ejc-sql turns Emacs into a simple SQL client; it uses a JDBC connection to databases via clojure/java.jdbc lib.
You can use multiple connections at the same time. Autocompletion and basic formatting of SQL scripts are also available.
- Installation
- Configuration
- Usage
- List of keybindings & functions
- Yasnippet
- Troubleshooting
- Requirements
- License
-
To run Clojure, install Leiningen (assuming you have already installed Java 7+).
-
Add MELPA (if not yet present) to your
package-archives
list.Then you can install ejc-sql with the following command:
M-x package-install [RET] ejc-sql [RET]
Here is an full-fledged real-world ejc-sql
configuration example:
ejc-sql-conf.
First, load ejc-sql
package:
(require 'ejc-sql)
To achieve async SQL queries evaluation, both Emacs and JVM side is an HTTP
client and HTTP server. Emacs as HTTP client via CIDER pass a SQL query to JVM
and don't expect any data response from the database. The JVM part prints the
result dataset to the file (in pain text table format). Then JVM as HTTP client
notifies Emacs: "data printed into filepath
, please refresh the output
buffer". The JVM side port can be configured by related CIDER customizations,
whereas the default Emacs side HTTP server port can be customized by
clomacs-httpd-default-port
variable (8080
by default):
(setq clomacs-httpd-default-port 8090) ; Use a port other than 8080.
Install auto-complete
e.g. by the following command:
M-x package-install [RET] auto-complete [RET]
Enable autocomplete for ejc-sql
minor mode:
(require 'ejc-autocomplete)
(add-hook 'ejc-sql-minor-mode-hook
(lambda ()
(auto-complete-mode t)
(ejc-ac-setup)))
Autocompletion is available for the following databases:
- Oracle
- MS SQL Server
- PostgreSQL
- MySQL
- Informix
- H2
- SQLite
Autocompletion data is stored in the database structure cache. This cache is
located on Clojure side, so it's global: the same database structure information
is shared between different buffers connected to the same database. An attempt
to autocomplete requires data from cache or lanches a thread aimed to create
it. If Clojure side has the database structure cache, autocompletion variants
are returned immediately. If not, the database structure cache creation process
starts. It's async, so the process of Emacs is not blocked, and the user can
move the point (cursor), edit SQL, and so on. If the user waits for
autocompletion and doesn't move point (cursor) during this process, he will get
autocompletion variants. In order to checkout the current database connection
cache run ejc-print-cache
.
Any successfully executed DDL query (CREATE
, ALTER
, DROP
, RENAME
) clears
current connection cache, so next autocompletion attempt will recreate it.
To clean the current connection cache manually, you can run
ejc-invalidate-cache
.
Non-nil ejc-use-flx
enables flx
fuzzy matching engine for autocompletion.
flx-ido is required in this case, it can
be installed by your favorite approach. E.g. by MEPLA
:
M-x package-install [RET] flx-ido [RET]
(setq ejc-use-flx t)
To customize the minimum number of typed chars use flx
for autocompletion,
2 by default:
(setq ejc-flx-threshold 2)
Install company-mode
e.g. by the following command:
M-x package-install [RET] company [RET]
Enable company-mode
completion frontend for ejc-sql
minor mode:
(require 'ejc-company)
(push 'ejc-company-backend company-backends)
(add-hook 'ejc-sql-minor-mode-hook
(lambda ()
(company-mode t)))
If you want to automatically start completion after inserting a dot for
company-mode
despite company-minimum-prefix-length
is bigger than 0
,
set ejc-complete-on-dot
to t
:
(setq ejc-complete-on-dot t)
To show documentation quickhelp install company-quickhelp
by:
M-x package-install [RET] company-quickhelp [RET]
To activate company-quickhelp
add the following to your .emacs
:
(company-quickhelp-mode)
By default ido
is used as minibuffer the completion system. You can change
this to leverage another option by editing ejc-completion-system
and
selecting standard
. This will allow you to use it with any configured
completion mechanism for example, ivy:
(setq ejc-completion-system 'standard)
Enable ElDoc for ejc-sql
minor mode:
(add-hook 'ejc-sql-minor-mode-hook
(lambda ()
(ejc-eldoc-setup)))
ElDoc for functions and procedures is available for the following databases:
- Oracle
- PostgreSQL
- MySQL
ejc-set-fetch-size
sets limit for the number of records to output (50
by
default). Set to nil
if you want to disable this limit.
ejc-set-max-rows
sets the limit for the number of records to contain in
ResultSet (99
by default). Set to nil
if you want to disable this limit, or
you can set it the same value as ejc-set-fetch-size
to increase select query
execution performance.
Any time your ResultSet is bigger than ejc-set-fetch-size
you will receive
messages like "Too many rows. Only 50 from 99+ are shown."
. To inhibit this
messages you can set ejc-set-show-too-many-rows-message
to nil
(t
by
default).
ejc-set-column-width-limit
sets limit for outputing the number of chars per
column (30
by default). The rest will be replaced by ...
. Set to
nil
if you want to disable this limit. This setting is applied to the text
representation of any field type, but it is especially useful for varchar
and
CLOB
fields.
ejc-set-use-unicode
sets using unicode for grid borders, e.g. use ─┼─
instead of -+-
(nil
by default).
All these functions change Clojure variables, so if you want to change
defaults, to avoid Clojure nREPL autolaunch on Emacs start, you should add
them to the ejc-sql-connected-hook
in your .emacs
, e.g.:
(add-hook 'ejc-sql-connected-hook
(lambda ()
(ejc-set-fetch-size 50)
(ejc-set-max-rows 50)
(ejc-set-show-too-many-rows-message t)
(ejc-set-column-width-limit 25)
(ejc-set-use-unicode t)))
Current result set table minor-mode is orgtbl-mode
. This mode provides some
functionality for post-processing and browsing the query results.
(setq ejc-result-table-impl 'orgtbl-mode)
Alternatively, you can use a simple and bare result set mode to maximize the
buffer performance by setting ejc-result-table-impl
to 'ejc-result-mode
.
If you want to see the full text of some field (e.g. the full text of CLOB
field) despite ejc-set-column-width-limit
, and your ejc-result-table-impl
is 'ejc-result-mode
you can select a single-record result set
(e.g. SELECT * FROM table WHERE id = 1
).
If you want to see the full text of some field with newlines in case of
multiline fields, you should select single-record and single-column result set
(e.g. SELECT field FROM table WHERE id = 1
). So, you will get a field value
as-is despite ejc-set-column-width-limit
and ejc-result-table-impl
.
To illustrate the description above here are some output examples of query results that depend on configuration.
Assume you have the following database (this example uses MySQL):
CREATE TABLE product (
id INT UNSIGNED NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT PRIMARY KEY,
name VARCHAR(30) NOT NULL,
quantity INT,
price DECIMAL(7,2),
description VARCHAR(255)
);
INSERT INTO product (name, price, quantity, description)
VALUES ('socks', 1.25, 10, CONCAT('A sock is an item of clothing worn\n',
'on the feet and often covering the\n',
'ankle or some part of the calf.\n',
'Some type of shoe or boot is\n',
'typically worn over socks.'));
INSERT INTO product (name, price, quantity, description)
VALUES ('sweater', 14.56, 5, CONCAT('A sweater, also called a jumper\n'
'in British English, is a piece\n'
'of clothing, typically with long\n'
'sleeves, made of knitted or\n'
'crocheted material that covers\n'
'the upper part of the body.'));
output examples for orgtbl-mode
(by default):
SELECT * FROM product
| id | name | quantity | price | description |
|----+---------+----------+-------+--------------------------------|
| 1 | socks | 10 | 1.25 | A sock is an item of clothi... |
| 2 | sweater | 5 | 14.56 | A sweater, also called a ju... |
SELECT * FROM product WHERE id = 1
| id | name | quantity | price | description |
|----+-------+----------+-------+--------------------------------|
| 1 | socks | 10 | 1.25 | A sock is an item of clothi... |
SELECT description FROM product WHERE id = 1
| description |
|------------------------------------|
| A sock is an item of clothing worn |
| on the feet and often covering the |
| ankle or some part of the calf. |
| Some type of shoe or boot is |
| typically worn over socks. |
output examples for ejc-result-mode
:
SELECT * FROM product
id | name | quantity | price | description
---+---------+----------+-------+-------------------------------
1 | socks | 10 | 1.25 | A sock is an item of clothi...
