This is a map-type SmartModule that converts arbitrary JSON records into SQL model, which is a self-describing representation of SQL INSERT statements. This SmartModule is intended to be used in SQL Sink Connector, to execute a command in a SQL database.
The mapping between incoming JSON records and the resulting SQL record is defined in the configuration of the SmartModule in the mapping init parameter. Let’s look at the example:
- uses: infinyon/json-sql@0.1.0
with:
mapping:
table: "target_table"
map-columns:
"device_id":
json-key: "device.device_id"
value:
type: "int"
required: true
"device_type":
json-key: "device.type"
value:
type: "text"
default: "mobile"
"record":
json-key: "$"
value:
type: "jsonb"
required: true
Here, we create insert statements to target_table database table. Each statement has three columns:
- device_id with
inttype. The value for this column will looked-up at the following hierarchy$.device.device_idof the input record. If it is not present, the error will be thrown, as the mapping states, it is a required field. - device_type - text field with
mobilemarked as default value. Not required. Will be taken from$.device.typehierarchy. - record -
jsonbcolumn that contains the whole input record.
With the given mapping, the Json-Sql SmartModule will convert the input:
{
"device": {
"device_id": 1
}
}
into the following output:
{
"Insert": {
"table": "target_table",
"values": [
{
"column": "record",
"raw_value": "{\"device\":{\"device_id\":1}}",
"type": "Json"
},
{
"column": "device_type",
"raw_value": "mobile",
"type": "Text"
},
{
"column": "device_id",
"raw_value": "1",
"type": "Int"
}
]
}
}
which is equivalent to the following SQL statement:
INSERT INTO 'target_table' (record, device_type, device_id) VALUES ('{"device":{"device_id":1}}', 'mobile', 1)
The list of supported types and corresponding types from SQL model:
| Mapping | Model |
|---|---|
| int8, bigint | BigInt |
| int4, int, integer | Int |
| int2, smallint | SmallInt |
| bool, boolean | Bool |
| bytes, bytea | Bytes |
| text | Text |
| float4, float, real | Float |
| float8, “double precision”, doubleprecision | DoublePrecision |
| decimal, numeric | Numeric |
| date | Date |
| time | Time |
| timestamp | Timestamp |
| json, jsonb | Json |
| uuid | Uuid |
To see Json-Sql SmartModule in action, we will use SMDK tool.
First, we need to download it to our cluster from SmartModule Hub:
$ fluvio hub download infinyon/json-sql@0.1.0
Second, we create a file transform.yaml with the mapping used before:
# transform.yaml
transforms:
- uses: infinyon/json-sql@0.1.0
with:
mapping:
table: "target_table"
map-columns:
"device_id":
json-key: "device.device_id"
value:
type: "int"
required: true
"device_type":
json-key: "device.type"
value:
type: "text"
default: "mobile"
"record":
json-key: "$"
value:
type: "jsonb"
required: true
Now let’s call smdk test to see the result:
$ smdk test --text '{"device":{"device_id":1}}' --transforms-file ./transform.yaml
{"Insert":{"table":"target_table","values":[{"column":"record","raw_value":"{\"device\":{\"device_id\":1}}","type":"Json"},{"column":"type","raw_value":"mobile","type":"Text"},{"column":"device_id","raw_value":"1","type":"Int"}]}}
As mentioned at the beginning of this page, the outputed records can be consumed by SQL Sink Connector to be executed on SQL database. By convention, SQL Sink connector expects JSON inputs.
For additional examples checkout the tutorials: