PgRoutiner - Database-First For .NET and PostgreSQL
Edit this page on GitHubPgRoutiner
is a set of command-line tools for PostgreSQL databases and PostgreSQL .NET projects.
Using your .NET configuration project connection string (or custom-defined connection) - you can:
Navigate and search the database with ease.
Generate C# and TS models and code.
Generate database scripts and run tools.
Generate markdown documentation.
Generate CRUD command functions.
See the presentation slides
See the PgRoutiner Blog
See the PgRoutiner Concept Blog
See the PgRoutiner Code-Gen Blog
See the PgRoutiner Documentation Blog
Note: all examples in this readme, as well as in the presentation above use PostgreSQL Sample Database from [PostgreSQL Tutorial]
Quick start:
- Download native executable files (not dependent on any framework) for the latest version from the releases page.
- Set the appropriate path to the downloaded executable file.
- Type
pgroutiner --info
- Note: working with native executables is many times faster, they very short startup time and they offer many times better user experience.
Table of Contents:
- PgRoutiner - Database-First For .NET and PostgreSQL
Installation
Download Binaries
This is the fastest and easiest way to get started with the PgRoutiner tool. The releases page contains downloadable executables that are not dependent on anything. No framework or docker is required, just plain old native executable.
This is actually, the preferable way of using the PgRoutiner tool. Native executables are very much optimized and have very short startup time and they offer many times better user experience.
Here are the steps:
- Download native executable files (not dependent on any framework) for the latest version from the releases page.
- Set the appropriate path to the downloaded executable file.
- Type
pgroutiner --info
to see f it works.
That is it.
.NET Tool
Requirements
- To use as a .NET tool, .NET 8 SDK is required. See the global .NET tool or the local .NET tool for installation details.
Global .NET tool
To install a global tool (recommended):
$ dotnet tool install --global dotnet-pgroutiner
Tool 'dotnet-pgroutiner' (version '5.4.0') was successfully installed.
$ dotnet tool install --global dotnet-pgroutiner
Tool 'dotnet-pgroutiner' (version '5.4.0') was successfully installed.
To update a global tool:
$ dotnet tool update --global dotnet-pgroutiner
Tool 'dotnet-pgroutiner' was successfully updated from version '5.0.7' to version '5.0.8'.
$ dotnet tool update --global dotnet-pgroutiner
Tool 'dotnet-pgroutiner' was successfully updated from version '5.0.7' to version '5.0.8'.
This will enable a global command line tool pgroutiner
. Try typing pgroutiner --help
.
Local .NET tool
To add a local tool to your project only you need to create a manifest file and add a tool without --global
switch as described in this tutorial.
TL-DR:
Add
.config
directory to your project or solution.Add
dotnet-tools.json
file to this directory with the following content:
{
"version": 1,
"isRoot": true,
"tools": {
"dotnet-pgroutiner": {
"version": "5.0.6",
"commands": [
"pgroutiner"
]
}
}
}
{
"version": 1,
"isRoot": true,
"tools": {
"dotnet-pgroutiner": {
"version": "5.0.6",
"commands": [
"pgroutiner"
]
}
}
}
From your command line type
dotnet tool restore
Run the tool with
dotnet tool run pgroutiner [arguments]
, for example,dotnet tool run pgroutiner --help
Quick Start
- Install
pgroutiner
(see the instructions above) - Open the terminal in your .NET project configured to use the PostgreSQL database.
- Type
pgroutiner --help
to see available commands and switches (the list is long). - Type
pgroutiner
to define a new connection if you don't have one - and to create the default configuration file for this dir. See more on Connection management - Type
pgroutiner --info
to see if can you connect to the database and to see other environment info. - Type
pgroutiner --list
to see list of all objects. - Type
pgroutiner --ddl [object_name]
to see the data definition language for the object from the second parameter. - Type
pgroutiner --search [search expression]
to search data definitions with search expression.
