<feed xmlns='http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom'>
<title>delta/python-packages/sqlalchemy.git/test/aaa_profiling/test_compiler.py, branch workflow_test_cython</title>
<subtitle>github.com: zzzeek/sqlalchemy.git
</subtitle>
<link rel='alternate' type='text/html' href='http://git.baserock.org/cgit/delta/python-packages/sqlalchemy.git/'/>
<entry>
<title>Replace with_labels() and apply_labels() in ORM/Core</title>
<updated>2021-01-26T21:52:30+00:00</updated>
<author>
<name>Gord Thompson</name>
<email>gord@gordthompson.com</email>
</author>
<published>2021-01-09T21:56:38+00:00</published>
<link rel='alternate' type='text/html' href='http://git.baserock.org/cgit/delta/python-packages/sqlalchemy.git/commit/?id=22f65156bbe846dea2fb9f87fe4187abe0ed790a'/>
<id>22f65156bbe846dea2fb9f87fe4187abe0ed790a</id>
<content type='text'>
Replace :meth:`_orm.Query.with_labels` and
:meth:`_sql.GenerativeSelect.apply_labels` with explicit getters and
setters ``get_label_style`` and ``set_label_style`` to accommodate the
three supported label styles: ``LABEL_STYLE_DISAMBIGUATE_ONLY`` (default),
``LABEL_STYLE_TABLENAME_PLUS_COL``, and ``LABEL_STYLE_NONE``.

In addition, for Core and "future style" ORM queries,
``LABEL_STYLE_DISAMBIGUATE_ONLY`` is now the default label style. This
style differs from the existing "no labels" style in that labeling is
applied in the case of column name conflicts; with ``LABEL_STYLE_NONE``, a
duplicate column name is not accessible via name in any case.

For legacy ORM queries using :class:`_query.Query`, the table-plus-column
names labeling style applied by ``LABEL_STYLE_TABLENAME_PLUS_COL``
continues to be used so that existing test suites and logging facilities
see no change in behavior by default, however this style of labeling is no
longer required for SQLAlchemy queries to function, as result sets are
commonly matched to columns using a positional approach since SQLAlchemy
1.0.

Within test suites, all use of apply_labels()  / use_labels
now uses the new methods.    New tests added to
test/sql/test_deprecations.py nad test/orm/test_deprecations.py
to cover just the old apply_labels() method call.  Tests
in ORM that made explicit use apply_labels()/ etc. where it isn't needed
for the ORM to work correctly use default label style now.

Co-authored-by: Mike Bayer &lt;mike_mp@zzzcomputing.com&gt;
Fixes: #4757
Change-Id: I5fdcd2ed4ae8c7fe62f8be2b6d0e8f66409b6a54
</content>
<content type='xhtml'>
<div xmlns='http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml'>
<pre>
Replace :meth:`_orm.Query.with_labels` and
:meth:`_sql.GenerativeSelect.apply_labels` with explicit getters and
setters ``get_label_style`` and ``set_label_style`` to accommodate the
three supported label styles: ``LABEL_STYLE_DISAMBIGUATE_ONLY`` (default),
``LABEL_STYLE_TABLENAME_PLUS_COL``, and ``LABEL_STYLE_NONE``.

In addition, for Core and "future style" ORM queries,
``LABEL_STYLE_DISAMBIGUATE_ONLY`` is now the default label style. This
style differs from the existing "no labels" style in that labeling is
applied in the case of column name conflicts; with ``LABEL_STYLE_NONE``, a
duplicate column name is not accessible via name in any case.

For legacy ORM queries using :class:`_query.Query`, the table-plus-column
names labeling style applied by ``LABEL_STYLE_TABLENAME_PLUS_COL``
continues to be used so that existing test suites and logging facilities
see no change in behavior by default, however this style of labeling is no
longer required for SQLAlchemy queries to function, as result sets are
commonly matched to columns using a positional approach since SQLAlchemy
1.0.

