Skip to main content

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().

For code graphs, additional tools make exploration easier — see examples/mcp_server.py for a full example with find_entity, read_source, and entity_context tools.

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.

Embedding Export / Import

Export embeddings to a standalone .kgle file so they survive graph rebuilds. Embeddings are keyed by node ID — import resolves IDs against the current graph, skipping any that no longer exist.

# Export all embeddings
stats = graph.export_embeddings("embeddings.kgle")
# {'stores': 2, 'embeddings': 5000}

# Export only specific node types
graph.export_embeddings("embeddings.kgle", ["Article", "Author"])

# Export specific (node_type, property) pairs — empty list = all properties for that type
graph.export_embeddings("embeddings.kgle", {
    "Article": ["summary", "title"],  # only these two
    "Author": [],                     # all embedding properties for Author
})

# Import into a fresh graph — matches by (node_type, node_id)
graph2 = kglite.KnowledgeGraph()
graph2.add_nodes(articles_df, 'Article', 'id', 'title')
result = graph2.import_embeddings("embeddings.kgle")
# {'stores': 2, 'imported': 4800, 'skipped': 200}

This is useful when rebuilding a graph from scratch (e.g., re-running a build script) without re-generating expensive embeddings.


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")

Save files (.kgl) use a pinned binary format (bincode with explicit little-endian, fixed-int encoding). Files are forward-compatible within the same major version. For sharing across machines or long-term archival, prefer a portable format (GraphML, CSV).

Embedding Snapshots

Export embeddings separately so they survive graph rebuilds. See Embedding Export / Import under Semantic Search for full details.

graph.export_embeddings("embeddings.kgle")                          # all embeddings
graph.export_embeddings("embeddings.kgle", ["Article"])             # by node type
graph.export_embeddings("embeddings.kgle", {"Article": ["summary"]})  # by type + property

result = graph.import_embeddings("embeddings.kgle")
# {'stores': 2, 'imported': 4800, 'skipped': 200}

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
export_embeddings() Yes Serialization + compression + file write
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
import_embeddings() No Mutates graph in-place
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 use a pinned binary format. .kgl and .kgle files use bincode with explicitly pinned encoding options (little-endian, fixed-int). Files are compatible across OS and CPU architecture within the same major version. For long-term archival or sharing with non-kglite tools, use export() (GraphML, CSV).
  • 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)
graph.export_embeddings('emb.kgle')                                     # export all embeddings to file
graph.export_embeddings('emb.kgle', ['Article'])                        # export by node type
graph.export_embeddings('emb.kgle', {'Article': ['summary']})           # export by type + property
graph.import_embeddings('emb.kgle')                                     # import embeddings from file
# 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]]

Code Tree

Parse multi-language codebases into KGLite knowledge graphs using tree-sitter. Extracts functions, classes/structs, enums, traits/interfaces, modules, and their relationships.

pip install kglite[code-tree]

Quick start

from kglite.code_tree import build

graph = build(".")  # auto-detects pyproject.toml / Cargo.toml

# What are the most-called functions?
graph.cypher("""
    MATCH (caller:Function)-[:CALLS]->(f:Function)
    RETURN f.name AS function, count(caller) AS callers
    ORDER BY callers DESC LIMIT 10
""")

# Label-optional matching — search across all node types
graph.cypher("""
    MATCH (n {name: 'execute'})
    RETURN n.type, n.name, n.file_path, n.line_number
""")

# Save for later
graph.save("codebase.kgl")

Code exploration methods

# Find entities by name (searches all code entity types)
graph.find("execute")
graph.find("KnowledgeGraph", node_type="Struct")
graph.find("exec", match_type="contains")       # case-insensitive substring
graph.find("Knowl", match_type="starts_with")    # case-insensitive prefix

# Get source location — single or batch
graph.source("execute_single_clause")
# {'file_path': 'src/graph/cypher/executor.rs', 'line_number': 165,
#  'end_line': 205, 'line_count': 41, 'signature': '...'}
graph.source(["KnowledgeGraph", "build", "execute"])

# Get full neighborhood of an entity
graph.context("KnowledgeGraph")
# {'node': {...}, 'defined_in': 'src/graph/mod.rs',
#  'HAS_METHOD': [...], 'IMPLEMENTS': [...], 'called_by': [...]}

# File table of contents — all entities defined in a file
graph.toc("src/graph/mod.rs")
# {'file': '...', 'entities': [...], 'summary': {'Function': 4, 'Struct': 2}}

Supported languages

Language Parser Extensions
Rust tree-sitter-rust .rs
Python tree-sitter-python .py
TypeScript tree-sitter-typescript .ts, .tsx
JavaScript tree-sitter-javascript .js, .jsx, .mjs

