters
results = (graph
    .type_filter("Article")
    .filter({"category": "politics"})
    .search_text("summary", "foreign policy", top_k=10))

Calling embed_texts() or search_text() without set_embedder() raises an error with a full skeleton showing the required model interface.

Storing Embeddings (Low-Level)

If you manage vectors yourself, use the low-level API:

# Explicit: pass a dict of {node_id: vector}
graph.set_embeddings('Article', 'summary', {
    1: [0.1, 0.2, 0.3, ...],
    2: [0.4, 0.5, 0.6, ...],
})

# Or auto-detect during add_nodes with column_types
df = pd.DataFrame({
    'id': [1, 2, 3],
    'title': ['A', 'B', 'C'],
    'text_emb': [[0.1, 0.2], [0.3, 0.4], [0.5, 0.6]],
})
graph.add_nodes(df, 'Doc', 'id', 'title', column_types={'text_emb': 'embedding'})

Vector Search (Low-Level)

Search operates on the current selection — combine with type_filter() and filter() for scoped queries:

# Basic search — returns list of dicts sorted by similarity
results = graph.type_filter('Article').vector_search('summary', query_vec, top_k=10)
# [{'id': 5, 'title': '...', 'type': 'Article', 'score': 0.95, ...}, ...]
# 'score' is always included: cosine similarity [-1,1], dot_product, or negative euclidean distance

# Filtered search — only search within a subset
results = (graph
    .type_filter('Article')
    .filter({'category': 'politics'})
    .vector_search('summary', query_vec, top_k=10))

# DataFrame output
df = graph.type_filter('Article').vector_search('summary', query_vec, top_k=10, to_df=True)

# Distance metrics: 'cosine' (default), 'dot_product', 'euclidean'
results = graph.type_filter('Article').vector_search(
    'summary', query_vec, top_k=10, metric='dot_product')

Semantic Search in Cypher

text_score() enables semantic search directly in Cypher queries. It automatically embeds the query text using the registered model (via set_embedder()) and computes similarity:

# Requires: set_embedder() + embed_texts()
graph.cypher("""
    MATCH (n:Article)
    RETURN n.title, text_score(n, 'summary', 'machine learning') AS score
    ORDER BY score DESC LIMIT 10
""")

# With parameters
graph.cypher("""
    MATCH (n:Article)
    WHERE text_score(n, 'summary', $query) > 0.8
    RETURN n.title
""", params={'query': 'artificial intelligence'})

# Combine with graph filters
graph.cypher("""
    MATCH (n:Article)-[:CITED_BY]->(m:Article)
    WHERE n.category = 'politics'
    RETURN m.title, text_score(m, 'summary', 'foreign policy') AS score
    ORDER BY score DESC LIMIT 5
""")

Embedding Utilities

graph.list_embeddings()
# [{'node_type': 'Article', 'text_column': 'summary', 'dimension': 384, 'count': 1000}]

graph.remove_embeddings('Article', 'summary')

# Retrieve all embeddings for a type (no selection needed)
embs = graph.get_embeddings('Article', 'summary')
# {1: [0.1, 0.2, ...], 2: [0.4, 0.5, ...], ...}

# Retrieve embeddings for current selection only
embs = graph.type_filter('Article').filter({'category': 'politics'}).get_embeddings('summary')

# Get a single node's embedding (O(1) lookup, returns None if not found)
vec = graph.get_embedding('Article', 'summary', node_id)

Embeddings persist across save()/load() cycles automatically.


Graph Algorithms

Shortest Path

result = graph.shortest_path(source_type='Person', source_id=1, target_type='Person', target_id=100)
if result:
    for node in result["path"]:
        print(f"{node['type']}: {node['title']}")
    print(f"Connections: {result['connections']}")
    print(f"Path length: {result['length']}")

Lightweight variants when you don't need full path data:

graph.shortest_path_length(...)    # → int | None (hop count only)
graph.shortest_path_ids(...)       # → list[id] | None (node IDs along path)
graph.shortest_path_indices(...)   # → list[int] | None (raw graph indices, fastest)

All path methods support connection_types, via_types, and timeout_ms for filtering and safety.

Batch variant for computing many distances at once:

distances = graph.shortest_path_lengths_batch('Person', [(1, 5), (2, 8), (3, 10)])
# → [2, None, 5]  (None where no path exists, same order as input)

Much faster than calling shortest_path_length in a loop — builds the adjacency list once.

All Paths

paths = graph.all_paths(
    source_type='Play', source_id=1,
    target_type='Wellbore', target_id=100,
    max_hops=4,
    max_results=100  # Prevent OOM on dense graphs
)

Connected Components

components = graph.connected_components()
# Returns list of lists: [[node_dicts...], [node_dicts...], ...]
print(f"Found {len(components)} connected components")
print(f"Largest component: {len(components[0])} nodes")

graph.are_connected(source_type='Person', source_id=1, target_type='Person', target_id=100)

Centrality Algorithms

All centrality methods return a ResultView of {type, title, id, score} rows, sorted by score descending.

graph.betweenness_centrality(top_k=10)
graph.betweenness_centrality(normalized=True, sample_size=500)
graph.pagerank(top_k=10, damping_factor=0.85)
graph.degree_centrality(top_k=10)
graph.closeness_centrality(top_k=10)

# Alternative output formats
graph.pagerank(as_dict=True)      # → {1: 0.45, 2: 0.32, ...} (keyed by id)
graph.pagerank(to_df=True)        # → DataFrame with type, title, id, score columns

Community Detection

# Louvain modularity optimization (recommended)
result = graph.louvain_communities()
# {'communities': {0: [{type, title, id}, ...], 1: [...]},
#  'modularity': 0.45, 'num_communities': 2}

for comm_id, members in result['communities'].items():
    names = [m['title'] for m in members]
    print(f"Community {comm_id}: {names}")

# With edge weights and resolution tuning
result = graph.louvain_communities(weight_property='strength', resolution=1.5)

# Label propagation (faster, less precise)
result = graph.label_propagation(max_iterations=100)

Node Degrees

degrees = graph.type_filter('Person').get_degrees()
# Returns: {'Alice': 5, 'Bob': 3, ...}

Spatial Operations

Spatial queries are also available in Cypher via point(), distance(), wkt_contains(), wkt_intersects(), and wkt_centroid(). See CYPHER.md.

Bounding Box

graph.type_filter('Discovery').within_bounds(
    lat_field='latitude', lon_field='longitude',
    min_lat=58.0, max_lat=62.0, min_lon=1.0, max_lon=5.0
)

Distance Queries (Haversine)

graph.type_filter('Wellbore').near_point_km(
    center_lat=60.5, center_lon=3.2, max_distance_km=50.0,
    lat_field='latitude', lon_field='longitude'
)

WKT Geometry Intersection

graph.type_filter('Field').intersects_geometry(
    'POLYGON((1 58, 5 58, 5 62, 1 62, 1 58))',
    geometry_field='wkt_geometry'
)

Point-in-Polygon

graph.type_filter('Block').contains_point(lat=60.5, lon=3.2, geometry_field='wkt_geometry')

Analytics

Statistics

price_stats = graph.type_filter('Product').statistics('price')
unique_cats = graph.type_filter('Product').unique_values(property='category', max_length=10)

Calculations

graph.type_filter('Product').calculate(expression='price * 1.1', store_as='price_with_tax')

graph.type_filter('User').traverse('PURCHASED').calculate(
    expression='sum(price * quantity)', store_as='total_spent'
)

graph.type_filter('User').traverse('PURCHASED').count(store_as='product_count', group_by_parent=True)

Connection Aggregation

graph.type_filter('Discovery').traverse('EXTENDS_INTO').calculate(
    expression='sum(share_pct)',
    aggregate_connections=True
)

Supported: sum, avg/mean, min, max, count, std.


Schema and Indexes

Schema Definition

graph.define_schema({
    'nodes': {
        'Prospect': {
            'required': ['npdid_prospect', 'prospect_name'],
            'optional': ['prospect_status'],
            'types': {'npdid_prospect': 'integer', 'prospect_name': 'string'}
        }
    },
    'connections': {
        'HAS_ESTIMATE': {'source': 'Prospect', 'target': 'ProspectEstimate'}
    }
})

errors = graph.validate_schema()
schema = graph.get_schema()

Indexes

Two index types:

Method Accelerates Use for
create_index() Equality (= value) Exact lookups
create_range_index() Range (>, <, >=, <=) Numeric/date filtering

Both also accelerate Cypher WHERE clauses. Composite indexes support multi-property equality.

graph.create_index('Prospect', 'prospect_geoprovince')        # equality index
graph.create_range_index('Person', 'age')                      # B-Tree range index
graph.create_composite_index('Person', ['city', 'age'])        # composite equality

graph.list_indexes()
graph.drop_index('Prospect', 'prospect_geoprovince')

Indexes are maintained automatically by all mutation operations.


Import and Export

Saving and Loading

graph.save("my_graph.kgl")
loaded_graph = kglite.load("my_graph.kgl")

Portability: Save files use bincode serialization and are not guaranteed portable across OS, CPU architecture, or library versions. Always re-export via a portable format (GraphML, CSV) when sharing across machines.

Export Formats

graph.export('my_graph.graphml', format='graphml')  # Gephi, yEd
graph.export('my_graph.gexf', format='gexf')        # Gephi native
graph.export('my_graph.json', format='d3')           # D3.js
graph.export('my_graph.csv', format='csv')           # creates _nodes.csv + _edges.csv

graphml_string = graph.export_string(format='graphml')

Subgraph Extraction

subgraph = (
    graph.type_filter('Company')
    .filter({'title': 'Acme Corp'})
    .expand(hops=2)
    .to_subgraph()
)
subgraph.export('acme_network.graphml', format='graphml')

Performance

Tips

  1. Batch operations — add nodes/connections in batches, not individually
  2. Specify columns — only include columns you need to reduce memory
  3. Filter by type firsttype_filter() before filter() for narrower scans
  4. Create indexes — on frequently filtered equality conditions (~3x on 100k+ nodes)
  5. Use lightweight methodsnode_count(), indices(), get_node_by_id() skip property materialization
  6. Cypher LIMIT — use LIMIT to avoid scanning entire result sets

Threading

The Python GIL is released during heavy Rust operations, allowing other Python threads to run concurrently:

Operation GIL Released? Notes
save() Yes Serialization + compression + file write
load() Yes File read + decompression + deserialization
cypher() (reads) Yes Query parsing, optimization, and execution
vector_search() Yes Similarity computation (uses rayon internally)
search_text() Partial Model embedding needs GIL; vector search releases it
add_nodes() No DataFrame conversion requires GIL throughout
cypher() (mutations) No Must hold exclusive lock on graph

For concurrent access from multiple threads, mutations (add_nodes, CREATE/SET/DELETE Cypher) require external synchronization. Read-only operations (cypher reads, vector_search, save) can run while other Python threads execute.


Common Gotchas

  • Single-label only. Each node has exactly one type. labels(n) returns a string, not a list. SET n:OtherLabel is not supported.
  • id and title are canonical. add_nodes(unique_id_field='user_id') stores the column as id. The original name works as an alias in Cypher (n.user_id resolves to n.id), but results always return canonical names (id, title).
  • Save files aren't portable. The binary format (bincode) may differ across OS, CPU architecture, or library versions. Use export() (GraphML, CSV) for sharing across machines.
  • Indexes: create_index() accelerates equality only (=). For range queries (>, <, >=, <=), use create_range_index().
  • Flat vs. grouped results. After traversal with multiple parents, get_titles(), get_nodes(), and get_properties() return grouped dicts instead of flat lists. Use flatten_single_parent=False to always get grouped output.
  • No auto-persistence. The graph lives in memory. save() is manual — crashes lose unsaved work.

Graph Maintenance

After heavy mutation workloads (DELETE, REMOVE), internal storage accumulates tombstones. Monitor with graph_info().

info = graph.graph_info()
# {'node_count': 950, 'node_capacity': 1000, 'node_tombstones': 50,
#  'edge_count': 2800, 'fragmentation_ratio': 0.05,
#  'type_count': 3, 'property_index_count': 2, 'composite_index_count': 0}

if info['fragmentation_ratio'] > 0.3:
    result = graph.vacuum()
    print(f"Reclaimed {result['tombstones_removed']} slots, remapped {result['nodes_remapped']} nodes")

vacuum() rebuilds the graph with contiguous indices and rebuilds all indexes. Resets the current selection — call between query chains.

reindex() rebuilds indexes only. Recovery tool, not routine maintenance — indexes are maintained automatically by all mutations.


