358 lines
11 KiB
Markdown
358 lines
11 KiB
Markdown
---
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title: Bashing JSON into Shape with SQLite
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date: 2022-01-04
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series: howto
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tags:
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- sqlite
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- json
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---
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It is clear that most of the world has decided that they want to use JSON for
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their public-facing API endpoints. However, most of the time you will need to
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deal with storage engines that don't deal with JSON very well. This can be
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confusing to deal with because you need to fit a square peg into a round hole.
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However, [SQLite](https://www.sqlite.org) added [JSON
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functions](https://www.sqlite.org/json1.html) to allow you to munge and modify
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JSON data in whatever creative ways you want. You can use these and SQLite
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[triggers](https://www.sqlite.org/lang_createtrigger.html) in order to
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automatically massage JSON into whatever kind of tables you want. Throw in
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upserts and you'll be able to make things even more automated. This support
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was added in SQLite 3.9.0 (released in 2015), so assuming Debian didn't disable
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it for no good reason, you should be able to use it today.
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For this example, we're going to be querying publicly available
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[JSONFeed](https://www.jsonfeed.org/) endpoints and turning that into SQL
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tables. Let's start with a table schema that looks like this:
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```sql
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CREATE TABLE IF NOT EXISTS jsonfeed_raw
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( feed_url TEXT PRIMARY KEY
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, scrape_date TEXT NOT NULL DEFAULT (DATE('now'))
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, raw TEXT NOT NULL
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);
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```
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[The scrape date is essentially the date that the JSONFeed row was inserted into
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the database. This can be useful when writing other parts of the stack to
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automatically query feeds for changes. This is left as an exercise to the
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reader.](conversation://Mara/hacker)
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You can then insert things into the SQLite database using Python's `sqlite3`
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module:
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```python
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#!/usr/bin/env nix-shell
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#! nix-shell -p python39 --run python
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import sqlite3
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import urllib.request
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con = sqlite3.connect("data.db")
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def get_feed(feed_url):
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req = urllib.request.Request(feed_url, headers={"User-Agent": "Xe/feedfetch"})
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with urllib.request.urlopen(req) as response:
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cur = con.cursor()
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body = response.read()
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cur.execute("""
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INSERT INTO jsonfeed_raw
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(feed_url, raw)
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VALUES
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(?, json(?))
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""", (feed_url, body))
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con.commit()
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print("got feed %s" % (feed_url))
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get_feed("https://xeiaso.net/blog.json")
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```
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So now let's play with the data! Let's load the database schema in with the
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`sqlite3` command:
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```console
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$ sqlite3 data.db < schema.sql
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```
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[The less-than symbol there is a redirect, it loads the data from `schema.sql`
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as standard input to the `sqlite` command. See <a
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href="https://xeiaso.net/blog/fun-with-redirection-2021-09-22">here</a>
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for more information on redirections.](conversation://Mara/hacker)
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Then run that python script to populate the database:
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```console
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$ python ./jsonfeedfetch.py
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got feed https://xeiaso.net/blog.json
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```
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Then open up the SQLite command line:
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```console
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$ sqlite3 data.db
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SQLite version 3.36.0 2021-06-18 18:36:39
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Enter ".help" for usage hints.
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sqlite>
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```
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And now we can play with a few of the JSON functions. First let's show off
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[`json_extract`](https://www.sqlite.org/json1.html#the_json_extract_function).
