Jsquery
JsQuery – json query language with GIN indexing support
Install / Use
/learn @postgrespro/JsqueryREADME
JsQuery – json query language with GIN indexing support
Introduction
JsQuery – is a language to query jsonb data type, introduced in PostgreSQL release 9.4.
It's primary goal is to provide an additional functionality to jsonb (currently missing in PostgreSQL), such as a simple and effective way to search in nested objects and arrays, more comparison operators with indexes support. We hope, that jsquery will be eventually a part of PostgreSQL.
Jsquery is released as jsquery data type (similar to tsquery) and @@ match operator for jsonb.
Authors
- Teodor Sigaev teodor@sigaev.ru, Postgres Professional, Moscow, Russia
- Alexander Korotkov aekorotkov@gmail.com, Postgres Professional, Moscow, Russia
- Oleg Bartunov oleg@sai.msu.su, Postgres Professional, Moscow, Russia
Availability
JsQuery is realized as an extension and not available in default PostgreSQL installation. It is available from github under the same license as PostgreSQL and supports PostgreSQL 9.4+.
Regards
Development was sponsored by Wargaming.net.
Installation
JsQuery is PostgreSQL extension which requires PostgreSQL 9.4 or higher. Before build and install you should ensure following:
- PostgreSQL version is 9.4 or higher.
- You have development package of PostgreSQL installed or you built PostgreSQL from source.
- You have flex and bison installed on your system. JsQuery was tested on flex 2.5.37-2.5.39, bison 2.7.12.
- Your PATH variable is configured so that pg_config command available, or set PG_CONFIG variable.
Typical installation procedure may look like this:
$ git clone https://github.com/postgrespro/jsquery.git
$ cd jsquery
$ make USE_PGXS=1
$ sudo make USE_PGXS=1 install
$ make USE_PGXS=1 installcheck
$ psql DB -c "CREATE EXTENSION jsquery;"
JSON query language
JsQuery extension contains jsquery datatype which represents whole JSON query
as a single value (like tsquery does for fulltext search). The query is an
expression on JSON-document values.
Simple expression is specified as path binary_operator value or
path unary_operator. See following examples.
x = "abc"– value of key "x" is equal to "abc";$ @> [4, 5, "zzz"]– the JSON document is an array containing values 4, 5 and "zzz";"abc xyz" >= 10– value of key "abc xyz" is greater than or equal to 10;volume IS NUMERIC– type of key "volume" is numeric.$ = true– the whole JSON document is just a true.similar_ids.@# > 5– similar_ids is an array or object of length greater than 5;similar_product_ids.# = "0684824396"– array "similar_product_ids" contains string "0684824396".*.color = "red"– there is object somewhere which key "color" has value "red".foo = *– key "foo" exists in object.
Path selects a set of JSON values to be checked using given operators. In the simplest case path is just a key name. In general path is key names and placeholders combined by dot signs. Path can use the following placeholders:
#– any index of an array;#N– N-th index of an array;%– any key of an object;*– any sequence of array indexes and object keys;@#– length of array or object, may only be used as the last component of a path;$– the whole JSON document as single value, may only be the whole path.
Expression is true when operator is true against at least one value selected by path.
Key names could be given either with or without double quotes. Key names without double quotes may not contain spaces, start with a number or match a jsquery keyword.
The supported binary operators are:
- Equality operator:
=; - Numeric comparison operators:
>,>=,<,<=; - Search in the list of scalar values using
INoperator; - Array comparison operators:
&&(overlap),@>(contains),<@(contained in).
The supported unary operators are:
- Check for existence operator:
= *; - Check for type operators:
IS ARRAY,IS NUMERIC,IS OBJECT,IS STRINGandIS BOOLEAN.
Expressions can be complex. Complex expression is a set of expressions
combined by logical operators (AND, OR, NOT) and grouped using braces.
Examples of complex expressions:
a = 1 AND (b = 2 OR c = 3) AND NOT d = 1x.% = true OR x.# = true
Prefix expressions are expressions given in the form path (subexpression).
In this case path selects JSON values to be checked using the given subexpression.
Check results are aggregated in the same way as in simple expressions.
#(a = 1 AND b = 2)– exists element of array which a key is 1 and b key is 2%($ >= 10 AND $ <= 20)– exists object key which values is between 10 and 20
Path can also contain the following special placeholders with "every" semantics:
#:– every index of an array;%:– every key of an object;*:– every sequence of array indexes and object keys.