Common Recipes

Upsert with MERGE

graph.cypher("""
    MERGE (p:Person {email: 'alice@example.com'})
    ON CREATE SET p.created = '2024-01-01', p.name = 'Alice'
    ON MATCH SET p.last_seen = '2024-01-15'
""")

Top-K Nodes by Centrality

top_nodes = graph.pagerank(top_k=10)
for node in top_nodes:
    print(f"{node['title']}: {node['score']:.3f}")

2-Hop Neighborhood

graph.cypher("""
    MATCH (me:Person {name: 'Alice'})-[:KNOWS*2]-(fof:Person)
    WHERE fof <> me
    RETURN DISTINCT fof.name
""")

Export Subgraph

subgraph = (
    graph.type_filter('Person')
    .filter({'name': 'Alice'})
    .expand(hops=2)
    .to_subgraph()
)
subgraph.export('alice_network.graphml', format='graphml')

Parameterized Queries

graph.cypher(
    "MATCH (p:Person) WHERE p.city = $city AND p.age > $min_age RETURN p.name",
    params={'city': 'Oslo', 'min_age': 25}
)

Delete Subgraph

graph.cypher("""
    MATCH (u:User) WHERE u.status = 'inactive'
    DETACH DELETE u
""")

Aggregation with Relationship Properties

graph.cypher("""
    MATCH (p:Person)-[r:RATED]->(m:Movie)
    RETURN p.name, avg(r.score) AS avg_rating, count(m) AS movies_rated
    ORDER BY avg_rating DESC
""")

API Quick Reference

Graph lifecycle

graph = kglite.KnowledgeGraph()     # create
graph.save("file.kgl")              # persist
graph = kglite.load("file.kgl")     # reload
graph.graph_info()                   # → dict with node_count, edge_count, fragmentation_ratio, ...
graph.get_schema()                   # → str summary of types and connections
graph.node_types                     # → ['Person', 'Product', ...]

Cypher (recommended for most tasks)

graph.cypher("MATCH (n:Person) RETURN n.name")                          # → ResultView
graph.cypher("MATCH (n:Person) RETURN n.name", to_df=True)              # → DataFrame
graph.cypher("MATCH (n:Person) RETURN n.name", params={'x': 1})         # parameterized
graph.cypher("CREATE (:Person {name: 'Alice'})")                        # → ResultView (.stats has counts)

Data loading (fluent API)

graph.add_nodes(data=df, node_type='T', unique_id_field='id')           # → report dict
graph.add_connections(data=df, connection_type='REL',
    source_type='A', source_id_field='src',
    target_type='B', target_id_field='tgt')                              # → report dict

Selection chain (fluent API)

graph.type_filter('Person')                        # select by type → KnowledgeGraph
    .filter({'age': {'>': 25}})                    # filter → KnowledgeGraph
    .sort('age', ascending=False)                  # sort → KnowledgeGraph
    .traverse('KNOWS', direction='outgoing')       # traverse → KnowledgeGraph
    .get_nodes()                                   # materialize → ResultView or grouped dict

Semantic search

# Text-level API (recommended) — register model once, embed & search by column name
graph.set_embedder(model)                                                    # register model (.dimension, .embed())
graph.embed_texts('Article', 'summary')                                      # embed text column → stored as summary_emb
graph.type_filter('Article').search_text('summary', 'find AI papers', top_k=10)  # text query search

# Low-level vector API — bring your own vectors
graph.set_embeddings('Article', 'summary', {id: vec, ...})             # store embeddings
graph.type_filter('Article').vector_search('summary', qvec, top_k=10)  # similarity search
graph.list_embeddings()                                                 # list all embedding stores
graph.remove_embeddings('Article', 'summary')                           # remove an embedding store
graph.get_embeddings('Article', 'summary')                              # retrieve all vectors for type
graph.type_filter('Article').get_embeddings('summary')                  # retrieve vectors for selection
graph.get_embedding('Article', 'summary', node_id)                      # single node vector (or None)
# Cypher: text_score(n, 'summary', 'query text') — semantic search in Cypher, needs set_embedder()

Introspection

graph.schema()                                # → full graph overview (types, counts, connections, indexes)
graph.connection_types()                      # → list of edge types with counts and endpoint types
graph.properties('Person')                    # → per-property stats (type, non_null, unique, values)
graph.properties('Person', max_values=50)     # → include values list for up to 50 unique values
graph.neighbors_schema('Person')              # → outgoing/incoming connection topology
graph.sample('Person', n=5)                   # → first N nodes as ResultView
graph.indexes()                               # → all indexes with type info
graph.agent_describe()                        # → XML string for LLM prompt context

Algorithms

graph.shortest_path(source_type, source_id, target_type, target_id)  # → {path, connections, length} | None
graph.all_paths(source_type, source_id, target_type, target_id)      # → list[{path, connections, length}]
graph.pagerank(top_k=10)                                             # → ResultView of {type, title, id, score}
graph.betweenness_centrality(top_k=10)                               # → ResultView of {type, title, id, score}
graph.louvain_communities()                                          # → {communities, modularity, num_communities}
graph.connected_components()                                         # → list[list[node_dict]]

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