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SQL(1)				   parallel				SQL(1)

NAME
       sql - execute a command on a database determined	by a dburl

SYNOPSIS
       sql [options] dburl [commands]

       sql [options] dburl < commandfile

       #!/usr/bin/sql --shebang	[options] dburl

DESCRIPTION
       GNU sql aims to give a simple, unified interface	for accessing
       databases through all the different databases' command line clients. So
       far the focus has been on giving	a common way to	specify	login
       information (protocol, username,	password, hostname, and	port number),
       size (database and table	size), and running queries.

       The database is addressed using a DBURL.	If commands are	left out you
       will get	that database's	interactive shell.

       GNU sql is often	used in	combination with GNU parallel.

       dburl	A    DBURL   has   the	 following   syntax:   [sql:]vendor://
		[[user][:password]@][host][:port]/[database][?sqlquery]

		See the	section	DBURL below.

       commands	The SQL	commands to run. Each argument	will  have  a  newline
		appended.

		Example: "SELECT * FROM	foo;" "SELECT *	FROM bar;"

		If  the	arguments contain '\n' or '\x0a' this will be replaced
		with a newline:

		Example: "SELECT * FROM	foo;\n SELECT *	FROM bar;"

		If no commands are given SQL is	 read  from  the  keyboard  or
		STDIN.

		Example: echo 'SELECT *	FROM foo;' | sql mysql:///

       --csv	CSV output.

       --db-size
       --dbsize	Size  of  database. Show the size of the database on disk. For
		Oracle this requires access to read the	table dba_data_files -
		the user system	has that.

       --help
       -h	Print a	summary	of the options to GNU sql and exit.

       --html	HTML output. Turn on HTML tabular output.

       --json
       --pretty	Pretty JSON output.

       --list-databases
       --listdbs
       --show-databases
       --showdbs
		List the databases (table spaces) in the database.

       --listproc
       --proclist
       --show-processlist
		Show the list of running queries.

       --list-tables
       --show-tables
       --table-list
		List the tables	in the database.

       --noheaders
       --no-headers
       -n	Remove headers and footers  and	 print	only  tuples.  Bug  in
		Oracle:	it still prints	number of rows found.

       -p pass-through
		The  string  following	-p  will  be  given  to	 the  database
		connection program as arguments. Multiple -p's will be	joined
		with  space.  Example:	pass  '-U'  and	 the  user name	to the
		program:

		-p "-U scott" can also be written -p -U	-p scott.

       --precision <rfc3339|h|m|s|ms|u|ns>
		Precision of timestamps.

		Specifiy the format of the output timestamps: rfc3339,	h,  m,
		s, ms, u or ns.

       -r	Try 3 times. Short version of --retries	3.

       --retries ntimes
		Try ntimes times. If the client	program	returns	with an	error,
		retry the command. Default is --retries	1.

       --sep string
       -s string
		Field separator. Use string as separator between columns.

       --skip-first-line
		Do  not	 use  the  first line of input (used by	GNU sql	itself
		when called with --shebang).

       --table-size
       --tablesize
		Size of	tables.	Show the size of the tables in the database.

       --verbose
       -v	Print which command is sent.

       --version
       -V	Print the version GNU sql and exit.

       --shebang
       -Y	GNU sql	can be called as a shebang (#!)	command	as  the	 first
		line of	a script. Like this:

		  #!/usr/bin/sql -Y mysql:///

		  SELECT * FROM	foo;

		For  this  to  work  --shebang	or -Y must be set as the first
		option.

