q 命令详解

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q 命令安装:


-bash: q: command not found

#Fedora
dnf install q

#OS X
brew install q

#RPM Package:
run rpm -ivh https://github.com/harelba/packages-for-q/raw/master/rpms/q-text-as-data-2.0.9-1.x86_64.rpm
rpm -U https://github.com/harelba/packages-for-q/raw/master/rpms/q-text-as-data-2.0.9-1.x86_64.rpm

#DEB Package: 
sudo dpkg -i https://github.com/harelba/packages-for-q/raw/master/deb/q-text-as-data_2.0.9-2_amd64.deb

#Windows Installer 下载地址:
https://github.com/harelba/packages-for-q/raw/master/windows/setup-q-2.0.9.exe

#tar.gz:
https://github.com/harelba/q/archive/2.0.9.tar.gz

#zip:
https://github.com/harelba/q/archive/2.0.9.zip

q 命令补充说明:


q 是一个命令行工具,可以直接在 CSV/TSV(和任何其他表格文本文件)上执行类似 SQL 的查询。

q 将普通文件视为数据库表,并支持所有 SQL 构造,例如 WHEREGROUP BYJOIN 等。它支持自动列名和列类型检测,并完全支持多种编码。

非英语用户: q 完全支持所有类型的编码。使用 -e data-encoding 设定输入数据编码,-Q query-encoding 设置查询编码,并且使用 -E output-encoding 设置输出编码。所有这三个参数都有合理的默认值。如果您遇到任何问题,请联系 q 命令开发者

具有 BOM 表的文件: Python 的 csv 模块内部未正确支持包含 BOM 表(字节顺序标记 - By Order Mark)的文件。q 命令包含一种变通办法,该办法允许读取包含 BOM 的 UTF8 文件 -e utf-8-sig 方式,这将支持所有编码的BOM表。

q 命令语法:


q <flags> "<query>"

q 命令最简单的执行为:  `q "SELECT * FROM myfile"` 将列出 myfile 文档所有内容.

q 命令实例:


通过将定界符指定为 , 来查询 .csv 文件:

q -d',' "SELECT * from path/to/file"

查询 .tsv 文件:

q -ddelimiter -H "SELECT * from path/to/file"

查询 clicks.csv 文件里,UUID 的排重数量:

q -H -t "SELECT COUNT(DISTINCT(uuid)) FROM ./clicks.csv"

229 <--输出共有229个

HHERE 条件查询 clicks.csv

q -H -t "SELECT request_id,score FROM ./clicks.csv WHERE score > 0.7 ORDER BY score DESC LIMIT 5"

2cfab5ceca922a1a2179dc4687a3b26e    1.0
f6de737b5aa2c46a3db3208413a54d64    0.986665809568
766025d25479b95a224bd614141feee5    0.977105183282
2c09058a1b82c6dbcf9dc463e73eddd2    0.703255121794

从标准输入读取输入,计算 /tmp subtree 中每个用户/组的总大小。

sudo find /tmp -ls | q "SELECT c5,c6,sum(c7)/1024.0/1024 AS total FROM - GROUP BY c5,c6 ORDER BY total desc"

mapred hadoop   304.00390625
root   root     8.0431451797485
smith  smith    4.34389972687

q 命令的关联查询:

q "SELECT myfiles.c8,emails.c2 FROM exampledatafile myfiles JOIN group-emails-example emails ON (myfiles.c4 = emails.c1) WHERE myfiles.c8 = 'ppp'"

ppp dip.1@otherdomain.com
ppp dip.2@otherdomain.com

使用标题行中的列名,计算拥有的进程数最多的前 3 个用户ID,并按降序排列。请注意查询中自动检测到的列名 UID 的用法。

ps -ef | q -H "SELECT UID,COUNT(*) cnt FROM - GROUP BY UID ORDER BY cnt DESC LIMIT 3"


#Output:

root 152
harel 119
avahi 2018

附:q 命令官网整体说明:


Usage: 
        q allows performing SQL-like statements on tabular text data.

        Its purpose is to bring SQL expressive power to manipulating text data using the Linux command line.

        Basic usage is q "<sql-like query>" where table names are just regular file names (Use - to read from standard input)
            When the input contains a header row, use -H, and column names will be set according to the header row content. If there isn't a header row, then columns will automatically be named c1..cN.

        Column types are detected automatically. Use -A in order to see the column name/type analysis.

        Delimiter can be set using the -d (or -t) option. Output delimiter can be set using -D

        All sqlite3 SQL constructs are supported.

        Examples:

              Example 1: ls -ltrd * | q "select c1,count(1) from - group by c1"
            This example would print a count of each unique permission string in the current folder.

          Example 2: seq 1 1000 | q "select avg(c1),sum(c1) from -"
            This example would provide the average and the sum of the numbers in the range 1 to 1000

          Example 3: sudo find /tmp -ls | q "select c5,c6,sum(c7)/1024.0/1024 as total from - group by c5,c6 order by total desc"
            This example will output the total size in MB per user+group in the /tmp subtree


            See the help or https://github.com/harelba/q/ for more details.


