3

Let me create an use case to discuss on.

CREATE  DATABASE sample;
USE sample;
CREATE TABLE quote (
  `id` int(2) unsigned NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT,
  `code` text ,
  `date` date DEFAULT NULL,
  `close` double DEFAULT NULL,
  PRIMARY KEY (`id`)
) ;

INSERT INTO quote (`code`, `date`, `close`)
VALUES ('epm', '20200824', 2.64); 
INSERT INTO quote (`code`, `date`, `close`)
VALUES ('dss', '20200824', 6.4); 

It is simple to execute only one sql command with sqlalchemy.

import pandas as pd 
from sqlalchemy import create_engine
user = 'root'
mysql_pass = 'your mysql passwd'
mysql_ip = '127.0.0.1'
engine = create_engine("mysql+pymysql://{}:{}@{}:3306".format(user,mysql_pass,mysql_ip))
cmd_one_line_sql = 'select * from sample.quote;'
df = pd.read_sql_query(cmd_one_line_sql,con = engine)
df 
   id code        date  close
0   1  epm  2020-08-24   2.64
1   2  dss  2020-08-24   6.40

I get the desired result,now the cmd contains multiple sql commands,for simplicity,it contains only two lines

cmd_multi_lines_sql = 'use sample;select * from quote;'

The cmd_multi_lines_sql just split cmd_one_line_sql as two.
I rewrite the code snippet according to manual:
execute many sql commands with sqlalchemy

import pandas as pd
from sqlalchemy import create_engine
user = 'root'
mysql_pass = 'your mysql passwd'
mysql_ip = '127.0.0.1'
engine = create_engine("mysql+pymysql://{}:{}@{}:3306".format(user,mysql_pass,mysql_ip))
connection = engine.raw_connection()
cmd_multi_lines_sql = 'use sample;select * from quote;'
try:
    cursor = connection.cursor()
    cursor.execute(cmd_multi_lines_sql)
    results_one = cursor.fetchall()
finally:
    connection.close()

Get the below error info:

Traceback (most recent call last):
  File "<stdin>", line 3, in <module>
  File "/usr/local/lib/python3.5/dist-packages/pymysql/cursors.py", line 170, in execute
    result = self._query(query)
  File "/usr/local/lib/python3.5/dist-packages/pymysql/cursors.py", line 328, in _query
    conn.query(q)
  File "/usr/local/lib/python3.5/dist-packages/pymysql/connections.py", line 517, in query
    self._affected_rows = self._read_query_result(unbuffered=unbuffered)
  File "/usr/local/lib/python3.5/dist-packages/pymysql/connections.py", line 732, in _read_query_result
    result.read()
  File "/usr/local/lib/python3.5/dist-packages/pymysql/connections.py", line 1075, in read
    first_packet = self.connection._read_packet()
  File "/usr/local/lib/python3.5/dist-packages/pymysql/connections.py", line 684, in _read_packet
    packet.check_error()
  File "/usr/local/lib/python3.5/dist-packages/pymysql/protocol.py", line 220, in check_error
    err.raise_mysql_exception(self._data)
  File "/usr/local/lib/python3.5/dist-packages/pymysql/err.py", line 109, in raise_mysql_exception
    raise errorclass(errno, errval)
pymysql.err.ProgrammingError: (1064, "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 'select * from quote' at line 1")

Another try:

vim  /tmp/test.sql
use sample;
select * from quote;

#write the commands in `/tmp/test.sql`
f = open('/tmp/test.sql','r')
cmd = f.read() 
df = pd.read_sql_query(cmd, con = engine)

It output the same error info.How to fix it?