Connection Management
The
pgroutiner
is designed to run from the .NET project root - and it will read any available connections from standard configuration JSON files (likeappsettings.Development.json
andappsettings.json
, in that order).It will use the first available connection string from the
ConnectionStrings
section:
appsettings.json
{
"ConnectionStrings": {
"DvdRental": "Server=localhost;Db=dvdrental;Port=5432;User Id=postgres;Password=postgres;"
}
}
{
"ConnectionStrings": {
"DvdRental": "Server=localhost;Db=dvdrental;Port=5432;User Id=postgres;Password=postgres;"
}
}
Note: this is the Npgsql connection string format, but, it can also use standard PostgreSQL URL connection format
postgresql://{user}:{password}@{server}:{port}/{database}
.Running simple info command to test the connection to see the environment:
~$ pgroutiner --info
Version:
5.0.3.0
Executable dir:
/home/vbilopav/.dotnet/tools
OS:
Unix 5.10.102.1
Using configuration files:
appsettings.Development.json
appsettings.json
Using dir:
/home/vbilopav/dev/dvdrental
Using settings:
--info
Using connection DvdRental:
Host=localhost;Database=dvdrental;Port=5432;Username=postgres (PostgreSQL 13.8)
Using project file:
dvdrental.csproj
pg_dump:
pg_dump
pg_restore:
/usr/lib/postgresql/13/bin/pg_restore
~$ pgroutiner --info
Version:
5.0.3.0
Executable dir:
/home/vbilopav/.dotnet/tools
OS:
Unix 5.10.102.1
Using configuration files:
appsettings.Development.json
appsettings.json
Using dir:
/home/vbilopav/dev/dvdrental
Using settings:
--info
Using connection DvdRental:
Host=localhost;Database=dvdrental;Port=5432;Username=postgres (PostgreSQL 13.8)
Using project file:
dvdrental.csproj
pg_dump:
pg_dump
pg_restore:
/usr/lib/postgresql/13/bin/pg_restore
- If the connection isn't available anywhere in the configuration files - the user is prompted to enter the connection parameters:
~$ pgroutiner
Connection server [localhost]:
Connection port [5432]:
Connection database [postgres]:
Connection user [postgres]:
Connection password [environment var.]:
~$ pgroutiner
Connection server [localhost]:
Connection port [5432]:
Connection database [postgres]:
Connection user [postgres]:
Connection password [environment var.]:
- To specify the specific connection name, use
-c
or--connection
parameter:
~$ pgroutiner -c ConnectionString2 --info
~$ pgroutiner -c ConnectionString2 --info
~$ pgroutiner --connection ConnectionString2 --info
~$ pgroutiner --connection ConnectionString2 --info
- If the connection name is not found, or the connection is not defined - the user will be prompted to enter valid connection parameters:
Connection server [localhost]:
Connection port [5432]:
Connection database [postgres]:
Connection user [postgres]:
Connection password:
Connection server [localhost]:
Connection port [5432]:
Connection database [postgres]:
Connection user [postgres]:
Connection password:
Connection server, port, database, and user have predefined default values (
localhost
,5432
,postgres
,postgres
) - hit Enter to skip and use the default.The Command line can use the entire connection string with
-c
or--connection
- instead of the connection name:
~$ pgroutiner --connection "Server=localhost;Db=test;Port=5432;User Id=postgres;Password=postgres;" --info
~$ pgroutiner --connection "Server=localhost;Db=test;Port=5432;User Id=postgres;Password=postgres;" --info
- Both command-line and configuration files can take advantage of the PostgreSQL URL format
postgresql://{user}:{password}@{server}:{port}/{database}
- instead of Npgsql connection string:
{
"ConnectionStrings": {
"TestConnection": "postgresql://postgres:postgres@localhost:5432/test"
}
}
{
"ConnectionStrings": {
"TestConnection": "postgresql://postgres:postgres@localhost:5432/test"
}
}
- Or, from the command line:
~$ pgroutiner --connection "postgresql://postgres:postgres@localhost:5432/test" --info
~$ pgroutiner --connection "postgresql://postgres:postgres@localhost:5432/test" --info
Every part of the connection (server, port, database, user, and password) can be omitted from the connection string or connection URL and it will be replaced with the following environment variables:
PGHOST
orPGSERVER
to replace the missing server parameter.PGPORT
to replace the missing port parameter.PGDATABASE
orPGDB
to replace the missing database parameter.PGHOST
orPGSERVER
to replace the missing server parameter.PGUSER
to replace the missing user parameter.PGPASSWORD
orPGPASS
to replace the missing password parameter.
