Skip to content
This repository has been archived by the owner on Mar 20, 2019. It is now read-only.

Latest commit

 

History

History
372 lines (270 loc) · 12.5 KB

readme.md

File metadata and controls

372 lines (270 loc) · 12.5 KB

Import data into your neo4j database from the neo4j-shell command

neo4j-shell-tools adds a number of commands to neo4j-shell which easily allow import and export data into running Neo4j database.

Installation

Download neo4j-shell-tools_3.0.1.zip and extract it in your Neo4j Server's lib directory e.g.

cd /path/to/neo4j-community-3.0.1
curl http://dist.neo4j.org/jexp/shell/neo4j-shell-tools_3.0.1.zip -o neo4j-shell-tools.zip
unzip neo4j-shell-tools.zip -d lib

Easier installation on Unix

The following script does the above installation automatically, and sets the $NEO4J_HOME path; works on Unix:

NEO4J_HOME=$(neo4j-shell -c 'dbinfo -g Kernel StoreDirectory' | grep -oE '\/.*lib.*?\/') && curl -Lk -o neo4j-shell-tools.zip http://dist.neo4j.org/jexp/shell/neo4j-shell-tools_3.0.1.zip && unzip neo4j-shell-tools.zip -d ${NEO4J_HOME}lib

Before you start

Restart neo4j and then launch the neo4j-shell:

cd /path/to/neo4j-community-3.0.1
./bin/neo4j restart
./bin/neo4j-shell

That assumes a default neo4j instance running on port 7474. You can call ./bin/neo4j-shell --help to get a list of other ways to connect to a neo4j instance.

Importing workflow

Before importing data, make sure that you create the necessary indexes or constraints for your data, so that you can quickly access the starting points for your graph patterns afterwards. For instance:

create constraint on (p:Person) assert p.email is unique;
create index on :Person(age);

Import

Then choose a suitable import command, depending on how your data is structured.

Cypher Import

Populate your database with write clauses in the cypher query language.

$ import-cypher [-i in.csv] [-o out.csv] [-d ,] [-q] [-b 10000] create (n:#{label} {name: {name}, age: {age}}) return id(n) as id, n.name as name
  • -i file.csv: tab or comma separated input data file (or URL), with header. Header names are used as param-names. The cypher statement will be executed one per row
  • -o file.csv: tab or comma separated output data file, all cypher result rows will be written to file, column labels become headers
  • -q: input/output file with quotes
  • -d delim: delim used to separate files (e.g. -d " ", -d \t -d , )
  • -b size: batch size for intermediate commits

Example input file: in.csv

name	age
Michael	38
Selina	15
Rana	8
Selma	5

Usage:

$ import-cypher -d"\t" -i in.csv -o out.csv create (n {name: {name}, age: {age}}) return id(n) as id, n.name as name
Query: create (n {name: {name}, age: {age}}) return id(n) as id, n.name as name; infile in.csv delim '	' quoted false outfile out.csv batch-size 20000
Import statement execution created 4 rows of output.

Output file: out.csv

id	name
1	Michael
2	Selina
3	Rana
4	Selma

Optionally support types for column headers: just use prop:type as header in your csv, e.g. name:string,age:int

Supported Types

  • int
  • long
  • double
  • float
  • boolean
  • string
  • byte
  • and arrays thereof with <type>_array, e.g. int_array

Geoff Import

Populate your database with geoff - a declarative notation for representing graph data in a human-readable format.

$ import-geoff [-i in.geoff]
  • -i in.geoff: newline separated geoff rule file (or URL)

Example input file: in.geoff

(A) {"name": "Alice"}
(B) {"name": "Bob"}
(A)-[r:KNOWS]->(B)

Usage:

$ import-geoff -i in.geoff
Geoff import of in.geoff created 3 entities.

Binary Import

Populate your database from a binary dump of a neo4j database. Internally, Kyro is used to serialize the graph.

