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( à la SQL ) [ælæ ɛskju:ɛl] - AlaSQL is an open source SQL database for Javascript with a strong focus on query speed and datasource flexibility for relational data, schemaless data, and graph data. It works in your browser, Node.js, IO.js and Cordova.
The library is designed for:
- Fast SQL based in-memory data processing for BI and ERP applications on fat clients
- Easy ETL and option for persistency by data import / manipulation / export for several formats
- All major browsers, Node.js, and mobile applications
We focus on speed by taking advantage of the dynamic nature of javascript when building up queries. Real world solutions demands flexibility regarding where data comes from and where it is to be stored. We focus on flexibility by making sure you can import/export and query directly on data stored in Excel (both xls
and .xlsx
), CSV, JSON, TAB, IndexedDB, LocalStorage, and SQLite files.
The library brings you the comfort of a full database engine to your javascript app. No, really - its working towards a full database engine complying with most of SQL-99 spiced up with additional syntax for handling noSQL (schema less) data and graph networks.
// A) Traditional SQL
alasql("CREATE TABLE cities (city string, population number)");
alasql("INSERT INTO cities VALUES ('Rome',2863223),('Paris',2249975),('Berlin',3517424),('Madrid',3041579)");
var res = alasql("SELECT * FROM cities WHERE population < 3500000 ORDER BY population DESC");
console.log(res);
/*
[
{
"city": "Madrid",
"population": 3041579
},
{
"city": "Rome",
"population": 2863223
},
{
"city": "Paris",
"population": 2249975
}
]
*/
// B) SQL on array of objects
var data = [{a:1,b:10}, {a:2,b:20}, {a:1,b:30}];
var res = alasql('SELECT a, SUM(b) AS b FROM ? GROUP BY a',[data]);
console.log(res); // [{"a":1,"b":40},{"a":2,"b":20}]
// C) Promise notation + read from file example
alasql.promise('SELECT * FROM XLS("mydata.xls") WHERE lastname LIKE "A%" and city = "London" GROUP BY name ')
.then(function(res){
console.log(res); // output depends on mydata.xls
}).catch(function(err){
console.log('Does the file exists? there was an error:', err);
});
// D) Cheat and load your data directly
alasql("CREATE TABLE example1 (a INT, b INT)");
alasql.tables.example1.data = [ // Insert data directly from javascript object...
{a:2,b:6},
{a:3,b:4}
];
alasql("INSERT INTO example1 VALUES (1,5)"); // ...or you insert data with normal SQL
var res = alasql("SELECT * FROM example1 ORDER BY b DESC");
console.log(res); // [{a:2,b:6},{a:1,b:5},{a:3,b:4}]
jsFiddle with example A) and example B)
npm install --save alasql # node
meteor add agershun:alasql # meteor
bower install --save alasql # bower
npm install -g alasql # command line
For the browser: include alasql.min.js
<script src="http://cdn.jsdelivr.net/alasql/0.2/alasql.min.js"></script>
The wiki has a great section on how to get started
When you feel you got the grip you can check out the wiki section about data manipulation or getting inspired by the list of Q&As
-
Documentation: Github wiki
-
Library CDN: jsDelivr.com
-
Feedback: Open an issue
-
Try online: Playground
-
Website: alasql.org
All contributions are much welcome and greatly appreciated(!) - The project has never received any funding and is based on unpaid voluntary work: We really (really) love pull requests
AlaSQL project is very young and still in active development phase, therefore it may have bugs. Please, submit any bugs and suggestions as an issue. AlaSQL uses Semantic Versioning so please note that major version is zero (0.y.z) and the API can not be considered 100% stable. Consider this before using the library in production.
Please checkout the limitations of the library
AlaSQL is very focused on speed and we make sure to use all the tricks we can find to make javascript spit out your results as quick as possible. For example:
- Queries are cached as compiled functions.
