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

Project description

KGLite — Lightweight Knowledge Graph for Python

PyPI version Python versions License: MIT Docs

KGLite is an embedded knowledge graph for Python: pip install, no server, no setup. It speaks Cypher, loads pandas DataFrames, and ships with the connective tissue for AI agents — an MCP server so Claude / Cursor / any MCP-capable LLM can query your graph as a tool, a describe() method that emits a compact XML schema for system prompts, and a code_tree parser that turns any source directory into a graph of functions, classes, calls, and imports across 9 languages.

Three storage modes scale from in-memory (millisecond queries on small graphs) to mmap-backed on disk (1 B+ edges, Wikidata-scale). Bundled dataset wrappers turn pip install kglite into a queryable Wikidata or petroleum-domain graph in one line.

Why KGLite?

  • Built for LLM agentsdescribe() XML schema, bundled MCP server, an agent-oriented query surface (cypher(), graph.select(...).traverse(...)), and structural validators (CALL orphan_node({type: ...}) YIELD node) for data-integrity checks that compose with the rest of Cypher.
  • One-line public datasetswikidata.open(path) and sodir.open(path) handle fetch, parallel build, and caching; re-runs reload the cached graph instantly.
  • Codebase → graph in one linekglite.code_tree.build(".") parses Python, Rust, TypeScript, Go, Java, C#, C++, and more into Function / Class / Module nodes with CALLS / DEFINES / IMPORTS edges.
  • Scales without leaving Python — in-memory for prototyping, mmap-backed for notebook-scale, disk-mode CSR for graphs too large for RAM. Same API across modes.
  • Query with CypherMATCH, MERGE, OPTIONAL MATCH, aggregations, parameters, semantic search via text_score().
  • DataFrames in, DataFrames out — bulk-load from pandas, query results as DataFrames.

Quick Start

pip install kglite
import pandas as pd
import kglite

# Three storage modes — pick by graph size:
#   default (in-memory)   — small/medium graphs, fastest queries
#   storage="mapped"      — mmap columns, RAM-friendly as you grow
#   storage="disk", path=…  — 100M+ nodes, Wikidata-scale, loaded lazily
graph = kglite.KnowledgeGraph()

# Bulk-load nodes from a DataFrame (also: add_nodes_bulk, from_blueprint,
# load_ntriples, or Cypher CREATE for ad-hoc inserts).
people = pd.DataFrame({
    "id":   ["alice", "bob", "eve"],
    "name": ["Alice", "Bob", "Eve"],
    "age":  [28, 35, 41],
    "city": ["Oslo", "Bergen", "Trondheim"],
})
graph.add_nodes(people, node_type="Person", unique_id_field="id", node_title_field="name")

# Bulk-load relationships the same way (also: add_connections_bulk,
# add_connections_from_source for auto-filter by loaded types).
knows = pd.DataFrame({"src": ["alice", "bob"], "tgt": ["bob", "eve"]})
graph.add_connections(knows, connection_type="KNOWS",
                      source_type="Person", source_id_field="src",
                      target_type="Person", target_id_field="tgt")

# 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'])

# Or get a pandas DataFrame directly.
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")

Try it instantly: ready-to-query datasets

Two bundled wrappers turn well-known public sources into queryable graphs without writing a loader. Each call handles the fetch + build + cache cycle, returns a KnowledgeGraph you can cypher() against, and respects a per-dataset cooldown so re-running just loads the cached graph in seconds. KGLite is independent of the upstream organisations — see each module docstring for non-affiliation notes.

