--- title: "Simple Key-Value Store using Sqlite3" date: 2023-11-09T22:15:23-05:00 draft: false tags: ["DB"] math: false medium_enabled: false --- A lot of software nowadays are built for scale. You have to setup a Kubernetes cluster and deploy Redis for duplication in order to have a key-value store. Though for many small projects, I feel like it's overkill. I'll show in this post, that we can have a nice simple[^1] key-value store using `sqlite3`. This gives us the benefit that we don't need to use system resources to run a daemon the entire time and only spin up a process when we need it. For our key-value store, we're going to use a table with two columns: - A key, which we'll call `name`. This will be a unique `TEXT` type that has to be set. - The value, which we'll call `value` (Creative, I know.) For our purposes, this will also be a `TEXT` type. The SQL to create this table is ```sql CREATE TABLE config( name TEXT NOT NULL UNIQUE, value TEXT ); ``` Let's say we want to get the value of the key `author`. This is a `SELECT` statement away: ```sql SELECT value FROM config where name='author'; ``` Now let's say that we want to insert a new key into the table. ```sql INSERT INTO config(name, value) VALUES ('a', '1'); ``` What about updating? ```sql UPDATE config SET value='2' WHERE name='a'; ``` The tricky part is if we want to insert if the key does not exist, and update if it does. To handle this we'll need to resolve the [conflict](https://www.sqlite.org/lang_conflict.html). ```sql INSERT INTO config(name, value) VALUES ('a', '3') ON CONFLICT(name) DO UPDATE SET value=excluded.value; ``` Lastly if you want to export the entire key-value store as a CSV: ```bash sqlite3 -header -csv data.db "SELECT * FROM config;" ``` This is nice and all, but it's inconvinient to type out all these SQL commands. Therefore, I wrote two little bash scripts. **`sqlite3_getkv`** ```bash #!/bin/sh set -o errexit set -o nounset set -o pipefail show_usage() { echo "Usage: sqlite3_getkv [db_file] [key]" exit 1 } # Check argument count if [ "$#" -ne 2 ]; then show_usage fi # Initalize database file is not already sqlite3 "$1" "CREATE TABLE IF NOT EXISTS config(name TEXT NOT NULL UNIQUE, value TEXT);" # Get value from key sqlite3 "$1" "SELECT value FROM CONFIG where name='$2';" ``` **`ssqlite3_setkv`** ```bash #!/bin/sh set -o errexit set -o nounset set -o pipefail show_usage() { echo "Usage: sqlite3_setkv [db_file] [key] [value]" exit 1 } # Check argument count if [ "$#" -ne 3 ]; then show_usage fi # Initalize database file is not already sqlite3 "$1" "CREATE TABLE IF NOT EXISTS config(name TEXT NOT NULL UNIQUE, value TEXT);" # Set key-value pair sqlite3 "$1" "INSERT INTO config(name, value) VALUES ('$2', '$3') ON CONFLICT(name) DO UPDATE SET value=excluded.value;" ``` **Example Usage:** ``` $ ./sqlite3_setkv.sh test.db a 4 $ ./sqlite3_setkv.sh test.db c 5 $ ./sqlite3_getkv.sh test.db a 4 $ ./sqlite3_setkv.sh test.db a 5 $ ./sqlite3_getkv.sh test.db a 5 ``` [^1]: Somehow my idea of easier, simpler, and more maintainable is writing bash scripts.