I'm not sure if this even exists or not, so I figured I would tap the wisdom of others..
I was wondering if there are any Java libraries out there that can be used to validate a SQL query's syntax. I know that there are many deviations from common SQL spec, so it would probably only work against something like SQL:2006, but that would certainly suffice.
My goal is to use this for unit-testing purposes without needing to attempt the execution against the DB. I know it's of limited use, but it would still be useful.
Do you need to validate SQL of specific vendor or standard ANSI SQL? All major SQL DBMS vendors significantly departed from standard by extending and underimplementing it at the same time.
In addition to validating, you obtain a meaningful representation of the query.
This allows you, for example, to only accept "certain" commands; manipulate
the query, "prettify" it, etc.
I don't think there are such libraries. The SQL syntax has too many derivatives.
A possible solution would be to use parts of an open source pure Java DBMS like SmallSQL. In this project you can create an instance of the SQLParser. The needed references to the connection can be removed very easily.
@Horcrux7: I downloaded SmallSQL just now. It didn't look so easy to remove the SSConnection reference. It seems like the SQLParser validates the SQL syntax by checking against an actual database schema. (e.g. SQLParser.from() method tries to connect to database).
If you can not remove the reverence then you can replace it with own placebo implementation. The syntax that you want parse must be have also a name schema.
JOOQ allows you to write SQL statements yourself, so if you miss a comma or brackets or smth the SQL will be invalid. JOOQ emits valid SQL if you're using the generated model classes - I am only using it as SQL Builder and not relying on the model generation - so it's possible to generate invalid SQL.
@hovanessyan True. I think you can try to prepare the query to test it's validity. It requires active database connection, but I think if query is prepared ok, you can be 99,9% be sure that it's syntactically correct.