This is a read-only copy of the MariaDB Knowledgebase generated on 2024-11-22. For the latest, interactive version please visit https://mariadb.com/kb/.

SQL Resource

SQL Resource

The SQL resource represents a database connection.

SQL Connection Interface

The following endpoints provide a simple REST API interface for executing SQL queries on servers and services in MaxScale.

This endpoint also supports executing SQL queries using an ODBC driver. The results returned by connections that use ODBC drivers can differ from the ones returned by normal SQL connections to objects in MaxScale.

This document uses the :id value in the URL to represent a connection ID and the :query_id to represent a query ID. These values do not need to be manually added as the relevant links are returned in the request body of each endpoint.

The endpoints use JSON Web Tokens to uniquely identify open SQL connections. A connection token can be acquired with a POST /v1/sql request and can be used with the POST /v1/sql/:id/query, GET /v1/sql/:id/results/:query_id and DELETE /v1/sql endpoints. All of these endpoints accept a connection token in the token parameter of the request:

POST /v1/sql/query?token=eyJhbGciOiJIUzI1NiJ9.eyJhdWQiOiJhZG1pbiIsImV4cCI6MTU4MzI1NDE1MSwiaWF0IjoxNTgzMjI1MzUxLCJpc3MiOiJtYXhzY2FsZSJ9.B1BqhjjKaCWKe3gVXLszpOPfeu8cLiwSb4CMIJAoyqw

In addition to request parameters, the token can be stored in cookies in which case they are automatically used by the REST API. For more information about token storage in cookies, see the documentation for POST /v1/sql.

Request Parameters

All of the endpoints that operate on a single connection support the following request parameters. The GET /v1/sql and GET /v1/sql/:id endpoints are an exception as they ignore the current connection token.

  • token

  • The connection token to use for the request. If provided, the value is unconditionally used even if a cookie with a valid token exists.

Get one SQL connection

GET /v1/sql/:id

Response

Response contains the requested resource.

Status: 200 OK

{
    "data": {
        "attributes": {
            "seconds_idle": 0.0013705639999999999,
            "sql": null,
            "target": "server1",
            "thread_id": 10
        },
        "id": "96be0ffe-10fb-4ed1-8e66-a17ef1eea0fe",
        "links": {
            "related": "http://localhost:8989/v1/sql/96be0ffe-10fb-4ed1-8e66-a17ef1eea0fe/queries/",
            "self": "http://localhost:8989/v1/sql/96be0ffe-10fb-4ed1-8e66-a17ef1eea0fe/"
        },
        "type": "sql"
    },
    "links": {
        "self": "http://localhost:8989/v1/sql/96be0ffe-10fb-4ed1-8e66-a17ef1eea0fe/"
    }
}

Get all SQL connections

GET /v1/sql

Response

Response contains a resource collection with all the open SQL connections.

Status: 200 OK

{
    "data": [
        {
            "attributes": {
                "seconds_idle": 0.0010341230000000001,
                "sql": null,
                "target": "server1",
                "thread_id": 12
            },
            "id": "90761656-3352-420b-83e7-0dcef691552a",
            "links": {
                "related": "http://localhost:8989/v1/sql/90761656-3352-420b-83e7-0dcef691552a/queries/",
                "self": "http://localhost:8989/v1/sql/90761656-3352-420b-83e7-0dcef691552a/"
            },
            "type": "sql"
        },
        {
            "attributes": {
                "seconds_idle": 0.002397377,
                "sql": null,
                "target": "server1",
                "thread_id": 11
            },
            "id": "98a8b5c5-3632-4f0f-98bb-0dc440a3409a",
            "links": {
                "related": "http://localhost:8989/v1/sql/98a8b5c5-3632-4f0f-98bb-0dc440a3409a/queries/",
                "self": "http://localhost:8989/v1/sql/98a8b5c5-3632-4f0f-98bb-0dc440a3409a/"
            },
            "type": "sql"
        }
    ],
    "links": {
        "self": "http://localhost:8989/v1/sql/"
    }
}

Open SQL connection to server

POST /v1/sql

The request body must be a JSON object consisting of the following fields:

  • target

  • The object to connect to. This is a mandatory value and the given value must be the name of a valid server, service or listener in MaxScale or the value odbc if an ODBC connection is being made.

