12 releases (2 stable)
5.1.0 | Jan 10, 2024 |
---|---|
0.8.2 | Sep 11, 2023 |
0.8.0 | Jul 25, 2023 |
0.7.0 | Jul 20, 2022 |
0.1.1 | May 3, 2021 |
#124 in Database interfaces
11,529 downloads per month
Used in 5 crates
18MB
341K
SLoC
pg_query.rs
This Rust library uses the actual PostgreSQL server source to parse SQL queries and return the internal PostgreSQL parse tree.
It also allows you to normalize queries (replacing constant values with $1, etc.) and parse these normalized queries into a parse tree again.
When you build this library, it builds parts of the PostgreSQL server source (see libpg_query), and then statically links it into this library.
You can find further examples and a longer rationale for the original Ruby implementation here. The Rust version tries to have a very similar API.
Getting started
Add the following to your Cargo.toml
[dependencies]
pg_query = "5.0"
Examples
Parsing a query
use pg_query::NodeRef;
let result = pg_query::parse("SELECT * FROM contacts");
assert!(result.is_ok());
let result = result.unwrap();
assert_eq!(result.tables(), vec!["contacts"]);
assert!(matches!(result.protobuf.nodes()[0].0, NodeRef::SelectStmt(_)));
Normalizing a query
let result = pg_query::normalize("SELECT 1 FROM x WHERE y = (SELECT 123 FROM a WHERE z = 'bla')").unwrap();
assert_eq!(result, "SELECT $1 FROM x WHERE y = (SELECT $2 FROM a WHERE z = $3)");
Fingerprinting a query
let result = pg_query::fingerprint("SELECT * FROM contacts.person WHERE id IN (1, 2, 3, 4);").unwrap();
assert_eq!(result.hex, "643d2a3c294ab8a7");
Truncating a query
let query = "INSERT INTO \"x\" (a, b, c, d, e, f) VALUES (?)";
let result = pg_query::parse(query).unwrap();
assert_eq!(result.truncate(32).unwrap(), "INSERT INTO x (...) VALUES (...)");
Credits
Thanks to Paul Mason for his work on pg_parse that this crate is based on.
After version 0.6.0, Paul donated the pg_query crate to the pganalyze team. pg_parse is a lighter alternative that focuses on query parsing, while pg_query aims for feature parity with the Ruby gem.
License
PostgreSQL server source code, used under the PostgreSQL license.
Portions Copyright (c) 1996-2023, The PostgreSQL Global Development Group
Portions Copyright (c) 1994, The Regents of the University of California
All other parts are licensed under the MIT license, see LICENSE file for details.
Copyright (c) 2021 Paul Mason [email protected]
Copyright (c) 2021-2023, Duboce Labs, Inc. (pganalyze) [email protected]
Dependencies
~1.5–5.5MB
~103K SLoC