- Joined tables are pre-indexed
WHERE
expressions are pre-filtered for joins
The results are good. Check out AlaSQL vs. other javaScript SQL databases:
-
3x speed compared to SQL.js selecting with
SUM
,JOIN
, andGROUP BY
. -
1x speed compared to WebSQL selecting with
SUM
,JOIN
, andGROUP BY
(in-memory operations for WebSQL - see this discussion) -
2x speed compared to Linq for
GROUP BY
on 1,048,576 rows
See more speed related info on the wiki
Use "good old" SQL on your data with multiple levels of: JOIN
, VIEW
, GROUP BY
, UNION
, PRIMARY KEY
, ANY
, ALL
, IN
, ROLLUP()
, CUBE()
, GROUPING SETS()
, CROSS APPLY
, OUTER APPLY
, WITH SELECT
, and subqueries. See the wiki to compare supported features with SQL standards.
You can use all benefits of SQL and JavaScript together by defining you own costume functions. Just add new functions to the alasql.fn object:
alasql.fn.myfn = function(a,b) {
return a*b+1;
}
var res = alasql('SELECT myfn(a,b) FROM one');
See more in the wiki
var ins = alasql.compile('INSERT INTO one VALUES (?,?)');
ins(1,10);
ins(2,20);
See more in the wiki
Group your JavaScript array of objects by field and count number of records in each group:
var data = [{a:1,b:1,c:1},{a:1,b:2,c:1},{a:1,b:3,c:1}, {a:2,b:1,c:1}];
var res = alasql('SELECT a, COUNT(*) AS b FROM ? GROUP BY a',[data]);
console.log(res);
See more ideas of creative datamanipulation in the wiki
After globally installing AlaSQL npm install alasql -g
you can access AlaSQL via the commandline
> alasql "SET @data = @[{a:'1',b:?},{a:'2',b:?}]; SELECT a, b FROM @data;" 10 20
[ 1, [ { a: 1, b: 10 }, { a: 2, b: 20 } ] ]
> alasql "VALUE OF SELECT COUNT(*) as abc FROM TXT('README.md') WHERE LENGTH([0]) > ?" 140
// Number of lines with more than 140 characters in README.md
See more in the wiki
AlaSQL plays nice with d3.js and gives you a convenient way to integrate a specific subset of your data vis the visual powers of d3. See more about D3.js and AlaSQL in the wiki
AlaSQL can export data to both Excel 2003 (.xls) and Excel 2007 (.xlsx) with coloring of cells and other Excel formatting functions.
Meteor is amazing. You can now query directly on your Meteor collections with SQL - simple and easy. See more about Meteor and AlaSQL in the wiki
Angular is great. Besides using AlaSQL for normal data manipulation it works like a charm for exporting you present scope to Excel. See more about Angular and AlaSQL in the wiki
Pinpointing data on a map should be easy. AlaSQL is great to prepare source data for Google Maps from for example Excel or CSV making a one unit of work for fetching and identifying whats relevant. See more about Google Maps and AlaSQL in the wiki
AlaSQL can query data directly from a google spreadsheet. A good "partnership" for easy editing and powerfull data manipulation. See more about Google Spreadsheets and AlaSQL in the wiki
AlaSQL supports plugins. To install the plugin you need to use the REQUIRE
statement. See more at the wiki
AlaSQL is a multi-paradigm database with support for graphs that can be searched or manipulated.
// Who loves lovers of Alice?
var res = alasql('SEARCH / ANY(>> >> #Alice) name');
console.log(res) // ['Olga','Helen']
See more at the wiki
AlaSQL can work as a webworker. Include alasql-worker.js and thats's it: AlaSQL will work as a webworker.
<script src="alasql-worker.min.js"></script>
<script>
var arr = [{a:1},{a:2},{a:1}];
alasql('SELECT * FROM ?',[arr],function(data){
console.log(data);
});
</script>
Try the example at jsFiddle.