  • user

  • The username to use when creating the connection. This is a mandatory value when connecting to an object in MaxScale.

  • password

  • The password for the user. This is a mandatory value when connecting to an object in MaxScale.

  • db

  • The default database for the connection. By default the connection will have no default database. This is ignored by ODBC connections.

  • timeout

  • Connection timeout in seconds. The default connection timeout is 10 seconds. This controls how long the SQL connection creation can take before an error is returned. This is accepted by all connection types.

  • connection_string

  • Connection string that defines the ODBC connection. This is a required value for ODBC type connections and is ignored by all other connection types.

Here is an example request body:

{
    "user": "jdoe",
    "password": "my-s3cret",
    "target": "server1",
    "db": "test",
    "timeout": 15
}

And here is an example request that uses an ODBC driver to connect to a remote server:

{
    "target": "odbc",
    "connection_string": "Driver=MariaDB;SERVER=127.0.0.1;UID=maxuser;PWD=maxpwd"
}

The response will contain the new connection with the token stored at meta.token. If the request uses the persist=yes request parameter, the token is stored in cookies instead of the metadata object and the response body will not contain the token.

The location of the newly created connection will be stored at links.self in the response body as well as in the Location header.

The token must be given to all subsequent requests that use the connection. It must be either given in the token parameter of a request or it must be stored in the cookies. If both a token parameter and a cookie exist at the same time, the token parameter will be used instead of the cookie.

Request Parameters

This endpoint supports the following request parameters.

  • persist

  • Store the connection token in cookies instead of returning it as the response body.

    This parameter expects only one value, yes, as its argument. When persist=yes is set, the token is stored in the conn_id_sig_<id> cookie where the <id> part is replaced by the ID of the connection.

  • max-age

  • Sets the connection token maximum age in seconds. The default is max-age=28800. Only positive values are accepted and if a non-positive or a non-integer value is found, the parameter is ignored. Once the token age exceeds the configured maximum value, the token can no longer be used and a new connection must be created.

Response

Connection was opened:

Status: 201 Created

{
    "data": {
        "attributes": {
            "seconds_idle": 7.6394000000000001e-5,
            "sql": null,
            "target": "server1",
            "thread_id": 13
        },
        "id": "f4e38d96-99b4-479e-ac36-5f3b437aff99",
        "links": {
            "related": "http://localhost:8989/v1/sql/f4e38d96-99b4-479e-ac36-5f3b437aff99/queries/",
            "self": "http://localhost:8989/v1/sql/f4e38d96-99b4-479e-ac36-5f3b437aff99/"
        },
        "type": "sql"
    },
    "links": {
        "self": "http://localhost:8989/v1/sql/f4e38d96-99b4-479e-ac36-5f3b437aff99/"
    },
    "meta": {
        "token": "eyJhbGciOiJIUzI1NiJ9.eyJhdWQiOiJmNGUzOGQ5Ni05OWI0LTQ3OWUtYWMzNi01ZjNiNDM3YWZmOTkiLCJleHAiOjE2ODk5NTA4MDQsImlhdCI6MTY4OTkyMjAwNCwiaXNzIjoibXhzLXF1ZXJ5Iiwic3ViIjoiZjRlMzhkOTYtOTliNC00NzllLWFjMzYtNWYzYjQzN2FmZjk5In0.gCKYl7XwwnMLjJbQT6UShDuK8aJ6gessmredQ1i0On4"
    }
}

Missing or invalid payload:

Status: 400 Bad Request

Close an opened SQL connection

DELETE /v1/sql/:id

Response

Connection was closed:

Status: 204 No Content

Missing or invalid connection token:

Status: 400 Bad Request

Reconnect an opened SQL connection

POST /v1/sql/:id/reconnect

Reconnects an existing connection. This can also be used if the connection to the backend server was lost due to a network error.

The connection will use the same credentials that were passed to the POST /v1/sql endpoint. The new connection will still have the same ID in the REST API but will be treated as a new connection by the database. A reconnection re-initializes the connection and resets the session state. Reconnections cannot take place while a transaction is open.

