Provided by: libsql-translator-perl_0.11018-1_all
NAME
sqlt-graph - Automatically create a graph from a database schema
SYNOPSIS
./sqlt-graph -d|--db|-f|--from=db_parser [options] schema.sql Options: -l|--layout Layout schema for GraphViz ("dot," "neato," "twopi"; default "dot") -n|--node-shape Shape of the nodes ("record," "plaintext," "ellipse," "circle," "egg," "triangle," "box," "diamond," "trapezium," "parallelogram," "house," "hexagon," "octagon," default "record") -o|--output Output file name (default STDOUT) -t|--output-type Output file type ("canon", "text," "ps," "hpgl," "pcl," "mif," "pic," "gd," "gd2," "gif," "jpeg," "png," "wbmp," "cmap," "ismap," "imap," "vrml," "vtx," "mp," "fig," "svg," "plain," default "png") -c|--color Add colors --cluster Cluster tables --no-fields Don't show field names --height Image height (in inches, default "11", set to "0" to undefine) --width Image width (in inches, default "8.5", set to "0" to undefine) --fontsize custom font size for node and edge labels --fontname name of custom font (or full path to font file) for node, edge, and graph labels --nodeattr attribute name and value (in key=val syntax) for nodes; this option may be repeated to specify multiple node attributes --edgeattr same as --nodeattr, but for edge attributes --graphattr same as --nodeattr, but for graph attributes --natural-join Perform natural joins --natural-join-pk Perform natural joins from primary keys only --show-datatypes Show datatype of each field --show-sizes Show column sizes for VARCHAR and CHAR fields --show-constraints Show list of constraints for each field -s|--skip Fields to skip in natural joins --skip-tables Comma-separated list of table names to exclude --skip-tables-like Comma-separated list of regexen to exclude tables --debug Print debugging information --trace Print parser trace info
DESCRIPTION
This script will create a graph of your schema. Only the database driver argument (for SQL::Translator) is required. If no output file name is given, then image will be printed to STDOUT, so you should redirect the output into a file. The default action is to assume the presence of foreign key relationships defined via "REFERNCES" or "FOREIGN KEY" constraints on the tables. If you are parsing the schema of a file that does not have these, you will find the natural join options helpful. With natural joins, like-named fields will be considered foreign keys. This can prove too permissive, however, as you probably don't want a field called "name" to be considered a foreign key, so you could include it in the "skip" option, and all fields called "name" will be excluded from natural joins. A more efficient method, however, might be to simply deduce the foreign keys from primary keys to other fields named the same in other tables. Use the "natural-join-pk" option to achieve this. If the schema defines foreign keys, then the graph produced will be directed showing the direction of the relationship. If the foreign keys are intuited via natural joins, the graph will be undirected. Clustering of tables allows you to group and box tables according to function or domain or whatever criteria you choose. The syntax for clustering tables is: cluster1=table1,table2;cluster2=table3,table4
AUTHOR
Ken Youens-Clark <kclark@cpan.org>.
SEE ALSO
perl, SQL::Translator.