Db Explorer
/install hermes-db-explorer
DB Explorer
Connect to databases, run queries, explore schemas, and export data — all from the terminal.
When to Use
Activate this skill when the user:
- Says "check the database", "query the DB", "show me the data"
- Wants to see table structure, row counts, or sample data
- Needs to export data to CSV/JSON
- Wants to find slow queries or check DB health
- Mentions a database connection string or DB name
Supported Databases
| Database | CLI Tool | Install (macOS) | Install (Linux) |
|---|---|---|---|
| PostgreSQL | psql | brew install postgresql | apt install postgresql-client |
| MySQL | mysql | brew install mysql | apt install mysql-client |
| SQLite | sqlite3 | (built-in on macOS) | apt install sqlite3 |
| MongoDB | mongosh | brew install mongosh | See mongodb.com/docs/shell |
| Redis | redis-cli | brew install redis | apt install redis-tools |
Quick Start
1. Identify the Database
Ask the user for:
- Database type (postgres/mysql/sqlite/mongo/redis)
- Connection string OR host/port/database/user/password
- For SQLite: just the file path
2. Connect and Explore
# PostgreSQL
psql "postgresql://user:password@host:5432/dbname" -c "\dt" # list tables
psql "postgresql://user:password@host:5432/dbname" -c "\d table_name" # describe table
psql "postgresql://user:password@host:5432/dbname" -c "SELECT count(*) FROM table_name;"
# MySQL
mysql -h host -u user -p dbname -e "SHOW TABLES;"
mysql -h host -u user -p dbname -e "DESCRIBE table_name;"
mysql -h host -u user -p dbname -e "SELECT count(*) FROM table_name;"
# SQLite
sqlite3 /path/to/db.db ".tables" # list tables
sqlite3 /path/to/db.db ".schema table_name" # describe table
sqlite3 /path/to/db.db "SELECT count(*) FROM table_name;"
# MongoDB
mongosh "mongodb://user:password@host:27017/dbname" --eval "db.getCollectionNames()"
mongosh "mongodb://user:password@host:27017/dbname" --eval "db.collection_name.countDocuments()"
# Redis
redis-cli -h host -p 6379 -a password INFO keyspace
redis-cli -h host -p 6379 -a password DBSIZE
redis-cli -h host -p 6379 -a password KEYS "*"
3. Safety Rules
ALWAYS follow these rules:
- Read-only by default — Never run INSERT/UPDATE/DELETE/DROP without explicit user confirmation
- Limit results — Always add
LIMIT 100(or equivalent) to SELECT queries unless user asks for all - Show before execute — For any write operation, show the exact SQL/command and ask for confirmation
- No passwords in history — Use environment variables or connection strings, don't echo passwords
- Transaction safety — For writes, wrap in BEGIN/ROLLBACK first, show results, then ask to COMMIT
4. Schema Exploration Workflow
When user says "explore the database" or "show me the schema":
# Step 1: List all tables
# Step 2: For each table, show columns, types, and constraints
# Step 3: Show row counts
# Step 4: Show foreign key relationships
# Step 5: Summarize as a readable schema map
PostgreSQL full schema dump:
psql "$CONN" -c "
SELECT table_name, column_name, data_type, is_nullable, column_default
FROM information_schema.columns
WHERE table_schema = 'public'
ORDER BY table_name, ordinal_position;
"
MySQL full schema dump:
mysql "$CONN" -e "
SELECT TABLE_NAME, COLUMN_NAME, DATA_TYPE, IS_NULLABLE, COLUMN_DEFAULT
FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.COLUMNS
WHERE TABLE_SCHEMA = DATABASE()
ORDER BY TABLE_NAME, ORDINAL_POSITION;
"
5. Export Formats
Export query results to common formats:
# CSV (PostgreSQL)
psql "$CONN" -c "\copy (SELECT * FROM table_name) TO '/tmp/export.csv' WITH CSV HEADER"
# CSV (MySQL)
mysql "$CONN" -e "SELECT * FROM table_name" | sed 's/ /,/g' > /tmp/export.csv
# JSON (PostgreSQL)
psql "$CONN" -t -c "SELECT json_agg(t) FROM (SELECT * FROM table_name LIMIT 100) t;" > /tmp/export.json
# SQLite to CSV
sqlite3 /path/to/db.db ".mode csv" ".headers on" ".output /tmp/export.csv" "SELECT * FROM table_name;" ".quit"
6. Common Diagnostic Queries
-- PostgreSQL: Table sizes
SELECT schemaname, tablename, pg_size_pretty(pg_total_relation_size(schemaname||'.'||tablename))
FROM pg_tables WHERE schemaname = 'public' ORDER BY pg_total_relation_size(schemaname||'.'||tablename) DESC;
-- PostgreSQL: Active connections
SELECT pid, usename, application_name, client_addr, state, query_start, query
FROM pg_stat_activity WHERE state != 'idle';
-- PostgreSQL: Slow queries (> 1s)
SELECT pid, now() - pg_stat_activity.query_start AS duration, query
FROM pg_stat_activity WHERE state = 'active' AND now() - pg_stat_activity.query_start > interval '1 second';
-- MySQL: Table sizes
SELECT table_name, ROUND(data_length/1024/1024, 2) AS data_mb, table_rows
FROM information_schema.tables WHERE table_schema = DATABASE() ORDER BY data_length DESC;
-- MySQL: Process list
SHOW FULL PROCESSLIST;
Performance Analysis
PostgreSQL Performance
# Slow queries (active for > 1s)
psql "$CONN" -c "
SELECT pid, now() - query_start AS duration, query
