spyql
octosql
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spyql | octosql | |
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23 | 34 | |
902 | 4,695 | |
- | - | |
0.0 | 1.2 | |
over 1 year ago | 5 days ago | |
Jupyter Notebook | Go | |
MIT License | Mozilla Public License 2.0 |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
spyql
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Fq: Jq for Binary Formats
I prefer a SQL-like format. It’s not as complete but it cover most of the day-to-day use cases. Take a look at https://github.com/dcmoura/spyql (I am the author). Congrats on fq!
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Command-line data analytics made easy with SPyQL
SPyQL documentation: spyql.readthedocs.io
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This Week In Python
spyql – Query data on the command line with SQL-like SELECTs powered by Python expressions
- Command-line data analytics made easy
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Jc – JSONifies the output of many CLI tools
This is great!
I am the author of SPyQL [1]. Combining JC with SPyQL you can easily query the json output and run python commands on top of it from the command-line :-) You can do aggregations and so forth in a much simpler and intuitive way than with jq.
I just wrote a blogpost [2] that illustrates it. It is more focused on CSV, but the commands would be the same if you were working with JSON.
[1] https://github.com/dcmoura/spyql
- The fastest command-line tools for querying large JSON datasets
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Working with more than 10gb csv
You can import the data into a PostgreSQL/MySQL/SQLite/... database and then query the database. However, even with the right choice of indexes, it might take a while to run queries on a table with hundreds of millions of records. You can easily import your data to these databases with SpyQL: $ spyql "SELECT * FROM csv TO sql(table=my_table_name) | sqlite3 my.db" (you would need to create the table my_table_name before running the command).
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ClickHouse Cloud is now in Public Beta
https://github.com/dcmoura/spyql/blob/master/notebooks/json_...
And ClickHouse looks like a normal relational database - there is no need for multiple components for different tiers (like in Druid), no need for manual partitioning into "daily", "hourly" tables (like you do in Spark and Bigquery), no need for lambda architecture... It's refreshing how something can be both simple and fast.
- A SQLite extension for reading large files line-by-line
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I want to convert a large JSON file into Tabular Format.
I thought this library was pretty nifty for json. It's also relatively fast compared to most json parsers: https://github.com/dcmoura/spyql
octosql
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Wazero: Zero dependency WebAssembly runtime written in Go
Never got it to anything close to a finished state, instead moving on to doing the same prototype in llvm and then cranelift.
That said, here's some of the wazero-based code on a branch - https://github.com/cube2222/octosql/tree/wasm-experiment/was...
It really is just a very very basic prototype.
- Analyzing multi-gigabyte JSON files locally
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DuckDB: Querying JSON files as if they were tables
This is really cool!
With their Postgres scanner[0] you can now easily query multiple datasources using SQL and join between them (i.e. Postgres table with JSON file). Something I strived to build with OctoSQL[1] before.
It's amazing to see how quickly DuckDB is adding new features.
Not a huge fan of C++, which is right now used for authoring extensions, it'd be really cool if somebody implemented a Rust extension SDK, or even something like Steampipe[2] does for Postgres FDWs which would provide a shim for quickly implementing non-performance-sensitive extensions for various things.
Godspeed!
[0]: https://duckdb.org/2022/09/30/postgres-scanner.html
[1]: https://github.com/cube2222/octosql
[2]: https://steampipe.io
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Show HN: ClickHouse-local – a small tool for serverless data analytics
Congrats on the Show HN!
It's great to see more tools in this area (querying data from various sources in-place) and the Lambda use case is a really cool idea!
I've recently done a bunch of benchmarking, including ClickHouse Local and the usage was straightforward, with everything working as it's supposed to.
Just to comment on the performance area though, one area I think ClickHouse could still possibly improve on - vs OctoSQL[0] at least - is that it seems like the JSON datasource is slower, especially if only a small part of the JSON objects is used. If only a single field of many is used, OctoSQL lazily parses only that field, and skips the others, which yields non-trivial performance gains on big JSON files with small queries.
Basically, for a query like `SELECT COUNT(*), AVG(overall) FROM books.json` with the Amazon Review Dataset, OctoSQL is twice as fast (3s vs 6s). That's a minor thing though (OctoSQL will slow down for more complicated queries, while for ClickHouse decoding the input is and remains the bottleneck).
[0]: https://github.com/cube2222/octosql
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Steampipe – Select * from Cloud;
To add somewhat of a counterpoint to the other response, I've tried the Steampipe CSV plugin and got 50x slower performance vs OctoSQL[0], which is itself 5x slower than something like DataFusion[1]. The CSV plugin doesn't contact any external API's so it should be a good benchmark of the plugin architecture, though it might just not be optimized yet.
That said, I don't imagine this ever being a bottleneck for the main use case of Steampipe - in that case I think the APIs themselves will always be the limiting part. But it does - potentially - speak to what you can expect if you'd like to extend your usage of Steampipe to more than just DevOps data.
[0]: https://github.com/cube2222/octosql
[1]: https://github.com/apache/arrow-datafusion
Disclaimer: author of OctoSQL
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Go runtime: 4 years later
Actually, folks just use gRPC or Yaegi in Go.
See Terraform[0], Traefik[1], or OctoSQL[2].
Although I agree plugins would be welcome, especially for performance reasons, though also to be able to compile and load go code into a running go process (JIT-ish).
[0]: https://github.com/hashicorp/terraform
[1]: https://github.com/traefik/traefik
[2]: https://github.com/cube2222/octosql
Disclaimer: author of OctoSQL
- Run SQL on CSV, Parquet, JSON, Arrow, Unix Pipes and Google Sheet
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Beginner interested in learning SQL. Have a few question that I wasn’t able to find on google.
Through more magic, you COULD of course use stuff like Spark, or easier with programs like TextQL, sq, OctoSQL.
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How I Used DALL·E 2 to Generate The Logo for OctoSQL
The logo was created for OctoSQL and in the article you can find a lot of sample phrase-image combinations, as it describes the whole path (generation, variation, editing) I went down. Let me know what you think!
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How I Used DALL·E 2 to Generate the Logo for OctoSQL
Hey, author here, happy to answer any questions!
The logo was created for OctoSQL[0] and in the article you can find a lot of sample phrase-image combinations, as it describes the whole path (generation, variation, editing) I went down. Let me know what you think!
[0]:https://github.com/cube2222/octosql
What are some alternatives?
prql - PRQL is a modern language for transforming data — a simple, powerful, pipelined SQL replacement
duckdb - DuckDB is an in-process SQL OLAP Database Management System
malloy - Malloy is an experimental language for describing data relationships and transformations.
q - q - Run SQL directly on delimited files and multi-file sqlite databases
tresql - Shorthand SQL/JDBC wrapper language, providing nested results as JSON and more
trdsql - CLI tool that can execute SQL queries on CSV, LTSV, JSON, YAML and TBLN. Can output to various formats.
Preql - An interpreted relational query language that compiles to SQL.
sqlitebrowser - Official home of the DB Browser for SQLite (DB4S) project. Previously known as "SQLite Database Browser" and "Database Browser for SQLite". Website at:
prosto - Prosto is a data processing toolkit radically changing how data is processed by heavily relying on functions and operations with functions - an alternative to map-reduce and join-groupby
sqlite-utils - Python CLI utility and library for manipulating SQLite databases
pxi - 🧚 pxi (pixie) is a small, fast, and magical command-line data processor similar to jq, mlr, and awk.
textql - Execute SQL against structured text like CSV or TSV