More SQL Parsing! Parse SQL into JSON parse tree
Project description
More SQL Parsing!
Parse SQL into JSON so we can translate it for other datastores!
Objective
The objective is to convert SQL queries to JSON-izable parse trees. This originally targeted MySQL, but has grown to include other database engines. Please paste some SQL into a new issue if it does not work for you
Project Status
December 2023 - I continue to resolve issues as they are raised. There are over 1100 tests, that cover most SQL for most databases, with limited DML and UDF support, including:
- inner queries,
- with clauses,
- window functions
- create/drop/alter tables and views
- insert/update/delete statements
- create procedure and function statements (MySQL only)
Install
pip install mo-sql-parsing
Parsing SQL
>>> from mo_sql_parsing import parse
>>> parse("select count(1) from jobs")
{'select': {'value': {'count': 1}}, 'from': 'jobs'}
Each SQL query is parsed to an object: Each clause is assigned to an object property of the same name.
>>> parse("select a as hello, b as world from jobs")
{'select': [{'value': 'a', 'name': 'hello'}, {'value': 'b', 'name': 'world'}], 'from': 'jobs'}
The SELECT
clause is an array of objects containing name
and value
properties.
SQL Flavours
There are a few parsing modes you may be interested in:
Double-quotes for literal strings
MySQL uses both double quotes and single quotes to declare literal strings. This is not ansi behaviour, but it is more forgiving for programmers coming from other languages. A specific parse function is provided:
result = parse_mysql(sql)
SQLServer Identifiers ([]
)
SQLServer uses square brackets to delimit identifiers. For example
SELECT [Timestamp] FROM [table]
which conflicts with BigQuery array constructor (eg [1, 2, 3, 4]
). You may use the SqlServer flavour with
from mo_sql_parsing import parse_sqlserver as parse
NULL is None
The default output for this parser is to emit a null function {"null":{}}
wherever NULL
is encountered in the SQL. If you would like something different, you can replace nulls with None
(or anything else for that matter):
result = parse(sql, null=None)
this has been implemented with a post-parse rewriting of the parse tree.
Normalized function call form
The default behaviour of the parser is to output function calls in simple_op
format: The operator being a key in the object; {op: params}
. This form can be difficult to work with because the object must be scanned for known operators, or possible optional arguments, or at least distinguished from a query object.
You can have the parser emit function calls in normal_op
format
>>> from mo_sql_parsing import parse, normal_op
>>> parse("select trim(' ' from b+c)", calls=normal_op)
which produces calls in a normalized format
{"op": op, "args": args, "kwargs": kwargs}
here is the pretty-printed JSON from the example above:
{'select': {'value': {
'op': 'trim',
'args': [{'op': 'add', 'args': ['b', 'c']}],
'kwargs': {'characters': {'literal': ' '}}
}}}
Generating SQL
You may also generate SQL from a given JSON document. This is done by the formatter, which is usually lagging the parser (Dec2023).
>>> from mo_sql_parsing import format
>>> format({"from":"test", "select":["a.b", "c"]})
'SELECT a.b, c FROM test'
Contributing
In the event that the parser is not working for you, you can help make this better but simply pasting your sql (or JSON) into a new issue. Extra points if you describe the problem. Even more points if you submit a PR with a test. If you also submit a fix, then you also have my gratitude.
Run Tests
See the tests directory for instructions running tests, or writing new ones.
More about implementation
SQL queries are translated to JSON objects: Each clause is assigned to an object property of the same name.
# SELECT * FROM dual WHERE a>b ORDER BY a+b
{
"select": "*",
"from": "dual",
"where": {"gt": ["a", "b"]},
"orderby": {"value": {"add": ["a", "b"]}}
}
Expressions are also objects, but with only one property: The name of the operation, and the value holding (an array of) parameters for that operation.
{op: parameters}
and you can see this pattern in the previous example:
{"gt": ["a","b"]}
Array Programming
The mo-sql-parsing.scrub()
method is used liberally throughout the code, and it "simplifies" the JSON. You may find this form a bit tedious to work with because the JSON property values can be values, lists of values, or missing. Please consider converting everything to arrays:
def listwrap(value):
if value is None:
return []
elif isinstance(value, list)
return value
else:
return [value]
then you may avoid all the is-it-a-list checks :
for select in listwrap(parsed_result.get('select')):
do_something(select)
Version Changes, Features
Version 10
December 2023
SELECT *
now emits an all_columns
call instead of plain star (*
).
>>> from mo_sql_parsing import parse
>>> parse("SELECT * FROM table")
{'select': {'all_columns': {}}, 'from': 'table'}
This works better with the except
clause, and is more explicit when selecting all child properties.
>>> parse("SELECT a.* EXCEPT b FROM table")
>>> {"select": {"all_columns": "a", "except": "b"}, "from": "table"}
You may get the original behaviour by staying with version 9, or by using all_columns="*"
:
>>> parse("SELECT * FROM table", all_columns="*")
{'select': "*", 'from': 'table'}
Version 9
November 2022
Output for COUNT(DISTINCT x)
has changed from function composition
{"count": {"distinct": x}}
to named parameters
{"count": x, "distinct": true}
This was part of a bug fix issue142 - realizing distinct
is just one parameter of many in an aggregate function. Specifically, using the calls=normal_op
for clarity:
>>> from mo_sql_parsing import parse, normal_op
>>> parse("select count(distinct x)", calls=normal_op)
{'select': {'value': {
'op': 'count',
'args': [x],
'kwargs': {'distinct': True}
}}}
Version 8.200+
September 2022
- Added
ALTER TABLE
andCOPY
command parsing for Snowflake
Version 8
November 2021
-
Prefer BigQuery
[]
(create array) over SQLServer[]
(identity) -
Added basic DML (
INSERT
/UPDATE
/DELETE
) -
flatter
CREATE TABLE
structures. Theoption
list in column definition has been flattened:
Old column format{"create table": { "columns": { "name": "name", "type": {"decimal": [2, 3]}, "option": [ "not null", "check": {"lt": [{"length": "name"}, 10]} ] } }}
New column format
{"create table": { "columns": { "name": "name", "type": {"decimal": [2, 3]} "nullable": False, "check": {"lt": [{"length": "name"}, 10]} } }}
Version 7
October 2021
- changed error reporting; still terrible
- upgraded mo-parsing library which forced version change
Version 6
October 2021
- fixed
SELECT DISTINCT
parsing - added
DISTINCT ON
parsing
Version 5
August 2021
- remove inline module
mo-parsing
- support
CREATE TABLE
, add SQL "flavours" emit{null:{}}
for None
Version 4
November 2021
- changed parse result of
SELECT DISTINCT
- simpler
ORDER BY
clause in window functions
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