The real PostgreSQL parser, exposed for nodejs.
Primarily used for the node.js parser and deparser pgsql-parser
npm install libpg-query
const parser = require('libpg-query');
parser.parseQuery('select 1').then(console.log);
Parses the sql and returns a Promise for the parse tree (or returns the parse tree directly in the sync version). May reject with/throw a parse error.
The return value is an array, as multiple queries may be provided in a single string (semicolon-delimited, as Postgres expects).
Parses the contents of a PL/PGSql function, from a CREATE FUNCTION
declaration, and returns a Promise for the parse tree (or returns the parse tree directly in the sync version). May reject with/throw a parse error.
Our latest is built with 16-latest
branch from libpg_query
PG Major Version | libpg_query | Branch | npm |
---|---|---|---|
16 | 16-latest | 16-latest |
libpg-query@16.2.0 |
15 | 15-latest | 15-latest |
libpg-query@15.1.0 |
14 | 14-latest | 14-latest |
libpg-query@14.0.0 |
13 | 13-latest | 13-latest |
libpg-query@13.3.1 |
12 | (n/a) | ||
11 | (n/a) | ||
10 | 10-latest | @1.3.1 (tree) |
- Install requirements (
npm i
) npx node-pre-gyp rebuild package
- With appropriate AWS credentials configured,
npx node-pre-gyp publish
Or you can run the scripts
npm run binary:build
npm run binary:publish
This is based on the output of libpg_query. This wraps the static library output and links it into a node module for use in js.
All credit for the hard problems goes to Lukas Fittl.
Additional thanks for node binding Ethan Resnick.