Configuration Management
Every possible command-line option and switch can be configured in the configuration file.
Use the
PgRoutiner
configuration section in the JSON configuration (appsettings.json
orappsettings.Development.json
), example:
{
"ConnectionStrings": {
"TestConnection": "postgresql://postgres:postgres@localhost:5432/test"
},
"PgRoutiner": {
// pgroutiner settings
}
}
{
"ConnectionStrings": {
"TestConnection": "postgresql://postgres:postgres@localhost:5432/test"
},
"PgRoutiner": {
// pgroutiner settings
}
}
pgroutiner
will read and apply configuration settings as the default value if the configuration sectionPgRoutiner
exists.Use the command line to override any configuration settings.
As a general rule, any configuration setting has its equivalent in the command line as the kebab-cased sitch starting with two dashes. Examples:
- Setting:
SkipConnectionPrompt
, command line:--skip-connection-prompt
- Setting:
SchemaSimilarTo
, command line:--schema-similar-to
- etc
- Setting:
Many settings have also shortcut alias, for example, the
Connection
setting can be either:-c
-conn
--conn
-connection
--connection
.Boolean settings are switches, it is sufficient to include a switch without value to turn it on:
pgroutiner --skip-connection-prompt
Add
false
or0
to turn it off:pgroutiner --skip-connection-prompt false
You can inspect currently applied settings with
--settings
switch.pgroutiner --settings
will force to skip any operation and it will only display all current settings. It will also display command-line alias in comment headers.You can also run
pgroutiner --info
which will, among other things, display currently applied settings that differ from default values.If there is no configuration section
PgRoutiner
is present anywhere, and if you runpgroutiner
without any parameters, you will be offered to create the default configuration fileappsettings.PgRoutiner.json
:
You don't seem to be using any available command-line commands and PgRoutiner configuration seems to be missing.
Would you like to create a custom settings file "appsettings.PgRoutiner.json" with your current values?
This settings configuration file can be used to change settings for this directory without using a command-line.
Create "appsettings.PgRoutiner.json" in this dir [Y/N]?
You don't seem to be using any available command-line commands and PgRoutiner configuration seems to be missing.
Would you like to create a custom settings file "appsettings.PgRoutiner.json" with your current values?
This settings configuration file can be used to change settings for this directory without using a command-line.
Create "appsettings.PgRoutiner.json" in this dir [Y/N]?
appsettings.PgRoutiner.json
, if exists, will always be loaded after theappsettings.json
andappsettings.Development.json
and override any possible setting values in those files.If you need to load these configuration files from a different location, you can use
--config-path, for example,
pgroutiner --config-path ../../dir2/
You can also use any of these options to load custom configuration files:
-cf
,--cf
,-config
,--config
,-config-file
,--config-file
, for example,pgroutiner --config ../../dir2/my-config.json
You can also write current settings to a custom configuration by using any of these options
-wcf
,--write-config-file
, for example,pgroutiner --write-config-file ../../dir2/my-config.json
The full configuration file with all default values for this current version
Working With Database
List database objects
Description:
-l -ls --ls --list to dump or search object list to console. Use the switch to dump all objects or parameter values to search.
