I have been readin about pandas to_sql solutions to not add duplicate records to a database. I am working with csv files of logs, each time i upload a new log file i then read the data and make some changes with pandas creating a new dataframe.
Then i execute to_sql('Logs',con = db.engine, if_exists = 'append', index=True)
. With the if_exists
arg i
make sure each time the new created dataframe from the new file is appended to the existing database. The problem is it keeps adding duplicating values. I want to make sure that if a file which has already been uploaded is by mistake uploaded again it won't be appended to the database. I want to try do this directly when creating the database withouth finding a workaround like just checking if the filename has been used before.
I am working with flask-sqlalchemy.
Thank you.
Your best bet is to catch duplicates by setting up your index as a primary key, and then using try
/except
to catch uniqueness violations. You mentioned another post that suggested watching for IntegrityError
exceptions, and I agree that's the best approach. You can combine that with a de-deuplication function to make sure your table updates run smoothly.
Here's a toy example:
from sqlalchemy import *
import sqlite3
# make a database, 'test', and a table, 'foo'.
conn = sqlite3.connect("test.db")
c = conn.cursor()
# id is a primary key. this will be the index column imported from to_sql().
c.execute('CREATE TABLE foo (id integer PRIMARY KEY, foo integer NOT NULL);')
# use the sqlalchemy engine.
engine = create_engine('sqlite:///test.db')
pd.read_sql("pragma table_info(foo)", con=engine)
cid name type notnull dflt_value pk
0 0 id integer 0 None 1
1 1 foo integer 1 None 0
Now, two example data frames, df
and df2
:
data = {'foo':[1,2,3]}
df = pd.DataFrame(data)
df
foo
0 1
1 2
2 3
data2 = {'foo':[3,4,5]}
df2 = pd.DataFrame(data2, index=[2,3,4])
df2
foo
2 3 # this row is a duplicate of df.iloc[2,:]
3 4
4 5
Move df
into table foo
:
df.to_sql('foo', con=engine, index=True, index_label='id', if_exists='append')
pd.read_sql('foo', con=engine)
id foo
0 0 1
1 1 2
2 2 3
Now, when we try to append df2
, we catch the IntegrityError
:
try:
df2.to_sql('foo', con=engine, index=True, index_label='id', if_exists='append')
# use the generic Exception, both IntegrityError and sqlite3.IntegrityError caused trouble.
except Exception as e:
print("FAILURE TO APPEND: {}".format(e))
Output:
FAILURE TO APPEND: (sqlite3.IntegrityError) UNIQUE constraint failed: foo.id [SQL: 'INSERT INTO foo (id, foo) VALUES (?, ?)'] [parameters: ((2, 3), (3, 4), (4, 5))]
On IntegrityError
, you can pull the existing table data, remove the duplicate entries of your new data, and then retry the append statement. Use apply()
for this:
def append_db(data):
try:
data.to_sql('foo', con=engine, index=True, index_label='id', if_exists='append')
return 'Success'
except Exception as e:
print("Initial failure to append: {}\n".format(e))
print("Attempting to rectify...")
existing = pd.read_sql('foo', con=engine)
to_insert = data.reset_index().rename(columns={'index':'id'})
mask = ~to_insert.id.isin(existing.id)
try:
to_insert.loc[mask].to_sql('foo', con=engine, index=False, if_exists='append')
print("Successful deduplication.")
except Exception as e2:
"Could not rectify duplicate entries. \n{}".format(e2)
return 'Success after dedupe'
df2.apply(append_db)
Output:
Initial failure to append: (sqlite3.IntegrityError) UNIQUE constraint failed: foo.id [SQL: 'INSERT INTO foo (id, foo) VALUES (?, ?)'] [parameters: ((2, 3), (3, 4), (4, 5))]
Attempting to rectify...
Successful deduplication.
foo Success after dedupe
dtype: object
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