Hi,
I know d2rq, but that maps relational to RDF.
I am looking the other way around.
As far as I have seen, that’s not something d2rq is designed for.
Or am I wrong ?

best,
Andrea

> On Oct 2, 2015, at 2:34 PM, Richard Boyce <rd...@pitt.edu> wrote:
> 
> Hi Andrea, I think that D2R Server is very helpful here: 
> http://d2rq.org/d2r-server <http://d2rq.org/d2r-server>
> 
> All can be done with a mapping file that you configure. The server provides a 
> SPARQL web query  interface (SNORQL) but also can dump to an RDF file that 
> you load in a separate store. 
> 
> hope it helps,
> -R
> 
> On 10/02/2015 07:37 AM, Andrea Splendiani wrote:
>> Hi,
>> 
>> I am wondering if some of you knows of some tool that can translate (a 
>> subset) of SQL to SPARQL (perhaps requiring some constraints on the RDF 
>> representation).
>> In principle it should be simple: classes can appear as tables, URIs as IDs, 
>> datatype properties as columns and object properties as Fkeys.
>> Is there something implementing this translation available, that some of you 
>> know ? One current option (I think) is via Oracle, but I am wondering if 
>> there is something like-weight.
>> 
>> As of why I am interested in it... it's curious: I may have an RDF graph 
>> representing a unified set of sources (some of which native in RDF, some of 
>> which virtualized from SQL). 
>> Still people like to query the sql sources in sql, just because they know it 
>> better. But like this, they miss the whole integration (and a more flexible 
>> data model).
>> 
>> best,
>> Andrea 
> 
> 
> -- 
> Richard D Boyce, PhD
> Assistant Professor of Biomedical Informatics
> Faculty, Center for Pharmaceutical Policy and Prescribing 
> Faculty, Geriatric Pharmaceutical Outcomes and Gero-Informatics Research and 
> Training Program
> University of Pittsburgh
> rd...@pitt.edu <mailto:rd...@pitt.edu>
> Office: 412-648-9219
> Twitter: @bhaapgh

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