Skip to main content

The Crate Data Shell

Project description

Crash

Travis CI Version Documentation Python Version Coverage

Crash is an interactive CrateDB command line interface (CLI) SQL shell with autocompletion.

Screenshot

A screenshot of Crash

Prerequisites

Recent versions of Crash require Python (>= 2.7) to run.

Use Crash 0.16.0 if you’re running Python 2.6.

Installation

As a Python Package

Crash is available as a pip package.

To install, run:

$ pip install crash

Now, run it:

$ crash

To update, run:

$ pip install -U crash

Standalone

Crash is also available as a standalone executable that includes all the necessary dependencies, and can be run as long as Python (>= 2.7) is available.

First, download the executable:

$ curl -o crash https://cdn.crate.io/downloads/releases/crash_standalone_latest

Then, make it executable:

$ chmod +x crash

Now, run it:

$ ./crash

If you would like to run crash from any directory and without using leading ./ you will need to move it to somewhere on your $PATH.

Usage

For usage information and options, run:

$ crash --help

Contributing

This project is primarily maintained by Crate.io, but we welcome community contributions!

See the developer docs and the contribution docs for more information.

Help

Looking for more help?

Installation & Usage

If the package was installed using pip the shell can be started by invoking crash in a terminal. We recommend to install it to the Python user install directory to avoid unwanted dependency conflicts.

pip install --user crash

crash by default will try to connect to localhost:4200. To connect to another host use the connect command inside the shell or use the --hosts argument when launching the shell.

crash started with the -v switch (once or more times) will log useful information when it comes to debugging, like what connection attempts are made and full tracebacks of server errors.

For more information about the available command line arguments see Command Line Arguments.

When you connect to a server that is not reachable or whose hostname cannot be resolved you will get an error:

cr> \connect 127.0.0.1:65535
+------------------------+-----------+---------+-----------+-----------...-+
| server_url             | node_name | version | connected | message       |
+------------------------+-----------+---------+-----------+-----------...-+
| http://127.0.0.1:65535 |      NULL | 0.0.0   | FALSE     | Server not... |
+------------------------+-----------+---------+-----------+-----------...-+
CONNECT ERROR
cr> \connect 300.300.300.300:4200
+-----------------------------+-----------+---------+-----------+-------------...-+
| server_url                  | node_name | version | connected | message         |
+-----------------------------+-----------+---------+-----------+-------------...-+
| http://300.300.300.300:4200 |      NULL | 0.0.0   | FALSE     | Server not a... |
+-----------------------------+-----------+---------+-----------+-------------...-+
CONNECT ERROR

Successful connects will give you some information about the servers you connect to:

cr> \connect 127.0.0.1:44209;
+------------------------+-----------+---------+-----------+---------+
| server_url             | node_name | version | connected | message |
+------------------------+-----------+---------+-----------+---------+
| http://127.0.0.1:44209 | crate     | ...     | TRUE      | OK      |
+------------------------+-----------+---------+-----------+---------+
CONNECT OK...

If you connect to more than one server, the command will succeed if at least one server is reachable:

cr> \connect 127.0.0.1:44209 300.300.300.300:4295;
+-----------------------------+-----------+---------+-----------+-----------...-+
| server_url                  | node_name | version | connected | message       |
+-----------------------------+-----------+---------+-----------+-----------...-+
| http://127.0.0.1:44209      | crate     | ...     | TRUE      | OK            |
| http://300.300.300.300:4295 | NULL      | 0.0.0   | FALSE     | Server not... |
+-----------------------------+-----------+---------+-----------+-----------...-+
CONNECT OK...

Once the shell is connected, SQL statements can be executed simply by entering them without any special arguments like this:

cr> SELECT table_name FROM information_schema.tables
... WHERE table_name = 'cluster';
+------------+
| table_name |
+------------+
| cluster    |
+------------+
SELECT 1 row in set (... sec)

When the CrateDB shell is started with the option -v debugging information will be printed:

cr> select x from y;
SQLActionException[TableUnknownException: Table 'doc.y' unknown]
SQLActionException: NOT_FOUND 4041 TableUnknownException: Table 'doc.y' unknown
...

Limitations

Nested Objects and Arrays

While it is possible to select or filter by nested objects it is currently not possible to insert them using Crash. In order to do that the CrateDB REST endpoint or a client library like crate-python has to be used.

The same also applies for arrays.

Project details


Release history Release notifications | RSS feed

Download files

Download the file for your platform. If you're not sure which to choose, learn more about installing packages.

Source Distribution

crash-0.22.1.tar.gz (47.4 kB view hashes)

Uploaded Source

Built Distribution

crash-0.22.1-py2.py3-none-any.whl (59.2 kB view hashes)

Uploaded Python 2 Python 3

Supported by

AWS AWS Cloud computing and Security Sponsor Datadog Datadog Monitoring Fastly Fastly CDN Google Google Download Analytics Microsoft Microsoft PSF Sponsor Pingdom Pingdom Monitoring Sentry Sentry Error logging StatusPage StatusPage Status page