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MariaDB Cookbook

You're reading from   MariaDB Cookbook Learn how to use the database that's growing in popularity as a drop-in replacement for MySQL. The MariaDB Cookbook is overflowing with handy recipes and code examples to help you become an expert simply and speedily.

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Product type Paperback
Published in Mar 2014
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781783284399
Length 282 pages
Edition Edition
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Author (1):
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Daniel Bartholomew Daniel Bartholomew
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Daniel Bartholomew
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Toc

Table of Contents (20) Chapters Close

MariaDB Cookbook
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
1. Getting Started with MariaDB FREE CHAPTER 2. Diving Deep into MariaDB 3. Optimizing and Tuning MariaDB 4. The TokuDB Storage Engine 5. The CONNECT Storage Engine 6. Replication in MariaDB 7. Replication with MariaDB Galera Cluster 8. Performance and Usage Statistics 9. Searching Data Using Sphinx 10. Exploring Dynamic and Virtual Columns in MariaDB 11. NoSQL with HandlerSocket 12. NoSQL with the Cassandra Storage Engine 13. MariaDB Security Index

Reading data using HandlerSocket and Python


Now that we have installed pyhs, we can start using it to read data from our database.

Getting ready

Install the HandlerSocket PERL client libraries as described in the Installing the HandlerSocket PERL client libraries recipe earlier in this chapter. Launch the mysql command-line client and run the SQL commands from the Getting ready section of the Reading data using HandlerSocket and PERL recipe, described earlier in this chapter, to give us some sample data to read (and if we've already gone through the PERL or Ruby recipes, running the SQL commands again will reset the sample data to its default state).

How to do it...

  1. Launch the interactive Python interpreter in a terminal window as follows:

    python
    
  2. Run the following commands in the interpreter:

    from pyhs import Manager 
    hs = Manager() 
    data = hs.get('test', 'hs_test', ['id', 'givenname', 'surname'], '5') 
    print dict(data)
    
  3. Then, run the following commands in the interpreter:

    from pyhs.sockets import...
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