DBURL
       A    DBURL    has     the     following	   syntax:     [sql:]vendor://
       [[user][:password]@][host][:port]/[database][?sqlquery]

       To    quote    special	characters   use   %-encoding	specified   in
       http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc3986#section-2.1	(E.g.	 a    password
       containing '/' would contain '%2F').

       csv:///%2Ftmp%2Fparallel-bug-56096/mytable
       csv:////tmp/parallel-bug-56096/mytable mysql://me@/me/ mysql:////

       sqlite3:///%2Frun%2Fshm%2Fparallel.db
       sqlite3:///%2Frun%2Fshm%2Fparallel.db/table
       sqlite:///%2Ftmp%2Ffile.sqlite?SELECT   csv:///%2Ftmp%2Fparallel-CSV/OK
       csv:///%2Fmust%2Ffail/fail sqlite3:///%2Frun%2Fshm%2Fparallel.db

       Examples:

	mysql://scott:tiger@my.example.com/mydb
	influxdb://scott:tiger@influxdb.example.com/foo
	sql:oracle://scott:tiger@ora.example.com/xe
	postgresql://scott:tiger@pg.example.com/pgdb
	pg:///
	postgresqlssl://scott@pg.example.com:3333/pgdb
	sql:sqlite2:////tmp/db.sqlite?SELECT * FROM foo;
	sqlite3:///../db.sqlite3?SELECT%20*%20FROM%20foo;

       Currently supported vendors:

        MySQL (mysql) with SSL	(mysqls, mysqlssl)

        Oracle	(oracle, ora)

        PostgreSQL (postgresql, pg, pgsql, postgres) with SSL (postgresqlssl,
	 pgs, pgsqlssl,	postgresssl, pgssl, postgresqls, pgsqls, postgress)

        SQLite2 (sqlite, sqlite2)

        SQLite3 (sqlite3)

        InfluxDB 1.x (influx, influxdb)  with	SSL  (influxdbssl,  influxdbs,
	 influxs, influxssl)

       Aliases	must  start  with  ':'	and are	read from /etc/sql/aliases and
       ~/.sql/aliases. The user's own ~/.sql/aliases should only  be  readable
       by the user.

       Example of aliases:

	:myalias1 pg://scott:tiger@pg.example.com/pgdb
	:myalias2 ora://scott:tiger@ora.example.com/xe
	# Short	form of	mysql://`whoami`:nopassword@localhost:3306/`whoami`
	:myalias3 mysql:///
	# Short	form of	mysql://`whoami`:nopassword@localhost:33333/mydb
	:myalias4 mysql://:33333/mydb
	# Alias	for an alias
	:m	:myalias4
	# the sortest alias possible
	:	sqlite2:////tmp/db.sqlite
	# Including an SQL query
	:query	sqlite:////tmp/db.sqlite?SELECT	* FROM foo;

EXAMPLES
   Get an interactive prompt
       The most	basic use of GNU sql is	to get an interactive prompt:

       sql sql:oracle://scott:tiger@ora.example.com/xe

       If you have setup an alias you can do:

       sql :myora

   Run a query
       To run a	query directly from the	command	line:

       sql :myalias "SELECT * FROM foo;"

       Oracle  requires	 newlines  after each statement. This can be done like
       this:

       sql :myora "SELECT * FROM foo;" "SELECT * FROM bar;"

       Or this:

       sql :myora "SELECT * FROM foo;\nSELECT *	FROM bar;"

   Copy	a PostgreSQL database
       To copy a PostgreSQL database use pg_dump to generate the dump and  GNU
       sql to import it:

       pg_dump pg_database | sql pg://scott:tiger@pg.example.com/pgdb

   Empty all tables in a MySQL database
       Using  GNU  parallel  it	 is  easy to empty all tables without dropping
       them:

       sql -n mysql:///	'show tables' |	parallel sql mysql:/// DELETE FROM {};

   Drop	all tables in a	PostgreSQL database
       To drop all tables in a PostgreSQL database do:

       sql -n pg:/// '\dt' | parallel --colsep '\|' -r sql pg:///  DROP	 TABLE
       {2};

   Run as a script
       Instead of doing:

       sql mysql:/// < sqlfile

       you  can	 combine  the  sqlfile	with  the DBURL	to make	a UNIX-script.
       Create a	script called demosql:

       #!/usr/bin/sql -Y mysql:///

       SELECT *	FROM foo;

       Then do:

       chmod +x	demosql; ./demosql

   Use --colsep	to process multiple columns
       Use GNU parallel's --colsep to separate columns:

       sql -s '\t' :myalias 'SELECT * FROM  foo;'  |  parallel	--colsep  '\t'
       do_stuff	{4} {1}

