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SPARQL kernel

This module installs a Jupyter kernel for SPARQL. It allows sending queries to an SPARQL endpoint and fetching & presenting the results in a notebook.

It is implemented as a Jupyter wrapper kernel, by using the Python SPARQLWrapper & rdflib packages.

Requirements

The kernel has only been tried with Jupyter 4.x. It works with Python 2.7 and Python 3 (tested with Python 3.6).

The above mentioned SPARQLWrapper & rdflib Python packages are required dependencies (they are marked as such, so they will automatically be installed with the package if needed).

An optional dependency is Graphviz, needed to create diagrams for RDF result graphs (Graphviz's dot program must be available for that to work).

Installation

You will need Jupyter >= 4.0. The module is installable via pip.

The installation process requires two steps:

  1. Install the Python package:

    pip install sparqlkernel
    
  2. Install the kernel into Jupyter:

    jupyter sparqlkernel install [--user] [--logdir <dir>]
    

The --user option will install the kernel in the current user's personal config, while the generic command will install it as a global kernel (but needs write permissions in the system directories).

Additionally, the --logdir <dir> option will define the default directory to use for logfiles (it can be overriden when executing the kernel by defining the LOGDIR environment variable). By default it will use the system temporal directory.

Note that kernel installation also installs some custom CSS and a modification for a Pygments highlighter; its purpose is to improve the layout of the kernel results as they are presented in the notebook and to improve conversion to other formats (HTML). But it also means that the rendered notebook will look slightly different in a Jupyter deployment in which the kernel has not been installed, or within an online viewer.

The examples subdirectory contains some notebook examples (again, they will look slightly different if viewed on a running kernel). They can also be viewed through the online Notebook viewer.

To uninstall, perform the inverse operations (in reverse order), to uninstall the kernel from Jupyter and to remove the Python package:

jupyter sparqlkernel remove
pip uninstall sparqlkernel

Syntax

The kernel implements the standard SPARQL primitives: SELECT, ASK, DESCRIBE, CONSTRUCT. Once the endpoint is defined (see magics below), just write a SPARQL valid query in a cell and execute it; the query will be sent to the endpoint and the results printed out.

The kernel features keyword autocompletion (TAB key), as well as contextual help (Shift-TAB). This is unfinished work: completion is currently done as isolated SPARQL keywords (no SPARQL syntax context is used) and only a few keywords have contextual help, as of now.

It also installs menu entries in the HELP menu pointing to SPARQL documentation.

Execution

The query results are displayed in the notebook as cell results; there are a number of choices for the display format, controlled via magics (see below).

Each SPARQL query is immediately launched, and once the results are printed out it is forgotten. Cells are thus completely independent from each other (except for magics, which are persistent).

When a notebook is fully executed (e.g. Cells -> Run all), all code cells in the notebook, and hence all queries, are executed in sequence. To avoid execution of any particular cell, its type can be changed to RAW cell instead of CODE cell (in Cells -> Cell Type -> Raw).

Magics

The kernel behaviour can be controlled by the use of line magics (lines starting with %). See the magics documentation for details.

Logging

Settings defined by magics are always printed out in the cell result area (in red type) to inform what are the conditions in which a query is sent. Additionally, it is possible write logs that contain additional debug information.

The logging level is controlled by the %log magic. All logs are written to a single file, with the name sparqlkernel.log. Its default place is the machine temporal directory (e.g. /tmp in Linux, or C:/TMP in Windows). There are two possibilities to change its location:

  • When installing the kernel, use the --logdir <dir> option
  • Before starting Jupyter, define the LOGDIR environment variable.