Another option - run alasql.worker() function:
<script src="alasql.min.js"></script>
<script>
alasql.worker();
var res = alasql('select value 10',[],function(res){
console.log(res);
});
</script>
Try this example in jsFiddle.
Also you can use AlaSQL in webworker just simply load it as a script:
importScripts('alasql.min.js');
Now AlaSQL can work with files in XLS, XSLX, CSV, TAB, TXT, and JSON format
alasql('select * into one from csv("mydata.csv")');
alasql('select Country, Name from xlsx("cities.xlsx",{headers:true, range:"B1:E10"})\
where Population > 100000',
[],function(data){
console.log(data);
});
See test168 and test169 for examples
AlaSQL can read (not write) SQLite data files if you include SQL.js library:
<script src="alasql.js"></script>
<script src="sql.js"></script>
<script>
alasql('ATTACH SQLITE DATABASE Chinook("Chinook_Sqlite.sqlite");\
USE Chinook; \
SELECT * FROM Genre',[],function(res){
console.log("Genres:",res.pop());
});
</script>
See more detailed the example.
Upload CSV file with headers to IndexedDB database, and then save only asian countries to Excel file:
alasql('ATTACH INDEXEDDB DATABASE geo; \
CREATE TABLE IF NOT EXISTS geo.country; \
SELECT * INTO geo.country FROM CSV("country.csv",{headers:true}); \
SELECT * INTO XLSX("asia.xlsx") FROM geo.country WHERE continent_name = "Asia"');
See the example.
Most of SQL-99. Please see the wiki for more info
AlaSQL extends "good old" SQL to make it closer to JavaScript. The "sugar" includes:
- Json objects -
{a:'1',b:@['1','2','3']}
- Object propertires -
obj->property->subproperty
- Object and arrays elements -
obj->(a*1)
- JavaScript functions -
obj->valueOf()
- SELECT VALUE, ROW, COLUMN, MATRIX to format results of query
You can use browser localStorage and DOM-storage as a data storage. Here is a sample:
alasql('CREATE localStorage DATABASE IF NOT EXISTS Atlas');
alasql('ATTACH localStorage DATABASE Atlas AS MyAtlas');
alasql('CREATE TABLE IF NOT EXISTS MyAtlas.City (city string, population number)');
alasql('SELECT * INTO MyAtlas.City FROM ?',[[{city:'Vienna', population:1731000},
{city:'Budapest', population:1728000}]]);
var res = alasql('SELECT * FROM MyAtlas.City');
console.log(res);
Try this sample in jsFiddle. Run this sample two or three times, and AlaSQL store more and more data in localStorage. Here, "Atlas" is the name of localStorage database, where "MyAtlas" is a memory AlaSQL database.
You can use localStorage in two modes: SET AUTOCOMMIT ON to immediate save data to localStorage after each statement or SET AUTOCOMMIT OFF. In this case you need to use COMMIT statement to save all data from in-memory mirror to localStorage.
You can use files in these formats directly from AlaSQL (in sync and async modes):
var res1 = alasq("select * from txt('mytext.txt') where [0] like 'M%'");
var res2 = alasq("select * from tab('mydata.tab') order by [1]");
var res3 = alasq("select [3] as city,[4] as population from csv('cities.csv')");
alasq("select * from json('array.json')",[],function(res4){
console.log(res4)
});
See test157.js as an example.
You can use JSON objects in your databases (do not forget use == and !== operators for deep comparision of objects):
alasql> SELECT VALUE {a:'1',b:'2'}
{a:1,b:2}
alasql> SELECT VALUE {a:'1',b:'2'} == {a:'1',b:'2'}
true
alasql> SELECT VALUE {a:'1',b:'2'}->b
2
alasql> SELECT VALUE {a:'1',b:(2*2)}->b
4
Try AlaSQL JSON objects in Console [sample](http://alasql.org/console?drop table if exists one;create table one;insert into one values {a:@[1,2,3],c:{e:23}}, {a:@[{b:@[1,2,3]}]};select * from one)
Yes, you can even use AlaSQL as a very simple server for tests.