Within test suites, all use of apply_labels()  / use_labels
now uses the new methods.    New tests added to
test/sql/test_deprecations.py nad test/orm/test_deprecations.py
to cover just the old apply_labels() method call.  Tests
in ORM that made explicit use apply_labels()/ etc. where it isn't needed
for the ORM to work correctly use default label style now.

Co-authored-by: Mike Bayer &lt;mike_mp@zzzcomputing.com&gt;
Fixes: #4757
Change-Id: I5fdcd2ed4ae8c7fe62f8be2b6d0e8f66409b6a54
</pre>
</div>
</content>
</entry>
<entry>
<title>reinvent xdist hooks in terms of pytest fixtures</title>
<updated>2021-01-14T03:10:13+00:00</updated>
<author>
<name>Mike Bayer</name>
<email>mike_mp@zzzcomputing.com</email>
</author>
<published>2021-01-10T18:44:14+00:00</published>
<link rel='alternate' type='text/html' href='http://git.baserock.org/cgit/delta/python-packages/sqlalchemy.git/commit/?id=f1e96cb0874927a475d0c111393b7861796dd758'/>
<id>f1e96cb0874927a475d0c111393b7861796dd758</id>
<content type='text'>
To allow the "connection" pytest fixture and others work
correctly in conjunction with setup/teardown that expects
to be external to the transaction, remove and prevent any usage
of "xdist" style names that are hardcoded by pytest to run
inside of fixtures, even function level ones.   Instead use
pytest autouse fixtures to implement our own
r"setup|teardown_test(?:_class)?" methods so that we can ensure
function-scoped fixtures are run within them.   A new more
explicit flow is set up within plugin_base and pytestplugin
such that the order of setup/teardown steps, which there are now
many, is fully documented and controllable.   New granularity
has been added to the test teardown phase to distinguish
between "end of the test" when lock-holding structures on
connections should be released to allow for table drops,
vs. "end of the test plus its teardown steps" when we can
perform final cleanup on connections and run assertions
that everything is closed out.

From there we can remove most of the defensive "tear down everything"
logic inside of engines which for many years would frequently dispose
of pools over and over again, creating for a broken and expensive
connection flow.  A quick test shows that running test/sql/ against
a single Postgresql engine with the new approach uses 75% fewer new
connections, creating 42 new connections total, vs. 164 new
connections total with the previous system.

As part of this, the new fixtures metadata/connection/future_connection
have been integrated such that they can be combined together
effectively.  The fixture_session(), provide_metadata() fixtures
have been improved, including that fixture_session() now strongly
references sessions which are explicitly torn down before
table drops occur afer a test.

Major changes have been made to the
ConnectionKiller such that it now features different "scopes" for
testing engines and will limit its cleanup to those testing
engines corresponding to end of test, end of test class, or
end of test session.   The system by which it tracks DBAPI
connections has been reworked, is ultimately somewhat similar to
how it worked before but is organized more clearly along
with the proxy-tracking logic.  A "testing_engine" fixture
is also added that works as a pytest fixture rather than a
standalone function.  The connection cleanup logic should
now be very robust, as we now can use the same global
connection pools for the whole suite without ever disposing
them, while also running a query for PostgreSQL
locks remaining after every test and assert there are no open
transactions leaking between tests at all.  Additional steps
are added that also accommodate for asyncio connections not
explicitly closed, as is the case for legacy sync-style
tests as well as the async tests themselves.

As always, hundreds of tests are further refined to use the
new fixtures where problems with loose connections were identified,
largely as a result of the new PostgreSQL assertions,
many more tests have moved from legacy patterns into the newest.