Examples:
vbilopav@DESKTOP-O3A6QK2:~/dev/dvdrental$ pgroutiner --list
SCHEMA public
EXTENSION plpgsql
TYPE mpaa_rating
DOMAIN public.year
TABLE public.actor
VIEW public.actor_info
VIEW public.customer_list
...
vbilopav@DESKTOP-O3A6QK2:~/dev/dvdrental$ pgroutiner --list
SCHEMA public
EXTENSION plpgsql
TYPE mpaa_rating
DOMAIN public.year
TABLE public.actor
VIEW public.actor_info
VIEW public.customer_list
...
vbilopav@DESKTOP-O3A6QK2:~/dev/dvdrental$ pgroutiner -l
SCHEMA public
EXTENSION plpgsql
TYPE mpaa_rating
DOMAIN public.year
TABLE public.actor
VIEW public.actor_info
VIEW public.customer_list
...
vbilopav@DESKTOP-O3A6QK2:~/dev/dvdrental$ pgroutiner -l
SCHEMA public
EXTENSION plpgsql
TYPE mpaa_rating
DOMAIN public.year
TABLE public.actor
VIEW public.actor_info
VIEW public.customer_list
...
vbilopav@DESKTOP-O3A6QK2:~/dev/dvdrental$ pgroutiner -ls
SCHEMA public
EXTENSION plpgsql
TYPE mpaa_rating
DOMAIN public.year
TABLE public.actor
VIEW public.actor_info
VIEW public.customer_list
...
vbilopav@DESKTOP-O3A6QK2:~/dev/dvdrental$ pgroutiner -ls
SCHEMA public
EXTENSION plpgsql
TYPE mpaa_rating
DOMAIN public.year
TABLE public.actor
VIEW public.actor_info
VIEW public.customer_list
...
- Note: when searching through the object list, the match is highlighted.
vbilopav@DESKTOP-O3A6QK2:~/dev/dvdrental$ pgroutiner --list film
VIEW public.film_list
VIEW public.nicer_but_slower_film_list
VIEW public.sales_by_film_category
TABLE public.film_actor
TABLE public.film_category
TABLE public.film
SEQ public.film_film_id_seq
FUNCTION public.film_in_stock(integer, integer)
FUNCTION public.film_not_in_stock(integer, integer)
vbilopav@DESKTOP-O3A6QK2:~/dev/dvdrental$
vbilopav@DESKTOP-O3A6QK2:~/dev/dvdrental$ pgroutiner --list film
VIEW public.film_list
VIEW public.nicer_but_slower_film_list
VIEW public.sales_by_film_category
TABLE public.film_actor
TABLE public.film_category
TABLE public.film
SEQ public.film_film_id_seq
FUNCTION public.film_in_stock(integer, integer)
FUNCTION public.film_not_in_stock(integer, integer)
vbilopav@DESKTOP-O3A6QK2:~/dev/dvdrental$
vbilopav@DESKTOP-O3A6QK2:~/dev/dvdrental$ pgroutiner --list actor
TABLE public.actor
VIEW public.actor_info
TABLE public.film_actor
SEQ public.actor_actor_id_seq
vbilopav@DESKTOP-O3A6QK2:~/dev/dvdrental$
vbilopav@DESKTOP-O3A6QK2:~/dev/dvdrental$ pgroutiner --list actor
TABLE public.actor
VIEW public.actor_info
TABLE public.film_actor
SEQ public.actor_actor_id_seq
vbilopav@DESKTOP-O3A6QK2:~/dev/dvdrental$
View object definitions
Description:
-def -ddl --ddl -definition --definition to dump object schema definition in console supplied as a value parameter.