To run enter the command:
alaserver [port]
then type in browser something like "http://127.0.0.1:1337/?SELECT VALUE 2*2"
Warning: Alaserver is not multi-thread, not concurrent, and not secured.
When targeting the browser, several code bundlers like Webpack and Browserify will pick up modules you might not want.
Here's a list of modules that alasql requires
- fs
- cptable
- jszip
- xlsx
- xls
- cpexcel
- path
- es6-promise
Use the built-in IgnorePlugin
var IgnorePlugin = require("webpack").IgnorePlugin;
module.exports = {
...
//Will ignore the modules fs, path, xlsx, xls
plugins:[new IgnorePlugin(/(^fs$|xlsx|xls|^path$)/)]
};
Read up on excluding, ignoring, and shimming
Example (using excluding)
var browserify = require("browserify");
var b = browserify("./main.js").bundle();
//Will ignore the modules fs, path, xlsx, xls
["fs","path","xlsx","xls"].map(ignore => b.ignore(ignore));
Take charge and add your idea or vote on your favorite feature to be implemented:
Please be aware that AlaSQL may have bugs. Besides the bugs there are a number of limitations
-
AlaSQL has a (long) list of keywords that must be escaped if used for column names. When selecting a field named
key
please writeSELECT `key` FROM ...
instead. This is also the case for words like`value`
,`read`
,`count`
,`by`
,`top`
,`path`
,`deleted`
,`work`
and`offset`
. Please consult the full list of keywords. -
It is Ok with select for 1000000 records or to join two tables by 10000 records in each (You can use streaming functions to work with longer datasources - see test/test143.js) but be aware that the workload is multiplied so selecting from more than 8 tables with just 100 rows in each will show bad performance. This is one of our top priorities to make better.
-
Limited functionality for transactions (supports only for localStorage) - Sorry, transactions are limited, because AlaSQL started to use more complex approach for PRIMARY KEYS / FOREIGN KEYS. Transactions will be fully turned on again in future version.
-
A
(FULL) OUTER JOIN
andRIGHT JOIN
on more than 2 tables will not give the expected results.INNER JOIN
andLEFT JOIN
are ok. -
Please use alias for field names with the same name (
SELECT a.id as a_id, b.id as b_id FORM ?
).
Probably, there are many of others. Please, help us to fix them by submitting it as an issue. Thank you!
If you want to try the last development version of the library please download this file or visit the testbench to play around in the browser console.
AlaSQL uses mocha
for tests. Install mocha and run
> npm test
or run test/index.html for tests in browser (Please serve via localhost with for example http-server
).
Now you can use AlaSQL ASSERT operator to test results of previous operation:
CREATE TABLE one (a INT);
ASSERT 1;
INSERT INTO one VALUES (1),(2),(3);
ASSERT 3;
SELECT * FROM one ORDER BY a DESC;
ASSERT [{a:3},{a:2},{a:1}];
AlaSQL uses SQLLOGICTEST to test it compatibility with SQL-99. The tests include about 2.000.000 queries and statements.
The testruns can be found in the testlog.
AlaSQL uses FileSaver.js library for saving files locally from the browser. Please be aware that it does not save files in Safari 8.0.
MIT - see MIT licence information
Many thanks to Zach Carter for Jison parser generator, to the author of FileSaver.js, Andrew Kent for his SQL Parser, authors of XLSX library, and other people for useful tools, which make our work much easier.
- AlaX - Export to Excel with colors and formats
- WebSQLShim - WebSQL shim over IndexedDB (work in progress)
- AlaMDX - JavaScript MDX OLAP library (work in progress)
- Other similar projects - list of databases on JavaScript
© 2014-2016, Andrey Gershun (agershun@gmail.com) & M. Rangel Wulff (m@rawu.dk)