Consider following example.
%.#:($ >= 0 AND $ <= 1)
This example could be read as following: there is at least one key whose value is an array of numerics between 0 and 1.
We can rewrite this example in the following form with extra braces:
%(#:($ >= 0 AND $ <= 1))
The first placeholder % checks that the expression in braces is true for at least
one value in the object. The second placeholder #: checks if the value is an array
and that all its elements satisfy the expressions in braces.
We can rewrite this example without the #: placeholder as follows:
%(NOT #(NOT ($ >= 0 AND $ <= 1)) AND $ IS ARRAY)
In this example we transform the assertion that every element of array satisfy some condition to an assertion that there are no elements which don't satisfy the same condition.
Some examples of using paths:
numbers.#: IS NUMERIC– every element of "numbers" array is numeric.*:($ IS OBJECT OR $ IS BOOLEAN)– JSON is a structure of nested objects with booleans as leaf values.#:.%:($ >= 0 AND $ <= 1)– each element of array is an object containing only numeric values between 0 and 1.documents.#:.% = *– "documents" is an array of objects containing at least one key.%.#: ($ IS STRING)– JSON object contains at least one array of strings.#.% = true– at least one array element is an object which contains at least one "true" value.
The use of path operators and braces need some further explanation. When the same path
operators are used multiple times, they may refer to different values. If you want them
to always refer to the same value, you must use braces and the $ operator. For example:
# < 10 AND # > 20– an element less than 10 exists, and another element greater than 20 exists.#($ < 10 AND $ > 20)– an element which is both less than 10 and greater than 20 exists (impossible).#($ >= 10 AND $ <= 20)– an element between 10 and 20 exists.# >= 10 AND # <= 20– an element greater or equal to 10 exists, and another element less or equal to 20 exists. Please note that this query also can be satisfied by an array with no elements between 10 and 20, for instance [0,30].
Same rules apply when searching inside objects and branch structures.
Type checking operators and "every" placeholders are useful for document
schema validation. JsQuery matchig operator @@ is immutable and can be used
in CHECK constraint. See following example.
CREATE TABLE js (
id serial,
data jsonb,
CHECK (data @@ '
name IS STRING AND
similar_ids.#: IS NUMERIC AND
points.#:(x IS NUMERIC AND y IS NUMERIC)'::jsquery));
In this example the check constraint validates that in the "data" jsonb column the value of the "name" key is a string, the value of the "similar_ids" key is an array of numerics, and the value of the "points" key is an array of objects which contain numeric values in "x" and "y" keys.
See our pgconf.eu presentation for more examples.
GIN indexes
JsQuery extension contains two operator classes (opclasses) for GIN which provide different kinds of query optimization.
- jsonb_path_value_ops
- jsonb_value_path_ops
In each of two GIN opclasses jsonb documents are decomposed into entries. Each entry is associated with a particular value and its path. The difference between opclasses is in the entry representation, comparison and usage for search optimization.
For example, the jsonb document
{"a": [{"b": "xyz", "c": true}, 10], "d": {"e": [7, false]}}
would be decomposed into following entries:
- "a".#."b"."xyz"
- "a".#."c".true
- "a".#.10
- "d"."e".#.7
- "d"."e".#.false
Since JsQuery doesn't support searching in a particular array index, we consider
all array elements to be equivalent. Thus, each array element is marked with
the same # sign in its path.
Major problem in the entries representation is its size. In the given example the key "a" is presented three times. In large branchy documents with long keys sizes of naive entries, the representation becomes unreasonably large. Both opclasses address this issue, but in slightly different ways.
jsonb_path_value_ops
jsonb_path_value_ops represents entry as pair of path hash and value. Following pseudocode illustrates it:
(hash(path_item_1.path_ite
Related Skills
openhue
339.5kControl Philips Hue lights and scenes via the OpenHue CLI.
sag
339.5kElevenLabs text-to-speech with mac-style say UX.
weather
339.5kGet current weather and forecasts via wttr.in or Open-Meteo
tweakcc
1.5kCustomize Claude Code's system prompts, create custom toolsets, input pattern highlighters, themes/thinking verbs/spinners, customize input box & user message styling, support AGENTS.md, unlock private/unreleased features, and much more. Supports both native/npm installs on all platforms.