Wikidata

Single-stream latest-truthy.nt.bz2 from dumps.wikimedia.org — parallel-decoded with a bit-level block scanner, parsed, built into a queryable graph in one call:

from kglite.datasets import wikidata

g = wikidata.open("/data/wd")                                    # full graph
g = wikidata.open("/data/wd", entity_limit_millions=100)         # 100M slice
g = wikidata.open("/data/wd", storage="memory",                  # in-memory, fast tests
                  entity_limit_millions=10)

Sodir (Norwegian Offshore Directorate)

Petroleum-domain graph from the public ArcGIS REST FeatureServer at factmaps.sodir.no — 33 baseline node types (Field, Wellbore, Discovery, Licence, Stratigraphy, …), ~480 k nodes, parallel-fetched and built in seconds:

from kglite.datasets import sodir

g = sodir.open("/data/sodir")  # in-memory by default; ~30s first run
g = sodir.open("/data/sodir", complement_blueprint="my_extras.json")  # extend

Two-tier cooldown — cheap row-count probes every 14 days; full per-dataset re-fetch every 30 days. Add a complement blueprint to extend the baseline (new node types, custom edges) without touching the canonical schema; the file is persisted into the workdir on first use and auto-loaded after.

Use Cases

Agentic AI — memory and tool use

Give an LLM a structured memory it can query. describe() emits a compact XML schema that fits in a system prompt, and the bundled MCP server exposes the whole graph as a Cypher tool — drop-in for Claude, Cursor, or any MCP-capable agent.

xml = graph.describe()                            # schema for the agent's context
prompt = f"You have a knowledge graph:\n{xml}\nAnswer via graph.cypher()."
# Or: python examples/mcp_server.py path/to/graph.kgl

Codebase analysis

Parse Python, Rust, TypeScript, Go, Java, C#, and C++ into a graph of functions, classes, calls, and imports. Trace who-calls-what, find dead code, and review structure without leaving your editor. Pairs naturally with the MCP server so an agent can reason over your repo.

from kglite.code_tree import build

graph = build(".")                                # parse current directory
graph.cypher("""
    MATCH (f:Function)-[:CALLS]->(g:Function)
    RETURN g.name, count(f) AS callers
    ORDER BY callers DESC LIMIT 10
""")

RAG retrieval

Store documents, chunks, and entities together as one graph. Combine text_score() semantic similarity with Cypher structure — hybrid retrieval in one query, no second vector DB.

graph.cypher("""
    MATCH (c:Chunk)-[:IN_DOC]->(d:Document)
    RETURN c.text, d.title,
           text_score(c.embedding, $query_vec) AS score
    ORDER BY score DESC LIMIT 5
""", params={"query_vec": query_embedding})

Data exploration and analysis

Load CSVs or DataFrames, walk relationships, run graph algorithms (shortest path, centrality, community detection), and export — all from a notebook.

graph.add_nodes(users_df, node_type="User", unique_id_field="user_id", node_title_field="name")
graph.cypher("""
    MATCH path = shortestPath((a:User {name:'Alice'})-[*]-(b:User {name:'Eve'}))
    RETURN path
""")

Structural validators — surface data-integrity gaps in one query

Six built-in CALL procedures find the gaps that aren't visible from normal queries: nodes with zero edges, missing-required-edge violations, two-step cycles, duplicate titles, more. They compose with the rest of Cypher — feed the output into WHERE, ORDER BY, or downstream aggregation in a single pass.

# Wellbores in our sodir graph that lack a production licence
graph.cypher("""
    CALL missing_required_edge({type: 'Wellbore', edge: 'IN_LICENCE'}) YIELD node
    RETURN node.id, node.title
""")  # 502 violations on the Sodir April-2026 snapshot

# Cross-reference flagged IDs against any query result, in one Cypher pass
graph.cypher("""
    MATCH (l:Licence {title: '057'})<-[:IN_LICENCE]-(w:Wellbore)
    WITH collect(w.id) AS pl057
    CALL missing_required_edge({type: 'Wellbore', edge: 'DRILLED_BY'}) YIELD node
    WHERE node.id IN pl057
    RETURN count(*) AS pl057_missing_drilled_by
""")

missing_required_edge and missing_inbound_edge validate the (type, edge) direction against the graph's actual schema and refuse to execute when misused. See docs/guides/cypher.md for the full procedure list.