2 | sweater | 5 | 14.56 | A sweater, also called a ju...
SELECT * FROM product WHERE id = 1
id | 1
name | socks
quantity | 10
price | 1.25
description | A sock is an item of clothing worn on the feet and often covering the ankle or some part of the calf. Some type of shoe or boot is typically worn over socks.
SELECT description FROM product WHERE id = 1
description
----------------------------------
A sock is an item of clothing worn
on the feet and often covering the
ankle or some part of the calf.
Some type of shoe or boot is
typically worn over socks.
The easiest way to create connections configuration is to use interactive connections creation.
In any sql-mode
buffer run (C-c ei):
M-x ejc-connect-interactive <RET>
Then follow the creation steps: type your connection name, choose database type, host (or file path depends on selected database type), port, user name and password.
ejc-sql
uses Aether API of
Maven-resolver to automatically resolve and download the required JDBC
driver (if not yet) for selected database type.
You can customize artifacts and their versions used as JDBC drivers for each
database type in Leiningen format in ejc-jdbc-drivers
custom variable.
After you type all required data a and new connection will be created, it
will attempt to immediately connect current-buffer
to this connection.
Then you can use this connection name to connect from different buffers.
Type (C-c ec):
M-x ejc-connect <RET> your-connection-name <RET>
This connection will be available during the current Emacs session. To keep
it between Emacs restarts, you can open your .emacs
file or any file,
loaded as Emacs configuration, locate point (cursor) somewhere after
(require 'ejc-sql)
expression and run:
M-x ejc-insert-connection-data <RET> your-connection-name <RET>
This function inserts ejc-create-connection
expression the same as you can
accomplish via manual connection creation.
In most cases, you don't need to install JDBC drivers manually.
Simply put, you can set a parameter :dependencies
in ejc-create-connection
function as a vector of the required artifacts in Leiningen format.
In this case, ejc-sql
will resolve, download (if not yet) all
required jar dependencies via Aether
and load them to CLASSPATH
during the ejc-connect
function run. E.g.:
(ejc-create-connection
"Informix-db-connection"
:dependencies [[com.ibm.informix/jdbc "4.50.3"]]
...
)
Alternatively, you can pass the exact JDBC driver jar file in the
:classpath
parameter of ejc-create-connection
function. E.g.:
(ejc-create-connection
"Informix-db-connection"
:classpath (concat "~/.m2/repository/com/ibm/informix/jdbc/4.50.3/"
"jdbc-4.50.3.jar")
...
)
ejc-sql
will try to resolve all required dependencies if this JBDC driver
requires some dependencies itself anyway. But you can pass all requred
dependencies manually as a vector of jar files paths. E.g.:
(ejc-create-connection
"Informix-db-connection"
:classpath (vector
(concat "~/.m2/repository/org/mongodb/bson/3.8.0/"
"bson-3.8.0.jar")
(concat "~/.m2/repository/com/ibm/informix/jdbc/4.50.3/"
"jdbc-4.50.3.jar"))
...
)
The rest of this section describes how to download and install JDBC drivers manually. If you are familiar with JDBC, please omit it.
The most common way is to install JDBC drivers to your ~/.m2
directory.
Here is a list of such installation examples. Anyway, it will become outdated
soon, so please consult Google to install your database JDBC driver.
First of all, install Maven, then you can install your JDBC driver with one of the following commands.
Oracle
Download JDBC driver manually from oracle.com
Fix your actual JDBC version number -Dversion
, filepath -Dfile
and run
command like this:
mvn install:install-file -Dfile="~/downloads/ojdbc7.jar" -DgroupId=com.oracle.jdbc -DartifactId=ojdbc7 -Dversion=12.1.0.2 -Dpackaging=jar -DgeneratePom=true
MS SQL Server
Download JDBC driver manually from microsoft.com
Fix your actual JDBC version number -Dversion
, filepath -Dfile
and run
command like this:
mvn install:install-file -Dfile="~/downloads/sqljdbc.jar" -DgroupId=com.microsoft.sqlserver -DartifactId=sqljdbc -Dversion=6.0 -Dpackaging=jar -DgeneratePom=true
or from Maven Central:
mvn org.apache.maven.plugins:maven-dependency-plugin:get -Dartifact=com.microsoft.sqlserver:mssql-jdbc:6.2.2.jre8
JTDS
mvn org.apache.maven.plugins:maven-dependency-plugin:get -Dartifact=net.sourceforge.jtds:jtds:1.3.1
PostgreSQL
mvn org.apache.maven.plugins:maven-dependency-plugin:get -Dartifact=postgresql:postgresql:9.3-1102.jdbc41 -DrepoUrl=http://clojars.org/repo/
MySQL
mvn org.apache.maven.plugins:maven-dependency-plugin:get -Dartifact=mysql:mysql-connector-java:5.1.6
MariaDB
mvn org.apache.maven.plugins:maven-dependency-plugin:get -Dartifact=org.mariadb.jdbc:mariadb-java-client:1.1.7
H2
mvn org.apache.maven.plugins:maven-dependency-plugin:get -Dartifact=com.h2database:h2:1.4.192
SQLite
mvn org.apache.maven.plugins:maven-dependency-plugin:get -Dartifact=org.xerial:sqlite-jdbc:3.8.11.2
Informix
mvn org.apache.maven.plugins:maven-dependency-plugin:get -Dartifact=com.ibm.informix:jdbc:4.50.3
Setup connections with ejc-create-connection
function in your .emacs
.
It's first arg is your custom database connection name, the remaining args
are the same as database connection structure of
clojure/java.jdbc lib.
The configuration of ejs-sql
might looks like this:
;; Create your JDBC database connections configuration:
;; MySQL example
(ejc-create-connection
"MySQL-db-connection"
:classpath (concat "~/.m2/repository/mysql/mysql-connector-java/5.1.6/"
"mysql-connector-java-5.1.6.jar")
:subprotocol "mysql"
:subname "//localhost:3306/my_db_name"
:user "a_user"
:password "secret")
If you want to see MySQL-specific keywords in autocompletion
list, please provide access to mysql.help_keyword
table
for your user, e.g.:
GRANT SELECT ON mysql.help_keyword TO a_user;
;; MariaDB example
(ejc-create-connection
"MariaDB-db-connection"
:dependencies [[org.mariadb.jdbc/mariadb-java-client "2.6.0"]]
:classname "org.mariadb.jdbc.Driver"
:connection-uri "jdbc:mariadb://localhost:3306/db_name"
:user "a_user"
:password "secret")
;; MS SQL Server example
(ejc-create-connection
"MS-SQL-db-connection"
:classpath (concat "~/.m2/repository/com/microsoft"
"/sqlserver/sqljdbc/4.2/sqljdbc-4.2.jar")
:subprotocol "sqlserver"
:subname "//localhost:1433"
:user "a_user"
:password "secret"
:database "my_db_name")
;; MS SQL Server example (via URI)
(ejc-create-connection
"MS-SQL-db-connection-uri"
:classpath (concat "~/.m2/repository/com/microsoft"
"/sqlserver/sqljdbc/4.2/sqljdbc-4.2.jar")
:connection-uri (concat "jdbc:sqlserver://localhost\\\\instance:1433;"
"databaseName=my_db_name;"
"user=a_user;"
"password=secret;"))
;; MS SQL Server example (via JTDS)
(ejc-create-connection
"MS-SQL-db-connection-JTDS"
:classpath (concat "~/.m2/repository/net/sourceforge/jtds"
"/jtds/1.3.1/jtds-1.3.1.jar")
:connection-uri (concat "jdbc:jtds:sqlserver://localhost:1433/dbname;"
"instance=instance;"
"user=a_user;"
"password=secret;"))
;; Oracle example (via Service Name)
(ejc-create-connection
"Oracle-db-connection-sname"
:classpath (concat "~/.m2/repository/com/oracle/jdbc"
"/ojdbc8/12.2.0.1/ojdbc8-12.2.0.1.jar")
:dbtype "oracle"
:dbname "my_service_name"
:host "localhost"
:port "1521"
:user "a_user"
:password "secret"
:separator "/")
;; Oracle example (via SID)
(ejc-create-connection
"Oracle-db-connection-sid"
:classpath (concat "~/.m2/repository/com/oracle/jdbc"
"/ojdbc7/12.1.0.2/ojdbc7-12.1.0.2.jar")
:dbtype "oracle:sid"
:dbname "my_sid_name"
:host "localhost"
:port "1521"
:user "a_user"
:password "secret"
:separator "/")
;; Oracle example (via URI)
(ejc-create-connection
"Oracle-db-connection-uri"
:classpath (concat "~/.m2/repository/com/oracle/jdbc"
"/ojdbc7/12.1.0.2/ojdbc7-12.1.0.2.jar")
:connection-uri "jdbc:oracle:thin:@localhist:1521:dbname"
:user "a_user"
:password "secret"
:separator "/")
;; H2 example
(ejc-create-connection
"H2-db-connection"
:classpath (file-truename
"~/.m2/repository/com/h2database/h2/1.4.191/h2-1.4.191.jar")
:subprotocol "h2"
:subname "file://~/projects/my_proj/db/database;AUTO_SERVER=TRUE"
:user "a_user"
:password "secret")
;; H2 remote example
;; run on remote server first:
;; java -jar ~/.m2/repository/com/h2database/h2/1.4.192/h2-1.4.192.jar -tcpAllowOthers
(ejc-create-connection
"H2-remote-db-connection"
:classpath "~/.m2/repository/com/h2database/h2/1.4.192/h2-1.4.192.jar"
:connection-uri (concat "jdbc:h2:tcp://192.168.0.1:9092/~/db/database;ifexists=true;"
"user=a_user;"
"password=secret;"))
;; SQLite example
(ejc-create-connection
"SQLite-conn"
:classpath (concat "~/.m2/repository/org/xerial/sqlite-jdbc/"
"3.23.1/sqlite-jdbc-3.23.1.jar")
:subprotocol "sqlite"
;; Use absolute path, e.g.:
;; "file:///home/user/projects/my_proj/db/sqdb.db"
;; "/home/user/projects/my_proj/db/sqdb.db"
;; "file:///C:/Projects/my_proj/db/sqdb.db"
;; "C:/Projects/my_proj/db/sqdb.db"
;; or expand it by file-truename (not applicable for Windows paths):
:subname (concat "file://"
(file-truename "~/projects/my_proj/db/sqdb.db")))
;; PostgreSQL example
(ejc-create-connection
"PostgreSQL-db-connection"
:classpath (concat "~/.m2/repository/postgresql/postgresql/9.3.1102.jdbc41/"
"postgresql-9.3-1102.jdbc41.jar")
:subprotocol "postgresql"
:subname "//localhost:5432/my_db_name"
:user "a_user"
:password "secret")
;; Informix example
(ejc-create-connection
"Informix-db-connection"
:dependencies [[com.ibm.informix/jdbc "4.50.3"]]
:classname "com.informix.jdbc.IfxDriver"
:connection-uri (concat
;; In the case of IPv6, ::1 should be used
;; as the host instead of localhost.
"jdbc:informix-sqli://localhost:8201/test:"
"INFORMIXSERVER=myserver;"
"user=a_user;"
"password=secret;"))
;; Presto example
(ejc-create-connection
"Presto-db-connection"
:subprotocol "presto"
:dependencies [[com.facebook.presto/presto-jdbc "0.232"]]
:connection-uri (concat
"jdbc:presto://localhost:1234/dbName/schemaName?"
"user=a_user"))
;; ClickHouse example
(ejc-create-connection
"ch@180"
:dependencies [[ru.yandex.clickhouse/clickhouse-jdbc "0.2.6"]]
:dbtype "clickhouse"
:classname "ru.yandex.clickhouse.ClickHouseDriver"
:connection-uri (concat "jdbc:clickhouse://10.1.4.180:8123/" "testdb"))
;; ElasticSearch example
(ejc-create-connection
"es@177"
:dependencies [[org.elasticsearch.plugin/x-pack-sql-jdbc "7.9.1"]]
:dbtype "elasticsearch"
:classname "org.elasticsearch.xpack.sql.jdbc.EsDriver"
:connection-uri (concat "jdbc:es://172.16.13.177:9200/"))
First of all, open your SQL source file (or any sql-mode
buffer).
On the other hand, there is a handy function to create temporary sql-mode
buffers for playing with SQL: ejc-get-temp-editor-buffer
.
If you bind it, e.g. to:
(global-set-key (kbd "C-c eb") 'ejc-get-temp-editor-buffer)
then, when you press C-c eb, *ejc-sql-editor*
buffer will be
created; when you press M-1 C-c eb, *ejc-sql-editor-1*
buffer will
created and so on. This buffers can be saved as ordinary file buffers by
save-buffer
command to the appropriate files, located in
ejc-temp-editor-file-path
directory ("~/tmp/ejc-sql/" by default).
In any selected SQL buffer connect to your database:
M-x ejc-connect <RET> MySQL-db-connection <RET>
and wait until "Connected." message appears. This will add connection
information to buffer local variables. Furthermore, if there is no ejc-sql
dedicated Clojure REPL running, it will start it.
Since connection information is buffer-local
, you should run ejc-connect
for any new buffer. Any of ejc-sql-mode
buffers can keep connection
information to different databases and database types. But they use the same
ejc-sql
dedicated Clojure REPL to interact with databases via JDBC.
Then type your queries like this:
select something from my_table
and press C-c C-c to run it.
Have much fun!
Use /
char to separate expressions to evaluate (actually \n/
), e.g.:
select something from my_table
/
select other from other_table
So, you don't need to select SQL snippet, simply put point (cursor) into code
snippet and press C-c C-c (or desired keybinding). Borders of SQL
will be found by Emacs buffer begin/end or this /
separator.
It's possible to pass multiple statements, you can use ;
delimiter to separate
them:
insert into my_table (product, price) values ('socks', 1.25);
insert into my_table (product, price) values ('sweater', 14.56);
insert into my_table (product, price) values ('jeans', 25.30);
/
select * from my_table
Here, the first part is a single SQL snippet passed to ejc-sql
backend but
evaluated by 3 independent SQL statements (transactions). The output will looks
like this:
Records affected: 1
Records affected: 1
Records affected: 1
Furthermore, you can change the delimiter inside SQL snippet. E.g. in this
MySQL snippet ;
replaced by $$
as transaction delimiter:
DELIMITER $$
CREATE PROCEDURE GetAllProducts()
BEGIN
SELECT * FROM products;
END $$
/
CALL GetAllProducts();
Since ;
symbols can be used very often as part of procedure syntax
(e.g. in Oracle), you can disable splitting SQL code snippet to the sequence of
separate transactions by setting :separator
in DB connection configuration
(see https://github.com/kostafey/ejc-sql#oracle-connection).
You can run M-x ejc-connect <RET> my-db-connection <RET>
in org-mode
buffers. In this case, major-mode
will persists as org-mode
, but all
connection-related data will be added to the buffer.
* Create DB
** Product table
*** Create
#+begin_src sql
CREATE TABLE product (
id INT UNSIGNED NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT,
name VARCHAR(30) NOT NULL,
price DECIMAL(7,2)
);
#+end_src
*** Fill
#+begin_src sql
INSERT INTO product (name, price) VALUES ('socks', 1.25);
INSERT INTO product (name, price) VALUES ('sweater', 14.56);
INSERT INTO product (name, price) VALUES ('jeans', 25.30);
#+end_src
*** Select
#+begin_src sql
SELECT * FROM product;
/
SELECT * FROM product WHERE name = 'jeans';
#+end_src
#+RESULTS:
: id | name | price
: ---+---------+------
: 1 | socks | 1.25
: 2 | sweater | 14.56
: 3 | jeans | 25.30
Place point (cursor) into code snippet and run SQL statements via
C-c C-c as always. For org-mode
buffers code snippets borders
considered as batch of SQL statement(s) boundaries.
Furthermore, you can use ejc-sql-separator
(/
by default) to divide
batch of SQL statement(s) inside code block as in sql-mode
buffers.
The SQL query evaluation result will be added to this org-mode
buffer in
#+RESULTS:
section - an expected behaviour for org-mode
users by default
(see example above).
To avoid this behaviour and get results in popup window - as ejc-sql
users
expected, add to your .emacs
:
(setq ejc-org-mode-show-results nil)
If your org-mode
buffer connected via ejc-connect
, any time you run
C-c ' (org-edit-special
) for code snippets, you will get new
buffer with this minor-mode (ejc-sql-mode
) and all connection-related data.
So, you can operate inside it like in ordinary sql-mode
buffer, which is
already connected to the database.
You can use both ejc-sql
and org-mode
original org-babel
execution
engine simultaneously in one buffer.
To disable ejc-sql
wrapper around org-mode
SQL source code blocks, set
ejc-org-mode-babel-wrapper
to nil
(enabled by default).
If ejc-org-mode-babel-wrapper
is enabled and the current SQL source code block
has a connection header arguments, you will be asked for confirmation.
Reference this discussion.
If you have to restart Emacs multiple times, you can keep the ejc-sql
Clojure
backend alive between Emacs restarts by running this backend out of Emacs, and
connect to it from Emacs.
To accomplish that, you should cd
to your ejc-sql project folder (typically
~/.emacs.d/elpa/ejc-sql-<version>
) and launch the nREPL via lein repl
.
Then run in Emacs M-x ejc-connect-existing-repl
, type Host
and Port
from your lein repl
console output.
Finally, use M-x ejc-connect
from any SQL buffer to connect to the exact
database, as always.
You can use different nREPL for ejc-sql
, e.g. if you develop a Clojure project
via CIDER, you can use your project nREPL to interact with the database by JDBC
and ejc-sql
. To achieve this, enable using any CIDER nREPL for clomacs
projects in your .emacs
:
(setq clomacs-allow-other-repl t)
Then add ejc-sql
to your project as a dependency in project.clj
:
(defproject some-project "0.1.0-SNAPSHOT"
...
:dependencies [[org.clojure/clojure "1.10.0"]
...
[ejc-sql "0.4.1-SNAPSHOT"]]
...
)
or if you don't want to change your project.clj
file, you can add it globally
in ~/.lein/profiles.clj
, e.g.:
{:user {:plugins [[cider/cider-nrepl "0.25.0-alpha1"]]
:dependencies [[ejc-sql "0.4.1-SNAPSHOT"]]}}
The actual version of ejc-sql
backend in Clojars:
So, when you start your project nREPL via cider-jack-in
, you can open any SQL
file (sql-mode
or org-mode
buffer) and connect to the database by
ejc-connect
as usual and it will reuse the existing nREPL.
In terms of ejc-sql
, SQL evaluation results can be result sets, record
affected messages, SQL definition of entities or error messages.
Any SQL evaluation result saved to results ring - list of files
ejc-sql-result-0.txt
, ejc-sql-result-1.txt
, and so on.
They located in the TEMP
folder, it can be customized by ejc-results-path
.
The number of files (number of previous results) can be customized by setting
ejc-ring-length
(10 by default).
You can see previous SQL evaluation result by C-M-b
(ejc-show-prev-result
) in *ejc-sql-output*
buffer.
To return back use C-M-f (ejc-show-next-result
). This way you can
navigate through the results ring.
Since *ejc-sql-output*
buffer contains ejc-sql
connection information, it
makes possible to navigate through views & stored procedures code definitions.