$ import-binary [-i in.bin] [-r REL_TYPE] [-b 20000] [-c]
  • -i in.bin: binary file from previous database export
  • -r REL_TYPE default relationship-type for relationships without a label attribute
  • -b batch-size batch-commit size
  • -c uses a cache that spills to disk for very large imports

Usage:

$ import-binary -b 10000 -i /tmp/export.bin -c

GraphML Import

Populate your database from GraphML files. GraphML is an XML file format used to describe graphs.

$ import-graphml [-i in.xml] [-r REL_TYPE] [-b 20000] [-c] [-t]
  • -i in.xml: graphml file (or URL)
  • -r REL_TYPE default relationship-type for relationships without a label attribute
  • -t also import node labels, see the export format
  • -b batch-size batch-commit size
  • -c uses a cache that spills to disk for very large imports

Example input file: in.xml

<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<graphml xmlns="http://graphml.graphdrawing.org/xmlns"
         xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance"
         xsi:schemaLocation="http://graphml.graphdrawing.org/xmlns
        http://graphml.graphdrawing.org/xmlns/1.0/graphml.xsd">
    <key id="d0" for="node" attr.name="color" attr.type="string">
        <default>yellow</default>
    </key>
    <key id="d1" for="edge" attr.name="weight" attr.type="double"/>
    <graph id="G" edgedefault="undirected">
        <node id="n0">
            <data key="d0">green</data>
        </node>
        <node id="n1"/>
        <edge id="e0" source="n0" target="n1">
            <data key="d1">1.0</data>
        </edge>
    </graph>
</graphml>

Usage:

$ import-graphml -i in.xml
GraphML-Import file in.xml rel-type RELATED_TO batch-size 40000 use disk-cache false
0. 100%: nodes = 1 rels = 0 properties = 0 time 11 ms
Finished: nodes = 2 rels = 1 properties = 2 total time 16 ms
GraphML import created 3 entities.

Export

Choose a suitable export command, depending on your requirement for the exported data

  • To export your data as Cypher statements, use, use the Cypher Export command.
  • To export your data as CSV, use the Cypher Import command with the -o file option which will output the results of your queries into a CSV file.
  • To export your data as GraphML, use the GraphML Export command.
  • To export your data as a binary file, use the Export Binary command.

Cypher Export

If you have a populated database, you can dump it completely or partially (by using a Cypher statement) to a script-file which uses Cypher and neo4j-shell commands to control the import.

The export order is:

  1. Nodes batched in transactions
  2. Schema information like indexes and constraints
  3. Relationships by looking up nodes by primary keys and connecting them, also batched in transactions
$ export-cypher [-o export.cypher] [-r] [-b 10000] [MATCH (p:Person)-[r:ACTED_IN]->(m:Movie) RETURN *]
  • -o file.cypher: output file for dump, if left blank the output is sent to the neo4j-shell output and has to be redirected
  • -b size: batch size for commit batches for nodes and relationships
  • -r add all nodes of selected relationships, also add relationships between selected nodes

Note: For nodes that don't have a unique constraint, a temporary label (UNIQUE IMPORT LABEL) and property (UNIQUE IMPORT ID) are added to allow later lookup in the relationship-generation section. A constraint for UNIQUE IMPORT LABEL(UNIQUE IMPORT ID) is added too. All, the constraint, the label and the property are removed at the end of the import script again.

Example dump file:

$ export-cypher -r -o test.cypher match (n)-[r]->() return n,r

// create nodes
begin
CREATE (:`UNIQUE IMPORT LABEL` {`UNIQUE IMPORT ID`:0});
CREATE (:`User` {`age`:43, `name`:"User1"});
commit

// add schema
begin
CREATE INDEX ON :`User`(`age`);
CREATE CONSTRAINT ON (node:`User`) ASSERT node.`name` IS UNIQUE;
CREATE CONSTRAINT ON (node:`UNIQUE IMPORT LABEL`) ASSERT node.`UNIQUE IMPORT ID` IS UNIQUE;
commit
schema await