Response

Reconnection was successful:

Status: 204 No Content

Reconnection failed or connection is already in use:

Status: 503 Service Unavailable

Missing or invalid connection token:

Status: 400 Bad Request

Clone an existing SQL connection

POST /v1/sql/:id/clone

Clones an existing connection. This is done by opening a new connection using the credentials and configuration from the given connection.

Request Parameters

This endpoint supports the same request parameters as the POST /v1/sql endpoint.

Response

The response is identical to the one in the POST /v1/sql endpoint. In addition, this endpoint can return the following responses.

Connection is already in use:

Status: 503 Service Unavailable

Missing or invalid connection token:

Status: 400 Bad Request

Execute SQL query

POST /v1/sql/:id/queries

The request body must be a JSON object with the value of the sql field set to the SQL to be executed:

{
    "sql": "SELECT * FROM test.t1",
    "max_rows": 1000
}

The request body must be a JSON object consisting of the following fields:

  • sql

  • The SQL to be executed. If the SQL contain multiple statements, multiple results are returned in the response body.

  • max_rows

  • The maximum number of rows returned in the response. By default this is 1000 rows. Setting the value to 0 means no limit. Any extra rows in the result will be discarded.

By default, the complete result is returned in the response body. If the SQL query returns more than one result, the results array will contain all the results. If the async=true request option is used, the query is queued for execution.

The results array can have three types of objects: resultsets, errors, and OK responses.

  • A resultset consists of the data field with the result data stored as a two dimensional array. The names of the fields are stored in an array in the fields field. These types of results will be returned for any operation that returns rows (i.e. SELECT statements)
{
    "data": {
        "attributes": {
            "execution_time": 0.00026922799999999999,
            "results": [
                {
                    "complete": true,
                    "data": [
                        [
                            1
                        ],
                        [
                            2
                        ],
                        [
                            3
                        ]
                    ],
                    "fields": [
                        "id"
                    ]
                }
            ],
            "sql": "SELECT id FROM test.t1"
        },
        "id": "8eda4bbe-d917-4dd0-9b07-3aa3db5e78d5.1",
        "type": "queries"
    },
    "links": {
        "self": "http://localhost:8989/v1/sql/8eda4bbe-d917-4dd0-9b07-3aa3db5e78d5/queries/8eda4bbe-d917-4dd0-9b07-3aa3db5e78d5.1/"
    }
}
  • An error consists of an object with the errno field set to the MariaDB error code, the message field set to the human-readable error message and the sqlstate field set to the current SQLSTATE of the connection.
{
    "data": {
        "attributes": {
            "execution_time": 0.00012686699999999999,
            "results": [
                {
                    "errno": 1064,
                    "message": "You have an error in your SQL syntax; check the manual that corresponds to your MariaDB server version for the right syntax to use near 'TABLE test.t1' at line 1",
                    "sqlstate": "42000"
                }
            ],
            "sql": "SELECT syntax_error FROM TABLE test.t1"
        },
        "id": "621bacd9-48fd-436c-afda-b4e4d0d7b228.1",
        "type": "queries"
    },
    "links": {
        "self": "http://localhost:8989/v1/sql/621bacd9-48fd-436c-afda-b4e4d0d7b228/queries/621bacd9-48fd-436c-afda-b4e4d0d7b228.1/"
    }
}
  • An OK response is returned for any result that completes successfully but not return rows (e.g. an INSERT or UPDATE statement). The affected_rows field contains the number of rows affected by the operation, the last_insert_id contains the auto-generated ID and the warnings field contains the number of warnings raised by the operation.
{
    "data": {
        "attributes": {
            "execution_time": 0.000474659,
            "results": [
                {
                    "affected_rows": 0,
                    "last_insert_id": 0,
                    "warnings": 0
                }
            ],
            "sql": "CREATE TABLE test.my_table(id INT)"
        },
        "id": "60005d40-c034-4aa3-94de-b15c14d9c91c.1",
        "type": "queries"
    },
    "links": {
        "self": "http://localhost:8989/v1/sql/60005d40-c034-4aa3-94de-b15c14d9c91c/queries/60005d40-c034-4aa3-94de-b15c14d9c91c.1/"
    }
}

It is also possible for the fields of the error response to be present in the resultset response if the result ended with an error but still generated some data. Usually this happens when query execution is interrupted but a partial result was generated by the server.