Options:
  -h, --help            show this help message and exit
  -v, --version         Print version
  -V, --verbose         Print debug info in case of problems
  -S SAVE_DB_TO_DISK_FILENAME, --save-db-to-disk=SAVE_DB_TO_DISK_FILENAME
                        Save database to an sqlite database file
  --save-db-to-disk-method=SAVE_DB_TO_DISK_METHOD
                        Method to use to save db to disk. 'standard' does not
                        require any deps, 'fast' currenty requires manually
                        running `pip install sqlitebck` on your python
                        installation. Once packing issues are solved, the fast
                        method will be the default.

  Input Data Options:
    -H, --skip-header   Skip header row. This has been changed from earlier
                        version - Only one header row is supported, and the
                        header row is used for column naming
    -d DELIMITER, --delimiter=DELIMITER
                        Field delimiter. If none specified, then space is used
                        as the delimiter.
    -t, --tab-delimited
                        Same as -d <tab>. Just a shorthand for handling
                        standard tab delimited file You can use $'\t' if you
                        want (this is how Linux expects to provide tabs in the
                        command line
    -e ENCODING, --encoding=ENCODING
                        Input file encoding. Defaults to UTF-8. set to none
                        for not setting any encoding - faster, but at your own
                        risk...
    -z, --gzipped       Data is gzipped. Useful for reading from stdin. For
                        files, .gz means automatic gunzipping
    -A, --analyze-only  Analyze sample input and provide information about
                        data types
    -m MODE, --mode=MODE
                        Data parsing mode. fluffy, relaxed and strict. In
                        strict mode, the -c column-count parameter must be
                        supplied as well
    -c COLUMN_COUNT, --column-count=COLUMN_COUNT
                        Specific column count when using relaxed or strict
                        mode
    -k, --keep-leading-whitespace
                        Keep leading whitespace in values. Default behavior
                        strips leading whitespace off values, in order to
                        provide out-of-the-box usability for simple use cases.
                        If you need to preserve whitespace, use this flag.
    --disable-double-double-quoting
                        Disable support for double double-quoting for escaping
                        the double quote character. By default, you can use ""
                        inside double quoted fields to escape double quotes.
                        Mainly for backward compatibility.
    --disable-escaped-double-quoting
                        Disable support for escaped double-quoting for
                        escaping the double quote character. By default, you
                        can use \" inside double quoted fields to escape
                        double quotes. Mainly for backward compatibility.
    --as-text           Don't detect column types - All columns will be
                        treated as text columns
    -w INPUT_QUOTING_MODE, --input-quoting-mode=INPUT_QUOTING_MODE
                        Input quoting mode. Possible values are all, minimal
                        and none. Note the slightly misleading parameter name,
                        and see the matching -W parameter for output quoting.
    -M MAX_COLUMN_LENGTH_LIMIT, --max-column-length-limit=MAX_COLUMN_LENGTH_LIMIT
                        Sets the maximum column length.
    -U, --with-universal-newlines
                        Expect universal newlines in the data. Limitation: -U
                        works only with regular files for now, stdin or .gz
                        files are not supported yet.

  Output Options:
    -D OUTPUT_DELIMITER, --output-delimiter=OUTPUT_DELIMITER
                        Field delimiter for output. If none specified, then
                        the -d delimiter is used if present, or space if no
                        delimiter is specified
    -T, --tab-delimited-output
                        Same as -D <tab>. Just a shorthand for outputting tab
                        delimited output. You can use -D $'\t' if you want.
    -O, --output-header
                        Output header line. Output column-names are determined
                        from the query itself. Use column aliases in order to
                        set your column names in the query. For example,
                        'select name FirstName,value1/value2 MyCalculation
                        from ...'. This can be used even if there was no
                        header in the input.
    -b, --beautify      Beautify output according to actual values. Might be
                        slow...
    -f FORMATTING, --formatting=FORMATTING
                        Output-level formatting, in the format X=fmt,Y=fmt
                        etc, where X,Y are output column numbers (e.g. 1 for
                        first SELECT column etc.
    -E OUTPUT_ENCODING, --output-encoding=OUTPUT_ENCODING
                        Output encoding. Defaults to 'none', leading to
                        selecting the system/terminal encoding
    -W OUTPUT_QUOTING_MODE, --output-quoting-mode=OUTPUT_QUOTING_MODE
                        Output quoting mode. Possible values are all, minimal,
                        nonnumeric and none. Note the slightly misleading
                        parameter name, and see the matching -w parameter for
                        input quoting.

  Query Related Options:
    -q QUERY_FILENAME, --query-filename=QUERY_FILENAME
                        Read query from the provided filename instead of the
                        command line, possibly using the provided query
                        encoding (using -Q).
    -Q QUERY_ENCODING, --query-encoding=QUERY_ENCODING
                        query text encoding. Experimental. Please send your
                        feedback on this

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