Graph schema

Node types: Project, Dependency, File, Module, Function, Struct, Class, Enum, Trait, Protocol, Interface, Attribute, Constant

Relationship types: DEPENDS_ON (Project→Dependency), HAS_SOURCE (Project→File), DEFINES (File→item), CALLS (Function→Function), HAS_METHOD (Struct/Class→Function), HAS_ATTRIBUTE (Struct/Class→Attribute), HAS_SUBMODULE (Module→Module), IMPLEMENTS (type→trait), EXTENDS (class→class), IMPORTS (File→Module), USES_TYPE, EXPOSES (Module→item)

Options

graph = build(".")                           # auto-detect manifest (pyproject.toml, Cargo.toml)
graph = build("pyproject.toml")              # explicit manifest file
graph = build("/path/to/src")                # directory scan (fallback when no manifest)
graph = build(".", include_tests=True)       # include test directories
graph = build(".", save_to="code.kgl", verbose=True)

When a manifest is detected, build() reads project metadata (name, version, dependencies) and only scans declared source directories — avoiding .venv/, target/, node_modules/, etc.

Project details


Release history Release notifications | RSS feed

Download files

Download the file for your platform. If you're not sure which to choose, learn more about installing packages.

Source Distributions

No source distribution files available for this release.See tutorial on generating distribution archives.

Built Distributions

If you're not sure about the file name format, learn more about wheel file names.

kglite-0.5.37-cp313-cp313-win_amd64.whl (2.2 MB view details)

Uploaded CPython 3.13Windows x86-64

kglite-0.5.37-cp313-cp313-manylinux_2_35_x86_64.whl (2.5 MB view details)

Uploaded CPython 3.13manylinux: glibc 2.35+ x86-64

kglite-0.5.37-cp313-cp313-macosx_11_0_arm64.whl (2.2 MB view details)

Uploaded CPython 3.13macOS 11.0+ ARM64

kglite-0.5.37-cp313-cp313-macosx_10_12_x86_64.whl (2.4 MB view details)

Uploaded CPython 3.13macOS 10.12+ x86-64

kglite-0.5.37-cp312-cp312-win_amd64.whl (2.2 MB view details)

Uploaded CPython 3.12Windows x86-64

kglite-0.5.37-cp312-cp312-manylinux_2_35_x86_64.whl (2.5 MB view details)

Uploaded CPython 3.12manylinux: glibc 2.35+ x86-64

kglite-0.5.37-cp312-cp312-macosx_11_0_arm64.whl (2.2 MB view details)

Uploaded CPython 3.12macOS 11.0+ ARM64

kglite-0.5.37-cp312-cp312-macosx_10_12_x86_64.whl (2.4 MB view details)

Uploaded CPython 3.12macOS 10.12+ x86-64

kglite-0.5.37-cp311-cp311-win_amd64.whl (2.2 MB view details)

Uploaded CPython 3.11Windows x86-64

kglite-0.5.37-cp311-cp311-manylinux_2_35_x86_64.whl (2.5 MB view details)

Uploaded CPython 3.11manylinux: glibc 2.35+ x86-64

kglite-0.5.37-cp311-cp311-macosx_11_0_arm64.whl (2.2 MB view details)

Uploaded CPython 3.11macOS 11.0+ ARM64

kglite-0.5.37-cp311-cp311-macosx_10_12_x86_64.whl (2.4 MB view details)

Uploaded CPython 3.11macOS 10.12+ x86-64

kglite-0.5.37-cp310-cp310-win_amd64.whl (2.2 MB view details)

Uploaded CPython 3.10Windows x86-64

kglite-0.5.37-cp310-cp310-manylinux_2_35_x86_64.whl (2.5 MB view details)

Uploaded CPython 3.10manylinux: glibc 2.35+ x86-64

kglite-0.5.37-cp310-cp310-macosx_11_0_arm64.whl (2.2 MB view details)

Uploaded CPython 3.10macOS 11.0+ ARM64

kglite-0.5.37-cp310-cp310-macosx_10_12_x86_64.whl (2.4 MB view details)

Uploaded CPython 3.10macOS 10.12+ x86-64

File details

Details for the file kglite-0.5.37-cp313-cp313-win_amd64.whl.

File metadata

  • Download URL: kglite-0.5.37-cp313-cp313-win_amd64.whl
  • Upload date:
  • Size: 2.2 MB
  • Tags: CPython 3.13, Windows x86-64
  • Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? No
  • Uploaded via: twine/6.1.0 CPython/3.13.7

File hashes

Hashes for kglite-0.5.37-cp313-cp313-win_amd64.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 aa92bcccfdcd8875f8a280354febc45704cce0fabd2f0b19dbbd349b4394f532
MD5 ed36831e5ad4bbb813582a6bc11739d1
BLAKE2b-256 0d44273562834eda2bad8576c509ed8c55d83de7cdb504a0e39fe1301dc06f90

See more details on using hashes here.

File details

Details for the file kglite-0.5.37-cp313-cp313-manylinux_2_35_x86_64.whl.

File metadata

File hashes

Hashes for kglite-0.5.37-cp313-cp313-manylinux_2_35_x86_64.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 feb56ab61305a57bf6dd2e033b59e02134cc4d8cb8d9d26ee7f41df4baa40dc5
MD5 55f010db64e125109bbed055fbca574b
BLAKE2b-256 feaf6ee92b6416c64b2b8e1afa8138aee78d90b944dc1c7f58ada6f883c67c07

See more details on using hashes here.

File details

Details for the file kglite-0.5.37-cp313-cp313-macosx_11_0_arm64.whl.

File metadata

File hashes

Hashes for kglite-0.5.37-cp313-cp313-macosx_11_0_arm64.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 f4a8e60a2495df48bb732184a999ebbf63ac661226ab9be0f5b99b02fa6afb99
MD5 3e12a42d80995574dbc7fd9fd7cf3efe
BLAKE2b-256 395565a6ae4be8dcff8ac09a7611c99169cb1e81d5f3bca6ddec795cd79900fa

See more details on using hashes here.

File details

Details for the file kglite-0.5.37-cp313-cp313-macosx_10_12_x86_64.whl.

File metadata

File hashes

Hashes for kglite-0.5.37-cp313-cp313-macosx_10_12_x86_64.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 1c70e21524857d3e1d5934b32c7f5c85f6ae4521ebbc1e0d4166187b06cf72a5
MD5 fc7648f7ad3cfc878e3b13168394ff6f
BLAKE2b-256 b872615151e12fbef919abe5e3b0a1eacb4940d3930c27c6664e971176abf4c2

See more details on using hashes here.

File details

Details for the file kglite-0.5.37-cp312-cp312-win_amd64.whl.

File metadata

  • Download URL: kglite-0.5.37-cp312-cp312-win_amd64.whl
  • Upload date:
  • Size: 2.2 MB
  • Tags: CPython 3.12, Windows x86-64
  • Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? No
  • Uploaded via: twine/6.1.0 CPython/3.13.7

File hashes

Hashes for kglite-0.5.37-cp312-cp312-win_amd64.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 aa724fda15195a9ac05da33717551b3276ef40f73ecce5e0f5e3a5a9902e66fb
MD5 838e1865ab7bdfa83b15f9396ce14a7b
BLAKE2b-256 9839b08ebfd95050b085e5371ad720349d760a85f7d2c6b968d47d9413f18f49

See more details on using hashes here.

File details

Details for the file kglite-0.5.37-cp312-cp312-manylinux_2_35_x86_64.whl.

File metadata

File hashes

Hashes for kglite-0.5.37-cp312-cp312-manylinux_2_35_x86_64.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 45ea19e65ef7e7e6244f3f1a79464b0692650d5d65c931653b0379bc207d5877
MD5 4a804f295196da2352dea6cb471c6a12
BLAKE2b-256 1082f8646526bb3b80e812d0d30f64f5a0e8fde25252668697d8870ab8355b13

See more details on using hashes here.

File details

Details for the file kglite-0.5.37-cp312-cp312-macosx_11_0_arm64.whl.

File metadata

File hashes

Hashes for kglite-0.5.37-cp312-cp312-macosx_11_0_arm64.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 e32f2f9ee6a1635863ecd9d58224cfb552ba1e9773ab19992ea9f10d58033f51
MD5 6b13f11aa8c26aef49afcdfe12e30ac4
BLAKE2b-256 7c3fafbfd8b15e8cc48b495c7aae74b023be8d902a76209f07a2d3880004a318

See more details on using hashes here.

File details

Details for the file kglite-0.5.37-cp312-cp312-macosx_10_12_x86_64.whl.

File metadata

File hashes

Hashes for kglite-0.5.37-cp312-cp312-macosx_10_12_x86_64.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 b563dad522bd11facde20e4bb7876a6a9543b8238901e21286263bd91d0ef59c
MD5 5651bd88018fd862dd94304a9d86152b
BLAKE2b-256 8567f4738eab187924e1b02a8e2dfbeee10f24b8164400ecfde7a34301bd6dd8

See more details on using hashes here.

File details

Details for the file kglite-0.5.37-cp311-cp311-win_amd64.whl.

File metadata

  • Download URL: kglite-0.5.37-cp311-cp311-win_amd64.whl
  • Upload date:
  • Size: 2.2 MB
  • Tags: CPython 3.11, Windows x86-64
  • Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? No
  • Uploaded via: twine/6.1.0 CPython/3.13.7

File hashes

Hashes for kglite-0.5.37-cp311-cp311-win_amd64.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 ecfe37fcbb5c477438a044cad1fa4cebc95ef24128b6868a5c46071b4c6d5a98
MD5 18568ecb5038aaa829b2bc16eeebb849
BLAKE2b-256 ba9ad03499e7e361680272517a9fe4bef38c22ad0a3029b5e6f48649118bed9b

See more details on using hashes here.

File details

Details for the file kglite-0.5.37-cp311-cp311-manylinux_2_35_x86_64.whl.

File metadata

File hashes

Hashes for kglite-0.5.37-cp311-cp311-manylinux_2_35_x86_64.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 804a18cefe727ff590f369cac3ae38be3ea23564a08ade6a98b9b244b8a5b73e
MD5 a1f09fcaddf99ce14751195be6a866a5
BLAKE2b-256 de18c0e2b732cd096adc682e8fc2712bf6c130b45e8b494915ba1b928fa2bde3

See more details on using hashes here.

File details

Details for the file kglite-0.5.37-cp311-cp311-macosx_11_0_arm64.whl.

File metadata

File hashes

Hashes for kglite-0.5.37-cp311-cp311-macosx_11_0_arm64.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 0ab38b35bb25163046f82a583249489e17d7e5766a96473ec135873425238f52
MD5 16d2a054793239ce0863cc7b2c7a777b
BLAKE2b-256 1ed1dfc957802460f5fd91e9983faed51845e95b3de91d498ae124355fec82db

See more details on using hashes here.

File details

Details for the file kglite-0.5.37-cp311-cp311-macosx_10_12_x86_64.whl.

File metadata

File hashes

Hashes for kglite-0.5.37-cp311-cp311-macosx_10_12_x86_64.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 aa36bc6c979e52972d1b13d9a98b82ee58f80a59bb52cbbb4eeba9e8d0857680
MD5 2ecc68117f715e12508e3a0a6a6f7243
BLAKE2b-256 df9a60398c6e0adfa179396acc9b538dfc2e0da158cfbde986a639d7ae7f8085

See more details on using hashes here.

File details

Details for the file kglite-0.5.37-cp310-cp310-win_amd64.whl.

File metadata

  • Download URL: kglite-0.5.37-cp310-cp310-win_amd64.whl
  • Upload date:
  • Size: 2.2 MB
  • Tags: CPython 3.10, Windows x86-64
  • Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? No
  • Uploaded via: twine/6.1.0 CPython/3.13.7

File hashes

Hashes for kglite-0.5.37-cp310-cp310-win_amd64.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 1f5ea6360b5e516e6617d72de57cdfe02b5a828ead6d72c6d7fc246876f94152
MD5 90822af405b863e223c646ab9df83468
BLAKE2b-256 7a2dba7da63402c3ebfe2cead4062511b417b4fe775d50d7f35313766010dbb0

See more details on using hashes here.

File details

Details for the file kglite-0.5.37-cp310-cp310-manylinux_2_35_x86_64.whl.

File metadata

File hashes

Hashes for kglite-0.5.37-cp310-cp310-manylinux_2_35_x86_64.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 038fd66de8e79d2fe3c18d401c6446ae02c0e5c98eda47a68d976dca1c491979
MD5 f0b08f513fa514cf972b1e1e701f2e1f
BLAKE2b-256 754498179205539c4e1595adb778c1ac25f0971a48693e90ff3bec3d518c20b8

See more details on using hashes here.

File details

Details for the file kglite-0.5.37-cp310-cp310-macosx_11_0_arm64.whl.

File metadata

File hashes

Hashes for kglite-0.5.37-cp310-cp310-macosx_11_0_arm64.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 823474ce04959ad381d2e7a15b0de2913a573b06c4e2175b0bfc91055ef0c639
MD5 a2e9e5b98e7ca33eb371c144e7f069ec
BLAKE2b-256 fb5622fc6941fc751d9ca36104bb5a250ad72e1f93a0d3b38bb5f3cf0d40c1d4

See more details on using hashes here.

File details

Details for the file kglite-0.5.37-cp310-cp310-macosx_10_12_x86_64.whl.

File metadata

File hashes

Hashes for kglite-0.5.37-cp310-cp310-macosx_10_12_x86_64.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 3dcdc5e5e6d0141b42851998d40ad1edab14210f636942c3808bbec20c1039d6
MD5 c832e46a4fa18b5b8e5cb0702aa868dc
BLAKE2b-256 966ccbb644102144054c1f74dcc1477efa0e2c07749d41d24f2e3e19642918c0

See more details on using hashes here.

Supported by

AWS Cloud computing and Security Sponsor Datadog Monitoring Depot Continuous Integration Fastly CDN Google Download Analytics Pingdom Monitoring Sentry Error logging StatusPage Status page