Request Parameters

  • async

  • If set to true, the query is queued for asynchronous execution and the results must be retrieved later from the URL stored in links.self field of the response. The HTTP response code is set to HTTP 202 Accepted if the query was successfully queued for execution.

Response

Query successfully executed:

Status: 201 Created

{
    "data": {
        "attributes": {
            "execution_time": 0.00014767200000000001,
            "results": [
                {
                    "complete": true,
                    "data": [
                        [
                            1
                        ]
                    ],
                    "fields": [
                        "1"
                    ]
                }
            ],
            "sql": "SELECT 1"
        },
        "id": "1deac8a4-3184-43ad-8aed-941ba166bd44.1",
        "type": "queries"
    },
    "links": {
        "self": "http://localhost:8989/v1/sql/1deac8a4-3184-43ad-8aed-941ba166bd44/queries/1deac8a4-3184-43ad-8aed-941ba166bd44.1/"
    }
}

Query queued for execution:

Status: 202 Accepted

{
    "data": {
        "attributes": {
            "execution_time": 0.0,
            "sql": "SELECT 1"
        },
        "id": "3d23f7e0-6a83-4282-94a5-8a1089d56f72.1",
        "type": "queries"
    },
    "links": {
        "self": "http://localhost:8989/v1/sql/3d23f7e0-6a83-4282-94a5-8a1089d56f72/queries/3d23f7e0-6a83-4282-94a5-8a1089d56f72.1/"
    }
}

Invalid payload or missing connection token:

Status: 400 Bad Request

Fatal connection error:

Status: 503 Service Unavailable

  • If the API returns this response, the connection to the database server was lost. The only valid action to take at this point is to close it with the DELETE /v1/sql/:id endpoint.

Get Asynchronous Query Results

GET /v1/sql/:id/queries/:query_id

The results are only available if a POST /v1/sql/:id/queries was executed with the async field set to true. The result of any asynchronous query can be read multiple times. Only the latest result is stored: executing a new query will cause the latest result to be erased. Results can be explicitly erased with a DELETE request.

Response

Query successfully executed:

Status: 201 Created

{
    "data": {
        "attributes": {
            "execution_time": 0.00011945,
            "results": [
                {
                    "complete": true,
                    "data": [
                        [
                            1
                        ]
                    ],
                    "fields": [
                        "1"
                    ]
                }
            ],
            "sql": "SELECT 1"
        },
        "id": "7153ab30-fae7-44c8-858a-449cbf11c234.1",
        "type": "queries"
    },
    "links": {
        "self": "http://localhost:8989/v1/sql/7153ab30-fae7-44c8-858a-449cbf11c234/queries/7153ab30-fae7-44c8-858a-449cbf11c234.1/"
    }
}

Query not yet complete:

Status: 202 Accepted

No asynchronous results expected, invalid payload or missing connection token:

Status: 400 Bad Request

Fatal connection error:

Status: 503 Service Unavailable

  • If the API returns this response, the connection to the database server was lost. The only valid action to take at this point is to close it with the DELETE /v1/sql/:id endpoint.

Erase Asynchronous Query Results

DELETE /v1/sql/:id/queries/:query_id

Erases the latest result of an asynchronously executed query. All asynchronous results are erased when the connection that owns them is closed.

Response

Result erased:

Status: 200 OK

Connection is busy or it was not found:

Status: 503 Service Unavailable

Missing connection token:

Status: 400 Bad Request

Cancel a Query

POST /v1/sql/:id/cancel

This endpoint cancels the current query being executed by this connection. If no query is being done and the connection is idle, no action is taken.

If the connection is busy but it is not executing a query, an attempt to cancel is still made: in this case the results of this operation are undefined for ODBC connections, for MariaDB connections this will cause a KILL QUERY command to be executed.

Response

Query was canceled:

Status: 200 OK

Connection was not found:

Status: 503 Service Unavailable

Missing connection token:

Status: 400 Bad Request

List ODBC Drivers

GET /v1/sql/odbc/drivers

Get the list of configured ODBC drivers found by the driver manager. The list of drivers includes all drivers known to the driver manager for which an installed library was found (i.e. Driver or Driver64 in /etc/odbcinst.ini points to a file).