An unfortunate discovery during the creation of this system is that
autouse fixtures (as well as if they are set up by
@pytest.mark.usefixtures) are not usable at our current scale with pytest
4.6.11 running under Python 2.  It's unclear if this is due
to the older version of pytest or how it implements itself for
Python 2, as well as if the issue is CPU slowness or just large
memory use, but collecting the full span of tests takes over
a minute for a single process when any autouse fixtures are in
place and on CI the jobs just time out after ten minutes.
So at the moment this patch also reinvents a small version of
"autouse" fixtures when py2k is running, which skips generating
the real fixture and instead uses two global pytest fixtures
(which don't seem to impact performance) to invoke the
"autouse" fixtures ourselves outside of pytest.
This will limit our ability to do more with fixtures
until we can remove py2k support.

py.test is still observed to be much slower in collection in the
4.6.11 version compared to modern 6.2 versions, so add support for new
TOX_POSTGRESQL_PY2K and TOX_MYSQL_PY2K environment variables that
will run the suite for fewer backends under Python 2.  For Python 3
pin pytest to modern 6.2 versions where performance for collection
has been improved greatly.

Includes the following improvements:

Fixed bug in asyncio connection pool where ``asyncio.TimeoutError`` would
be raised rather than :class:`.exc.TimeoutError`.  Also repaired the
:paramref:`_sa.create_engine.pool_timeout` parameter set to zero when using
the async engine, which previously would ignore the timeout and block
rather than timing out immediately as is the behavior with regular
:class:`.QueuePool`.

For asyncio the connection pool will now also not interact
at all with an asyncio connection whose ConnectionFairy is
being garbage collected; a warning that the connection was
not properly closed is emitted and the connection is discarded.
Within the test suite the ConnectionKiller is now maintaining
strong references to all DBAPI connections and ensuring they
are released when tests end, including those whose ConnectionFairy
proxies are GCed.

Identified cx_Oracle.stmtcachesize as a major factor in Oracle
test scalability issues, this can be reset on a per-test basis
rather than setting it to zero across the board.  the addition
of this flag has resolved the long-standing oracle "two task"
error problem.

For SQL Server, changed the temp table style used by the
"suite" tests to be the double-pound-sign, i.e. global,
variety, which is much easier to test generically.  There
are already reflection tests that are more finely tuned
to both styles of temp table within the mssql test
suite.  Additionally, added an extra step to the
"dropfirst" mechanism for SQL Server that will remove
all foreign key constraints first as some issues were
observed when using this flag when multiple schemas
had not been torn down.

Identified and fixed two subtle failure modes in the
engine, when commit/rollback fails in a begin()
context manager, the connection is explicitly closed,
and when "initialize()" fails on the first new connection
of a dialect, the transactional state on that connection
is still rolled back.

Fixes: #5826
Fixes: #5827
Change-Id: Ib1d05cb8c7cf84f9a4bfd23df397dc23c9329bfe
</content>
<content type='xhtml'>
<div xmlns='http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml'>
<pre>
To allow the "connection" pytest fixture and others work
correctly in conjunction with setup/teardown that expects
to be external to the transaction, remove and prevent any usage
of "xdist" style names that are hardcoded by pytest to run
inside of fixtures, even function level ones.   Instead use
pytest autouse fixtures to implement our own
r"setup|teardown_test(?:_class)?" methods so that we can ensure
function-scoped fixtures are run within them.   A new more
explicit flow is set up within plugin_base and pytestplugin
such that the order of setup/teardown steps, which there are now
many, is fully documented and controllable.   New granularity
has been added to the test teardown phase to distinguish
between "end of the test" when lock-holding structures on
connections should be released to allow for table drops,
vs. "end of the test plus its teardown steps" when we can
perform final cleanup on connections and run assertions
that everything is closed out.

From there we can remove most of the defensive "tear down everything"
logic inside of engines which for many years would frequently dispose
of pools over and over again, creating for a broken and expensive
connection flow.  A quick test shows that running test/sql/ against
a single Postgresql engine with the new approach uses 75% fewer new
connections, creating 42 new connections total, vs. 164 new
connections total with the previous system.

As part of this, the new fixtures metadata/connection/future_connection
have been integrated such that they can be combined together
effectively.  The fixture_session(), provide_metadata() fixtures
have been improved, including that fixture_session() now strongly
references sessions which are explicitly torn down before
table drops occur afer a test.

