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Parses sqlite statements and performs static analysis on them

sqlparser #

Sql parser and static analyzer written in Dart. At the moment, this library targets the sqlite dialect only.

Features #

This library aims to support every sqlite feature, which includes parsing and detailed static analysis. We can resolve what type a column in a SELECT statement has, infer types for variables, find semantic errors and more.

This library supports most sqlite features:

  • DQL: Full support, including joins, group by, nested and compound selects, WITH clauses and window functions
  • DDL: Supports CREATE TABLE statements, including advanced features like foreign keys or virtual tables (when a matching module like fts5 is enabled). This library also supports CREATE TRIGGER and CREATE INDEX statements.

Using the parser #

To obtain an abstract syntax tree from an sql statement, use SqlEngine.parse.

import 'package:sqlparser/sqlparser.dart';

final engine = SqlEngine();
final result = engine.parse('''
SELECT f.* FROM frameworks f
  INNER JOIN uses_language ul ON ul.framework = f.id
  INNER JOIN languages l ON l.id = ul.language
WHERE l.name = 'Dart'
ORDER BY f.name ASC, f.popularity DESC
LIMIT 5 OFFSET 5 * 3
  ''');
// result.rootNode contains the select statement in tree form

Analysis #

Given information about all tables and a sql statement, this library can:

  1. Determine which result columns a query is going to have, including types and nullability
  2. Make an educated guess about what type the variables in the query should have (it's not really possible to be 100% accurate about this because sqlite is very flexible at types, but this library gets it mostly right)
  3. Issue basic warnings about queries that are syntactically valid but won't run (references unknown tables / columns, uses undefined functions, etc.)

To use the analyzer, first register all known tables via SqlEngine.registerTable. Then, SqlEngine.analyze(sql) gives you an AnalysisContext which contains an annotated AST and information about errors. The type of result columns and expressions can be inferred by using AnalysisContext.typeOf(). Here's an example:

final id = TableColumn('id', const ResolvedType(type: BasicType.int));
final content = TableColumn('content', const ResolvedType(type: BasicType.text));
final demoTable = Table(
  name: 'demo',
  resolvedColumns: [id, content],
);
final engine = SqlEngine()..registerTable(demoTable);

final context =
    engine.analyze('SELECT id, d.content, *, 3 + 4 FROM demo AS d');

final select = context.root as SelectStatement;
final resolvedColumns = select.resolvedColumns;

resolvedColumns.map((c) => c.name); // id, content, id, content, 3 + 4
resolvedColumns.map((c) => context.typeOf(c).type.type); // int, text, int, text, int, int

But why? #

Moor, a persistence library for Dart apps, uses this package to generate type-safe methods from sql.

Thanks #

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Parses sqlite statements and performs static analysis on them

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License

unknown (LICENSE)

Dependencies

charcode, collection, meta, source_span

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