CLI Reference¶
sqlfluff¶
Sqlfluff is a modular sql linter for humans.
sqlfluff [OPTIONS] COMMAND [ARGS]...
Options
- --version¶
Show the version and exit.
dialects¶
Show the current dialects available.
sqlfluff dialects [OPTIONS]
Options
- -n, --nocolor¶
No color - output will be without ANSI color codes.
- -v, --verbose¶
Verbosity, how detailed should the output be. This is stackable, so -vv is more verbose than -v. For the most verbose option try -vvvv or -vvvvv.
- --version¶
Show the version and exit.
fix¶
Fix SQL files.
PATH is the path to a sql file or directory to lint. This can be either a file (‘path/to/file.sql’), a path (‘directory/of/sql/files’), a single (‘-‘) character to indicate reading from stdin or a dot/blank (‘.’/’ ‘) which will be interpreted like passing the current working directory as a path argument.
sqlfluff fix [OPTIONS] [PATHS]...
Options
- -n, --nocolor¶
No color - output will be without ANSI color codes.
- -v, --verbose¶
Verbosity, how detailed should the output be. This is stackable, so -vv is more verbose than -v. For the most verbose option try -vvvv or -vvvvv.
- --version¶
Show the version and exit.
- --disable-noqa¶
Set this flag to ignore inline noqa comments.
- --logger <logger>¶
Choose to limit the logging to one of the loggers.
- Options
templater | lexer | parser | linter | rules
- --bench¶
Set this flag to engage the benchmarking tool output.
- --ignore <ignore>¶
Ignore particular families of errors so that they don’t cause a failed run. For example –ignore parsing would mean that any parsing errors are ignored and don’t influence the success or fail of a run. –ignore behaves somewhat like noqa comments, except it applies globally. Multiple options are possible if comma separated: e.g. –ignore parsing,templating.
- --encoding <encoding>¶
Specify encoding to use when reading and writing files. Defaults to autodetect.
- --ignore-local-config¶
Ignore config files in default search path locations. This option allows the user to lint with the default config or can be used in conjunction with –config to only reference the custom config file.
- --config <extra_config_path>¶
Include additional config file. By default the config is generated from the standard configuration files described in the documentation. This argument allows you to specify an additional configuration file that overrides the standard configuration files. N.B. cfg format is required.
- --exclude-rules <exclude_rules>¶
Exclude specific rules. For example specifying –exclude-rules L001 will remove rule L001 (Unnecessary trailing whitespace) from the set of considered rules. This could either be the allowlist, or the general set if there is no specific allowlist. Multiple rules can be specified with commas e.g. –exclude-rules L001,L002 will exclude violations of rule L001 and rule L002.
- --rules <rules>¶
Narrow the search to only specific rules. For example specifying –rules L001 will only search for rule L001 (Unnecessary trailing whitespace). Multiple rules can be specified with commas e.g. –rules L001,L002 will specify only looking for violations of rule L001 and rule L002.
- --templater <templater>¶
The templater to use (default=jinja)
- Options
raw | jinja | python | placeholder
- --dialect <dialect>¶
The dialect of SQL to lint
- -f, --force¶
skip the confirmation prompt and go straight to applying fixes. Use this with caution.
- --fixed-suffix <fixed_suffix>¶
An optional suffix to add to fixed files.
- -p, --processes <processes>¶
The number of parallel processes to run.
- --disable_progress_bar¶
Disables progress bars.
- --FIX-EVEN-UNPARSABLE¶
Enables fixing of files that have templating or parse errors. Note that the similar-sounding ‘–ignore’ or ‘noqa’ features merely prevent errors from being displayed. For safety reasons, the ‘fix’command will not make any fixes in files that have templating or parse errors unless ‘–FIX-EVEN-UNPARSABLE’ is enabled on the command lineor in the .sqlfluff config file.
Arguments
- PATHS¶
Optional argument(s)
lint¶
Lint SQL files via passing a list of files or using stdin.
PATH is the path to a sql file or directory to lint. This can be either a file (‘path/to/file.sql’), a path (‘directory/of/sql/files’), a single (‘-‘) character to indicate reading from stdin or a dot/blank (‘.’/’ ‘) which will be interpreted like passing the current working directory as a path argument.
Linting SQL files:
sqlfluff lint path/to/file.sql sqlfluff lint directory/of/sql/files
Linting a file via stdin (note the lone ‘-’ character):
cat path/to/file.sql | sqlfluff lint - echo ‘select col from tbl’ | sqlfluff lint -
sqlfluff lint [OPTIONS] [PATHS]...
Options
- -n, --nocolor¶
No color - output will be without ANSI color codes.
- -v, --verbose¶
Verbosity, how detailed should the output be. This is stackable, so -vv is more verbose than -v. For the most verbose option try -vvvv or -vvvvv.
- --version¶
Show the version and exit.
- --disable-noqa¶
Set this flag to ignore inline noqa comments.
- --logger <logger>¶
Choose to limit the logging to one of the loggers.
- Options
templater | lexer | parser | linter | rules
- --bench¶
Set this flag to engage the benchmarking tool output.
- --ignore <ignore>¶
Ignore particular families of errors so that they don’t cause a failed run. For example –ignore parsing would mean that any parsing errors are ignored and don’t influence the success or fail of a run. –ignore behaves somewhat like noqa comments, except it applies globally. Multiple options are possible if comma separated: e.g. –ignore parsing,templating.
- --encoding <encoding>¶
Specify encoding to use when reading and writing files. Defaults to autodetect.
- --ignore-local-config¶
Ignore config files in default search path locations. This option allows the user to lint with the default config or can be used in conjunction with –config to only reference the custom config file.
