On 11/22/2012 11:54 AM, Dimitri Fontaine wrote:
Andrew Dunstan <and...@dunslane.net> writes:
Here is a WIP patch for enhancements to json generation.

First, there is the much_requested json_agg, which will aggregate rows
directly to json. So the following will now work:

     select json_agg(my_table) from mytable;
     select json_agg(q) from (<myquery here>) q;
Awesome, thanks!

How do you handle the nesting of the source elements? I would expect a
variant of the aggregate that takes two input parameters, the datum and
the current nesting level.

Consider a tree table using parent_id and a recursive query to display
the tree. You typically handle the nesting with an accumulator and a
call to repeat() to prepend some spaces before the value columns. What
about passing that nesting level (integer) to the json_agg()?
It still would not produxe nesting, just a nicer format.

If you want real nesting, you may want a version of my pl/python function
row-with-all-dependents-by-foreign-key-to-json()

which outputs a table row and then recursively all rows from other
 (or the same) table which have a foreign key relationship to this row

I use it to backup removed objects.

I would love to have something similar as a built-in function, though the current version
has some limitations and lacks some checks, like check for FK loops.


Function follows:
-------------------------------------------------------
CREATE OR REPLACE FUNCTION record_to_json_with_detail(table_name text, pk_value int) RETURNS text AS $$

import json,re

def fk_info(table_name):
    fkplan = plpy.prepare("""
    SELECT conrelid::regclass as reftable,
           pg_get_constraintdef(c.oid) as condef
      FROM pg_constraint c
     WHERE c.confrelid::regclass = $1::regclass
       AND c.contype = 'f'
    """, ("text",))
    cdefrx = re.compile('FOREIGN KEY [(](.*)[)] REFERENCES .*[(](.*)[)].*')
    fkres = plpy.execute(fkplan, (table_name,))
    for row in fkres:
        reffields, thisfields = cdefrx.match(row['condef']).groups()
        yield thisfields, row['reftable'],reffields

def select_from_table_by_col(table_name, col_name, col_value):
qplan = plpy.prepare('select * from %s where %s = $1' % (table_name, col_name), ('int',))
    return plpy.execute(qplan, (col_value,))

def recursive_rowdict(table_name, row_dict):
rd = dict([(a,b) for (a,b) in row_dict.items() if b is not None]) # skip NULLs
    rd['__row_class__'] = table_name
    for id_col, ref_tab, ref_col in fk_info(table_name):
q2res = select_from_table_by_col(ref_tab, ref_col,row_dict[id_col])
        if q2res:
            try:
rd['__refs__::' + id_col] += [recursive_rowdict(ref_tab,row) for row in q2res]
            except KeyError:
rd['__refs__::' + id_col] = [recursive_rowdict(ref_tab,row) for row in q2res]
    return rd

q1res = select_from_table_by_col(table_name, 'id', pk_value)
return json.dumps(recursive_rowdict(table_name, q1res[0]), indent=3)
$$ LANGUAGE plpythonu;

create table test1(id serial primary key, selfkey int references test1, data text); create table test2(id serial primary key, test1key int references test1, data text);

insert into test1 values(1,null,'top');
insert into test1 values(2,1,'lvl1');
insert into test2 values(1,1,'lvl1-2');
insert into test2 values(2,2,'lvl2-2');

select record_to_json_with_detail('test1',1);
        record_to_json_with_detail
-------------------------------------------
 {
    "__row_class__": "test1",
    "data": "top",
    "id": 1,
    "__refs__::id": [
       {
          "__row_class__": "test1",
          "selfkey": 1,
          "data": "lvl1",
          "id": 2,
          "__refs__::id": [
             {
                "__row_class__": "test2",
                "test1key": 2,
                "data": "lvl2-2",
                "id": 2
             }
          ]
       },
       {
          "__row_class__": "test2",
          "test1key": 1,
          "data": "lvl1-2",
          "id": 1
       }
    ]
 }
(1 row)

Time: 6.576 ms

---------------------------------------
Hannu Krosing



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