Major changes have been made to the
ConnectionKiller such that it now features different "scopes" for
testing engines and will limit its cleanup to those testing
engines corresponding to end of test, end of test class, or
end of test session.   The system by which it tracks DBAPI
connections has been reworked, is ultimately somewhat similar to
how it worked before but is organized more clearly along
with the proxy-tracking logic.  A "testing_engine" fixture
is also added that works as a pytest fixture rather than a
standalone function.  The connection cleanup logic should
now be very robust, as we now can use the same global
connection pools for the whole suite without ever disposing
them, while also running a query for PostgreSQL
locks remaining after every test and assert there are no open
transactions leaking between tests at all.  Additional steps
are added that also accommodate for asyncio connections not
explicitly closed, as is the case for legacy sync-style
tests as well as the async tests themselves.

As always, hundreds of tests are further refined to use the
new fixtures where problems with loose connections were identified,
largely as a result of the new PostgreSQL assertions,
many more tests have moved from legacy patterns into the newest.

An unfortunate discovery during the creation of this system is that
autouse fixtures (as well as if they are set up by
@pytest.mark.usefixtures) are not usable at our current scale with pytest
4.6.11 running under Python 2.  It's unclear if this is due
to the older version of pytest or how it implements itself for
Python 2, as well as if the issue is CPU slowness or just large
memory use, but collecting the full span of tests takes over
a minute for a single process when any autouse fixtures are in
place and on CI the jobs just time out after ten minutes.
So at the moment this patch also reinvents a small version of
"autouse" fixtures when py2k is running, which skips generating
the real fixture and instead uses two global pytest fixtures
(which don't seem to impact performance) to invoke the
"autouse" fixtures ourselves outside of pytest.
This will limit our ability to do more with fixtures
until we can remove py2k support.

py.test is still observed to be much slower in collection in the
4.6.11 version compared to modern 6.2 versions, so add support for new
TOX_POSTGRESQL_PY2K and TOX_MYSQL_PY2K environment variables that
will run the suite for fewer backends under Python 2.  For Python 3
pin pytest to modern 6.2 versions where performance for collection
has been improved greatly.

Includes the following improvements:

Fixed bug in asyncio connection pool where ``asyncio.TimeoutError`` would
be raised rather than :class:`.exc.TimeoutError`.  Also repaired the
:paramref:`_sa.create_engine.pool_timeout` parameter set to zero when using
the async engine, which previously would ignore the timeout and block
rather than timing out immediately as is the behavior with regular
:class:`.QueuePool`.

For asyncio the connection pool will now also not interact
at all with an asyncio connection whose ConnectionFairy is
being garbage collected; a warning that the connection was
not properly closed is emitted and the connection is discarded.
Within the test suite the ConnectionKiller is now maintaining
strong references to all DBAPI connections and ensuring they
are released when tests end, including those whose ConnectionFairy
proxies are GCed.

Identified cx_Oracle.stmtcachesize as a major factor in Oracle
test scalability issues, this can be reset on a per-test basis
rather than setting it to zero across the board.  the addition
of this flag has resolved the long-standing oracle "two task"
error problem.

For SQL Server, changed the temp table style used by the
"suite" tests to be the double-pound-sign, i.e. global,
variety, which is much easier to test generically.  There
are already reflection tests that are more finely tuned
to both styles of temp table within the mssql test
suite.  Additionally, added an extra step to the
"dropfirst" mechanism for SQL Server that will remove
all foreign key constraints first as some issues were
observed when using this flag when multiple schemas
had not been torn down.

Identified and fixed two subtle failure modes in the
engine, when commit/rollback fails in a begin()
context manager, the connection is explicitly closed,
and when "initialize()" fails on the first new connection
of a dialect, the transactional state on that connection
is still rolled back.

Fixes: #5826
Fixes: #5827
Change-Id: Ib1d05cb8c7cf84f9a4bfd23df397dc23c9329bfe
</pre>
</div>
</content>
</entry>
<entry>
<title>Update select usage to use the new 1.4 format</title>
<updated>2020-09-08T21:13:48+00:00</updated>
<author>
<name>Federico Caselli</name>
<email>cfederico87@gmail.com</email>
</author>
<published>2020-09-02T21:46:06+00:00</published>
<link rel='alternate' type='text/html' href='http://git.baserock.org/cgit/delta/python-packages/sqlalchemy.git/commit/?id=e8600608669d90c4a6385b312d271aed63eb5854'/>
<id>e8600608669d90c4a6385b312d271aed63eb5854</id>
<content type='text'>
This change includes mainly that the bracketed use within
select() is moved to positional, and keyword arguments are
removed from calls to the select() function.  it does not
yet fully address other issues such as keyword arguments passed
to the table.select().

Additionally, allows False / None to both be considered
as "disable" for all of select.correlate(), select.correlate_except(),
query.correlate(), which establishes consistency with
passing of ``False`` for the legact select(correlate=False)
argument.

Change-Id: Ie6c6e6abfbd3d75d4c8de504c0cf0159e6999108
</content>
<content type='xhtml'>
<div xmlns='http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml'>
<pre>
This change includes mainly that the bracketed use within
select() is moved to positional, and keyword arguments are
removed from calls to the select() function.  it does not
yet fully address other issues such as keyword arguments passed
to the table.select().

Additionally, allows False / None to both be considered
as "disable" for all of select.correlate(), select.correlate_except(),
query.correlate(), which establishes consistency with
passing of ``False`` for the legact select(correlate=False)
argument.

Change-Id: Ie6c6e6abfbd3d75d4c8de504c0cf0159e6999108
</pre>
</div>
</content>
</entry>
<entry>
<title>Add future=True to create_engine/Session; unify select()</title>
<updated>2020-07-08T15:05:11+00:00</updated>
<author>
<name>Mike Bayer</name>
<email>mike_mp@zzzcomputing.com</email>
</author>
<published>2020-06-26T20:15:19+00:00</published>
<link rel='alternate' type='text/html' href='http://git.baserock.org/cgit/delta/python-packages/sqlalchemy.git/commit/?id=91f376692d472a5bf0c4b4033816250ec1ce3ab6'/>
<id>91f376692d472a5bf0c4b4033816250ec1ce3ab6</id>
<content type='text'>
Several weeks of using the future_select() construct
has led to the proposal there be just one select() construct
again which features the new join() method, and otherwise accepts
both the 1.x and 2.x argument styles.   This would make
migration simpler and reduce confusion.

However, confusion may be increased by the fact that select().join()
is different  Current thinking is we may be better off
with a few hard behavioral changes to old and relatively unknown APIs
rather than trying to play both sides within two extremely similar
but subtly different APIs.  At the moment, the .join() thing seems
to be the only behavioral change that occurs without the user
taking any explicit steps.   Session.execute() will still
behave the old way as we are adding a future flag.

This change also adds the "future" flag to Session() and
session.execute(), so that interpretation of the incoming statement,
as well as that the new style result is returned, does not
occur for existing applications unless they add the use
of this flag.

The change in general is moving the "removed in 2.0" system
further along where we want the test suite to fully pass
even if the SQLALCHEMY_WARN_20 flag is set.

Get many tests to pass when SQLALCHEMY_WARN_20 is set; this
should be ongoing after this patch merges.

Improve the RemovedIn20 warning; these are all deprecated
"since" 1.4, so ensure that's what the messages read.
Make sure the inforamtion link is on all warnings.
Add deprecation warnings for parameters present and
add warnings to all FromClause.select() types of methods.

Fixes: #5379
Fixes: #5284
Change-Id: I765a0b912b3dcd0e995426427d8bb7997cbffd51
References: #5159
</content>
<content type='xhtml'>
<div xmlns='http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml'>
<pre>
Several weeks of using the future_select() construct
has led to the proposal there be just one select() construct
again which features the new join() method, and otherwise accepts
both the 1.x and 2.x argument styles.   This would make
migration simpler and reduce confusion.

However, confusion may be increased by the fact that select().join()
is different  Current thinking is we may be better off
with a few hard behavioral changes to old and relatively unknown APIs
rather than trying to play both sides within two extremely similar
but subtly different APIs.  At the moment, the .join() thing seems
to be the only behavioral change that occurs without the user
taking any explicit steps.   Session.execute() will still
behave the old way as we are adding a future flag.