Examples:
vbilopav@DESKTOP-O3A6QK2:~/dev/dvdrental$ pgroutiner -ddl actor
--
-- Table: public.actor
--
CREATE TABLE public.actor (
actor_id integer DEFAULT nextval('public.actor_actor_id_seq'::regclass) NOT NULL PRIMARY KEY,
first_name character varying(45) NOT NULL,
last_name character varying(45) NOT NULL,
last_update timestamp without time zone DEFAULT now() NOT NULL
);
ALTER TABLE public.actor OWNER TO postgres;
CREATE INDEX idx_actor_last_name ON public.actor USING btree (last_name);
CREATE TRIGGER last_updated BEFORE UPDATE ON public.actor FOR EACH ROW EXECUTE FUNCTION public.last_updated();
vbilopav@DESKTOP-O3A6QK2:~/dev/dvdrental$
vbilopav@DESKTOP-O3A6QK2:~/dev/dvdrental$ pgroutiner -ddl actor
--
-- Table: public.actor
--
CREATE TABLE public.actor (
actor_id integer DEFAULT nextval('public.actor_actor_id_seq'::regclass) NOT NULL PRIMARY KEY,
first_name character varying(45) NOT NULL,
last_name character varying(45) NOT NULL,
last_update timestamp without time zone DEFAULT now() NOT NULL
);
ALTER TABLE public.actor OWNER TO postgres;
CREATE INDEX idx_actor_last_name ON public.actor USING btree (last_name);
CREATE TRIGGER last_updated BEFORE UPDATE ON public.actor FOR EACH ROW EXECUTE FUNCTION public.last_updated();
vbilopav@DESKTOP-O3A6QK2:~/dev/dvdrental$
vbilopav@DESKTOP-O3A6QK2:~/dev/dvdrental$ pgroutiner -ddl film
--
-- Table: public.film
--
CREATE TABLE public.film (
film_id integer DEFAULT nextval('public.film_film_id_seq'::regclass) NOT NULL PRIMARY KEY,
title character varying(255) NOT NULL,
description text,
release_year public.year,
language_id smallint NOT NULL,
rental_duration smallint DEFAULT 3 NOT NULL,
rental_rate numeric(4,2) DEFAULT 4.99 NOT NULL,
length smallint,
replacement_cost numeric(5,2) DEFAULT 19.99 NOT NULL,
rating public.mpaa_rating DEFAULT 'G'::public.mpaa_rating,
last_update timestamp without time zone DEFAULT now() NOT NULL,
special_features text[],
fulltext tsvector NOT NULL,
FOREIGN KEY (language_id) REFERENCES public.language(language_id) ON UPDATE CASCADE ON DELETE RESTRICT
);
ALTER TABLE public.film OWNER TO postgres;
CREATE INDEX film_fulltext_idx ON public.film USING gist (fulltext);
CREATE INDEX idx_fk_language_id ON public.film USING btree (language_id);
CREATE INDEX idx_title ON public.film USING btree (title);
CREATE TRIGGER film_fulltext_trigger BEFORE INSERT OR UPDATE ON public.film FOR EACH ROW EXECUTE FUNCTION tsvector_update_trigger('fulltext', 'pg_catalog.english', 'title', 'description');
CREATE TRIGGER last_updated BEFORE UPDATE ON public.film FOR EACH ROW EXECUTE FUNCTION public.last_updated();
vbilopav@DESKTOP-O3A6QK2:~/dev/dvdrental$
vbilopav@DESKTOP-O3A6QK2:~/dev/dvdrental$ pgroutiner -ddl film
--
-- Table: public.film
--
CREATE TABLE public.film (
film_id integer DEFAULT nextval('public.film_film_id_seq'::regclass) NOT NULL PRIMARY KEY,
title character varying(255) NOT NULL,
description text,
release_year public.year,
language_id smallint NOT NULL,
rental_duration smallint DEFAULT 3 NOT NULL,
rental_rate numeric(4,2) DEFAULT 4.99 NOT NULL,
length smallint,
replacement_cost numeric(5,2) DEFAULT 19.99 NOT NULL,
rating public.mpaa_rating DEFAULT 'G'::public.mpaa_rating,
last_update timestamp without time zone DEFAULT now() NOT NULL,
special_features text[],
fulltext tsvector NOT NULL,
FOREIGN KEY (language_id) REFERENCES public.language(language_id) ON UPDATE CASCADE ON DELETE RESTRICT
);
ALTER TABLE public.film OWNER TO postgres;
CREATE INDEX film_fulltext_idx ON public.film USING gist (fulltext);
CREATE INDEX idx_fk_language_id ON public.film USING btree (language_id);
CREATE INDEX idx_title ON public.film USING btree (title);