1
  • If you didn't edit the error message that you got, then you cmd variable (or text file) obviously contains the 'cmd commands here' string. If you edited it, it's hard to help you without knowing what the sql error is.
    – Flo
    Aug 28, 2020 at 12:43

3 Answers 3

6
+500

After some research and asking at github the answer is obvious

you need to pass the needed parameters with

connect_args=

And the parameter since sqlalchemy

is

{"client_flag": MULTI_STATEMENTS}

So your python code locks like his

from sqlalchemy import create_engine
import pymysql
from pymysql.constants.CLIENT import MULTI_STATEMENTS
user = 'root'
mysql_pass = 'testpassword'
mysql_ip = 'localhost'
cmd = 'SELECT * FROM table1;SELECT * FROM test'

engine = create_engine("mysql+pymysql://{}:{}@{}:3306/testdb1?charset=utf8".format(user,mysql_pass,mysql_ip),connect_args={"client_flag": MULTI_STATEMENTS})
connection = engine.raw_connection()

try:
    cursor = connection.cursor()
    cursor.execute(cmd)
    results_one = cursor.fetchall()
    cursor.nextset()
    results_two = cursor.fetchall()
    cursor.close()
finally:
    connection.close()

But with this solution you need to know before hand which queries you run.

If you want to be more flexible, with dynamic sql statements

from sqlalchemy import create_engine
user = 'root'
mysql_pass = 'testpassword'
mysql_ip = 'localhost'
cmd = 'SELECT * FROM table1;SELECT * FROM test'
engine = create_engine("mysql+pymysql://{}:{}@{}:3306/testdb1?charset=utf8".format(user,mysql_pass,mysql_ip))
connection = engine.raw_connection()
splitstring = cmd.split(";")
ges_resultset = []
try:
    cursor = connection.cursor()
    for cmdoneonly in splitstring:
        cursor.execute(cmdoneonly)
        results = cursor.fetchall()
        ges_resultset.append(results) 
    cursor.close()
finally:
    connection.close()

Where you can check every single command and know how python can react to it

  • SELECT need to get the result set
  • INSERT DELETE CREATE you don't(there are more, but you get the gist)
6
  • See my comment to another answer re: splitting anonymous code blocks on the semicolon character. It doesn't always work, at least not with T-SQL. Aug 29, 2020 at 16:09
  • this is a question about mysql and pymysql and both work, as intended, for sql server i couldn't find any solution at all t that support multi query for sql server. But feel free to enlighten me
    – nbk
    Aug 29, 2020 at 16:20
  • SQL Server supports anonymous code blocks by default (at least in any circumstances that I have encountered) so there is no need to explicitly enable "multiple statements". Aug 29, 2020 at 18:09
  • that enablng is specific to py,ysql and differs from driver to driver massivly. I doubt that we could make a universal code ad hoc, but that would alofftopic here
    – nbk
    Aug 29, 2020 at 18:51
  • How can i send you 250 reputation bounty?
    – showkey
    Aug 30, 2020 at 9:04
2

The issues you face are:

  1. You need to pass the MULTI_STATEMENTS flag to PyMySQL, and
  2. read_sql_query assumes that the first result set contains the data for the DataFrame, and that may not be true for an anonymous code block.

You can create your own PyMySQL connection and retrieve the data like this:

import pandas as pd
import pymysql
from pymysql.constants import CLIENT

conn_info = {
    "host": "localhost",
    "port": 3307,
    "user": "root",
    "password": "toot",
    "database": "mydb",
    "client_flag": CLIENT.MULTI_STATEMENTS,
}

cnxn = pymysql.connect(**conn_info)
crsr = cnxn.cursor()

sql = """\
CREATE TEMPORARY TABLE tmp (id int primary key, txt varchar(20)) 
    ENGINE=InnoDB DEFAULT CHARSET=utf8mb4 COLLATE=utf8mb4_unicode_ci;
INSERT INTO tmp (id, txt) VALUES (1, 'foo'), (2, 'ΟΠΑ!');
SELECT id, txt FROM tmp;
"""
crsr.execute(sql)

num_tries = 5
result = None
for i in range(num_tries):
    result = crsr.fetchall()
    if result:
        break
    crsr.nextset()

if not result:
    print(f"(no result found after {num_tries} attempts)")
else:
    df = pd.DataFrame(result, columns=[x[0] for x in crsr.description])
    print(df)
    """console output:
       id   txt
    0   1   foo
    1   2  ΟΠΑ!
    """

(Edit) Additional notes:

Note 1: As mentioned in another answer, you can use the connect_args argument to SQLAlchemy's create_engine method to pass the MULTI_STATEMENTS flag. If you need a SQLAlchemy Engine object for other things (e.g., for to_sql) then that might be preferable to creating your own PyMySQL connection directly.

Note 2: num_tries can be arbitrarily large; it is simply a way of avoiding an endless loop. If we need to skip the first n empty result sets then we need to call nextset that many times regardless, and once we've found the non-empty result set we break out of the loop.

4
  • Wonderful! df = pd.DataFrame(result, columns=[x[0] for x in crsr.description]),excelent!
    – showkey
    Aug 29, 2020 at 0:25
  • Wish developer on SQLAlchemy to upgrade to support MULTI_STATEMENTS' sql.
    – showkey
    Aug 29, 2020 at 0:27
  • How can i send you 250 reputation bounty?
    – showkey
    Aug 30, 2020 at 9:04
  • @showkey - I appreciate the thought, but don't worry about it. I'm glad you got a satisfactory solution to your issue. Aug 31, 2020 at 19:21
0

@Gord Thompson,i make a little improvement to set num_tries automatically:

import pandas as pd
import pymysql
from pymysql.constants import CLIENT

conn_info = {
    "host": "localhost",
    "port": 3306,
    "user": "root",
    "password": "your mysql passwd",
    "client_flag": CLIENT.MULTI_STATEMENTS,
}

cnxn = pymysql.connect(**conn_info)
crsr = cnxn.cursor()

sql = """\
create database sample;
USE sample;
CREATE TEMPORARY TABLE tmp (id int primary key, txt varchar(20)) 
    ENGINE=InnoDB DEFAULT CHARSET=utf8mb4 COLLATE=utf8mb4_unicode_ci;
INSERT INTO tmp (id, txt) VALUES (1, 'foo'), (2, 'ΟΠΑ!');
SELECT id, txt FROM tmp;
SELECT txt FROM tmp;
"""

crsr.execute(sql)
num_tries = sql.count(';') if sql.endswith(';') else sql.count(';') + 1


for i in range(num_tries):
    result = crsr.fetchall()
    if result:
        df = pd.DataFrame(result, columns=[x[0] for x in crsr.description])
        print(df)
    crsr.nextset()

@nbk:when the cmd contain many sql statements,to execute your code may encounter such issue as :

pymysql.err.InternalError: (1065, 'Query was empty')

Make a little improvement based on your code:

import pandas as pd
from sqlalchemy import create_engine
user = 'root'
mysql_pass = 'your mysql passwd'
mysql_ip = 'localhost'

sql = """\
create database sample;
USE sample;
CREATE TEMPORARY TABLE tmp (id int primary key, txt varchar(20)) 
    ENGINE=InnoDB DEFAULT CHARSET=utf8mb4 COLLATE=utf8mb4_unicode_ci;
INSERT INTO tmp (id, txt) VALUES (1, 'foo'), (2, 'ΟΠΑ!');
SELECT id, txt FROM tmp;
SELECT txt FROM tmp;
"""

engine = create_engine("mysql+pymysql://{}:{}@{}:3306".format(user,mysql_pass,mysql_ip))

connection = engine.raw_connection()

splitstring = sql.split(";")
try:
    cursor = connection.cursor()
    for cmdoneonly in splitstring:
        if cmdoneonly.strip():
            cursor.execute(cmdoneonly)
            results = cursor.fetchall()
            if results :
                df = pd.DataFrame(results, columns=[x[0] for x in cursor.description])
                print(df)
    cursor.close()
finally:
    connection.close()
  • it is necessary to add a determine statement if cmdoneonly.strip(): to avoid 1065:Query was empty error.

  • it is a wonderful statement df = pd.DataFrame(results, columns=[x[0] for x in cursor.description]) learning from @Gord Thompson.

1
  • Be aware that some SQL dialects (e.g., T-SQL) can be quite lax about requiring that statements be terminated with semicolons so simply splitting the text to count statements is not always guaranteed to work. Aug 29, 2020 at 16:49

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