This commit avoids extraneous calls to satisfies?. Satisfies? is very slow compared to protocol method dispatch, because method dispatch is cached and satisfies? is not. Instead of using satisfies? to check for cases where we need to fall back to a default behavior, we extend ToSql to java.lang.Object, providing a default behavior directly. This commit boosts honeysql's speed substantially. In my benchmarks, 80-90% of the time spent calling sql/format was spent in satisfies?. |
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| resources | ||
| src/honeysql | ||
| test/honeysql | ||
| .gitignore | ||
| CHANGES.md | ||
| project.clj | ||
| README.md | ||
Honey SQL
SQL as Clojure data structures. Build queries programmatically -- even at runtime -- without having to bash strings together.
Leiningen Coordinate
[honeysql "0.4.3"]
Usage
(require '[honeysql.core :as sql]
'[honeysql.helpers :refer :all])
Everything is built on top of maps representing SQL queries:
(def sqlmap {:select [:a :b :c]
:from [:foo]
:where [:= :f.a "baz"]})
format turns maps into clojure.java.jdbc-compatible, parameterized SQL:
(sql/format sqlmap)
=> ["SELECT a, b, c FROM foo WHERE (f.a = ?)" "baz"]
You can build up SQL maps yourself or use helper functions. build is the Swiss Army Knife helper. It lets you leave out brackets here and there:
(sql/build :select :*
:from :foo
:where [:= :f.a "baz"])
=> {:where [:= :f.a "baz"], :from [:foo], :select [:*]}
You can provide a "base" map as the first argument to build:
(sql/build sqlmap :offset 10 :limit 10)
=> {:limit 10, :offset 10, :select [:a :b :c], :where [:= :f.a "baz"], :from [:foo]}
There are also functions for each clause type in the honeysql.helpers namespace:
(-> (select :a :b :c)
(from :foo)
(where [:= :f.a "baz"]))
Order doesn't matter:
(= (-> (select :*) (from :foo))
(-> (from :foo) (select :*)))
=> true
When using the vanilla helper functions, new clauses will replace old clauses:
(-> sqlmap (select :*))
=> {:from [:foo], :where [:= :f.a "baz"], :select (:*)}
To add to clauses instead of replacing them, use merge-select, merge-where, etc.:
(-> sqlmap
(merge-select :d :e)
(merge-where [:> :b 10])
sql/format)
=> ["SELECT a, b, c, d, e FROM foo WHERE (f.a = ? AND b > 10)" "baz"]
Inserts are supported in two patterns. In the first pattern, you must explicitly specify the columns to insert, then provide a collection of rows, each a collection of column values:
(-> (insert-into :properties)
(columns :name :surname :age)
(values
[["Jon" "Smith" 34]
["Andrew" "Cooper" 12]
["Jane" "Daniels" 56]])
sql/format)
=> ["INSERT INTO properties (name, surname, age)
VALUES (?, ?, 34), (?, ?, 12), (?, ?, 56)"
"Jon" "Smith" "Andrew" "Cooper" "Jane" "Daniels"]
Alternately, you can simply specify the values as maps; the first map defines the columns to insert, and the remaining maps must have the same set of keys and values:
(-> (insert-into :properties)
(values [{:name "John" :surname "Smith" :age 34}
{:name "Andrew" :surname "Cooper" :age 12}
{:name "Jane" :surname "Daniels" :age 56})
sql/format)
=> ["INSERT INTO properties (age, name, surname)
VALUES (34, ?, ?), (12, ?, ?), (56, ?, ?)"
"John" "Smith"
"Andrew" "Cooper"
"Jane" "Daniels"]
The column values do not have to be literals, they can be nested queries:
(let [user-id 12345
role-name "user"]
(-> (insert-into :user_profile_to_role)
(values [{:user_profile_id user-id
:role_id (-> (select :id)
(from :role)
(where [:= :name role-name]))}])
sql/format))
=> ["INSERT INTO user_profile_to_role (user_profile_id, role_id)
VALUES (12345, (SELECT id FROM role WHERE name = ?))"