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This lets you pull a value out of a JSON object. For example, let's get the feed
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title out of my website's JSONFeed:
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```console
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sqlite> select json_extract(raw, '$.title') from jsonfeed_raw;
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Xe's Blog
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```
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We can use this function to help us create a table that stores the metadata we
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care about from a JSONFeed, such as this:
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```sql
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CREATE TABLE IF NOT EXISTS jsonfeed_metadata
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( feed_url TEXT PRIMARY KEY
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, title TEXT NOT NULL
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, description TEXT
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, home_page_url TEXT
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, updated_at TEXT NOT NULL DEFAULT (DATE('now'))
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);
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```
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[If you ask my coworkers, they can confirm that I actually do real life
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unironcally write SQL like that.](conversation://Cadey/coffee)
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Then we can populate that table with a query like this:
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```sql
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INSERT INTO jsonfeed_metadata
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( feed_url
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, title
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, description
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, home_page_url
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, updated_at
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)
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SELECT jsonfeed_raw.feed_url AS feed_url
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, json_extract(jsonfeed_raw.raw, '$.title') AS title
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, json_extract(jsonfeed_raw.raw, '$.description') AS description
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, json_extract(jsonfeed_raw.raw, '$.home_page_url') AS home_page_url
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, DATE('now') AS updated_at
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FROM jsonfeed_raw;
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```
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[The `AS` keyword lets you bind values in a `SELECT` statement to names for use
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elsewhere in the query. I don't know if it's _strictly_ needed, however it makes
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the names line up and SQLite doesn't complain about it, so it's probably
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fine.](conversation://Mara/hacker)
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Now this is workable, however you know what's easier than writing statements in
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the SQLite console like that? Not having to! SQLite triggers allow us to run
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database statements automatically when certain conditions happen. The main
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condition we want to care about right now is when we insert new data. We can
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turn that statement into an after-insert trigger like this:
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```sql
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CREATE TRIGGER IF NOT EXISTS jsonfeed_raw_ins
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AFTER INSERT ON jsonfeed_raw
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BEGIN
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INSERT INTO jsonfeed_metadata
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( feed_url
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, title
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, description
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, home_page_url
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)
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VALUES ( NEW.feed_url
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, json_extract(NEW.raw, '$.title')
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, json_extract(NEW.raw, '$.description')
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, json_extract(NEW.raw, '$.home_page_url')
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);
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END;
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```
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Then we can run a few commands to nuke all the database state:
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```console
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sqlite3> DELETE FROM jsonfeed_metadata;
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sqlite3> DELETE FROM jsonfeed_raw;
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```
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And run that python script again, then the data should automatically show up:
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```
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sqlite3> SELECT * FROM jsonfeed_metadata;
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https://xeiaso.net/blog.json|Xe's Blog|My blog posts and rants about various technology things.|https://xeiaso.net|2022-01-04
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```
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It's like magic!
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However, if you run that python script again without deleting the rows, you will
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get a primary key violation. We can fix this by turning the insert into an
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[upsert](https://www.sqlite.org/lang_UPSERT.html) with something like this:
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```python
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cur.execute("""
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INSERT INTO jsonfeed_raw
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(feed_url, raw)
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VALUES
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(?, json(?))
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ON CONFLICT DO
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UPDATE SET raw = json(?)
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""", (feed_url, body, body))
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```
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And also make a complementary update trigger for the `jsonfeed_raw` table:
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```sql
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CREATE TRIGGER IF NOT EXISTS jsonfeed_raw_upd
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AFTER UPDATE ON jsonfeed_raw
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BEGIN
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INSERT INTO jsonfeed_metadata
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( feed_url
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, title
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, description
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, home_page_url
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)
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VALUES ( NEW.feed_url
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, json_extract(NEW.raw, '$.title')
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, json_extract(NEW.raw, '$.description')
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, json_extract(NEW.raw, '$.home_page_url')
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)
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ON CONFLICT DO
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UPDATE SET
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title = json_extract(NEW.raw, '$.title')
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, description = json_extract(NEW.raw, '$.description')
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, home_page_url = json_extract(NEW.raw, '$.home_page_url')
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;
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```
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[You should probably update the original trigger to be an upsert too. You can
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follow this trigger as a guide. Be sure to `DROP TRIGGER jsonfeed_raw_upd;`
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first though!](conversation://Mara/hacker)
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We can also scrape the feed items out too with `json_each`. `json_each` lets you
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iterate a JSON array and returns SQLite rows for every value in that array.
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Let's take this for example:
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```console
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sqlite> select * from json_each('["foo", "bar"]');
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0|foo|text|foo|1||$[0]|$
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1|bar|text|bar|2||$[1]|$
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```
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The schema for the temporary table that `json_each` (and the related
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`json_tree`) uses can be found [here](https://www.sqlite.org/json1.html#jeach).
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You can also grab things out of a list in an object with the second argument to
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`json_each`, so you can do things like this:
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```console
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sqlite> select * from json_each('{"spam": ["foo", "bar"]}', '$.spam');
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0|foo|text|foo|3||$.spam[0]|$.spam
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1|bar|text|bar|4||$.spam[1]|$.spam
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```
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Using this, we can make a table for each of the feed items that looks something
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like this:
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```sql
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CREATE TABLE IF NOT EXISTS jsonfeed_posts
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( url TEXT PRIMARY KEY
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, feed_url TEXT NOT NULL
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, title TEXT NOT NULL
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, date_published TEXT NOT NULL
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);
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```
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And then munge everything out of the data in the database with a query like
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this:
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```sql
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INSERT INTO jsonfeed_posts
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( url
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, feed_url
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, title
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, date_published
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)
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SELECT
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json_extract(json_each.value, '$.url') AS url
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, jsonfeed_raw.feed_url AS feed_url
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, json_extract(json_each.value, '$.title') AS title
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, json_extract(json_each.value, '$.date_published') AS date_published
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FROM
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jsonfeed_raw
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, json_each(jsonfeed_raw.raw, '$.items');
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```
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This will fetch all of the values of the `items` field in every JSONFeed and
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then automatically populate them into the `jsonfeed_posts` table. However
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turning this into a trigger with the naiive approach will not instantly work.
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Let's say we have the trigger form that looks like this:
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```sql
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CREATE TRIGGER IF NOT EXISTS jsonfeed_raw_upd_posts
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AFTER INSERT ON jsonfeed_raw
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BEGIN
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INSERT INTO jsonfeed_posts
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( url
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, feed_url
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, title
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, date_published
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)
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SELECT
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json_extract(json_each.value, '$.url') AS url
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, NEW.feed_url AS feed_url
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, json_extract(json_each.value, '$.title') AS title
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, json_extract(json_each.value, '$.date_published') AS date_published
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FROM json_each(NEW.raw, '$.items')
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ON CONFLICT DO
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UPDATE SET title = excluded.title
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, date_published = excluded.date_published
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;
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END;
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```
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If you paste this into your SQLite console, you'll get this error:
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```
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Error: near "DO": syntax error
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```
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This is actually due to a [parsing ambiguity in
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SQLite](https://www.sqlite.org/lang_UPSERT.html). In order to fix this you will
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need to add `WHERE TRUE` between the `FROM` and `ON CONFLICT` clauses of the
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trigger:
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```sql
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-- ...
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FROM json_each(NEW.raw, '$.items')
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WHERE TRUE
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ON CONFLICT DO
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-- ...
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```
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[And thus the day is saved by the wheretrue, the hidden apex predator of the
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SQLite realm, a fated value that is only non-falsy at night. Weep in terror lest
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it add you to its table of victims!](conversation://Numa/delet)
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[The correlating insert trigger change is also an exercise for the
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reader.](conversation://Mara/hacker)
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Now you can add JSONFeeds how you want and all of the data will automatically be
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updated. This can probably be vastly simplified further with the use of
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[generated columns](https://dgl.cx/2020/06/sqlite-json-support), however this
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should work admirably for most needs.
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SQLite is able to be a NOSQL database. It's good enough for your needs. If you
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want to play with the code I wrote while writing this article, check it out
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[here](https://git.io/JSDVR). This post was written live on
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[twitch.tv](https://twitch.tv/princessxen). Please follow or subscribe to be
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kept up to date on when I go live!
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The VOD for this post is [here](https://www.twitch.tv/videos/1253083566). The
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corresponding YouTube upload is [here](https://youtu.be/zkM_lY65Lcw). It won't
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be available immediately after this post goes live, but it will go up in time.
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Here is my favorite message from the chat while I was researching this post:
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> jbpratt: if you were married to sqlite, i'd be reporting domestic abuse. This
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> is awesome
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