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ipydb: Work with databases in IPython

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ipydb is an IPython plugin for running SQL queries and viewing their results.

Usage

Some demonstration videos are available in the documentation.

$ ipython
In [1] : %load_ext ipydb
In [2] : %automagic on
Automagic is ON, % prefix IS NOT needed for line magics.

In [3] : connecturl mysql://user:pass@localhost/employees
In [4] localhost/employees: tables
departments
dept_emp
dept_manager
employees
salaries
titles

In [5] localhost/employees: fields departments
departments
-----------
    dept_name                          VARCHAR(40)
    dept_no                            CHAR(4)

In [6] localhost/employees: select * from departments order by dept_name
+---------+--------------------+
| dept_no | dept_name          |
+---------+--------------------+
| d009    | Customer Service   |
| d005    | Development        |
| d002    | Finance            |
| d003    | Human Resources    |
| d001    | Marketing          |
| d004    | Production         |
| d006    | Quality Management |
| d008    | Research           |
| d007    | Sales              |

Features

  • Tab-completion of table names, fields and joins
  • View query results in ascii-table format piped through less
  • Single-line or multi-line query editing
  • Tab-completion metadata is read in the background and persisted across sessions
  • Cross-database support, thanks to SqlAlchemy: supported databases

Installation

To install ipydb:

$ pip install ipydb

You will need a python driver for your database of choice. For example:

$ pip install mysql-python

ipydb uses SqlAlchemy to interact with databases. See the Supported Databases page for a (large!) list of supported DB-API 2.0 drivers and how to write a connection URL for your particular database.

Start ipython and load the ipydb plugin:

$ ipython
In [1]: load_ext ipydb

Documentation

Documentation is available at: http://ipydb.readthedocs.org

Connecting to Databases

There are two ways to connect to a database with ipydb. Directly via a connection url, using the connecturl magic function, or, using a connection 'nickname' with the connect magic function.

1. Using connecturl

You can connect to a database using an SqlAlchemy style url as follows:

%connecturl drivername://username:password@host/database

Some examples:

In [3] : connecturl mysql://myuser:mypass@localhost/mydatabase
In [4] : connecturl sqlite:///path/to/mydb.sqlite
In [5] : connecturl sqlite:///:memory:

See the SqlAlchemy Documentation for further information.

2. Using connect and a .db-connections configuration file

For this to work, you need to create a file called .db-connections located in your home directory. .db-connections is an "ini" formatted file, parsable by python's ConfigParser module.

Here's an example of what ~/.db-connections might look like:

[mydb] ; nickname
type = mysql
username = root
password = xxxx
host = localhost
database = employees

[myotherdb] ; nickname
type = sqlite
database = /path/to/file.sqlite

Each database connection defined in ~/.db-connections is then referenceable via its [section heading]. So with the above .db-connections file, the following examples would work:

In [6] : connect mydb
In [7] mydb : connect myotherdb

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Turn your IPython console into a cross-database SQL client

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