FROM pg_stat_activity
WHERE state = 'active' AND now() - query_start > interval '1 second'
ORDER BY duration DESC;
"
# Index usage
psql "$CONN" -c "
SELECT schemaname, tablename, indexname, idx_scan, idx_tup_read
FROM pg_stat_user_indexes
ORDER BY idx_scan ASC LIMIT 20;
"
# Table bloat
psql "$CONN" -c "
SELECT schemaname, tablename,
pg_size_pretty(pg_total_relation_size(schemaname||'.'||tablename)) AS total_size,
pg_size_pretty(pg_relation_size(schemaname||'.'||tablename)) AS table_size,
pg_size_pretty(pg_total_relation_size(schemaname||'.'||tablename) - pg_relation_size(schemaname||'.'||tablename)) AS index_size
FROM pg_tables
WHERE schemaname = 'public'
ORDER BY pg_total_relation_size(schemaname||'.'||tablename) DESC LIMIT 10;
"
# Cache hit ratio (should be > 99%)
psql "$CONN" -c "
SELECT
sum(heap_blks_hit) / (sum(heap_blks_hit) + sum(heap_blks_read)) AS cache_hit_ratio
FROM pg_statio_user_tables;
"
MySQL Performance
# Slow queries
mysql "$CONN" -e "SELECT * FROM information_schema.processlist WHERE TIME > 1 ORDER BY TIME DESC;"
# Index usage
mysql "$CONN" -e "
SELECT table_name, index_name, cardinality
FROM information_schema.statistics
WHERE table_schema = DATABASE()
ORDER BY cardinality DESC LIMIT 20;
"
# Table sizes
mysql "$CONN" -e "
SELECT table_name,
ROUND(data_length/1024/1024, 2) AS data_mb,
ROUND(index_length/1024/1024, 2) AS index_mb,
table_rows
FROM information_schema.tables
WHERE table_schema = DATABASE()
ORDER BY data_length DESC LIMIT 10;
"
Backup & Restore
PostgreSQL
# Backup single database
pg_dump "$CONN" > backup_$(date +%Y%m%d).sql
# Backup single table
pg_dump "$CONN" -t table_name > table_backup.sql
# Restore
psql "$CONN" \x3C backup.sql
# Backup with compression
pg_dump "$CONN" | gzip > backup_$(date +%Y%m%d).sql.gz
MySQL
# Backup single database
mysqldump -h host -u user -p dbname > backup_$(date +%Y%m%d).sql
# Backup single table
mysqldump -h host -u user -p dbname table_name > table_backup.sql
# Restore
mysql -h host -u user -p dbname \x3C backup.sql
SQLite
# Backup
sqlite3 /path/to/db.db ".backup /tmp/backup.db"
# Or just copy
cp /path/to/db.db /tmp/backup_$(date +%Y%m%d).db
Data Migration Helpers
Copy table between databases
# PostgreSQL to CSV to MySQL
psql "$PG_CONN" -c "\copy table_name TO '/tmp/export.csv' WITH CSV HEADER"
mysql "$MYSQL_CONN" -e "LOAD DATA LOCAL INFILE '/tmp/export.csv' INTO TABLE table_name FIELDS TERMINATED BY ',' ENCLOSED BY '\"' LINES TERMINATED BY '\
' IGNORE 1 ROWS;"
Schema comparison
# Get PostgreSQL schema hash for comparison
psql "$CONN" -c "
SELECT md5(string_agg(table_name || column_name || data_type, '' ORDER BY table_name, ordinal_position))
FROM information_schema.columns
WHERE table_schema = 'public';
"
Pitfalls
- Connection strings with special chars — URL-encode passwords containing @, :, /, etc.
- SSL requirements — Many cloud databases (RDS, Cloud SQL, Supabase) require
?sslmode=requireor--ssl-mode=REQUIRED - Timeout on large tables — Always LIMIT unless user explicitly wants full export
- SQLite locking — Only one writer at a time; use WAL mode for concurrent reads:
PRAGMA journal_mode=WAL; - MongoDB auth database — Sometimes auth is on
admindb, not the target db:?authSource=admin - Redis SELECT — Redis has 16 databases (0-15); check which one:
redis-cli INFO keyspace
Verification
After connecting:
- Run a simple query to confirm connection works
- List tables/collections to show the schema
- Run a count query on a key table to verify data access
- Check cache hit ratio (PostgreSQL) or slow queries (MySQL)
- Verify backup capability with a test dump
Environment Variables
The skill uses these if available:
DATABASE_URL— Full connection string (takes priority)DB_HOST,DB_PORT,DB_NAME,DB_USER,DB_PASSWORD— Individual paramsDB_TYPE— postgres/mysql/sqlite/mongo/redis
- Make sure OpenClaw is installed (local or Docker)
- Run the install command in chat:
/install hermes-db-explorer - After installation, invoke the skill by name or use
/hermes-db-explorer - Provide required inputs per the skill's parameter spec and get structured output
What is Db Explorer?
Connect to and explore databases (PostgreSQL, MySQL, SQLite, MongoDB, Redis). Run queries, inspect schemas, export data. Use when user wants to query a datab... It is an AI Agent Skill for Claude Code / OpenClaw, with 71 downloads so far.
How do I install Db Explorer?
Run "/install hermes-db-explorer" in the OpenClaw or Claude Code chat to install it in one step — no extra setup required.
Is Db Explorer free?
Yes, Db Explorer is completely free, licensed under MIT-0. You can download, install and use it at no cost.
Which platforms does Db Explorer support?
Db Explorer is cross-platform and runs anywhere OpenClaw / Claude Code is available (cross-platform).
Who created Db Explorer?
It is built and maintained by lrg913427-dot (@lrg913427-dot); the current version is v2.0.0.