This project proposes a standard for database connection URIs and provides a simple Perl implementation. This figure summarizes the definition syntax and for database URIs (illustration adapted from RFC 3986 --- STD 66, chapter 3):
db:engine://username:password@example.com:8042/widgets.db?tz=utc&charset=utf8#users
\/ \____/ \_______________/ \_________/ \__/ \________/ \/ \__/ \____/ \__/\____/
| | | | | | | | | | |
| | userinfo hostname port | key | key | |
| | \________________________________/ | | | |
| | | | value value |
| engine | | \_________________/ |
scheme | authority db name or path | |
name | \___________________________________________/ query fragment
| | |
| | hierarchical part
| |
| | db name or path query fragment
| __|_ ________|________ _____|____ ____|____
/\ / \ / \ / \/ \
db:engine:my_big_fat_database?encoding=big5#log.animals
Notes on this syntax:
-
The Database URI scheme is
db
. Consequently, database URIs always start withdb:
. This is the URI scheme that defines a database URI. -
Next comes the database engine. This part is a string naming the type of database engine for the database. It must always be followed by a colon,
:
. There is no formal list of supported engines, though certain implementations may specify engine-specific semantics, such as a default port. -
The authority part is separated from the engine by a double slash,
//
, and terminated by the next slash or end of the URI. It consists of an optional user-information part, terminated by@
(e.g.,username:password@
); a host address (e.g., domain name or IP address); and an optional port number, preceded by a colon,:
. -
The path part specifies the database name or path. It must be separated from the authority, if the authority is present, by a single slash,
/
. If the database name is a full path, it may start with an additional slash. -
The optional query part, separated by a question mark,
?
, containskey=value
pairs separated by a semicolon,;
, or ampersand,&
. These parameters may be used to configure a database connection with parameters not directly supported by the rest of the URI format. -
The optional fragment part, separted by a hash mark,
#
, contains additional context information, such as a table or view name.
Here are some database URIs without an authority part, which is typical for non-server engines such as SQLite, where the path part is a relative or absolute file name:
db:sqlite:
db:sqlite:foo.db
db:sqlite:../foo.db
db:sqlite:/var/db/foo.sqlite
Other engines may use a database name rather than a file name:
db:ingres:mydb
db:postgresql:template1
When a URI includes an authority part, it must be preceded by a double slash:
db:postgresql://example.com/
db:mysql://root@localhost/
db:pg://postgres:secr3t@example.net
Formally, the authority part requires a host name, but some implementations, inspired by the file scheme, might allow an empty host to imply localhost.
db:mysql:/root@
db:postgres://postgres:secr3t@
db:sqlite:///
The path part contians the database name, separated from the authority by a single slash:
db:postgresql://example.com/template1
db:mongodb://localhost:27017/myDatabase
db:oracle://scott:tiger@foo.com/scott
Some databases, such as Firebird, take both a host name and a file path. Just put the relative or absolute path after that slash, as appropriate:
db:firebird://localhost/test.gdb
- Relativedb:firebird://localhost/../test.gdb
- Relativedb:firebird://localhost/C:/temp/test.gdb
- Absolutedb:firebird://localhost/%2Ftmp/test.gdb
- Absolute
Note the percent-encoded slash in the last example. Formally, an absolute path may not start with a slash, so we use its percent-encoded representation here. In practice, implementations may recognize a leading slash, anyway:
db:firebird://localhost//tmp/test.gdb
Any URI format may optionally have a query part containing key/value pairs:
db:sqlite:foo.db?foreign_keys=ON;journal_mode=WAL
db:pg://localhost:5433/postgres?client_encoding=utf8;connect_timeout=10
URIs may also have a fragment that names a specific database object. Since database URIs will generally be used for connecting, this part may be ignored.
db:sqlite:my.db#users
db:pg://localhost/postgres#pg_catalog.pg_class
.
Formally, a database URI as defined here is an opaque URI starting with db:
followed by an embedded server-style URI. For example, this database URI:
db:pg://localhost/mydb
Is formally the URI pg://localhost/mydb
embedded in an opaque db:
URI. It
adheres to this formal definition because the scheme part of a URI is not
allowed to contain a sub-scheme (or subprotocol, in the
JDBC parlance).
It is therefore a legal URI embedded in a second legal URI.
Informally, it's simpler to think of a database URI as a single URI starting
with the combination of the scheme and the engine, e.g., db:pg
.
Some may recognize URIs as database URIs in the absence of the db:
scheme,
provided their schemes correspond to widely-recognized database engines, such
as postgresql
, mysql
, sqlite
, mssql
, and oracle
. These are not
formally recognized as standard schemes, though they may be recognized as
standard engines by the db:
scheme specification.
The format here is inspired by a lot of prior art.
-
JDBC URIs set the precedent for an opaque URI with a second, embedded URI, as discussed here.
-
A number of database URI formats set the standard for
engine://authority/dbname
, including: