From 6884720fae8a2622b14e93d9e35ca5fcc2283b40 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Daniel Baumann Date: Mon, 8 Feb 2021 11:31:05 +0100 Subject: Adding upstream version 3.1.0. Signed-off-by: Daniel Baumann --- README.rst | 372 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 372 insertions(+) create mode 100644 README.rst (limited to 'README.rst') diff --git a/README.rst b/README.rst new file mode 100644 index 0000000..d593427 --- /dev/null +++ b/README.rst @@ -0,0 +1,372 @@ +A REPL for Postgres +------------------- + +|Build Status| |CodeCov| |PyPI| |Landscape| |Gitter| + +This is a postgres client that does auto-completion and syntax highlighting. + +Home Page: http://pgcli.com + +MySQL Equivalent: http://mycli.net + +.. image:: screenshots/pgcli.gif +.. image:: screenshots/image01.png + +Quick Start +----------- + +If you already know how to install python packages, then you can simply do: + +:: + + $ pip install -U pgcli + + or + + $ sudo apt-get install pgcli # Only on Debian based Linux (e.g. Ubuntu, Mint, etc) + $ brew install pgcli # Only on macOS + +If you don't know how to install python packages, please check the +`detailed instructions`_. + +If you are restricted to using psycopg2 2.7.x then pip will try to install it from a binary. There are some known issues with the psycopg2 2.7 binary - see the `psycopg docs`_ for more information about this and how to force installation from source. psycopg2 2.8 has fixed these problems, and will build from source. + +.. _`detailed instructions`: https://github.com/dbcli/pgcli#detailed-installation-instructions +.. _`psycopg docs`: http://initd.org/psycopg/docs/install.html#change-in-binary-packages-between-psycopg-2-7-and-2-8 + +Usage +----- + +:: + + $ pgcli [database_name] + + or + + $ pgcli postgresql://[user[:password]@][netloc][:port][/dbname][?extra=value[&other=other-value]] + +Examples: + +:: + + $ pgcli local_database + + $ pgcli postgres://amjith:pa$$w0rd@example.com:5432/app_db?sslmode=verify-ca&sslrootcert=/myrootcert + +For more details: + +:: + + $ pgcli --help + + Usage: pgcli [OPTIONS] [DBNAME] [USERNAME] + + Options: + -h, --host TEXT Host address of the postgres database. + -p, --port INTEGER Port number at which the postgres instance is + listening. + -U, --username TEXT Username to connect to the postgres database. + -u, --user TEXT Username to connect to the postgres database. + -W, --password Force password prompt. + -w, --no-password Never prompt for password. + --single-connection Do not use a separate connection for completions. + -v, --version Version of pgcli. + -d, --dbname TEXT database name to connect to. + --pgclirc PATH Location of pgclirc file. + -D, --dsn TEXT Use DSN configured into the [alias_dsn] section of + pgclirc file. + --list-dsn list of DSN configured into the [alias_dsn] section + of pgclirc file. + --row-limit INTEGER Set threshold for row limit prompt. Use 0 to disable + prompt. + --less-chatty Skip intro on startup and goodbye on exit. + --prompt TEXT Prompt format (Default: "\u@\h:\d> "). + --prompt-dsn TEXT Prompt format for connections using DSN aliases + (Default: "\u@\h:\d> "). + -l, --list list available databases, then exit. + --auto-vertical-output Automatically switch to vertical output mode if the + result is wider than the terminal width. + --warn / --no-warn Warn before running a destructive query. + --help Show this message and exit. + +``pgcli`` also supports many of the same `environment variables`_ as ``psql`` for login options (e.g. ``PGHOST``, ``PGPORT``, ``PGUSER``, ``PGPASSWORD``, ``PGDATABASE``). + +The SSL-related environment variables are also supported, so if you need to connect a postgres database via ssl connection, you can set set environment like this: + +:: + + export