CREATE TRIGGER film_fulltext_trigger BEFORE INSERT OR UPDATE ON public.film FOR EACH ROW EXECUTE FUNCTION tsvector_update_trigger('fulltext', 'pg_catalog.english', 'title', 'description');
CREATE TRIGGER last_updated BEFORE UPDATE ON public.film FOR EACH ROW EXECUTE FUNCTION public.last_updated();
vbilopav@DESKTOP-O3A6QK2:~/dev/dvdrental$
vbilopav@DESKTOP-O3A6QK2:~/dev/dvdrental$ pgroutiner --ddl film_in_stock
--
-- Function: public.film_in_stock
--
CREATE FUNCTION public.film_in_stock(
p_film_id integer,
p_store_id integer,
OUT p_film_count integer
)
RETURNS SETOF integer
LANGUAGE sql
AS $_$
SELECT inventory_id
FROM inventory
WHERE film_id = $1
AND store_id = $2
AND inventory_in_stock(inventory_id);
$_$;
ALTER FUNCTION public.film_in_stock(p_film_id integer, p_store_id integer, OUT p_film_count integer) OWNER TO postgres;
vbilopav@DESKTOP-O3A6QK2:~/dev/dvdrental$
vbilopav@DESKTOP-O3A6QK2:~/dev/dvdrental$ pgroutiner --ddl film_in_stock
--
-- Function: public.film_in_stock
--
CREATE FUNCTION public.film_in_stock(
p_film_id integer,
p_store_id integer,
OUT p_film_count integer
)
RETURNS SETOF integer
LANGUAGE sql
AS $_$
SELECT inventory_id
FROM inventory
WHERE film_id = $1
AND store_id = $2
AND inventory_in_stock(inventory_id);
$_$;
ALTER FUNCTION public.film_in_stock(p_film_id integer, p_store_id integer, OUT p_film_count integer) OWNER TO postgres;
vbilopav@DESKTOP-O3A6QK2:~/dev/dvdrental$
- Note: to dump multiple definitions use semicolon-separated values:
vbilopav@DESKTOP-O3A6QK2:~/dev/dvdrental$ pgroutiner --ddl "actor;film_in_stock"
--
-- Table: public.actor
--
CREATE TABLE public.actor (
actor_id integer DEFAULT nextval('public.actor_actor_id_seq'::regclass) NOT NULL PRIMARY KEY,
first_name character varying(45) NOT NULL,
last_name character varying(45) NOT NULL,
last_update timestamp without time zone DEFAULT now() NOT NULL
);
ALTER TABLE public.actor OWNER TO postgres;
CREATE INDEX idx_actor_last_name ON public.actor USING btree (last_name);
CREATE TRIGGER last_updated BEFORE UPDATE ON public.actor FOR EACH ROW EXECUTE FUNCTION public.last_updated();
--
-- Function: public.film_in_stock
--
CREATE FUNCTION public.film_in_stock(
p_film_id integer,
p_store_id integer,
OUT p_film_count integer
)
RETURNS SETOF integer
LANGUAGE sql
AS $_$
SELECT inventory_id
FROM inventory
WHERE film_id = $1
AND store_id = $2
AND inventory_in_stock(inventory_id);
$_$;
ALTER FUNCTION public.film_in_stock(p_film_id integer, p_store_id integer, OUT p_film_count integer) OWNER TO postgres;
vbilopav@DESKTOP-O3A6QK2:~/dev/dvdrental$
vbilopav@DESKTOP-O3A6QK2:~/dev/dvdrental$ pgroutiner --ddl "actor;film_in_stock"
--
-- Table: public.actor
--
CREATE TABLE public.actor (
actor_id integer DEFAULT nextval('public.actor_actor_id_seq'::regclass) NOT NULL PRIMARY KEY,
first_name character varying(45) NOT NULL,
last_name character varying(45) NOT NULL,
last_update timestamp without time zone DEFAULT now() NOT NULL
);
ALTER TABLE public.actor OWNER TO postgres;
CREATE INDEX idx_actor_last_name ON public.actor USING btree (last_name);
CREATE TRIGGER last_updated BEFORE UPDATE ON public.actor FOR EACH ROW EXECUTE FUNCTION public.last_updated();
--
-- Function: public.film_in_stock
--
CREATE FUNCTION public.film_in_stock(
p_film_id integer,
p_store_id integer,
OUT p_film_count integer
)
RETURNS SETOF integer
LANGUAGE sql
AS $_$
SELECT inventory_id
FROM inventory
WHERE film_id = $1
AND store_id = $2
AND inventory_in_stock(inventory_id);
$_$;
ALTER FUNCTION public.film_in_stock(p_film_id integer, p_store_id integer, OUT p_film_count integer) OWNER TO postgres;
vbilopav@DESKTOP-O3A6QK2:~/dev/dvdrental$
Search definitions by search expression
Description:
s --s --search to search object schema definitions and dump highlighted results to the console.