Response

The response contains a resource collection with all available drivers.

Status: 200 OK

{
    "data": [
        {
            "attributes": {
                "description": "ODBC for MariaDB",
                "driver": "/usr/lib/libmaodbc.so",
                "driver64": "/usr/lib64/libmaodbc.so",
                "fileusage": "1"
            },
            "id": "MariaDB",
            "type": "drivers"
        }
    ],
    "links": {
        "self": "http://localhost:8989/v1/sql/odbc/drivers/"
    }
}

Prepare ETL Operation

POST /v1/sql/:id/etl/prepare

The ETL operation requires two connections: an ODBC connection to a remote server (source connection) and a connection to a server in MaxScale (destination connection). All ETL operations must be done on the ODBC connection.

The ETL operations require that the MariaDB ODBC driver is installed on the MaxScale server. This driver is often available in the package manager of your operating system but it can also be downloaded from the MariaDB website. Installation instructions for installing the driver manually can be found here.

The request body must be a JSON object consisting of the following fields:

  • target

The target connection ID that defines the destination server. This must be the ID of a connection (i.e. data.attributes.id ) to a server in MaxScale created via the POST /v1/sql/ endpoint.

  • type

The type of the ETL data source. The value must be a string with one of the following values:

- `mariadb`

  Extract data from a MariaDB database.

- `postgresql`

  Extract data from a PostgreSQL database. This requires that the PostgreSQL
  ODBC driver is installed on the MaxScale server. This driver is often
  available in the package manager of your operating system.

- `generic`

  Extract data from a generic ODBC source. This uses the ODBC catalog
  functions to determine the table layout. The results provided by this are
  not as accurate as the specialized versions but it can serve as a good
  starting point from which manual modifications to the SQL can be done.

  This ETL type requires that the table catalog is provided at the top level
  with the `catalog` field. The meaning of the catalog differs between
  database implementations.
  • tables

An array of objects, each of which must define a table and a schema field. The table field defines the name of the table to be imported and the schema field defines the schema it is in. If the objects contain a value for create, select or insert, the SQL generation for that part is skipped.

  • connection_string

Extra connection string that is appended to the destination server's connection string. This connection will always use the MariaDB ODBC driver. The list of supported options can be found here.

  • threads

The number of parallel connections used during the ETL operation. By default the ETL operation will use up to 16 connections.

  • timeout

The connection and query timeout in seconds. By default a timeout of 30 seconds is used.

  • create_mode

A string with either normal, ignore or replace which controls how tables are handled that already exist on the destination server.

If left undefined or set to normal, the tables are created using a normal CREATE TABLE statement. This will cause an error to be reported if the table already exist and will prevent the ETL from proceeding past the object creation stage.

If set to ignore the tables are created with CREATE TABLE IF NOT EXISTS which will ignore any existing tables and assume that they are compatible with the rest of the ETL operation. This mode can be used to continuously load data from an external source into MariaDB.

If set to replace, the tables are created with CREATE OR REPLACE TABLE which will cause existing tables to be dropped if they exist. This is not a reversible process so caution should be taken when this mode is used.

  • catalog

The catalog for the tables. This is only used when type is set to generic. In all other cases this value is ignored.

Here is an example payload that prepares the table test.t1 for extraction from a MariaDB server.

{
  "type": "mariadb",
  "target": "e2a56d2f-6514-4926-8dba-dca0c4ae3a86",
  "tables": [
    {
      "table": "t1",
      "schema": "test"
    }
  ]
}

The token for the source connection is provided the same way it is provided for all other /v1/sql endpoints: in the token request parameter or in the cookies. The destination connection token is provided either in the target_token request parameter or as a cookie.

Request Parameters

This endpoints supports the following additional request parameters.

  • target_token

  • The connection token for the destination connection. If provided, the value is unconditionally used even if a cookie with a valid token exists for the destination connection.

Response

ETL operation prepared:

Status: 202 Accepted

Once complete, the /v1/sql/:id/queries/:query_id endpoint will return the following result.