   Retry if the	connection fails
       If  the	access	to  the	database fails occasionally --retries can help
       make sure the query succeeds:

       sql --retries 5 :myalias	'SELECT	* FROM really_big_foo;'

   Get info about the running database system
       Show how	big the	database is:

       sql --db-size :myalias

       List the	tables:

       sql --list-tables :myalias

       List the	size of	the tables:

       sql --table-size	:myalias

       List the	running	processes:

       sql --show-processlist :myalias

REPORTING BUGS
       GNU sql is part of GNU parallel.	Report bugs to <bug-parallel@gnu.org>.

AUTHOR
       When using GNU sql for a	publication please cite:

       O. Tange	(2011):	GNU SQL	- A Command Line Tool for Accessing  Different
       Databases Using DBURLs, ;login: The USENIX Magazine, April 2011:29-32.

       Copyright (C) 2008-2010 Ole Tange http://ole.tange.dk

       Copyright   (C)	2010-2025  Ole	Tange,	http://ole.tange.dk  and  Free
       Software	Foundation, Inc.

LICENSE
       This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it
       under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published  by  the
       Free  Software  Foundation; either version 3 of the License, or at your
       option any later	version.

       This program is distributed in the hope that it	will  be  useful,  but
       WITHOUT	 ANY   WARRANTY;   without   even   the	 implied  warranty  of
       MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR  A  PARTICULAR  PURPOSE.	 See  the  GNU
       General Public License for more details.

       You should have received	a copy of the GNU General Public License along
       with this program.  If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.

   Documentation license I
       Permission   is	 granted   to  copy,  distribute  and/or  modify  this
       documentation under the terms of	the GNU	 Free  Documentation  License,
       Version	1.3  or	 any  later  version  published	 by  the Free Software
       Foundation; with	no Invariant Sections, with no Front-Cover Texts,  and
       with  no	 Back-Cover  Texts.   A	copy of	the license is included	in the
       file LICENSES/GFDL-1.3-or-later.txt.

   Documentation license II
       You are free:

       to Share	to copy, distribute and	transmit the work

       to Remix	to adapt the work

       Under the following conditions:

       Attribution
		You must attribute the work in the  manner  specified  by  the
		author or licensor (but	not in any way that suggests that they
		endorse	you or your use	of the work).

       Share Alike
		If  you	 alter,	 transform,  or	 build upon this work, you may
		distribute the resulting work only under the same, similar  or
		a compatible license.

       With the	understanding that:

       Waiver	Any  of	 the  above  conditions	 can  be  waived  if  you  get
		permission from	the copyright holder.

       Public Domain
		Where the work or any of its elements is in the	public	domain
		under applicable law, that status is in	no way affected	by the
		license.

       Other Rights
		In  no	way  are  any  of the following	rights affected	by the
		license:

			 Your fair  dealing  or	 fair  use  rights,  or	 other
			 applicable copyright exceptions and limitations;

			 The author's moral rights;

			 Rights	 other	persons	 may  have  either in the work
			 itself	or in how the work is used, such as  publicity
			 or privacy rights.

       Notice	For  any  reuse	or distribution, you must make clear to	others
		the license terms of this work.

       A copy of the full license is included in the file as cc-by-sa.txt.

DEPENDENCIES
       GNU sql uses Perl. If mysql is installed, MySQL dburls  will  work.  If
       psql   is  installed,  PostgreSQL  dburls  will	work.	If  sqlite  is
       installed, SQLite2 dburls will work.  If	sqlite3	is installed,  SQLite3
       dburls  will work. If sqlplus is	installed, Oracle dburls will work. If
       rlwrap is installed, GNU	sql will have a	command	history	for Oracle.

FILES
       ~/.sql/aliases -	user's own aliases with	DBURLs

       /etc/sql/aliases	- common aliases with DBURLs

SEE ALSO
       mysql(1),  psql(1),  rlwrap(1),	sqlite(1),   sqlite3(1),   sqlplus(1),
       influx(1)

20250222			  2025-04-17				SQL(1)

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