Searches entire definitions and dumps to console entire definitions containing the expression.
Note: search expression match is highlighted.
vbilopav@DESKTOP-O3A6QK2:~/dev/dvdrental$ pgroutiner --search "select public.group_concat"
--
-- View: public.actor_info
--
CREATE VIEW public.actor_info AS
SELECT a.actor_id,
a.first_name,
a.last_name,
public.group_concat(DISTINCT (((c.name)::text || ': '::text) || ( SELECT public.group_concat((f.title)::text) AS group_concat
FROM ((public.film f
JOIN public.film_category fc_1 ON ((f.film_id = fc_1.film_id)))
JOIN public.film_actor fa_1 ON ((f.film_id = fa_1.film_id)))
WHERE ((fc_1.category_id = c.category_id) AND (fa_1.actor_id = a.actor_id))
GROUP BY fa_1.actor_id))) AS film_info
FROM (((public.actor a
LEFT JOIN public.film_actor fa ON ((a.actor_id = fa.actor_id)))
LEFT JOIN public.film_category fc ON ((fa.film_id = fc.film_id)))
LEFT JOIN public.category c ON ((fc.category_id = c.category_id)))
GROUP BY a.actor_id, a.first_name, a.last_name;
ALTER TABLE public.actor_info OWNER TO postgres;
vbilopav@DESKTOP-O3A6QK2:~/dev/dvdrental$
vbilopav@DESKTOP-O3A6QK2:~/dev/dvdrental$ pgroutiner --search "select public.group_concat"
--
-- View: public.actor_info
--
CREATE VIEW public.actor_info AS
SELECT a.actor_id,
a.first_name,
a.last_name,
public.group_concat(DISTINCT (((c.name)::text || ': '::text) || ( SELECT public.group_concat((f.title)::text) AS group_concat
FROM ((public.film f
JOIN public.film_category fc_1 ON ((f.film_id = fc_1.film_id)))
JOIN public.film_actor fa_1 ON ((f.film_id = fa_1.film_id)))
WHERE ((fc_1.category_id = c.category_id) AND (fa_1.actor_id = a.actor_id))
GROUP BY fa_1.actor_id))) AS film_info
FROM (((public.actor a
LEFT JOIN public.film_actor fa ON ((a.actor_id = fa.actor_id)))
LEFT JOIN public.film_category fc ON ((fa.film_id = fc.film_id)))
LEFT JOIN public.category c ON ((fc.category_id = c.category_id)))
GROUP BY a.actor_id, a.first_name, a.last_name;
ALTER TABLE public.actor_info OWNER TO postgres;
vbilopav@DESKTOP-O3A6QK2:~/dev/dvdrental$
vbilopav@DESKTOP-O3A6QK2:~/dev/dvdrental$ pgroutiner --search smallint
--
-- Table: public.store
--
CREATE TABLE public.store (
store_id integer DEFAULT nextval('public.store_store_id_seq'::regclass) NOT NULL PRIMARY KEY,
manager_staff_id smallint NOT NULL,
address_id smallint NOT NULL,
last_update timestamp without time zone DEFAULT now() NOT NULL,
FOREIGN KEY (address_id) REFERENCES public.address(address_id) ON UPDATE CASCADE ON DELETE RESTRICT,
FOREIGN KEY (manager_staff_id) REFERENCES public.staff(staff_id) ON UPDATE CASCADE ON DELETE RESTRICT
);
ALTER TABLE public.store OWNER TO postgres;
CREATE UNIQUE INDEX idx_unq_manager_staff_id ON public.store USING btree (manager_staff_id);
CREATE TRIGGER last_updated BEFORE UPDATE ON public.store FOR EACH ROW EXECUTE FUNCTION public.last_updated();
--
-- Table: public.address
--
CREATE TABLE public.address (
address_id integer DEFAULT nextval('public.address_address_id_seq'::regclass) NOT NULL PRIMARY KEY,
address character varying(50) NOT NULL,
address2 character varying(50),
district character varying(20) NOT NULL,
city_id smallint NOT NULL,
postal_code character varying(10),
phone character varying(20) NOT NULL,
last_update timestamp without time zone DEFAULT now() NOT NULL,
CONSTRAINT fk_address_city FOREIGN KEY (city_id) REFERENCES public.city(city_id)
);
...