E.g. you can require ejc-describe-entity
for some stored procedure, then
require ejc-describe-entity
inside *ejc-sql-output*
for some stored
procedure, used in this (just described) procedure definition, and so on. Then
you can return to previous procedure definition by ejc-show-prev-result
. So,
it looks like goto definition, then return back. For the purpose of convenience,
the following keybindings are provided:
- M-.
ejc-describe-entity
- M-,
ejc-show-prev-result
New keybindings defined in ejc-sql-mode
minor mode:
Keyboard shortcut | Command | Description |
---|---|---|
C-c e c | ejc-connect |
Select DB connection (configured by ejc-create-connection ) and connect to it. |
C-c e i | ejc-connect-interactive |
Create new connection interactively and connect to it. |
C-c C-c | ejc-eval-user-sql-at-point |
Evaluate SQL script bounded by the ejc-sql-separator or/and buffer boundaries. |
C-c C-r | ejc-eval-user-sql-region |
Evaluate region selected SQL code. |
C-g | ejc-cancel-query |
Terminate current running query or run keyboard-quit if there is no running queries. |
C-h t | ejc-describe-table |
Describe SQL table. |
C-h d | ejc-describe-entity |
Get entity definition: show creation SQL of view, package, function, procedure or type. |
M-. | ejc-describe-entity |
Get entity definition: show creation SQL of view, package, function, procedure or type. |
M-, | ejc-show-prev-result |
Load previous SQL eval result in *ejc-sql-output* buffer. |
C-c e up | ejc-show-last-result |
Show last result. |
C-c e t | ejc-show-tables-list |
Show tables list. |
C-c e v | ejc-show-views-list |
Show views list. |
C-c e p | ejc-show-procedures-list |
Show stored procedures list. |
C-c e T | ejc-show-user-types-list |
Show user types list. |
C-c e s | ejc-strinp-sql-at-point |
Strip SQL (trim java string tokens). |
C-c e S | ejc-dress-sql-at-point |
Dress SQL (to copy-paste it to java code). |
C-c e f | ejc-format-sql-at-point |
Format (pretty-print) this SQL statement. |
C-M-b | ejc-previous-sql |
Goto previous SQL statement (or load previous SQL eval result in *ejc-sql-output* ). |
C-M-f | ejc-next-sql |
Goto next SQL statement (or load next SQL eval result in *ejc-sql-output* ). |
C-M-S-b | ejc-previous-sql |
Select from point to previous SQL statement. |
C-M-S-f | ejc-next-sql |
Select from point to next SQL statement. |
List of other interactive functions
Command | Description |
---|---|
ejc-connect |
Connect to database for current buffer |
ejc-quit-connection |
Close all database connections, quit Clojure REPL. |
ejc-format-sql-region |
Format (pretty-print) selected SQL snippet |
ejc-mark-this-sql |
Mark SQL script bounded by the ejc-sql-separator or/and buffer boundaries |
ejc-show-tables-list |
Show tables list |
ejc-show-constraints-list |
Show constraints list |
ejc-open-log |
Open log |
ejc-get-temp-editor-buffer |
Create ad-hoc SQL editor buffer, use prefix arg number to get many buffers |
ejc-print-cache |
Output current connection cache |
ejc-invalidate-cache |
Clean your current connection cache (database owners and tables list) |
ejc-direx:pop-to-buffer |
Create buffer with database structure tree |
List of snippets:
select | where | inner |
---|---|---|
insert | begin | left |
update | grant | right |
delete | revoke | alter |
Error running timer ‘ac-update-greedy’: (error "Sync nREPL request timed out (op eval session...
Increase nrepl-sync-request-timeout
, e.g.:
(setq nrepl-sync-request-timeout 60)
- GNU Emacs 26.
- Leiningen 2.x
- clomacs
- clojure/java.jdbc 0.5.8
- dash
- spinner.el
- direx.el
- auto-complete (optional)
- company-mode (optional)
- company-quickhelp (optional)
- flx-ido (optional)
- yasnippet (optional).
Copyright © 2012-2020 Kostafey [email protected] and contributors
Distributed under the General Public License 2.0+