Examples

The examples/ directory has runnable, self-contained scripts covering each of the use cases above:

  • code_graph.py — build a code knowledge graph from a source directory via code_tree.build. Produces Function, Class, Module, File nodes with CALLS, DEFINES, IMPORTS edges.
  • legal_graph.py — end-to-end add_nodes / add_connections from pandas DataFrames, covering laws, regulations, and court decisions with citation relationships. Good template for adapting to your own domain.
  • mcp_server.py — drop-in MCP server that exposes any .kgl file to an LLM (Claude, Cursor, …) as a Cypher query tool, with schema disclosure and code-graph–aware helpers.
  • spatial_graph.py — declarative CSV→graph loading via a JSON blueprint; regions, facilities, and sensors with lat/lon coordinates and pipeline-path traversal queries.

For Wikidata- and Sodir-scale builds, see the Public datasets section above — kglite.datasets.wikidata.open(...) and kglite.datasets.sodir.open(...) cover those workflows in one call.

Benchmarks

KGLite builds and queries Wikidata-scale graphs on a laptop. Measured with bench/wiki_benchmark.py on an M-series MacBook.

Ingest — full pipeline from compressed N-Triples to a queryable graph:

dataset triples nodes edges ingest throughput peak RAM
wiki100m 100 M 938 K 748 K 29 s 3.4 M triples/s 1.3 GB
wiki500m 500 M 5.6 M 6.7 M 157 s 3.2 M triples/s 5.2 GB
wiki1000m 1 B 14.7 M 15.4 M 395 s 2.5 M triples/s 7.0 GB

Reloading a saved 1 B-triple graph from disk (7 GB on-disk): 3.5 s.

Query latency on the 1 B-triple graph (mapped storage). Type names match the labels Wikidata ships per language — with languages=["en"] (the default), Q5 is renamed to human:

Cypher wall
MATCH (n)-[:P31]->(:human) RETURN count(n) — typed aggregation 0.5 ms
MATCH (a)-[:P31]->(b)-[:P279]->(c) LIMIT 10 — 2-hop typed 0.9 ms
MATCH (a)-[:P31]->(b {nid:'Q64'}) RETURN a LIMIT 20 — pivot 1 ms
MATCH (a)-[:P31]->(:human) MATCH (a)-[:P27]->(c) LIMIT 10 — join 44 ms

Disk and mapped storage track within 1 % on build; mapped wins on query shapes backed by its in-memory inverted index, disk wins on unbounded typed traversals by staying on sorted-CSR mmap I/O.

No server, no tuning, same Python process as your code.

Key Features

Feature Description
Cypher queries MATCH, CREATE, SET, DELETE, MERGE, UNION/INTERSECT/EXCEPT, aggregations (incl. median, percentile_cont, variance), reduce(), ORDER BY, LIMIT, SKIP
Semantic search Vector embeddings + text_score() for similarity ranking
Text predicates text_edit_distance, text_normalize, text_jaccard, text_ngrams, text_contains_any / text_starts_with_any for fuzzy match
Graph algorithms Shortest path (BFS or Dijkstra via weight_property), centrality, community detection, clustering
Structural validators 14 CALL procedures: orphan_node, missing_required_edge, cycle_2step, inverse_violation, transitivity_violation, cardinality_violation, parallel_edges, null_property, type_domain/range_violation, etc. — agent-discoverable integrity checks composable with normal Cypher
Spatial Coordinates, WKT geometry, distance + containment, geometry primitives (geom_buffer, geom_convex_hull, geom_union/intersection/difference, geom_is_valid, geom_length), kg_knn k-nearest-neighbour
Timeseries Time-indexed data with ts_*() Cypher functions
Bulk loading Fluent API (add_nodes / add_connections) for DataFrames
Blueprints Declarative CSV-to-graph loading via JSON config
Import/Export Save/load snapshots, GraphML, CSV export
AI integration describe() introspection, MCP server, agent prompts
Code analysis Parse codebases via tree-sitter (kglite.code_tree)

Documentation

Full docs at kglite.readthedocs.io:

Requirements

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

License

MIT — see LICENSE for details.

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