vbilopav@DESKTOP-O3A6QK2:~/dev/dvdrental$ pgroutiner --search smallint
--
-- Table: public.store
--
CREATE TABLE public.store (
store_id integer DEFAULT nextval('public.store_store_id_seq'::regclass) NOT NULL PRIMARY KEY,
manager_staff_id smallint NOT NULL,
address_id smallint NOT NULL,
last_update timestamp without time zone DEFAULT now() NOT NULL,
FOREIGN KEY (address_id) REFERENCES public.address(address_id) ON UPDATE CASCADE ON DELETE RESTRICT,
FOREIGN KEY (manager_staff_id) REFERENCES public.staff(staff_id) ON UPDATE CASCADE ON DELETE RESTRICT
);
ALTER TABLE public.store OWNER TO postgres;
CREATE UNIQUE INDEX idx_unq_manager_staff_id ON public.store USING btree (manager_staff_id);
CREATE TRIGGER last_updated BEFORE UPDATE ON public.store FOR EACH ROW EXECUTE FUNCTION public.last_updated();
--
-- Table: public.address
--
CREATE TABLE public.address (
address_id integer DEFAULT nextval('public.address_address_id_seq'::regclass) NOT NULL PRIMARY KEY,
address character varying(50) NOT NULL,
address2 character varying(50),
district character varying(20) NOT NULL,
city_id smallint NOT NULL,
postal_code character varying(10),
phone character varying(20) NOT NULL,
last_update timestamp without time zone DEFAULT now() NOT NULL,
CONSTRAINT fk_address_city FOREIGN KEY (city_id) REFERENCES public.city(city_id)
);
...
Dump data from tables or queries as inserts
Backup and restore
Open PSQL tool
Execute PSQL commands and scripts
Generating Scripts
Generating Documentation
Generating Code
Troubleshooting
Depending on the command, this tool will start external processes with PostgreSQL client tools like psql
, pg_dump
, or pg_restore
.
That means, that PostgreSQL client tools must be installed on the system. PostgreSQL client tools will be installed by default with every PostgreSQL installation.
If you don't want a server, but only client tools:
- For Windows systems, there is option "client tools only" option in the installer.
- For Linux systems, installing the package
postgresql-client
would be enough, something like$ sudo apt-get install -y postgresql-client
, but depends on the system.
When pgroutiner
calls an external tool, it will first try to call the default alias psql
or pg_dump
. Then, if the version of the tool doesn't match the version from the connection it will try to locate the executable on the default location:
C:\Program Files\PostgreSQL\{0}\bin\pg_dump.exe
andC:\Program Files\PostgreSQL\{0}\bin\psql.exe
for windows systems./usr/lib/postgresql/{0}/bin/pg_dump
and/usr/lib/postgresql/{0}/bin/psql
for Linux systems.- Note: format placeholder
{0}
is the major version number.
Those paths are PostgreSQL installs binaries by default.
When PgRoutiner sees the version mismatch it will prompt a warning and fallback to that path with an appropriate version number.
This behavior can be avoided by settings PgDumpFallback
and PsqlFallback
settings values respectively.
Support
This is open-source software developed and maintained freely without any compensation whatsoever.
License
Copyright (c) Vedran Bilopavlović - VB Consulting and VB Software 2020 This source code is licensed under the MIT license.