This change also adds the "future" flag to Session() and
session.execute(), so that interpretation of the incoming statement,
as well as that the new style result is returned, does not
occur for existing applications unless they add the use
of this flag.

The change in general is moving the "removed in 2.0" system
further along where we want the test suite to fully pass
even if the SQLALCHEMY_WARN_20 flag is set.

Get many tests to pass when SQLALCHEMY_WARN_20 is set; this
should be ongoing after this patch merges.

Improve the RemovedIn20 warning; these are all deprecated
"since" 1.4, so ensure that's what the messages read.
Make sure the inforamtion link is on all warnings.
Add deprecation warnings for parameters present and
add warnings to all FromClause.select() types of methods.

Fixes: #5379
Fixes: #5284
Change-Id: I765a0b912b3dcd0e995426427d8bb7997cbffd51
References: #5159
</pre>
</div>
</content>
</entry>
<entry>
<title>Post black reformatting</title>
<updated>2019-01-06T23:23:11+00:00</updated>
<author>
<name>Mike Bayer</name>
<email>mike_mp@zzzcomputing.com</email>
</author>
<published>2019-01-06T06:19:47+00:00</published>
<link rel='alternate' type='text/html' href='http://git.baserock.org/cgit/delta/python-packages/sqlalchemy.git/commit/?id=1e278de4cc9a4181e0747640a960e80efcea1ca9'/>
<id>1e278de4cc9a4181e0747640a960e80efcea1ca9</id>
<content type='text'>
Applied on top of a pure run of black -l 79 in
I7eda77fed3d8e73df84b3651fd6cfcfe858d4dc9,  this set of changes
resolves all remaining flake8 conditions for those codes
we have enabled in setup.cfg.

Included are resolutions for all remaining flake8 issues
including shadowed builtins, long lines, import order, unused
imports, duplicate imports, and docstring issues.

Change-Id: I4f72d3ba1380dd601610ff80b8fb06a2aff8b0fe
</content>
<content type='xhtml'>
<div xmlns='http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml'>
<pre>
Applied on top of a pure run of black -l 79 in
I7eda77fed3d8e73df84b3651fd6cfcfe858d4dc9,  this set of changes
resolves all remaining flake8 conditions for those codes
we have enabled in setup.cfg.

Included are resolutions for all remaining flake8 issues
including shadowed builtins, long lines, import order, unused
imports, duplicate imports, and docstring issues.

Change-Id: I4f72d3ba1380dd601610ff80b8fb06a2aff8b0fe
</pre>
</div>
</content>
</entry>
<entry>
<title>Run black -l 79 against all source files</title>
<updated>2019-01-06T17:34:50+00:00</updated>
<author>
<name>Mike Bayer</name>
<email>mike_mp@zzzcomputing.com</email>
</author>
<published>2019-01-06T06:14:26+00:00</published>
<link rel='alternate' type='text/html' href='http://git.baserock.org/cgit/delta/python-packages/sqlalchemy.git/commit/?id=1e1a38e7801f410f244e4bbb44ec795ae152e04e'/>
<id>1e1a38e7801f410f244e4bbb44ec795ae152e04e</id>
<content type='text'>
This is a straight reformat run using black as is, with no edits
applied at all.

The black run will format code consistently, however in
some cases that are prevalent in SQLAlchemy code it produces
too-long lines.   The too-long lines will be resolved in the
following commit that will resolve all remaining flake8 issues
including shadowed builtins, long lines, import order, unused
imports, duplicate imports, and docstring issues.

Change-Id: I7eda77fed3d8e73df84b3651fd6cfcfe858d4dc9
</content>
<content type='xhtml'>
<div xmlns='http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml'>
<pre>
This is a straight reformat run using black as is, with no edits
applied at all.

The black run will format code consistently, however in
some cases that are prevalent in SQLAlchemy code it produces
too-long lines.   The too-long lines will be resolved in the
following commit that will resolve all remaining flake8 issues
including shadowed builtins, long lines, import order, unused
imports, duplicate imports, and docstring issues.