// create relationships
begin
MATCH (n1:`UNIQUE IMPORT LABEL`{`UNIQUE IMPORT ID`:0}), (n2:`User`{`name`:"User1"}) CREATE (n1)-[:`KNOWS` {`since`:2011}]->(n2);
commit

// clean up temporary import keys
begin
MATCH (n:`UNIQUE IMPORT LABEL`)  WITH n LIMIT 1000 REMOVE n:`UNIQUE IMPORT LABEL` REMOVE n.`UNIQUE IMPORT ID`;
commit
begin
DROP CONSTRAINT ON (node:`UNIQUE IMPORT LABEL`) ASSERT node.`UNIQUE IMPORT ID` IS UNIQUE;
commit

Binary Export

Export your Neo4j graph database to a binary file.

$ export-binary -o out.bin
  • -o out.bin

Usage:

$ export-binary -o out.bin

GraphML Export

Export your Neo4j graph database to GraphML files. GraphML is an XML file format used to describe graphs. Can be used to import and visualize your graph in Gephi.

$ export-graphml [-t] [-r] [-o out.graphml] [match (n:Foo)-[r]->() return n,r]
  • -t write types, do a first pass over the data to determine property-types and write them to the graphml header
  • -r add all nodes of selected relationships
  • -o out.graphml: graphml file to write to
  • optional cypher query to select a subgraph to export

Example output file: out.graphml

<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<graphml xmlns="http://graphml.graphdrawing.org/xmlns"
 xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance"
 xsi:schemaLocation="http://graphml.graphdrawing.org/xmlns
 http://graphml.graphdrawing.org/xmlns/1.0/graphml.xsd">
<graph id="G" edgedefault="directed">
<key id="name" for="node" attr.name="name" attr.type="string"/>
<key id="count" for="edge" attr.name="count" attr.type="int"/>
<node id="n0" labels=":FOO" ><data key="labels">:FOO</data><data key="name">John Doe</data></node>
<node id="n1" labels=":FOO" ><data key="labels">:FOO</data><data key="name">Jane Doe</data></node>
<edge id="e0" source="n0" target="n1" label="KNOWS"><data key="label">KNOWS</data><data key="count">0</data></edge>
<edge id="e1" source="n1" target="n0" label="KNOWS"><data key="label">KNOWS</data><data key="count">1</data></edge>
</graph>
</graphml>

Usage:

$ export-graphml -o out.graphml

Prerequisites

An up and running neo4j database which you can download from here.

Other Technical Details

Libraries used

More on GraphML

The 'import-graphml' command supports attributes, supports only single pass parsing, optimization for parse.nodeids="canonical"

An import of @chrisdiehl's Enron Dataset took 5 minutes on a MBA:

Finished: nodes = 343266 rels = 1903201 properties = 8888993 total time 313491 ms

Manual Build & Install

git clone git@github.com:jexp/neo4j-shell-tools.git
cd neo4j-shell-tools
mvn clean package dependency:copy-dependencies

Then copy the jars that get generated into the neo4j lib directory:

cp target/import-tools-*.jar target/dependency/opencsv-*.jar target/dependency/geoff-*.jar target/dependency/mapdb-*.jar target/dependency/kryo-*.jar target/dependency/reflectasm-*.jar target/dependency/minlog-*.jar target/dependency/objenesis-*.jar /path/to/neo4j-community/lib

or make those two files available on your neo4j-shell classpath

Setup auto indexing

NOTE: Using the "old" auto-index is discouraged, except if you know what you're doing. Use the label-based schema indexes instead.

The auto index command is used to automatically create indexes on certain properties defined on nodes or relationships. This is in addition to the properties defined in 'conf/neo4j.properties'.

auto-index [-t Node|Relationship] [-r] name age title
  • -r stops indexing those properties

Usage:

$ auto-index name age title
Enabling auto-indexing of Node properties: [name, age, title]