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Property-based testing for PostgreSQL schemas and SQL behavior. Early-stage alpha — APIs may change.

Project description

SqlProof

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→ Full docs: sqlproof.com

⚠️ Early-stage alpha (0.1.0a1). APIs are unstable and may change without deprecation warnings until 0.x stabilizes. Postgres edge cases and Hypothesis shrink behavior are still being discovered, and coverage of the schema surface area is incomplete. Do not rely on this for production test suites yet. Bug reports and reproductions welcome — open an issue.

Property-based testing for PostgreSQL schemas and SQL behavior. Define properties about your database code; SqlProof generates valid datasets with Hypothesis, executes your queries through psycopg, and saves the smallest counterexample it finds.

Install

Alpha releases are gated behind a pre-release flag so you don't get one by accident:

pip install --pre sqlproof
# or:
uv add --prerelease=allow sqlproof

Requires Python 3.11+ and PostgreSQL 13+.

Quick Start

Given a schema file:

-- schema.sql
CREATE TABLE orders (
  id SERIAL PRIMARY KEY,
  customer_id INTEGER NOT NULL,
  total NUMERIC(10,2) NOT NULL CHECK (total >= 0)
);

CREATE TABLE line_items (
  id SERIAL PRIMARY KEY,
  order_id INTEGER NOT NULL REFERENCES orders(id),
  quantity INTEGER NOT NULL CHECK (quantity > 0),
  price NUMERIC(10,2) NOT NULL CHECK (price > 0)
);

Write property tests with pytest:

from sqlproof import SqlProof, sqlproof

proof = SqlProof.from_schema_file("./schema.sql")


@sqlproof(proof, sizes={"orders": 20, "line_items": 50}, runs=50)
def test_no_orphan_line_items(db):
    rows = db.query("""
        SELECT li.id
        FROM line_items li
        LEFT JOIN orders o ON li.order_id = o.id
        WHERE o.id IS NULL
    """)
    assert rows == []

SqlProof will:

  1. Parse your schema (tables, columns, FKs, CHECK constraints, enums)
  2. Topologically order tables by foreign-key dependencies
  3. Generate datasets that respect common type, FK, CHECK, UNIQUE, and NOT NULL constraints
  4. Run your property with Hypothesis-managed execution and shrinking
  5. Save the shrunk counterexample as JSON when a property fails

API

See the full API reference at sqlproof.com.

Quick reference

proof = SqlProof.from_schema_file("./schema.sql")
proof = SqlProof.from_connection_string("postgresql://localhost/postgres")

proof.check("name", sizes={"orders": 10}, property=lambda db: ...)
proof.invariant(
    "no bad rows",
    sizes={"orders": 10},
    query="SELECT id FROM orders WHERE total < 0",
    expect_empty=True,
)

proof.disconnect()

Schema Sources

SQL file — SqlProof parses CREATE TABLE, CREATE TYPE ... AS ENUM, foreign keys, CHECK constraints, UNIQUE constraints, and column types directly from .sql files.

Connection string — Pass a postgresql:// URL and SqlProof introspects the live database via information_schema and pg_catalog.

proof = SqlProof.from_connection_string("postgresql://localhost:5432/mydb")

Custom Column Generators

SqlProof maps PostgreSQL types to Hypothesis strategies and refines simple range, IN (...), length, FK, and unique constraints. The public customization API is present for v0.1 and will grow with richer per-column strategy overrides.

The db Client

The property function receives a SqlProofClient:

rows = db.query("SELECT id, total FROM orders WHERE total >= %s", 0)
total = db.scalar("SELECT count(*) FROM orders")
typed = db.query_typed("SELECT id, total FROM orders", OrderRow)
data = db.get_generated_data()
  • query() returns a list of dictionaries.
  • query_typed() maps rows into TypedDict, dataclass, or Pydantic models.
  • get_generated_data() returns the dataset for the current run.

Failure Output

When a property fails, SqlProof throws with a formatted counterexample:

Property failed: order totals match sum of line items
Failure: AssertionError: expected totals to match
Row context: {'order_id': 1}
Dataset shape: {'orders': {'rows': 1}, 'line_items': {'rows': 2}}

Counterexamples are written under .sqlproof/failures/ and can be inspected with:

sqlproof report .sqlproof/failures/test_name.json
sqlproof report .sqlproof/failures/test_name.json --format json
sqlproof replay .sqlproof/failures/test_name.json

How It Works

  1. Schema parsing — Reads your SQL file (or introspects a live DB) to extract tables, columns, types, foreign keys, CHECK/UNIQUE constraints, and enums

  2. Dependency ordering — Topologically sorts tables by foreign key references so parent rows are always inserted first

  3. Data generation — Maps PostgreSQL types to Hypothesis strategies and applies constraint-aware generation for CHECK, UNIQUE, NOT NULL, and FK constraints

  4. Isolated execution — Schema-file proofs run against an in-memory client for fast local feedback. DSN-backed proofs introspect PostgreSQL, insert generated data inside savepoints, run the property, then roll back the run.

  5. Shrinking — When a property fails, Hypothesis shrinks the dataset to find the simplest counterexample

Supported PostgreSQL Types

integer, smallint, bigint, serial, bigserial, numeric(p,s), real, double precision, boolean, text, varchar(n), char(n), uuid, timestamp, timestamptz, date, time, json, jsonb, bytea, and custom ENUM types.

Development

git clone https://github.com/your-org/sqlproof.git
cd sqlproof
uv sync --extra dev

uv run pytest
uv run ruff check src tests
uv run pyright src/sqlproof
uv run mypy src/sqlproof

Postgres-backed tests

Integration tests are optional and read SQLPROOF_TEST_DATABASE_URL:

SQLPROOF_TEST_DATABASE_URL='postgresql://postgres:postgres@127.0.0.1:5432/postgres' uv run pytest tests/integration
uv run pytest tests/benchmarks

The integration tests create a temporary schema named sqlproof_it_* and drop it at the end.

Why SqlProof tests itself with properties

SqlProof uses Hypothesis internally, and its own tests use properties for schema fingerprinting, dependency ordering, FK validity, constraint generation, shrinking, parser idempotence, and counterexample replay. This keeps the library honest about the same invariants it asks users to write.

License

MIT

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