2022-08-07
Dash Api Docset Reference Search

on non-macos platforms, use zeal instead.

the core problem is that after uninstallation of xcode, one cannot launch the Apple Doc Helper or some binary afterwards inside the Apple docset under dash documentation folder. the docset can be copied to this folder automatically by dash but without xcode it cannot be opened.

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2022-06-03
Mysql Cheatsheet

MySQL Reference Card

Version: 0.1

Author: ProgM4c

Attribute Types

Numbers

Name

Coded on

Name

Coded on

TINYINT

1 byte

FLOAT(W, D)

4 bytes

SMALLINT

2 bytes

DOUBLE(W, D)

8 bytes

MEDIUMINT

3 bytes

W: width(number of digits with the ‘.’)

D: number of decimals

INT

4 bytes

BIGINT

8 bytes

Parameters:

• UNSIGNED

• ZEROFILL

Coded on:

• SIGNED :

• UNSIGNED:

Strings (between ‘ ‘)

Name

Size

CHAR(M)

String with fixed size, 1 <= M <= 255

VARCHAR(M)

String with variable size, 1 <= M <= 255

TINYTEXT

Max length = 255

TEXT

Max length = 65535

MEDIUMTEXT

Max length = 16777215

LONGTEXT

Max length = 4294967295

DECIMAL(M, D)

Simulate a floating point number in a string format

Date and Time

Name

Format

DATE

AAAA-MM-JJ

DATETIME

AAAA-MM-JJ HH:MM:SS

TIMESTAMP

AAAAMMJJHHMMSS

TIMESTAMP(M)

First M characters of a TIMESTAMP

TIME

HH:MM:SS

YEAR

AAAA

ENUM: take one value in the defined list (can be NULL)

syntax:

attr_name ENUM(‘value1’, ‘value2’, …) {NULL | NOT NULL}

Database queries

create a database

CREATE DATABASE [IF NOT EXISTS] ;

delete a database

DROP DATABSE [IF EXISTS] ;

rename a database

ALTER DATABASE RENAME ;

list databases

SHOW DATABASES;

select a database

USE ;

Table queries

show a table

SHOW TABLES;

rename a table

ALTER TABLE RENAME ;

describe a table

DESCRIBE

;

delete a table

DROP TABLE ;

type of constraints

• NOT NULL

• UNIQUE

• PRIMARY KEY = NOT NULL + UNIQUE

• FOREIGN KEY

• CHECK

• DEFAULT

• AUTO_INCREMENT

create a table

CREATE TABLE (

(size) ,

(size) ,

PRIMARY KEY()

);

add / delete a constraints

ALTER TABLE ADD CONSTRAINT TYPEOFCONSTRAINT (, …)

ALTER TABLE DROP [CONSTRAINT | TYPEOFCONSTRAINT ];

Modify table structure

add / delete attribute

ALTER TABLE ADD [FIRST|AFTER ];

ALTER TABLE DROP ;

add / delete default value to an column

ALTER TABLE ALTER {SET DEFAULT |DROP DEFAULT};

change definition of an attribute without/with renaming it

ALTER TABLE MODIFY ;

ALTER TABLE CHANGE ;

Inserting data

INSERT INTO (, , …) VALUES (, , …);

Modifying data

UPDATE

SET = , = , …

WHERE ;

Deleting data

DELETE FROM WHERE ;

Retrieving data

Select statement

SELECT [ DISTINCT ] attributs

[ INTO OUTFILE fichier ]

[ FROM relation ]

[ WHERE condition ]

[ GROUP BY attributs [ ASC | DESC ] ]

[ HAVING condition ]

[ ORDER BY attributs ]

[ LIMIT [a,] b ]

operators in a where clause

=

Equal

<>

Not equal. Note: In some versions of SQL this operator may be written as !=

Greater than

<

Less than

=

Greater than or equal

<=

Less than or equal

BETWEEN

Between an inclusive range

LIKE

Search for a pattern (‘%’ any sequence of characters ‘_’ any character)

[NOT] IN

To specify multiple possible values for a column

IS [NOT] NULL

To check if the value of a column is NULL or not

AND OR NOT

Filter records based on more than once condition

Sub-requests

SELECT * FROM

WHERE prix > (SELECT MIN(prix) FROM tab2)

SELECT * FROM

WHERE nom NOT IN (SELECT nom FROM tab2)

SELECT * FROM

WHERE prix > ALL (SELECT prix FROM tab2) (sup. à ttes les valeurs)

SELECT * FROM

WHERE prix > ANY (SELECT prix FROM tab2) (sup. à au moins 1)

SQL aliases on column / table

SELECT AS FROM

(alias a result)

SELECT FROM

AS (alias a table name)

SQL functions

AVG() - (moyenne)

COUNT() - (nombre d’élément)

MAX() - (maximum)

MIN() - (minimum)

SUM() - (somme)

UCASE()

LCASE()

LEN()

NOW()

FORMAT()

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2022-06-03
Mongodb Cheatsheet

use redability.js reader mode or elinks to render this shit:

https://www.mongodb.com/developer/products/mongodb/cheat-sheet/

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2022-06-03
Redis Cheatsheet

Redis Cheat Sheet

When you encounter a Redis instance and you quickly want to learn about the setup you just need a few simple commands to peak into the setup. Of course it doesn’t hurt to look at the official full command documentation, but below is a listing just for sysadmins.

Accessing Redis

CLI

First thing to know is that you can use “telnet” (usually on Redis default port 6379)

telnet localhost 6379

or the Redis CLI client

redis-cli

to connect to Redis. The advantage of redis-cli is that you have a help interface and command line history.

CLI Queries

Here is a short list of some basic data extraction commands:

Type Syntax and Explanation

Tracing monitor Watch current live commands. Use with care when on production. Cancel with Ctrl-C.

Slow Queries slowlog get 25 Print top 25 slow queries

slowlog len

slowlog reset

Search / List All Keys keys <pattern Use with care when on production!

keys myprefix*

keys pattern

keys *mysuffix

keys [a-c]* Use grep like expressions

Generic Key Handling del Delete key

dump Serialize key

exists Check for key

expire Set key TTL

Working with scalar types get

set

setnx Set key value only if key does not exist

Batch commands:

mget

mset

Working with counters incr

decr

Redis Lists lrange Accessing lists

lrange mylist 0 -1 Output all elements

lindex mylist 5 Get 5th element

llen mylist Get list length

lpush mylist “value” Push “value” to list

lpush mylist 5 Push number 5 to list

rpush mylist “value” Push “value” to beginning (unshift)

lpushx mylist 6 Only push if mylist exists

rpushx mylist 7

lpop mylist Remove+return value from list

rpop mylist Remove+return value from start (shift)

lrem mylist 1 “value” Remove ‘value’ count times

lset mylist 2 6 Set 3rd element to value 6

ltrim

Working with Redis Hashes hexists myhash field1 Check if hash key exists

hget myhash field1 Get key value

hdel myhash field2 Delete key

hset myhash field1 “value” Set key with “value”

hsetnx myhash field1 “value”

hgetall myhash Get all hash content

hkeys myhash List all keys

hlen myhash List number of keys

Batch commands:

hmget … Get multiple keys

hmset … Set multiple keys

Counter commands

hincrby myhash field1 1

hincrby myhash field1 5

hincrby myhash field1 -1

hincrbrfloat myhash field2 1.123445

CLI Scripting

For scripting just pass commands to “redis-cli”. For example:

$ redis-cli INFO | grep connected

connected_clients:2

connected_slaves:0

$

Server Statistics

The statistics command is “INFO” and will give you an output as following.

$ redis-cli INFO

redis_version:2.2.12

redis_git_sha1:00000000

redis_git_dirty:0

arch_bits:64

multiplexing_api:epoll

process_id:8353

uptime_in_seconds:2592232

uptime_in_days:30

lru_clock:809325

used_cpu_sys:199.20

used_cpu_user:309.26

used_cpu_sys_children:12.04

used_cpu_user_children:1.47

connected_clients:2 # <—- connection count

connected_slaves:0

client_longest_output_list:0

client_biggest_input_buf:0

blocked_clients:0

used_memory:6596112

used_memory_human:6.29M # <—- memory usage

used_memory_rss:17571840

mem_fragmentation_ratio:2.66

use_tcmalloc:0

loading:0

aof_enabled:0

changes_since_last_save:0

bgsave_in_progress:0

last_save_time:1371241671

bgrewriteaof_in_progress:0

total_connections_received:118

total_commands_processed:1091

expired_keys:441

evicted_keys:0

keyspace_hits:6

keyspace_misses:1070

hash_max_zipmap_entries:512

hash_max_zipmap_value:64

pubsub_channels:0

pubsub_patterns:0

vm_enabled:0

role:master # <—- master/slave in replication setup

db0:keys=91,expires=88

Changing Runtime Configuration

The command

CONFIG GET *

gives you a list of all active configuration variables you can change. The output might look like this:

redis 127.0.0.1:6379> CONFIG GET *

  1. “dir”

  2. “/var/lib/redis”

  3. “dbfilename”

  4. “dump.rdb”

  5. “requirepass”

  6. (nil)

  7. “masterauth”

  8. (nil)

  9. “maxmemory”

  10. “0”

  11. “maxmemory-policy”

  12. “volatile-lru”

  13. “maxmemory-samples”

  14. “3”

  15. “timeout”

  16. “300”

  17. “appendonly”

  18. “no”

  19. “no-appendfsync-on-rewrite”

  20. “no”

  21. “appendfsync”

  22. “everysec” # <—- how often fsync() is called

  23. “save”

  24. “900 1 300 10 60 10000” # <—- how often Redis dumps in background

  25. “slave-serve-stale-data”

  26. “yes”

  27. “hash-max-zipmap-entries”

  28. “512”

  29. “hash-max-zipmap-value”

  30. “64”

  31. “list-max-ziplist-entries”

  32. “512”

  33. “list-max-ziplist-value”

  34. “64”

  35. “set-max-intset-entries”

  36. “512”

  37. “slowlog-log-slower-than”

  38. “10000”

  39. “slowlog-max-len”

  40. “64”

Note that keys and values are alternating and you can change each key by issuing a “CONFIG SET” command like:

CONFIG SET timeout 900

Such a change will be effective instantly. When changing values consider also updating the redis configuration file.

Databases

Multiple Databases

Redis has a concept of separated namespaces called “databases”. You can select the database number you want to use with “SELECT”. By default the database with index 0 is used. So issuing

redis 127.0.0.1:6379> SELECT 1

OK

redis 127.0.0.1:6379[1]>

switches to the second database. Note how the prompt changed and now has a “[1]” to indicate the database selection. To find out how many databases there are you might want to run redis-cli from the shell:

$ redis-cli INFO | grep ^db

db0:keys=91,expires=88

db1:keys=1,expires=0

Dropping Databases

To drop the currently selected database run

FLUSHDB

to drop all databases at once run

FLUSHALL

Replication

Checking for Replication

To see if the instance is a replication slave or master issue

redis 127.0.0.1:6379> INFO

[…]

role:master

and watch for the “role” line which shows either “master” or “slave”. Starting with version 2.8 the “INFO” command also gives you per slave replication status looking like this

slave0:ip=127.0.0.1,port=6380,state=online,offset=281,lag=0

Setting up Replication

If you quickly need to set up replication just issue

SLAVEOF

on a machine that you want to become slave of the given IP. It will immediately get values from the master. Note that this instance will still be writable. If you want it to be read-only change the redis config file (only available in most recent version, e.g. not on Debian). To revert the slave setting run

SLAVEOF NO ONE

Performance Testing

Benchmark

Install the Redis tools and run the provided benchmarking tool

redis-benchmark -h [-p ]

If you are migrating from/to memcached protocol check out how to run the same benchmark for any key value store with memcached protocol.

Debugging Latency

First measure system latency on your Redis server with

redis-cli –intrinsic-latency 100

and then sample from your Redis clients with

redis-cli –latency -h -p

If you have problems with high latency check if transparent huge pages are disabled. Disable it with

echo never > /sys/kernel/mm/transparent_hugepage/enabled

Dump Database Backup

As Redis allows RDB database dumps in background, you can issue a dump at any time. Just run:

BGSAVE

When running this command Redis will fork and the new process will dump into the “dbfilename” configured in the Redis configuration without the original process being blocked. Of course the fork itself might cause an interruption. Use “LASTSAVE” to check when the dump file was last updated. For a simple backup solution just backup the dump file. If you need a synchronous save run “SAVE” instead of “BGSAVE”.

Listing Connections

Starting with version 2.4 you can list connections with

CLIENT LIST

and you can terminate connections with

CLIENT KILL :

Monitoring Traffic

The propably most useful command compared to memcached where you need to trace network traffic is the “MONITOR” command which will dump incoming commands in real time.

redis 127.0.0.1:6379> MONITOR

OK

1371241093.375324 “monitor”

1371241109.735725 “keys” “*”

1371241152.344504 “set” “testkey” “1”

1371241165.169184 “get” “testkey”

additionally use “SLOWLOG” to track the slowest queries in an interval. For example

SLOWLOG RESET

wait for some time

SLOWLOG GET 25

and get the 25 slowest command during this time.

Sharding with proxies

There are two major proxy solutions

Twemproxy (aka nutcracker, by Twitter)

Codis

Read More

2022-06-03
Neo4J Refcard

Neo4j Refcard Cheatsheet Reference Card

gist

Neo4j Cypher Refcard 4.4

Legend

Read

Write

General

Functions

Schema

Performance

Multidatabase

Security

Syntax

Read query structure

[USE]

[MATCH WHERE]

[OPTIONAL MATCH WHERE]

[WITH [ORDER BY] [SKIP] [LIMIT]]

RETURN [ORDER BY] [SKIP] [LIMIT]

MATCH

MATCH (n:Person)-[:KNOWS]->(m:Person)

WHERE n.name = ‘Alice’

Node patterns can contain labels and properties.

MATCH (n)–>(m)

Any pattern can be used in MATCH.

MATCH (n {name: ‘Alice’})–>(m)

Patterns with node properties.

MATCH p = (n)–>(m)

Assign a path to p.

OPTIONAL MATCH (n)-[r]->(m)

Optional pattern: nulls will be used for missing parts.

WHERE

WHERE n.property <> $value

Use a predicate to filter. Note that WHERE is always part of a MATCH, OPTIONAL MATCH or WITH clause. Putting it after a different clause in a query will alter what it does.

WHERE EXISTS {

MATCH (n)–>(m) WHERE n.age = m.age

}

Use an existential subquery to filter.

Write-only query structure

[USE]

(CREATE | MERGE)*

[SET|DELETE|REMOVE|FOREACH]*

[RETURN [ORDER BY] [SKIP] [LIMIT]]

Read-write query structure

[USE]

[MATCH WHERE]

[OPTIONAL MATCH WHERE]

[WITH [ORDER BY] [SKIP] [LIMIT]]

(CREATE | MERGE)*

[SET|DELETE|REMOVE|FOREACH]*

[RETURN [ORDER BY] [SKIP] [LIMIT]]

CREATE

CREATE (n {name: $value})

Create a node with the given properties.

CREATE (n $map)

Create a node with the given properties.

UNWIND $listOfMaps AS properties

CREATE (n) SET n = properties

Create nodes with the given properties.

CREATE (n)-[r:KNOWS]->(m)

Create a relationship with the given type and direction; bind a variable to it.

CREATE (n)-[:LOVES {since: $value}]->(m)

Create a relationship with the given type, direction, and properties.

SET

SET n.property1 = $value1,

n.property2 = $value2

Update or create a property.

SET n = $map

Set all properties. This will remove any existing properties.

SET n += $map

Add and update properties, while keeping existing ones.

SET n:Person

Adds a label Person to a node.

Import

LOAD CSV FROM

https://neo4j.com/docs/cypher-refcard/4.4/csv/artists.csv‘ AS line

CREATE (:Artist {name: line[1], year: toInteger(line[2])})

Load data from a CSV file and create nodes.

LOAD CSV WITH HEADERS FROM

https://neo4j.com/docs/cypher-refcard/4.4/csv/artists-with-headers.csv‘ AS line

CREATE (:Artist {name: line.Name, year: toInteger(line.Year)})

Load CSV data which has headers.

USING PERIODIC COMMIT 500

LOAD CSV WITH HEADERS FROM

https://neo4j.com/docs/cypher-refcard/4.4/csv/artists-with-headers.csv‘ AS line

CREATE (:Artist {name: line.Name, year: toInteger(line.Year)})

Commit the current transaction after every 500 rows when importing large amounts of data.

LOAD CSV FROM

https://neo4j.com/docs/cypher-refcard/4.4/csv/artists-fieldterminator.csv

AS line FIELDTERMINATOR ‘;’

CREATE (:Artist {name: line[1], year: toInteger(line[2])})

Use a different field terminator, not the default which is a comma (with no whitespace around it).

LOAD CSV FROM

https://neo4j.com/docs/cypher-refcard/4.4/csv/artists.csv‘ AS line

RETURN DISTINCT file()

Returns the absolute path of the file that LOAD CSV is processing, returns null if called outside of LOAD CSV context.

LOAD CSV FROM

https://neo4j.com/docs/cypher-refcard/4.4/csv/artists.csv‘ AS line

RETURN linenumber()

Returns the line number that LOAD CSV is currently processing, returns null if called outside of LOAD CSV context.

Operators

General

DISTINCT, ., []

Mathematical

+, -, *, /, %, ^

Comparison

=, <>, <, >, <=, >=, IS NULL, IS NOT NULL

Boolean

AND, OR, XOR, NOT

String

List

+, IN, [x], [x .. y]

Regular Expression

=~

String matching

STARTS WITH, ENDS WITH, CONTAINS

null

null is used to represent missing/undefined values.

null is not equal to null. Not knowing two values does not imply that they are the same value. So the expression null = null yields null and not true. To check if an expression is null, use IS NULL.

Arithmetic expressions, comparisons and function calls (except coalesce) will return null if any argument is null.

An attempt to access a missing element in a list or a property that doesn’t exist yields null.

In OPTIONAL MATCH clauses, nulls will be used for missing parts of the pattern.

Patterns

(n:Person)

Node with Person label.

(n:Person:Swedish)

Node with both Person and Swedish labels.

(n:Person {name: $value})

Node with the declared properties.

()-[r {name: $value}]-()

Matches relationships with the declared properties.

(n)–>(m)

Relationship from n to m.

(n)–(m)

Relationship in any direction between n and m.

(n:Person)–>(m)

Node n labeled Person with relationship to m.

(m)<-[:KNOWS]-(n)

Relationship of type KNOWS from n to m.

(n)-[:KNOWS|LOVES]->(m)

Relationship of type KNOWS or of type LOVES from n to m.

(n)-[r]->(m)

Bind the relationship to variable r.

(n)-[*1..5]->(m)

Variable length path of between 1 and 5 relationships from n to m.

(n)-[*]->(m)

Variable length path of any number of relationships from n to m. (See Performance section.)

(n)-[:KNOWS]->(m {property: $value})

A relationship of type KNOWS from a node n to a node m with the declared property.

shortestPath((n1:Person)-[*..6]-(n2:Person))

Find a single shortest path.

allShortestPaths((n1:Person)-[*..6]->(n2:Person))

Find all shortest paths.

size((n)–>()–>())

Count the paths matching the pattern.

USE

USE myDatabase

Select myDatabase to execute query, or query part, against.

USE neo4j

MATCH (n:Person)-[:KNOWS]->(m:Person)

WHERE n.name = ‘Alice’

MATCH query executed against neo4j database.

SHOW FUNCTIONS and PROCEDURES

SHOW FUNCTIONS

Listing all available functions.

SHOW PROCEDURES EXECUTABLE YIELD name

List all procedures that can be executed by the current user and return only the name of the procedures.

SHOW and TERMINATE TRANSACTIONS

SHOW TRANSACTIONS

Listing all available transactions.

TERMINATE TRANSACTIONS ‘neo4j-transaction-42’

Terminate the transaction with ID neo4j-transaction-42.

Labels

CREATE (n:Person {name: $value})

Create a node with label and property.

MERGE (n:Person {name: $value})

Matches or creates unique node(s) with the label and property.

SET n:Spouse:Parent:Employee

Add label(s) to a node.

MATCH (n:Person)

Matches nodes labeled Person.

MATCH (n:Person)

WHERE n.name = $value

Matches nodes labeled Person with the given name.

WHERE (n:Person)

Checks the existence of the label on the node.

labels(n)

Labels of the node.

REMOVE n:Person

Remove the label from the node.

Maps

{name: ‘Alice’, age: 38,

address: {city: ‘London’, residential: true}}

Literal maps are declared in curly braces much like property maps. Lists are supported.

WITH {person: {name: ‘Anne’, age: 25}} AS p

RETURN p.person.name

Access the property of a nested map.

MERGE (p:Person {name: $map.name})

ON CREATE SET p = $map

Maps can be passed in as parameters and used either as a map or by accessing keys.

MATCH (matchedNode:Person)

RETURN matchedNode

Nodes and relationships are returned as maps of their data.

map.name, map.age, map.children[0]

Map entries can be accessed by their keys. Invalid keys result in an error.

Functions

coalesce(n.property, $defaultValue)

The first non-null expression.

timestamp()

Milliseconds since midnight, January 1, 1970 UTC.

id(nodeOrRelationship)

The internal id of the relationship or node.

toInteger($expr)

Converts the given input into an integer if possible; otherwise it returns null.

toFloat($expr)

Converts the given input into a floating point number if possible; otherwise it returns null.

toBoolean($expr)

Converts the given input into a boolean if possible; otherwise it returns null.

keys($expr)

Returns a list of string representations for the property names of a node, relationship, or map.

properties($expr)

Returns a map containing all the properties of a node or relationship.

Spatial functions

point({x: $x, y: $y})

Returns a point in a 2D cartesian coordinate system.

point({latitude: $y, longitude: $x})

Returns a point in a 2D geographic coordinate system, with coordinates specified in decimal degrees.

point({x: $x, y: $y, z: $z})

Returns a point in a 3D cartesian coordinate system.

point({latitude: $y, longitude: $x, height: $z})

Returns a point in a 3D geographic coordinate system, with latitude and longitude in decimal degrees, and height in meters.

point.distance(point({x: $x1, y: $y1}), point({x: $x2, y: $y2}))

Returns a floating point number representing the linear distance between two points. The returned units will be the same as those of the point coordinates, and it will work for both 2D and 3D cartesian points.

point.distance(point({latitude: $y1, longitude: $x1}), point({latitude: $y2, longitude: $x2}))

Returns the geodesic distance between two points in meters. It can be used for 3D geographic points as well.

Temporal functions

date(“2018-04-05”)

Returns a date parsed from a string.

localtime(“12:45:30.25”)

Returns a time with no time zone.

time(“12:45:30.25+01:00”)

Returns a time in a specified time zone.

localdatetime(“2018-04-05T12:34:00”)

Returns a datetime with no time zone.

datetime(“2018-04-05T12:34:00[Europe/Berlin]”)

Returns a datetime in the specified time zone.

datetime({epochMillis: 3360000})

Transforms 3360000 as a UNIX Epoch time into a normal datetime.

date({year: $year, month: $month, day: $day})

All of the temporal functions can also be called with a map of named components. This example returns a date from year, month and day components. Each function supports a different set of possible components.

datetime({date: $date, time: $time})

Temporal types can be created by combining other types. This example creates a datetime from a date and a time.

date({date: $datetime, day: 5})

Temporal types can be created by selecting from more complex types, as well as overriding individual components. This example creates a date by selecting from a datetime, as well as overriding the day component.

WITH date(“2018-04-05”) AS d

RETURN d.year, d.month, d.day, d.week, d.dayOfWeek

Accessors allow extracting components of temporal types.

Duration functions

duration(“P1Y2M10DT12H45M30.25S”)

Returns a duration of 1 year, 2 months, 10 days, 12 hours, 45 minutes and 30.25 seconds.

duration.between($date1,$date2)

Returns a duration between two temporal instances.

WITH duration(“P1Y2M10DT12H45M”) AS d

RETURN d.years, d.months, d.days, d.hours, d.minutes

Returns 1 year, 14 months, 10 days, 12 hours and 765 minutes.

WITH duration(“P1Y2M10DT12H45M”) AS d

RETURN d.years, d.monthsOfYear, d.days, d.hours, d.minutesOfHour

Returns 1 year, 2 months, 10 days, 12 hours and 45 minutes.

date(“2015-01-01”) + duration(“P1Y1M1D”)

Returns a date of 2016-02-02. It is also possible to subtract durations from temporal instances.

duration(“PT30S”) * 10

Returns a duration of 5 minutes. It is also possible to divide a duration by a number.

CONSTRAINT

CREATE CONSTRAINT FOR (p:Person)

REQUIRE p.name IS UNIQUE

Create a unique property constraint on the label Person and property name. If any other node with that label is updated or created with a name that already exists, the write operation will fail. This constraint will create an accompanying index.

CREATE CONSTRAINT uniqueness FOR (p:Person)

REQUIRE (p.firstname, p.age) IS UNIQUE

Create a unique property constraint with the name uniqueness on the label Person and properties firstname and age. If any other node with that label is updated or created with a firstname and age combination that already exists, the write operation fails. This constraint creates an accompanying index.

CREATE CONSTRAINT FOR (p:Person)

REQUIRE p.surname IS UNIQUE

OPTIONS {indexProvider: ‘native-btree-1.0’}

Create a unique property constraint on the label Person and property surname with the index provider native-btree-1.0 for the accompanying index.

CREATE CONSTRAINT FOR (p:Person)

REQUIRE p.name IS NOT NULL

(★) Create a node property existence constraint on the label Person and property name, throws an error if the constraint already exists. If a node with that label is created without a name, or if the name property is removed from an existing node with the Person label, the write operation will fail.

CREATE CONSTRAINT node_exists IF NOT EXISTS FOR (p:Person)

REQUIRE p.name IS NOT NULL

(★) If a node property existence constraint on the label Person and property name or any constraint with the name node_exists already exist then nothing happens. If no such constraint exists, then it will be created.

CREATE CONSTRAINT FOR ()-[l:LIKED]-()

REQUIRE l.when IS NOT NULL

(★) Create a relationship property existence constraint on the type LIKED and property when. If a relationship with that type is created without a when, or if the when property is removed from an existing relationship with the LIKED type, the write operation will fail.

CREATE CONSTRAINT relationship_exists FOR ()-[l:LIKED]-()

REQUIRE l.since IS NOT NULL

(★) Create a relationship property existence constraint with the name relationship_exists on the type LIKED and property since. If a relationship with that type is created without a since, or if the since property is removed from an existing relationship with the LIKED type, the write operation will fail.

SHOW UNIQUE CONSTRAINTS YIELD *

List all unique constraints.

CREATE CONSTRAINT FOR (p:Person)

REQUIRE (p.firstname, p.surname) IS NODE KEY

(★) Create a node key constraint on the label Person and properties firstname and surname. If a node with that label is created without both firstname and surname or if the combination of the two is not unique, or if the firstname and/or surname properties on an existing node with the Person label is modified to violate these constraints, the write operation fails. This constraint creates an accompanying index.

CREATE CONSTRAINT node_key FOR (p:Person)

REQUIRE p.firstname IS NODE KEY

(★) Create a node key constraint with the name node_key on the label Person and property firstname. If a node with that label is created without the firstname property or if the value is not unique, or if the firstname property on an existing node with the Person label is modified to violate these constraints, the write operation fails. This constraint creates an accompanying index.

CREATE CONSTRAINT node_key_with_config FOR (p:Person)

REQUIRE (p.name, p.age) IS NODE KEY

OPTIONS {indexConfig: {spatial.wgs-84.min: [-100.0, -100.0], spatial.wgs-84.max: [100.0, 100.0]}}

(★) Create a node key constraint with the name node_key_with_config on the label Person, properties name and age, and given spatial.wgs-84 settings for the accompanying b-tree index. The other index settings will have their default values.

DROP CONSTRAINT uniqueness

Dropping the constraint with the name uniqueness, throws an error if the constraint does not exist. If the constraint has an accompanying index, that is also dropped.

DROP CONSTRAINT uniqueness IF EXISTS

Dropping the constraint with the name uniqueness if it exists, does nothing if it does not exist. If the constraint has an accompanying index, that is also dropped.

Database management

CREATE OR REPLACE DATABASE myDatabase

(★) Create a database named myDatabase. If a database with that name exists, then the existing database is deleted and a new one created.

ALTER DATABASE myDatabase SET ACCESS READ ONLY

(★) Modify a database named myDatabase to be read-only.

STOP DATABASE myDatabase

(★) Stop the database myDatabase.

START DATABASE myDatabase

(★) Start the database myDatabase.

CREATE ALIAS myAlias FOR DATABASE myDatabase

(★) Create an alias myAlias for the database with name myDatabase.

ALTER ALIAS myAlias SET DATABASE TARGET myDatabase

(★) Alter the alias myAlias to target the database with name myDatabase.

DROP ALIAS myAlias FOR DATABASE

(★) Drop the database alias myAlias.

SHOW DATABASES

List all databases in the system and information about them.

SHOW DATABASES

YIELD name, currentStatus

WHERE name CONTAINS ‘my’ AND currentStatus = ‘online’

List information about databases, filtered by name and online status and further refined by conditions on these.

SHOW DATABASE myDatabase

List information about the database myDatabase.

SHOW DEFAULT DATABASE

List information about the default database.

SHOW HOME DATABASE

List information about the current users home database.

DROP DATABASE myDatabase IF EXISTS

(★) Delete the database myDatabase, if it exists.

User management

CREATE USER alice SET PASSWORD $password

Create a new user and a password. This password must be changed on the first login.

ALTER USER alice SET PASSWORD $password CHANGE NOT REQUIRED

Set a new password for a user. This user will not be required to change this password on the next login.

ALTER USER alice IF EXISTS SET PASSWORD CHANGE REQUIRED

If the specified user exists, force this user to change their password on the next login.

ALTER USER alice SET STATUS SUSPENDED

(★) Change the user status to suspended. Use SET STATUS ACTIVE to reactivate the user.

ALTER USER alice SET HOME DATABASE otherDb

(★) Change the home database of user to otherDb. Use REMOVE HOME DATABASE to unset the home database for the user and fallback to the default database.

ALTER CURRENT USER SET PASSWORD FROM $old TO $new

Change the password of the logged-in user. The user will not be required to change this password on the next login.

SHOW CURRENT USER

List the currently logged-in user, their status, roles and whether they need to change their password.

(★) Status and roles are Enterprise Edition only.

SHOW USERS

List all users in the system, their status, roles and if they need to change their password.

(★) Status and roles are Enterprise Edition only.

SHOW USERS

YIELD user, suspended

WHERE suspended = true

List users in the system, filtered by their name and status and further refined by whether they are suspended.

(★) Status is Enterprise Edition only.

RENAME USER alice TO alice_delete

Rename the user alice to alice_delete.

DROP USER alice_delete

Delete the user.

(★) Role management

CREATE ROLE my_role

Create a role.

CREATE ROLE my_second_role IF NOT EXISTS AS COPY OF my_role

Create a role named my_second_role, unless it already exists, as a copy of the existing my_role.

RENAME ROLE my_second_role TO my_other_role

Rename a role named my_second_role to my_other_role.

GRANT ROLE my_role, my_other_role TO alice

Assign roles to a user.

REVOKE ROLE my_other_role FROM alice

Remove a specified role from a user.

SHOW ROLES

List all roles in the system.

SHOW ROLES

YIELD role

WHERE role CONTAINS ‘my’

List roles, filtered by the name of the role and further refined by whether the name contains ‘my’.

SHOW POPULATED ROLES WITH USERS

List all roles that are assigned to at least one user in the system, and the users assigned to those roles.

DROP ROLE my_role

Delete a role.

(★) Graph read privileges

GRANT TRAVERSE ON GRAPH * NODES * TO my_role

Grant traverse privilege on all nodes and all graphs to a role.

DENY READ {prop} ON GRAPH foo RELATIONSHIP Type TO my_role

Deny read privilege on a specified property, on all relationships with a specified type in a specified graph, to a role.

GRANT MATCH {*} ON HOME GRAPH ELEMENTS Label TO my_role

Grant read privilege on all properties and traverse privilege in the home graph, to a role. Here, both privileges apply to all nodes and relationships with a specified label/type in the graph.

(★) Graph write privileges

GRANT CREATE ON GRAPH * NODES Label TO my_role

Grant create privilege on all nodes with a specified label in all graphs to a role.

DENY DELETE ON GRAPH neo4j TO my_role

Deny delete privilege on all nodes and relationships in a specified graph to a role.

REVOKE SET LABEL Label ON GRAPH * FROM my_role

Revoke set label privilege for the specified label on all graphs to a role.

GRANT REMOVE LABEL * ON GRAPH foo TO my_role

Grant remove label privilege for all labels on a specified graph to a role.

DENY SET PROPERTY {prop} ON GRAPH foo RELATIONSHIPS Type TO my_role

Deny set property privilege on a specified property, on all relationships with a specified type in a specified graph, to a role.

GRANT MERGE {*} ON GRAPH * NODES Label TO my_role

Grant merge privilege on all properties, on all nodes with a specified label in all graphs, to a role.

REVOKE WRITE ON GRAPH * FROM my_role

Revoke write privilege on all graphs from a role.

DENY ALL GRAPH PRIVILEGES ON GRAPH foo TO my_role

Deny all graph privileges privilege on a specified graph to a role.

(★) SHOW PRIVILEGES

SHOW PRIVILEGES AS COMMANDS

List all privileges in the system as Cypher commands.

SHOW PRIVILEGES

List all privileges in the system, and the roles that they are assigned to.

SHOW PRIVILEGES

YIELD role, action, access

WHERE role = ‘my_role’

List information about privileges, filtered by role, action and access and further refined by the name of the role.

SHOW ROLE my_role PRIVILEGES AS COMMANDS

List all privileges assigned to a role as Cypher commands.

SHOW ROLE my_role, my_second_role PRIVILEGES AS COMMANDS

List all privileges assigned to each of the multiple roles as Cypher commands.

SHOW USER alice PRIVILEGES AS COMMANDS

List all privileges of a user, and the role that they are assigned to as Cypher commands.

SHOW USER PRIVILEGES AS COMMANDS

List all privileges of the currently logged in user, and the role that they are assigned to as Cypher commands.

RETURN

RETURN *

Return the value of all variables.

RETURN n AS columnName

Use alias for result column name.

RETURN DISTINCT n

Return unique rows.

ORDER BY n.property

Sort the result.

ORDER BY n.property DESC

Sort the result in descending order.

SKIP $skipNumber

Skip a number of results.

LIMIT $limitNumber

Limit the number of results.

SKIP $skipNumber LIMIT $limitNumber

Skip results at the top and limit the number of results.

RETURN count(*)

The number of matching rows. See Aggregating functions for more.

WITH

MATCH (user)-[:FRIEND]-(friend)

WHERE user.name = $name

WITH user, count(friend) AS friends

WHERE friends > 10

RETURN user

The WITH syntax is similar to RETURN. It separates query parts explicitly, allowing you to declare which variables to carry over to the next part.

MATCH (user)-[:FRIEND]-(friend)

WITH user, count(friend) AS friends

ORDER BY friends DESC

SKIP 1

LIMIT 3

RETURN user

ORDER BY, SKIP, and LIMIT can also be used with WITH.

UNION

MATCH (a)-[:KNOWS]->(b)

RETURN b.name

UNION

MATCH (a)-[:LOVES]->(b)

RETURN b.name

Returns the distinct union of all query results. Result column types and names have to match.

MATCH (a)-[:KNOWS]->(b)

RETURN b.name

UNION ALL

MATCH (a)-[:LOVES]->(b)

RETURN b.name

Returns the union of all query results, including duplicated rows.

MERGE

MERGE (n:Person {name: $value})

ON CREATE SET n.created = timestamp()

ON MATCH SET

n.counter = coalesce(n.counter, 0) + 1,

n.accessTime = timestamp()

Match a pattern or create it if it does not exist. Use ON CREATE and ON MATCH for conditional updates.

MATCH (a:Person {name: $value1}),

(b:Person {name: $value2})

MERGE (a)-[r:LOVES]->(b)

MERGE finds or creates a relationship between the nodes.

MATCH (a:Person {name: $value1})

MERGE

(a)-[r:KNOWS]->(b:Person {name: $value3})

MERGE finds or creates paths attached to the node.

DELETE

DELETE n, r

Delete a node and a relationship.

DETACH DELETE n

Delete a node and all relationships connected to it.

MATCH (n)

DETACH DELETE n

Delete all nodes and relationships from the database.

REMOVE

REMOVE n:Person

Remove a label from n.

REMOVE n.property

Remove a property.

FOREACH

FOREACH (r IN relationships(path) |

SET r.marked = true)

Execute a mutating operation for each relationship in a path.

FOREACH (value IN coll |

CREATE (:Person {name: value}))

Execute a mutating operation for each element in a list.

CALL subquery

CALL {

MATCH (p:Person)-[:FRIEND_OF]->(other:Person) RETURN p, other

UNION

MATCH (p:Child)-[:CHILD_OF]->(other:Parent) RETURN p, other

}

This calls a subquery with two union parts. The result of the subquery can afterwards be post-processed.

CALL procedure

CALL db.labels() YIELD label

This shows a standalone call to the built-in procedure db.labels to list all labels used in the database. Note that required procedure arguments are given explicitly in brackets after the procedure name.

CALL db.labels() YIELD *

Standalone calls may use YIELD * to return all columns.

CALL java.stored.procedureWithArgs

Standalone calls may omit YIELD and also provide arguments implicitly via statement parameters, e.g. a standalone call requiring one argument input may be run by passing the parameter map {input: ‘foo’}.

CALL db.labels() YIELD label

RETURN count(label) AS count

Calls the built-in procedure db.labels inside a larger query to count all labels used in the database. Calls inside a larger query always requires passing arguments and naming results explicitly with YIELD.

Lists

[‘a’, ‘b’, ‘c’] AS list

Literal lists are declared in square brackets.

size($list) AS len, $list[0] AS value

Lists can be passed in as parameters.

range($firstNum, $lastNum, $step) AS list

range() creates a list of numbers (step is optional), other functions returning lists are: labels(), nodes(), relationships().

MATCH p = (a)-[:KNOWS*]->()

RETURN relationships(p) AS r

The list of relationships comprising a variable length path can be returned using named paths and relationships().

RETURN matchedNode.list[0] AS value,

size(matchedNode.list) AS len

Properties can be lists of strings, numbers or booleans.

list[$idx] AS value,

list[$startIdx..$endIdx] AS slice

List elements can be accessed with idx subscripts in square brackets. Invalid indexes return null. Slices can be retrieved with intervals from start_idx to end_idx, each of which can be omitted or negative. Out of range elements are ignored.

UNWIND $names AS name

MATCH (n {name: name})

RETURN avg(n.age)

With UNWIND, any list can be transformed back into individual rows. The example matches all names from a list of names.

MATCH (a)

RETURN [(a)–>(b) WHERE b.name = ‘Bob’ | b.age]

Pattern comprehensions may be used to do a custom projection from a match directly into a list.

MATCH (person)

RETURN person { .name, .age}

Map projections may be easily constructed from nodes, relationships and other map values.

Predicates

n.property <> $value

Use comparison operators.

toString(n.property) = $value

Use functions.

n.number >= 1 AND n.number <= 10

Use boolean operators to combine predicates.

1 <= n.number <= 10

Use chained operators to combine predicates.

n:Person

Check for node labels.

variable IS NOT NULL

Check if something is not null, e.g. that a property exists.

n.property IS NULL OR n.property = $value

Either the property does not exist or the predicate is true.

n.property = $value

Non-existing property returns null, which is not equal to anything.

n[“property”] = $value

Properties may also be accessed using a dynamically computed property name.

n.property STARTS WITH ‘Tim’ OR

n.property ENDS WITH ‘n’ OR

n.property CONTAINS ‘goodie’

String matching.

n.property =~ ‘Tim.*’

String regular expression matching.

(n)-[:KNOWS]->(m)

Ensure the pattern has at least one match.

NOT (n)-[:KNOWS]->(m)

Exclude matches to (n)-[:KNOWS]->(m) from the result.

n.property IN [$value1, $value2]

Check if an element exists in a list.

List predicates

all(x IN coll WHERE x.property IS NOT NULL)

Returns true if the predicate is true for all elements in the list.

any(x IN coll WHERE x.property IS NOT NULL)

Returns true if the predicate is true for at least one element in the list.

none(x IN coll WHERE x.property IS NOT NULL)

Returns true if the predicate is false for all elements in the list.

single(x IN coll WHERE x.property IS NOT NULL)

Returns true if the predicate is true for exactly one element in the list.

CASE

CASE n.eyes

WHEN ‘blue’ THEN 1

WHEN ‘brown’ THEN 2

ELSE 3

END

Return THEN value from the matching WHEN value. The ELSE value is optional, and substituted for null if missing.

CASE

WHEN n.eyes = ‘blue’ THEN 1

WHEN n.age < 40 THEN 2

ELSE 3

END

Return THEN value from the first WHEN predicate evaluating to true. Predicates are evaluated in order.

List expressions

size($list)

Number of elements in the list.

reverse($list)

Reverse the order of the elements in the list.

head($list)

Get the first element of the list. Return null for an empty list. Eqivalent to the list indexing $list[0].

last($list)

Get the last element of the list. Return null for an empty list. Eqivalent to the list indexing $list[-1].

tail($list)

Get all elements except for the first element. Return [] for an empty list. Eqivalent to the list slice $list[1..]. Out-of-bound slices are truncated to an empty list [].

[x IN list | x.prop]

A list of the value of the expression for each element in the original list.

[x IN list WHERE x.prop <> $value]

A filtered list of the elements where the predicate is true.

[x IN list WHERE x.prop <> $value | x.prop]

A list comprehension that filters a list and extracts the value of the expression for each element in that list.

reduce(s = “”, x IN list | s + x.prop)

Evaluate expression for each element in the list, accumulate the results.

Path functions

length(path)

The number of relationships in the path.

nodes(path)

The nodes in the path as a list.

relationships(path)

The relationships in the path as a list.

[x IN nodes(path) | x.prop]

Extract properties from the nodes in a path.

Mathematical functions

abs($expr)

The absolute value.

rand()

Returns a random number in the range from 0 (inclusive) to 1 (exclusive), [0,1). Returns a new value for each call. Also useful for selecting a subset or random ordering.

round($expr)

Round to the nearest integer; ceil() and floor() find the next integer up or down.

sqrt($expr)

The square root.

sign($expr)

0 if zero, -1 if negative, 1 if positive.

sin($expr)

Trigonometric functions also include cos(), tan(), cot(), asin(), acos(), atan(), atan2(), and haversin(). All arguments for the trigonometric functions should be in radians, if not otherwise specified.

degrees($expr), radians($expr), pi()

Converts radians into degrees; use radians() for the reverse, and pi() for π.

log10($expr), log($expr), exp($expr), e()

Logarithm base 10, natural logarithm, e to the power of the parameter, and the value of e.

String functions

toString($expression)

String representation of the expression.

replace($original, $search, $replacement)

Replace all occurrences of search with replacement. All arguments must be expressions.

substring($original, $begin, $subLength)

Get part of a string. The subLength argument is optional.

left($original, $subLength),

right($original, $subLength)

The first part of a string. The last part of the string.

trim($original), lTrim($original),

rTrim($original)

Trim all whitespace, or on the left or right side.

toUpper($original), toLower($original)

UPPERCASE and lowercase.

split($original, $delimiter)

Split a string into a list of strings.

reverse($original)

Reverse a string.

size($string)

Calculate the number of characters in the string.

Relationship functions

type(a_relationship)

String representation of the relationship type.

startNode(a_relationship)

Start node of the relationship.

endNode(a_relationship)

End node of the relationship.

id(a_relationship)

The internal id of the relationship.

Aggregating functions

count(*)

The number of matching rows.

count(variable)

The number of non-null values.

count(DISTINCT variable)

All aggregating functions also take the DISTINCT operator, which removes duplicates from the values.

collect(n.property)

List from the values, ignores null.

sum(n.property)

Sum numerical values. Similar functions are avg(), min(), max().

percentileDisc(n.property, $percentile)

Discrete percentile. Continuous percentile is percentileCont(). The percentile argument is from 0.0 to 1.0.

stDev(n.property)

Standard deviation for a sample of a population. For an entire population use stDevP().

INDEX

CREATE INDEX FOR (p:Person) ON (p.name)

Create a b-tree index on nodes with label Person and property name.

CREATE INDEX index_name FOR ()-[k:KNOWS]-() ON (k.since)

Create a b-tree index with the name index_name on relationships with type KNOWS and property since.

CREATE INDEX FOR (p:Person) ON (p.surname)

OPTIONS {indexProvider: ‘native-btree-1.0’, indexConfig: {spatial.cartesian.min: [-100.0, -100.0], spatial.cartesian.max: [100.0, 100.0]}}

Create a b-tree index on nodes with label Person and property surname with the index provider native-btree-1.0 and given spatial.cartesian settings. The other index settings will have their default values.

CREATE INDEX FOR (p:Person) ON (p.name, p.age)

Create a composite b-tree index on nodes with label Person and the properties name and age, throws an error if the index already exist.

CREATE INDEX IF NOT EXISTS FOR (p:Person) ON (p.name, p.age)

Create a composite b-tree index on nodes with label Person and the properties name and age if it does not already exist, does nothing if it did exist.

CREATE LOOKUP INDEX lookup_index_name FOR (n) ON EACH labels(n)

Create a token lookup index with the name lookup_index_name on nodes with any label.

CREATE LOOKUP INDEX FOR ()-[r]-() ON EACH type(r)

Create a token lookup index on relationships with any relationship type.

CREATE FULLTEXT INDEX node_fulltext_index_name FOR (n:Friend) ON EACH [n.name]

OPTIONS {indexConfig: {fulltext.analyzer: ‘swedish’}}

Create a fulltext index on nodes with the name node_fulltext_index_name and analyzer swedish. Fulltext indexes on nodes can only be used by from the procedure db.index.fulltext.queryNodes. The other index settings will have their default values.

CREATE FULLTEXT INDEX rel_fulltext_index_name FOR ()-[r:HAS_PET|BROUGHT_PET]-() ON EACH [r.since, r.price]

Create a fulltext index on relationships with the name rel_fulltext_index_name. Fulltext indexes on relationships can only be used by from the procedure db.index.fulltext.queryRelationships.

CREATE TEXT INDEX FOR (f:Friend) ON (f.email)

Create a text index on nodes with label Friend and property email.

CREATE TEXT INDEX text_index_name FOR ()-[h:HAS_PET]-() ON (h.favoriteToy)

Create a text index with the name text_index_name on relationships with type HAS_PET and property favoriteToy.

SHOW INDEXES

List all indexes.

MATCH (n:Person) WHERE n.name = $value

An BTREE index can be automatically used for the equality comparison. Note that for example toLower(n.name) = $value will not use an index.

MATCH (n:Person) WHERE n.name = “Alice”

An TEXT index can be automatically used for the equality comparison when comparing to a string. Note that for example toLower(n.name) = “string” does not use an index.

MATCH (n:Person)

WHERE n.name < “Bob”

An index can automatically be used for range predicates. Note that a TEXT index is only used if the predicate compares the property with a string.

MATCH (n:Person)

WHERE n.name IN [$value]

An index can automatically be used for the IN list checks.

MATCH (n:Person)

WHERE n.name IN [‘Bob’, ‘Alice’]

An TEXT index can automatically be used for the IN list checks when all elements in the list are strings.

MATCH (n:Person)

WHERE n.name = $value and n.age = $value2

A composite index can be automatically used for equality comparison of both properties. Note that there needs to be predicates on all properties of the composite index for it to be used.

MATCH (n:Person)

USING INDEX n:Person(name)

WHERE n.name = $value

Index usage can be enforced when Cypher uses a suboptimal index, or more than one index should be used.

DROP INDEX index_name

Drop the index named index_name, throws an error if the index does not exist.

DROP INDEX index_name IF EXISTS

Drop the index named index_name if it exists, does nothing if it does not exist.

Performance

Use parameters instead of literals when possible. This allows Cypher to re-use your queries instead of having to parse and build new execution plans.

Always set an upper limit for your variable length patterns. It’s possible to have a query go wild and touch all nodes in a graph by mistake.

Return only the data you need. Avoid returning whole nodes and relationships — instead, pick the data you need and return only that.

Use PROFILE / EXPLAIN to analyze the performance of your queries. See Query Tuning for more information on these and other topics, such as planner hints.

(★) Database privileges

GRANT ACCESS ON DATABASE * TO my_role

Grant privilege to access and run queries against all databases to a role.

GRANT START ON DATABASE * TO my_role

Grant privilege to start all databases to a role.

GRANT STOP ON DATABASE * TO my_role

Grant privilege to stop all databases to a role.

GRANT CREATE INDEX ON DATABASE foo TO my_role

Grant privilege to create indexes on a specified database to a role.

GRANT DROP INDEX ON DATABASE foo TO my_role

Grant privilege to drop indexes on a specified database to a role.

GRANT SHOW INDEX ON DATABASE * TO my_role

Grant privilege to show indexes on all databases to a role.

DENY INDEX MANAGEMENT ON DATABASE bar TO my_role

Deny privilege to create and drop indexes on a specified database to a role.

GRANT CREATE CONSTRAINT ON DATABASE * TO my_role

Grant privilege to create constraints on all databases to a role.

DENY DROP CONSTRAINT ON DATABASE * TO my_role

Deny privilege to drop constraints on all databases to a role.

DENY SHOW CONSTRAINT ON DATABASE foo TO my_role

Deny privilege to show constraints on a specified database to a role.

REVOKE CONSTRAINT ON DATABASE * FROM my_role

Revoke granted and denied privileges to create and drop constraints on all databases from a role.

GRANT CREATE NEW LABELS ON DATABASE * TO my_role

Grant privilege to create new labels on all databases to a role.

DENY CREATE NEW TYPES ON DATABASE foo TO my_role

Deny privilege to create new relationship types on a specified database to a role.

REVOKE GRANT CREATE NEW PROPERTY NAMES ON DATABASE bar FROM my_role

Revoke the grant privilege to create new property names on a specified database from a role.

GRANT NAME MANAGEMENT ON HOME DATABASE TO my_role

Grant privilege to create labels, relationship types, and property names on the home database to a role.

GRANT ALL ON DATABASE baz TO my_role

Grant privilege to access, create and drop indexes and constraints, create new labels, types and property names on a specified database to a role.

GRANT SHOW TRANSACTION (*) ON DATABASE foo TO my_role

Grant privilege to list transactions and queries from all users on a specified database to a role.

DENY TERMINATE TRANSACTION (user1, user2) ON DATABASES * TO my_role

Deny privilege to kill transactions and queries from user1 and user2 on all databases to a role.

REVOKE GRANT TRANSACTION MANAGEMENT ON HOME DATABASE FROM my_role

Revoke the granted privilege to list and kill transactions and queries from all users on the home database from a role.

(★) Role management privileges

GRANT CREATE ROLE ON DBMS TO my_role

Grant the privilege to create roles to a role.

GRANT RENAME ROLE ON DBMS TO my_role

Grant the privilege to rename roles to a role.

GRANT DROP ROLE ON DBMS TO my_role

Grant the privilege to delete roles to a role.

DENY ASSIGN ROLE ON DBMS TO my_role

Deny the privilege to assign roles to users to a role.

DENY REMOVE ROLE ON DBMS TO my_role

Deny the privilege to remove roles from users to a role.

REVOKE DENY SHOW ROLE ON DBMS FROM my_role

Revoke the denied privilege to show roles from a role.

GRANT ROLE MANAGEMENT ON DBMS TO my_role

Grant all privileges to manage roles to a role.

(★) User management privileges

GRANT CREATE USER ON DBMS TO my_role

Grant the privilege to create users to a role.

GRANT RENAME USER ON DBMS TO my_role

Grant the privilege to rename users to a role.

DENY ALTER USER ON DBMS TO my_role

Deny the privilege to alter users to a role.

REVOKE SET PASSWORDS ON DBMS FROM my_role

Revoke the granted and denied privileges to alter users’ passwords from a role.

REVOKE GRANT SET USER STATUS ON DBMS FROM my_role

Revoke the granted privilege to alter the account status of users from a role.

GRANT SET USER HOME DATABASE ON DBMS TO my_role

Grant the privilege alter the home database of users to a role.

GRANT DROP USER ON DBMS TO my_role

Grant the privilege to delete users to a role.

REVOKE DENY SHOW USER ON DBMS FROM my_role

Revoke the denied privilege to show users from a role.

GRANT USER MANAGEMENT ON DBMS TO my_role

Grant all privileges to manage users to a role.

(★) Database management privileges

GRANT CREATE DATABASE ON DBMS TO my_role

Grant the privilege to create databases and aliases to a role.

REVOKE DENY DROP DATABASE ON DBMS FROM my_role

Revoke the denied privilege to delete databases and aliases from a role.

REVOKE GRANT ALTER DATABASE ON DBMS FROM my_role

Revoke the granted privilege to alter databases and aliases from a role.

GRANT SET DATABASE ACCESS ON DBMS TO my_role

Granted privilege to set database access mode to a role.

DENY DATABASE MANAGEMENT ON DBMS TO my_role

Deny all privileges to manage databases and aliases to a role.

(★) Privilege management privileges

GRANT SHOW PRIVILEGE ON DBMS TO my_role

Grant the privilege to show privileges to a role.

DENY ASSIGN PRIVILEGE ON DBMS TO my_role

Deny the privilege to assign privileges to roles to a role.

REVOKE GRANT REMOVE PRIVILEGE ON DBMS FROM my_role

Revoke the granted privilege to remove privileges from roles from a role.

REVOKE PRIVILEGE MANAGEMENT ON DBMS FROM my_role

Revoke all granted and denied privileges for manage privileges from a role.

(★) DBMS privileges

GRANT ALL ON DBMS TO my_role

Grant privilege to perform all role, user, database, alias, privilege, procedure, function, and impersonation management to a role.

DENY IMPERSONATE (alice) ON DBMS TO my_role

Deny privilege to impersonate the specified user to a role.

(★) Functionality available in Neo4j Enterprise Edition.

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