EmacSQL is a high-level Emacs Lisp front-end for SQLite.
PostgreSQL and MySQL are also supported, but use of these connectors is not recommended.
Any readable lisp value can be stored as a value in
EmacSQL, including numbers, strings, symbols, lists, vectors, and
closures. EmacSQL has no concept of "TEXT" values; it's all just lisp
objects. The lisp object nil
corresponds 1:1 with NULL
in the
database.
Requires Emacs 26 or later.
EmacSQL is not intended to interact with arbitrary databases, but to be an ACID-compliant database for Emacs extensions. This means that EmacSQL cannot be used with a regular SQL database used by other non-Emacs clients.
All database values must be s-expressions. When EmacSQL stores a
value — string, symbol, cons, etc. — it is printed and written to
the database in its printed form. Strings are wrapped in quotes
and escaped as necessary. That means "bare" symbols in the database
generally look like strings. The only exception is nil
, which is
stored as NULL
.
The author of EmacSQL thinks that it was probably a design mistake to restrict it to Emacs by storing only printed values, and that it would be a lot more useful if it just handled primitive database types.
However, EmacSQL is in maintenance mode and there are no plans to make any fundamental changes, not least because they would break all existing packages and databases that rely on the current EmacSQL behavior.
Emacs start-process-shell-command
function is not supported on
Windows. Since both emacsql-mysql
and emacsql-psql
rely on this
function, neither of these connection types are supported on Windows.
(defvar db (emacsql-sqlite-open "~/company.db"))
;; Create a table. Table and column identifiers are symbols.
(emacsql db [:create-table people ([name id salary])])
;; Or optionally provide column constraints.
(emacsql db [:create-table people
([name (id integer :primary-key) (salary float)])])
;; Insert some data:
(emacsql db [:insert :into people
:values (["Jeff" 1000 60000.0] ["Susan" 1001 64000.0])])
;; Query the database for results:
(emacsql db [:select [name id]
:from people
:where (> salary 62000)])
;; => (("Susan" 1001))
;; Queries can be templates, using $1, $2, etc.:
(emacsql db [:select [name id]
:from people
:where (> salary $s1)]
50000)
;; => (("Jeff" 1000) ("Susan" 1001))
When editing these prepared SQL s-expression statements, the M-x emacsql-show-last-sql
command (think eval-last-sexp
) is useful for
seeing what the actual SQL expression will become when compiled.
A table schema is a list whose first element is a vector of column
specifications. The rest of the list specifies table constraints. A
column identifier is a symbol and a column's specification can either
be just this symbol or it can include constraints as a list. Because
EmacSQL stores entire lisp objects as values, the only relevant (and
allowed) types are integer
, float
, and object
(default).
([(<column>) ...] (<table-constraint> ...) ...])
Dashes in identifiers are converted into underscores when compiled into SQL. This allows for lisp-style identifiers to be used in SQL. Constraints follow the compilation rules below.
;; No constraints schema with four columns:
([name id building room])
;; Add some column constraints:
([(name :unique) (id integer :primary-key) building room])
;; Add some table constraints:
([(name :unique) (id integer :primary-key) building room]
(:unique [building room])
(:check (> id 0)))
Here's an example using foreign keys.
;; "subjects" table schema
([(id integer :primary-key) subject])
;; "tag" table references subjects
([(subject-id integer) tag]
(:foreign-key [subject-id] :references subjects [id]
:on-delete :cascade))
Foreign key constraints are enabled by default in EmacSQL.
Expressions are written lisp-style, with the operator first. If it looks like an operator EmacSQL treats it like an operator. However, several operators are special.
<= >= funcall quote
The <=
and >=
operators accept 2 or 3 operands, transforming into
a SQL _ BETWEEN _ AND _
operator as appropriate.
For function-like "operators" like count
and max
use the funcall
"operator."
[:select (funcall max age) :from people]
Inside expressions, EmacSQL cannot tell the difference between symbol
literals and column references. If you're talking about the symbol
itself, just quote it as you would in normal Elisp. Note that this
does not "escape" $tn
parameter symbols.
(emacsql db [... :where (= category 'hiking)])
Quoting a string makes EmacSQL handle it as a "raw string." These raw
strings are not printed when being assembled into a query. These are
intended for use in special circumstances like filenames (ATTACH
) or
pattern matching (LIKE
). It is vital that raw strings are not
returned as results.
(emacsql db [... :where (like name '"%foo%")])
(emacsql db [:attach '"/path/to/foo.db" :as foo])
Since template parameters include their type they never need to be quoted.
With glob
and like
SQL operators keep in mind that they're
matching the printed representations of these values, even if the
value is a string.
The ||
concatenation operator is unsupported because concatenating
printed representations breaks an important constraint: all values must
remain readable within SQLite.
The database is interacted with via prepared SQL s-expression statements. You shouldn't normally be concatenating strings on your own. (And it leaves out any possibility of a SQL injection!) See the "Usage" section above for examples. A statement is a vector of keywords and other lisp object.
Prepared EmacSQL s-expression statements are compiled into SQL
statements. The statement compiler is memorized so that using the same
statement multiple times is fast. To assist in this, the statement can
act as a template -- using $i1
, $s2
, etc. -- working like the
Elisp format
function.
Rather than the typical uppercase SQL keywords, keywords in a prepared EmacSQL statement are literally just that: lisp keywords. EmacSQL only understands a very small amount of SQL's syntax. The compiler follows some simple rules to convert an s-expression into SQL.
A prepared s-expression statement is a vector beginning with a keyword followed by a series of keywords and special values. This includes most kinds of sub-queries.