PGSSLMODE="verify-full" + export PGSSLCERT="/your-path-to-certs/client.crt" + export PGSSLKEY="/your-path-to-keys/client.key" + export PGSSLROOTCERT="/your-path-to-ca/ca.crt" + pgcli -h localhost -p 5432 -U username postgres + +.. _environment variables: https://www.postgresql.org/docs/current/libpq-envars.html + +Features +-------- + +The `pgcli` is written using prompt_toolkit_. + +* Auto-completes as you type for SQL keywords as well as tables and + columns in the database. +* Syntax highlighting using Pygments. +* Smart-completion (enabled by default) will suggest context-sensitive + completion. + + - ``SELECT * FROM `` will only show table names. + - ``SELECT * FROM users WHERE `` will only show column names. + +* Primitive support for ``psql`` back-slash commands. +* Pretty prints tabular data. + +.. _prompt_toolkit: https://github.com/jonathanslenders/python-prompt-toolkit +.. _tabulate: https://pypi.python.org/pypi/tabulate + +Config +------ +A config file is automatically created at ``~/.config/pgcli/config`` at first launch. +See the file itself for a description of all available options. + +Contributions: +-------------- + +If you're interested in contributing to this project, first of all I would like +to extend my heartfelt gratitude. I've written a small doc to describe how to +get this running in a development setup. + +https://github.com/dbcli/pgcli/blob/master/DEVELOP.rst + +Please feel free to reach out to me if you need help. +My email: amjith.r@gmail.com, Twitter: `@amjithr `_ + +Detailed Installation Instructions: +----------------------------------- + +macOS: +====== + +The easiest way to install pgcli is using Homebrew. + +:: + + $ brew install pgcli + +Done! + +Alternatively, you can install ``pgcli`` as a python package using a package +manager called called ``pip``. You will need postgres installed on your system +for this to work. + +In depth getting started guide for ``pip`` - https://pip.pypa.io/en/latest/installing.html. + +:: + + $ which pip + +If it is installed then you can do: + +:: + + $ pip install pgcli + +If that fails due to permission issues, you might need to run the command with +sudo permissions. + +:: + + $ sudo pip install pgcli + +If pip is not installed check if easy_install is available on the system. + +:: + + $ which easy_install + + $ sudo easy_install pgcli + +Linux: +====== + +In depth getting started guide for ``pip`` - https://pip.pypa.io/en/latest/installing.html. + +Check if pip is already available in your system. + +:: + + $ which pip + +If it doesn't exist, use your linux package manager to install `pip`. This +might look something like: + +:: + + $ sudo apt-get install python-pip # Debian, Ubuntu, Mint etc + + or + + $ sudo yum install python-pip # RHEL, Centos, Fedora etc + +``pgcli`` requires python-dev, libpq-dev and libevent-dev packages. You can +install these via your operating system package manager. + + +:: + + $ sudo apt-get install python-dev libpq-dev libevent-dev + + or + + $ sudo yum install python-devel postgresql-devel + +Then you can install pgcli: + +:: + + $ sudo pip install pgcli + + +Docker +====== + +Pgcli can be run from within Docker. This can be useful to try pgcli without +installing it, or any dependencies, system-wide. + +To build the image: + +:: + + $ docker build -t pgcli . + +To create a container from the image: + +:: + + $ docker run --rm -ti pgcli pgcli + +To access postgresql databases listening on localhost, make sure to run the +docker in "host net mode". E.g. to access a database called "foo" on the +postgresql server running on localhost:5432 (the standard port): + +:: + + $ docker run --rm -ti --net host pgcli pgcli -h localhost foo + +To connect to a locally running instance over a unix socket, bind the socket to +the docker container: + +:: + + $ docker run --rm -ti -v /var/run/postgres:/var/run/postgres pgcli pgcli foo + + +IPython +======= + +Pgcli can be run from within `IPython `_ console. When working on a query, +it may be useful to drop into a pgcli session without leaving the IPython console, iterate on a +query, then quit pgcli to find the query results in your IPython workspace. + +Assuming you have IPython installed: + +:: + + $ pip install ipython-sql + +After that, run ipython and load the ``pgcli.magic`` extension: + +:: + + $ ipython + + In [1]: %load_ext pgcli.magic + + +Connect to a database and construct a query: + +:: + + In [2]: %pgcli postgres://someone@localhost:5432/world + Connected: someone@world + someone@localhost:world> select * from city c where countrycode = 'USA' and population > 1000000; + +------+--------------+---------------+--------------+--------------+ + | id | name | countrycode | district | population | + |------+--------------+---------------+--------------+--------------| + | 3793 | New York | USA | New York | 8008278 | + | 3794 | Los Angeles | USA | California | 3694820 | + | 3795 | Chicago | USA | Illinois | 2896016 | + | 3796 | Houston | USA | Texas | 1953631 | + | 3797 | Philadelphia | USA | Pennsylvania | 1517550 | + | 3798 | Phoenix | USA | Arizona | 1321045 | + | 3799 | San Diego | USA | California | 1223400 | + | 3800 | Dallas | USA | Texas | 1188580 | + | 3801 | San Antonio | USA | Texas | 1144646 | + +------+--------------+---------------+--------------+--------------+ + SELECT 9 + Time: 0.003s + + +Exit out of pgcli session with ``Ctrl + D`` and find the query results: + +:: + + someone@localhost:world> + Goodbye! + 9 rows affected. + Out[2]: + [(3793, u'New York', u'USA', u'New York', 8008278), + (3794, u'Los Angeles', u'USA', u'California', 3694820), + (3795, u'Chicago', u'USA', u'Illinois', 2896016), + (3796, u'Houston', u'USA', u'Texas', 1953631), + (3797, u'Philadelphia', u'USA', u'Pennsylvania', 1517550), + (3798, u'Phoenix', u'USA', u'Arizona', 1321045), + (3799, u'San Diego', u'USA', u'California', 1223400), + (3800, u'Dallas', u'USA', u'Texas', 1188580), + (3801, u'San Antonio', u'USA', u'Texas', 1144646)] + +The results are available in special local variable ``_``, and can be assigned to a variable of your +choice: + +:: + + In [3]: my_result = _ + +Pgcli only runs on Python3.6+ since 2.2.0, if you use an old version of Python, +you should use install ``pgcli <= 2.2.0``. + +Thanks: +------- + +A special thanks to `Jonathan Slenders `_ for +creating `Python Prompt Toolkit `_, +which is quite literally the backbone library, that made this app possible. +Jonathan has also provided valuable feedback and support during the development +of this app. + +`Click `_ is used for command line option parsing +and printing error messages. + +Thanks to `psycopg `_ for providing a rock solid +interface to Postgres database. + +Thanks to all the beta testers and contributors for your time and patience. :) + + +.. |Build Status| image:: https://api.travis-ci.org/dbcli/pgcli.svg?branch=master + :target: https://travis-ci.org/dbcli/pgcli + +.. |CodeCov| image:: https://codecov.io/gh/dbcli/pgcli/branch/master/graph/badge.svg + :target: https://codecov.io/gh/dbcli/pgcli + :alt: Code coverage report + +.. |Landscape| image:: https://landscape.io/github/dbcli/pgcli/master/landscape.svg?style=flat + :target: https://landscape.io/github/dbcli/pgcli/master + :alt: Code Health + +.. |PyPI| image:: https://img.shields.io/pypi/v/pgcli.svg + :target: https://pypi.python.org/pypi/pgcli/ + :alt: Latest Version + +.. |Gitter| image:: https://badges.gitter.im/Join%20Chat.svg + :target: https://gitter.im/dbcli/pgcli?utm_source=badge&utm_medium=badge&utm_campaign=pr-badge&utm_content=badge + :alt: Gitter Chat -- cgit v1.2.3