"user"]
Updates are possible too (note the double S in sset to avoid clashing
with clojure.core/set):
(-> (update :films)
(sset {:kind "dramatic"
:watched true})
(where [:= :kind "drama"])
sql/format)
=> ["UPDATE films SET watched = TRUE, kind = ? WHERE kind = ?" "dramatic" "drama"]
Deletes look as you would expect:
(-> (delete-from :films)
(where [:<> :kind "musical"])
sql/format)
=> ["DELETE FROM films WHERE kind <> ?" "musical"]
Queries can be nested:
(-> (select :*)
(from :foo)
(where [:in :foo.a (-> (select :a) (from :bar))])
sql/format)
=> ["SELECT * FROM foo WHERE (foo.a IN (SELECT a FROM bar))"]
Keywords that begin with % are interpreted as SQL function calls:
(-> (select :%count.*) (from :foo) sql/format)
=> ["SELECT count(*) FROM foo"]
(-> (select :%max.id) (from :foo) sql/format)
=> ["SELECT max(id) FROM foo"]
Keywords that begin with ? are interpreted as bindable parameters:
(-> (select :id)
(from :foo)
(where [:= :a :?baz])
(sql/format :params {:baz "BAZ"}))
=> ["SELECT id FROM foo WHERE a = ?" "BAZ"]
There are helper functions and data literals for SQL function calls, field qualifiers, raw SQL fragments, and named input parameters:
(-> (select (sql/call :foo :bar) (sql/qualify :foo :a) (sql/raw "@var := foo.bar"))
(from :foo)
(where [:= :a (sql/param :baz)]))
=> {:where [:= :a #sql/param :baz], :from (:foo), :select (#sql/call [:foo :bar] :foo.a #sql/raw "@var := foo.bar")}
(sql/format *1 :params {:baz "BAZ"})
=> ["SELECT FOO(bar), foo.a, @var := foo.bar FROM foo WHERE a = ?" "BAZ"]
To quote identifiers, pass the :quoting keyword option to format. Valid options are :ansi (PostgreSQL), :mysql, or :sqlserver:
(-> (select :foo.a)
(from :foo)
(where [:= :foo.a "baz"])
(sql/format :quoting :mysql))
=> ["SELECT `foo`.`a` FROM `foo` WHERE `foo`.`a` = ?" "baz"]
Here's a big, complicated query. Note that Honey SQL makes no attempt to verify that your queries make any sense. It merely renders surface syntax.
(-> (select :f.* :b.baz :c.quux [:b.bla "bla-bla"]
(sql/call :now) (sql/raw "@x := 10"))
(modifiers :distinct)
(from [:foo :f] [:baz :b])
(join :draq [:= :f.b :draq.x])
(left-join [:clod :c] [:= :f.a :c.d])
(right-join :bock [:= :bock.z :c.e])
(where [:or
[:and [:= :f.a "bort"] [:not= :b.baz (sql/param :param1)]]
[:< 1 2 3]
[:in :f.e [1 (sql/param :param2) 3]]
[:between :f.e 10 20]])
(group :f.a)
(having [:< 0 :f.e])
(order-by [:b.baz :desc] :c.quux)
(limit 50)
(offset 10))
=> {:select [:f.* :b.baz :c.quux [:b.bla "bla-bla"]
(sql/call :now) (sql/raw "@x := 10")]
:modifiers [:distinct]
:from [[:foo :f] [:baz :b]]
:join [:draq [:= :f.b :draq.x]]
:left-join [[:clod :c] [:= :f.a :c.d]]
:right-join [:bock [:= :bock.z :c.e]]
:where [:or
[:and [:= :f.a "bort"] [:not= :b.baz (sql/param :param1)]]
[:< 1 2 3]
[:in :f.e [1 (sql/param :param2) 3]]
[:between :f.e 10 20]]
:group-by [:f.a]
:having [:< 0 :f.e]
:order-by [[:b.baz :desc] :c.quux]
:limit 50
:offset 10}
(sql/format *1 {:param1 "gabba" :param2 2})
=> ["SELECT DISTINCT f.*, b.baz, c.quux, b.bla AS \"bla-bla\", NOW(), @x := 10
FROM foo AS f, baz AS b
INNER JOIN draq ON f.b = draq.x
LEFT JOIN clod AS c ON f.a = c.d
RIGHT JOIN bock ON bock.z = c.e
WHERE ((f.a = ? AND b.baz <> ?)
OR (1 < 2 AND 2 < 3)
OR (f.e IN (1, ?, 3))
OR f.e BETWEEN 10 AND 20)
GROUP BY f.a
HAVING 0 < f.e
ORDER BY b.baz DESC, c.quux
LIMIT 50
OFFSET 10 "
"bort" "gabba" 2]
;; Printable and readable
(= *2 (read-string (pr-str *2)))
=> true
Extensibility
You can define your own function handlers for use in where:
(require '[honeysql.format :as fmt])
(defmethod fmt/fn-handler "betwixt" [_ field lower upper]
(str (fmt/to-sql field) " BETWIXT "
(fmt/to-sql lower) " AND " (fmt/to-sql upper)))
(-> (select :a) (where [:betwixt :a 1 10]) sql/format)
=> ["SELECT a WHERE a BETWIXT 1 AND 10"]
You can also define your own clauses:
;; Takes a MapEntry of the operator & clause data, plus the entire SQL map
(defmethod fmt/format-clause :foobar [[op v] sqlmap]
(str "FOOBAR " (fmt/to-sql v)))
(sql/format {:select [:a :b] :foobar :baz})
=> ["SELECT a, b FOOBAR baz"]
(require '[honeysql.helpers :refer [defhelper]])
;; Defines a helper function, and allows 'build' to recognize your clause
(defhelper foobar [m args]
(assoc m :foobar (first args)))
(-> (select :a :b) (foobar :baz) sql/format)
=> ["SELECT a, b FOOBAR baz"]
If you do implement a clause or function handler, consider submitting a pull request so others can use it, too.
TODO
- Create table, etc.
License
Copyright © 2012 Justin Kramer
Distributed under the Eclipse Public License, the same as Clojure.