Google Cloud SQL for SQL server
Cloud SQL is a fully managed relational database service that offers high performance, seamless integration, and impressive scalability. It offers MySQL, PostgreSQL, and SQL Server database engines. Extend your database application to build AI-powered experiences leveraging Cloud SQL's Langchain integrations.
This notebook goes over how to use Cloud SQL for SQL server to save, load and delete langchain documents with MSSQLLoader
and MSSQLDocumentSaver
.
Learn more about the package on GitHub.
Before You Begin
To run this notebook, you will need to do the following:
- Create a Google Cloud Project
- Enable the Cloud SQL Admin API.
- Create a Cloud SQL for SQL server instance
- Create a Cloud SQL database
- Add an IAM database user to the database (Optional)
After confirmed access to database in the runtime environment of this notebook, filling the following values and run the cell before running example scripts.
# @markdown Please fill in the both the Google Cloud region and name of your Cloud SQL instance.
REGION = "us-central1" # @param {type:"string"}
INSTANCE = "test-instance" # @param {type:"string"}
# @markdown Please fill in user name and password of your Cloud SQL instance.
DB_USER = "sqlserver" # @param {type:"string"}
DB_PASS = "password" # @param {type:"string"}
# @markdown Please specify a database and a table for demo purpose.
DATABASE = "test" # @param {type:"string"}
TABLE_NAME = "test-default" # @param {type:"string"}
🦜🔗 Library Installation
The integration lives in its own langchain-google-cloud-sql-mssql
package, so we need to install it.
%pip install --upgrade --quiet langchain-google-cloud-sql-mssql
Colab only: Uncomment the following cell to restart the kernel or use the button to restart the kernel. For Vertex AI Workbench you can restart the terminal using the button on top.
# # Automatically restart kernel after installs so that your environment can access the new packages
# import IPython
# app = IPython.Application.instance()
# app.kernel.do_shutdown(True)
🔐 Authentication
Authenticate to Google Cloud as the IAM user logged into this notebook in order to access your Google Cloud Project.
- If you are using Colab to run this notebook, use the cell below and continue.
- If you are using Vertex AI Workbench, check out the setup instructions here.
from google.colab import auth
auth.authenticate_user()
☁ Set Your Google Cloud Project
Set your Google Cloud project so that you can leverage Google Cloud resources within this notebook.
If you don't know your project ID, try the following:
- Run
gcloud config list
. - Run
gcloud projects list
. - See the support page: Locate the project ID.
# @markdown Please fill in the value below with your Google Cloud project ID and then run the cell.
PROJECT_ID = "my-project-id" # @param {type:"string"}
# Set the project id
!gcloud config set project {PROJECT_ID}
💡 API Enablement
The langchain-google-cloud-sql-mssql
package requires that you enable the Cloud SQL Admin API in your Google Cloud Project.
# enable Cloud SQL Admin API
!gcloud services enable sqladmin.googleapis.com
Basic Usage
MSSQLEngine Connection Pool
Before saving or loading documents from MSSQL table, we need first configures a connection pool to Cloud SQL database. The MSSQLEngine
configures a SQLAlchemy connection pool to your Cloud SQL database, enabling successful connections from your application and following industry best practices.
To create a MSSQLEngine
using MSSQLEngine.from_instance()
you need to provide only 4 things:
project_id
: Project ID of the Google Cloud Project where the Cloud SQL instance is located.region
: Region where the Cloud SQL instance is located.instance
: The name of the Cloud SQL instance.database
: The name of the database to connect to on the Cloud SQL instance.user
: Database user to use for built-in database authentication and login.password
: Database password to use for built-in database authentication and login.
from langchain_google_cloud_sql_mssql import MSSQLEngine
engine = MSSQLEngine.from_instance(
project_id=PROJECT_ID,
region=REGION,
instance=INSTANCE,
database=DATABASE,
user=DB_USER,
password=DB_PASS,
)
Initialize a table
Initialize a table of default schema via MSSQLEngine.init_document_table(<table_name>)
. Table Columns:
- page_content (type: text)
- langchain_metadata (type: JSON)
overwrite_existing=True
flag means the newly initialized table will replace any existing table of the same name.
engine.init_document_table(TABLE_NAME, overwrite_existing=True)
Save documents
Save langchain documents with MSSQLDocumentSaver.add_documents(<documents>)
. To initialize MSSQLDocumentSaver
class you need to provide 2 things:
engine
- An instance of aMSSQLEngine
engine.table_name
- The name of the table within the Cloud SQL database to store langchain documents.
from langchain_core.documents import Document
from langchain_google_cloud_sql_mssql import MSSQLDocumentSaver
test_docs = [
Document(
page_content="Apple Granny Smith 150 0.99 1",
metadata={"fruit_id": 1},
),
Document(
page_content="Banana Cavendish 200 0.59 0",
metadata={"fruit_id": 2},
),
Document(
page_content="Orange Navel 80 1.29 1",
metadata={"fruit_id": 3},
),
]
saver = MSSQLDocumentSaver(engine=engine, table_name=TABLE_NAME)
saver.add_documents(test_docs)
Load documents
Load langchain documents with MSSQLLoader.load()
or MSSQLLoader.lazy_load()
. lazy_load
returns a generator that only queries database during the iteration. To initialize MSSQLDocumentSaver
class you need to provide:
engine
- An instance of aMSSQLEngine
engine.table_name
- The name of the table within the Cloud SQL database to store langchain documents.
from langchain_google_cloud_sql_mssql import MSSQLLoader
loader = MSSQLLoader(engine=engine, table_name=TABLE_NAME)
docs = loader.lazy_load()
for doc in docs:
print("Loaded documents:", doc)
Load documents via query
Other than loading documents from a table, we can also choose to load documents from a view generated from a SQL query. For example:
from langchain_google_cloud_sql_mssql import MSSQLLoader
loader = MSSQLLoader(
engine=engine,
query=f"select * from \"{TABLE_NAME}\" where JSON_VALUE(langchain_metadata, '$.fruit_id') = 1;",
)
onedoc = loader.load()
onedoc
The view generated from SQL query can have different schema than default table. In such cases, the behavior of MSSQLLoader is the same as loading from table with non-default schema. Please refer to section Load documents with customized document page content & metadata.