Change-Id: I7eda77fed3d8e73df84b3651fd6cfcfe858d4dc9
</pre>
</div>
</content>
</entry>
<entry>
<title>Fixed issue with :meth:`.TypeEngine.bind_expression` and</title>
<updated>2018-08-08T21:29:32+00:00</updated>
<author>
<name>Mike Bayer</name>
<email>mike_mp@zzzcomputing.com</email>
</author>
<published>2018-08-07T22:59:05+00:00</published>
<link rel='alternate' type='text/html' href='http://git.baserock.org/cgit/delta/python-packages/sqlalchemy.git/commit/?id=f03c7918796e1080d971a9c03943962478be4caf'/>
<id>f03c7918796e1080d971a9c03943962478be4caf</id>
<content type='text'>
:meth:`.TypeEngine.column_expression` methods where these methods would not
work if the target type were part of a :class:`.Variant`, or other target
type of a :class:`.TypeDecorator`.  Additionally, the SQL compiler now
calls upon the dialect-level implementation when it renders these methods
so that dialects can now provide for SQL-level processing for built-in
types.

Change-Id: Ic7b39575184db582e628e6ecee48dcda7d03a817
Fixes: #3981
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:meth:`.TypeEngine.column_expression` methods where these methods would not
work if the target type were part of a :class:`.Variant`, or other target
type of a :class:`.TypeDecorator`.  Additionally, the SQL compiler now
calls upon the dialect-level implementation when it renders these methods
so that dialects can now provide for SQL-level processing for built-in
types.

Change-Id: Ic7b39575184db582e628e6ecee48dcda7d03a817
Fixes: #3981
</pre>
</div>
</content>
</entry>
<entry>
<title>- Added new checks for the common error case of passing mapped classes</title>
<updated>2015-08-22T16:47:13+00:00</updated>
<author>
<name>Mike Bayer</name>
<email>mike_mp@zzzcomputing.com</email>
</author>
<published>2015-08-22T16:47:13+00:00</published>
<link rel='alternate' type='text/html' href='http://git.baserock.org/cgit/delta/python-packages/sqlalchemy.git/commit/?id=8712ef2f81498fe59b9636ba150833d779e60781'/>
<id>8712ef2f81498fe59b9636ba150833d779e60781</id>
<content type='text'>
or mapped instances into contexts where they are interpreted as
SQL bound parameters; a new exception is raised for this.
fixes #3321
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or mapped instances into contexts where they are interpreted as
SQL bound parameters; a new exception is raised for this.
fixes #3321
</pre>
</div>
</content>
</entry>
<entry>
<title>- rework profiling, zoomark tests into single tests so that</title>
<updated>2014-08-16T23:49:07+00:00</updated>
<author>
<name>Mike Bayer</name>
<email>mike_mp@zzzcomputing.com</email>
</author>
<published>2014-08-16T23:49:07+00:00</published>
<link rel='alternate' type='text/html' href='http://git.baserock.org/cgit/delta/python-packages/sqlalchemy.git/commit/?id=b577afcb2bdcd94581606bc911968d8885509769'/>
<id>b577afcb2bdcd94581606bc911968d8885509769</id>
<content type='text'>
they can be used under xdist
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they can be used under xdist
</pre>
</div>
</content>
</entry>
<entry>
<title>- fully flake8 test/aaa_profiling</title>
<updated>2014-07-09T22:59:16+00:00</updated>
<author>
<name>Mike Bayer</name>
<email>mike_mp@zzzcomputing.com</email>
</author>
<published>2014-07-09T22:59:16+00:00</published>
<link rel='alternate' type='text/html' href='http://git.baserock.org/cgit/delta/python-packages/sqlalchemy.git/commit/?id=1fc440393a612abcb837871003ac0d81721e1938'/>
<id>1fc440393a612abcb837871003ac0d81721e1938</id>
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</content>
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</pre>
</div>
</content>
</entry>
</feed>