{
    "data": {
        "attributes": {
            "execution_time": 0.0062226729999999997,
            "results": {
                "ok": true,
                "stage": "prepare",
                "tables": [
                    {
                        "create": "CREATE DATABASE IF NOT EXISTS `test`;\nUSE `test`;\nCREATE TABLE `t1` (\n  `id` bigint(20) unsigned NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT,\n  `data` varchar(255) DEFAULT NULL,\n  UNIQUE KEY `id` (`id`)\n) ENGINE=InnoDB AUTO_INCREMENT=2 DEFAULT CHARSET=utf8mb4 COLLATE=utf8mb4_general_ci",
                        "insert": "INSERT INTO `test`.`t1` (`id`,`data`) VALUES (?,?)",
                        "schema": "test",
                        "select": "SELECT `id`,`data` FROM `test`.`t1`",
                        "table": "t1"
                    }
                ]
            },
            "sql": "ETL"
        },
        "id": "31dc09b7-ec09-4e6d-b098-e925f706233c.1",
        "type": "queries"
    },
    "links": {
        "self": "http://localhost:8989/v1/sql/31dc09b7-ec09-4e6d-b098-e925f706233c/queries/31dc09b7-ec09-4e6d-b098-e925f706233c.1/"
    }
}

Invalid payload or missing connection token:

Status: 400 Bad Request

Start ETL Operation

POST /v1/sql/:id/etl/start

The behavior of this endpoint is identical to the preparation but instead of preparing the operation, this endpoint will execute the prepared ETL and load the data into MariaDB.

The intended way of doing an ETL operation is to first prepare it using the /v1/sql/:id/etl/prepare endpoint to retrieve the SQL statements that define the ETL operation. Then if the ETL preparation is successful, the data.attributes.results.tables value from the response is used as the tables value for the ETL start operation, done on the /v1/sql/:id/etl/start endpoint.

If any of the create, select or insert fields for a table in the tables list have not been defined, the SQL will be automatically generated by querying the source server, similarly to how the preparation generates the SQL statements. This means that the preparation step is optional if there is no need to adjust the automatically generated SQL.

The ETL operation can be canceled using the /v1/sql/:id/cancel endpoint which will roll back the ETL operation. Any tables that were created during the ETL operation are not deleted on the destination server and must be manually cleaned up.

If the ETL fails to extract the SQL from the source server or an error was encountered during table creation, the response will have the "ok" field set to false. Both the top-level object as well as the individual tables can have the "error" field set to the error message. This field is filled during the ETL operation which means errors are visible even if the ETL is still ongoing.

During the ETL operation, tables that have been fully processed will have a "execution_time" field. This field has the total time in seconds it took to execute the data loading step.

Response

ETL operation started:

Status: 202 Accepted

Once complete, the /v1/sql/:id/queries/:query_id endpoint will return the following result.

{
    "data": {
        "attributes": {
            "execution_time": 0.0094386039999999997,
            "results": {
                "ok": true,
                "stage": "load",
                "tables": [
                    {
                        "create": "CREATE DATABASE IF NOT EXISTS `test`;\nUSE `test`;\nCREATE TABLE `t1` (\n  `id` bigint(20) unsigned NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT,\n  `data` varchar(255) DEFAULT NULL,\n  UNIQUE KEY `id` (`id`)\n) ENGINE=InnoDB AUTO_INCREMENT=2 DEFAULT CHARSET=utf8mb4 COLLATE=utf8mb4_general_ci",
                        "execution_time": 0.0033923809999999999,
                        "insert": "INSERT INTO `test`.`t1` (`id`,`data`) VALUES (?,?)",
                        "rows": 1,
                        "schema": "test",
                        "select": "SELECT `id`,`data` FROM `test`.`t1`",
                        "table": "t1"
                    }
                ]
            },
            "sql": "ETL"
        },
        "id": "1391b67e-58a7-4be3-b686-2498cb3a0e06.1",
        "type": "queries"
    },
    "links": {
        "self": "http://localhost:8989/v1/sql/1391b67e-58a7-4be3-b686-2498cb3a0e06/queries/1391b67e-58a7-4be3-b686-2498cb3a0e06.1/"
    }
}

Invalid payload or missing connection token:

Status: 400 Bad Request

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