- --config <extra_config_path>¶
Include additional config file. By default the config is generated from the standard configuration files described in the documentation. This argument allows you to specify an additional configuration file that overrides the standard configuration files. N.B. cfg format is required.
- --exclude-rules <exclude_rules>¶
Exclude specific rules. For example specifying –exclude-rules L001 will remove rule L001 (Unnecessary trailing whitespace) from the set of considered rules. This could either be the allowlist, or the general set if there is no specific allowlist. Multiple rules can be specified with commas e.g. –exclude-rules L001,L002 will exclude violations of rule L001 and rule L002.
- --rules <rules>¶
Narrow the search to only specific rules. For example specifying –rules L001 will only search for rule L001 (Unnecessary trailing whitespace). Multiple rules can be specified with commas e.g. –rules L001,L002 will specify only looking for violations of rule L001 and rule L002.
- --templater <templater>¶
The templater to use (default=jinja)
- Options
raw | jinja | python | placeholder
- --dialect <dialect>¶
The dialect of SQL to lint
- -f, --format <format>¶
What format to return the lint result in (default=human).
- Options
human | json | yaml | github-annotation | github-annotation-native
- --write-output <write_output>¶
Optionally provide a filename to write the results to, mostly used in tandem with –format. NB: Setting an output file re-enables normal stdout logging.
- --annotation-level <annotation_level>¶
When format is set to github-annotation or github-annotation-native, default annotation level (default=notice). failure and error are equivalent.
- Options
notice | warning | failure | error
- --nofail¶
If set, the exit code will always be zero, regardless of violations found. This is potentially useful during rollout.
- --disregard-sqlfluffignores¶
Perform the operation regardless of .sqlfluffignore configurations
- -p, --processes <processes>¶
The number of parallel processes to run.
- --disable_progress_bar¶
Disables progress bars.
Arguments
- PATHS¶
Optional argument(s)
parse¶
Parse SQL files and just spit out the result.
PATH is the path to a sql file or directory to lint. This can be either a file (‘path/to/file.sql’), a path (‘directory/of/sql/files’), a single (‘-‘) character to indicate reading from stdin or a dot/blank (‘.’/’ ‘) which will be interpreted like passing the current working directory as a path argument.
sqlfluff parse [OPTIONS] PATH
Options
- -n, --nocolor¶
No color - output will be without ANSI color codes.
- -v, --verbose¶
Verbosity, how detailed should the output be. This is stackable, so -vv is more verbose than -v. For the most verbose option try -vvvv or -vvvvv.
- --version¶
Show the version and exit.
- --disable-noqa¶
Set this flag to ignore inline noqa comments.
- --logger <logger>¶
Choose to limit the logging to one of the loggers.
- Options
templater | lexer | parser | linter | rules
- --bench¶
Set this flag to engage the benchmarking tool output.
- --ignore <ignore>¶
Ignore particular families of errors so that they don’t cause a failed run. For example –ignore parsing would mean that any parsing errors are ignored and don’t influence the success or fail of a run. –ignore behaves somewhat like noqa comments, except it applies globally. Multiple options are possible if comma separated: e.g. –ignore parsing,templating.
- --encoding <encoding>¶
Specify encoding to use when reading and writing files. Defaults to autodetect.
- --ignore-local-config¶
Ignore config files in default search path locations. This option allows the user to lint with the default config or can be used in conjunction with –config to only reference the custom config file.
- --config <extra_config_path>¶
Include additional config file. By default the config is generated from the standard configuration files described in the documentation. This argument allows you to specify an additional configuration file that overrides the standard configuration files. N.B. cfg format is required.
- --exclude-rules <exclude_rules>¶
Exclude specific rules. For example specifying –exclude-rules L001 will remove rule L001 (Unnecessary trailing whitespace) from the set of considered rules. This could either be the allowlist, or the general set if there is no specific allowlist. Multiple rules can be specified with commas e.g. –exclude-rules L001,L002 will exclude violations of rule L001 and rule L002.
- --rules <rules>¶
Narrow the search to only specific rules. For example specifying –rules L001 will only search for rule L001 (Unnecessary trailing whitespace). Multiple rules can be specified with commas e.g. –rules L001,L002 will specify only looking for violations of rule L001 and rule L002.
- --templater <templater>¶
The templater to use (default=jinja)
- Options
raw | jinja | python | placeholder
- --dialect <dialect>¶
The dialect of SQL to lint
- --recurse <recurse>¶
The depth to recursively parse to (0 for unlimited)
- -c, --code-only¶
Output only the code elements of the parse tree.
- -m, --include-meta¶
Include meta segments (indents, dedents and placeholders) in the output. This only applies when outputting json or yaml.
- -f, --format <format>¶
What format to return the parse result in.
- Options
human | json | yaml
- --write-output <write_output>¶
Optionally provide a filename to write the results to, mostly used in tandem with –format. NB: Setting an output file re-enables normal stdout logging.
- --profiler¶
Set this flag to engage the python profiler.
- --nofail¶
If set, the exit code will always be zero, regardless of violations found. This is potentially useful during rollout.
Arguments
- PATH¶
Required argument
rules¶
Show the current rules in use.
sqlfluff rules [OPTIONS]
Options
- -n, --nocolor¶
No color - output will be without ANSI color codes.
- -v, --verbose¶
Verbosity, how detailed should the output be. This is stackable, so -vv is more verbose than -v. For the most verbose option try -vvvv or -vvvvv.
- --version¶
Show the version and exit.
version¶
Show the version of sqlfluff.
sqlfluff version [OPTIONS]
Options
- -n, --nocolor¶
No color - output will be without ANSI color codes.
- -v, --verbose¶
Verbosity, how detailed should the output be. This is stackable, so -vv is more verbose than -v. For the most verbose option try -vvvv or -vvvvv.
- --version¶
Show the version and exit.