[:select ... :from ...]
[:select tag :from tags
:where (in tag [:select ...])]
Dashes are converted into spaces and the keyword gets capitalized. For
example, :if-not-exists
becomes IF NOT EXISTS
. How you choose to
combine keywords is up to your personal taste (e.g., :drop :table
vs.
:drop-table
).
EmacSQL doesn't know what symbols refer to identifiers and what
symbols should be treated as values. Use quotes to mark a symbol as a
value. For example, people
here will be treated as an identifier.
[:insert-into people :values ...]
This includes rows being inserted, and sets of columns in a query. If you're talking about a row-like thing then put it in a vector.
[:select [id name] :from people]
Note that *
is actually a SQL keyword, so don't put it in a vector.
[:select * :from ...]
This is true even within row-oriented vectors.
[... :where (= name "Bob")]
[:select [(/ seconds 60) count] :from ...]
Some things that are traditionally keywords -- particularly those that
are mixed in with expressions -- have been converted into operators
(AS
, ASC
, DESC
).
[... :order-by [(asc b), (desc a)]] ; "ORDER BY b ASC, a DESC"
[:select p:name :from (as people p)] ; "SELECT p.name FROM people AS p"
What follows :values
is always treated like a vector or list of
vectors. Normally this sort of thing would appear to be a column
reference.
[... :values [1 2 3]]
[... :values ([1 2 3] [4 5 6])] ; insert multiple rows
This is to distinguish schemata from everything else. With the
exception of what follows :values
, nothing else is shaped like this.
[:create-table people ([(id :primary-key) name])]
To make statement compilation faster, and to avoid making you build up
statements dynamically, you can insert $tn
parameters in place of
identifiers and values. These refer to the argument's type and its
argument position after the statement in the emacsql
function,
one-indexed.
(emacsql db [:select * :from $i1 :where (> salary $s2)] 'employees 50000)
(emacsql db [:select * :from employees :where (like name $r1)] "%Smith%")
The letter before the number is the type.
i
: identifiers
: scalarv
: vector (or multiple vectors)r
: raw, unprinted stringsS
: schema
When combined with :values
, the vector type can refer to lists of
rows.
(emacsql db [:insert-into favorite-characters :values $v1]
'([0 "Calvin"] [1 "Hobbes"] [3 "Susie"]))
This is why rows must be vectors and not lists.
EmacSQL doesn't cover all of SQLite's features. Here are a list of things that aren't supported, and probably will never be.
-
Collating. SQLite has three built-in collation functions: BINARY (default), NOCASE, and RTRIM. EmacSQL values never have right-hand whitespace, so RTRIM won't be of any use. NOCASE is broken (ASCII-only) and there's little reason to use it.
-
Text manipulation functions. Like collating this is incompatible with EmacSQL s-expression storage.
-
Date and time. These are incompatible with the printed values stored by EmacSQL and therefore have little use.
EmacSQL is not intended to play well with other programs accessing the SQLite database. Non-numeric values are stored encoded as s-expressions TEXT values. This avoids ambiguities in parsing output from the command line and allows for storage of Emacs richer data types. This is an efficient, ACID-compliant database specifically for Emacs.
By default, emacs-lisp-mode
indents vectors as if they were regular
function calls.
;; Ugly indentation!
(emacsql db [:select *
:from people
:where (> age 60)])
Calling the function emacsql-fix-vector-indentation
(interactive)
advises the major mode to fix this annoyance.
;; Such indent!
(emacsql db [:select *
:from people
:where (> age 60)])
To run the test suite, clone the pg
and sqlite3
packages into
sibling directories. The Makefile will automatically put these paths on
the Emacs load path (override LDFLAGS
if your situation is different).
git clone https://github.com/emarsden/pg-el ../pg
git clone https://github.com/pekingduck/emacs-sqlite3-api ../sqlite3
Or set LOAD_PATH
to point at these packages elsewhere:
make LOAD_PATH='-L path/to/pg -L path/to/sqlite3'
Then invoke make:
make test
If the environment variable PGDATABASE
is present then the unit
tests will also be run with PostgreSQL (emacsql-psql). Provide
PGHOST
, PGPORT
, and PGUSER
if needed. If PGUSER
is provided,
the pg.el back-end (emacsql-pg) will also be tested.
If the environment variable MYSQL_DBNAME
is present then the unit
tests will also be run with MySQL in the named database. Note that
this is not an official MySQL variable, just something made up for
EmacSQL.
EmacSQL uses EIEIO so that interactions with a connection occur
through generic functions. You need to define a new class that
inherits from emacsql-connection
.
- Implement
emacsql-send-message
,emacsql-waiting-p
,emacsql-parse
, andemacsql-close
. - Provide a constructor that initializes the connection and calls
emacsql-register
(for automatic connection cleanup). - Provide
emacsql-types
if needed (hint: use a class-allocated slot). - Ensure that you properly read NULL as nil (hint: ask your back-end to print it that way).
- Register all reserved words with
emacsql-register-reserved
. - Preferably provide
emacsql-reconnect
if possible. - Set the default isolation level to serializable.
- Enable autocommit mode by default.
- Prefer ANSI syntax (value escapes, identifier escapes, etc.).
- Enable foreign key constraints by default.
The goal of the autocommit, isolation, parsing, and foreign key configuration settings is to normalize the interface as much as possible. The connection's user should have the option to be agnostic about which back-end is actually in use.
The provided implementations should serve as useful examples. If your back-end outputs data in a clean, standard way you may be able to use the emacsql-protocol-mixin class to do most of the work.