| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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We can cache the annotated cache key for Table, but
for selectables it's not safe, as it fails to pass the
anon_map along and creates many redudant structures in
observed test scenario. It is likely safe for a
Column that's mapped to a Table also, however this is
not implemented here. Will have to see if that part
needs adjusting.
Fixed critical memory issue identified in cache key generation, where for
very large and complex ORM statements that make use of lots of ORM aliases
with subqueries, cache key generation could produce excessively large keys
that were orders of magnitude bigger than the statement itself. Much thanks
to Rollo Konig Brock for their very patient, long term help in finally
identifying this issue.
Also within TypeEngine objects, when we generate elements
for instance variables, skip the None elements at least.
this also saves on tuple complexity.
Fixes: #8790
Change-Id: I448ddbfb45ae0a648815be8dad4faad7d1977427
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The PostgreSQL dialect now supports reflection of expression based indexes.
The reflection is supported both when using
:meth:`_engine.Inspector.get_indexes` and when reflecting a
:class:`_schema.Table` using :paramref:`_schema.Table.autoload_with`.
Thanks to immerrr and Aidan Kane for the help on this ticket.
Fixes: #7442
Change-Id: I3e36d557235286c0f7f6d8276272ff9225058d48
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Added very experimental feature to the :func:`_orm.selectinload` and
:func:`_orm.immediateload` loader options called
:paramref:`_orm.selectinload.recursion_depth` /
:paramref:`_orm.immediateload.recursion_depth` , which allows a single
loader option to automatically recurse into self-referential relationships.
Is set to an integer indicating depth, and may also be set to -1 to
indicate to continue loading until no more levels deep are found.
Major internal changes to :func:`_orm.selectinload` and
:func:`_orm.immediateload` allow this feature to work while continuing
to make correct use of the compilation cache, as well as not using
arbitrary recursion, so any level of depth is supported (though would
emit that many queries). This may be useful for
self-referential structures that must be loaded fully eagerly, such as when
using asyncio.
A warning is also emitted when loader options are connected together with
arbitrary lengths (that is, without using the new ``recursion_depth``
option) when excessive recursion depth is detected in related object
loading. This operation continues to use huge amounts of memory and
performs extremely poorly; the cache is disabled when this condition is
detected to protect the cache from being flooded with arbitrary statements.
Fixes: #8126
Change-Id: I9f162e0a09c1ed327dd19498aac193f649333a01
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Rearchitected the schema reflection API to allow some dialects to make use
of high performing batch queries to reflect the schemas of many tables at
once using much fewer queries. The new performance features are targeted
first at the PostgreSQL and Oracle backends, and may be applied to any
dialect that makes use of SELECT queries against system catalog tables to
reflect tables (currently this omits the MySQL and SQLite dialects which
instead make use of parsing the "CREATE TABLE" statement, however these
dialects do not have a pre-existing performance issue with reflection. MS
SQL Server is still a TODO).
The new API is backwards compatible with the previous system, and should
require no changes to third party dialects to retain compatibility;
third party dialects can also opt into the new system by implementing
batched queries for schema reflection.
Along with this change is an updated reflection API that is fully
:pep:`484` typed, features many new methods and some changes.
Fixes: #4379
Change-Id: I897ec09843543aa7012bcdce758792ed3d415d08
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this option works very badly with caching and the API
is likely not what we want either. Work continues for
#8126 including that the additional work in
I9f162e0a09c1ed327dd19498aac193f649333a01
tries to add new recursive features.
This reverts commit b3a1162553879d1369154e920f3f4129020bb88e.
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Added very experimental feature to the :func:`_orm.selectinload` and
:func:`_orm.immediateload` loader options called
:paramref:`_orm.selectinload.auto_recurse` /
:paramref:`_orm.immediateload.auto_recurse` , which when set to True will
cause a self-referential relationship load to continue loading with
arbitrary depth until no further objects are found. This may be useful for
self-referential structures that must be loaded fully eagerly, such as when
using asyncio.
Fixes: #8126
Change-Id: I5bbd00bd0ca43f4649b44680fea1e84680f0a5db
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to simplify pyproject.toml change the remaining files
that aren't going to be typed on this first pass
(unless of course someone wants to type some of these)
to include # mypy: ignore-errors. for the moment, only a handful
of ORM modules are to have more type checking implemented.
It's important that ignore-errors is used and
not "# type: ignore", as in the latter case, mypy doesn't even
read the existing types in the file, which makes it impossible to
type any files that refer to those modules at all.
to simplify ongoing typing work use inline mypy config
for remaining files that are "done" for now, indicating the
level of type checking they currently have.
Change-Id: I98669c1a305c2f0adba85d10b5425541f3fe9533
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__future__.annotations mode allows us to use non-string
annotations for argument and return types in most cases,
but more importantly it removes a large amount of runtime
overhead that would be spent in evaluating the annotations.
Change-Id: I2f5b6126fe0019713fc50001be3627b664019ede
References: #6810
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I spent days on Ibcf09af25228d39ee5a943fda82d8a9302433726
reading it over and over again and noticed this slight inaccuracy
10 seconds after I merged it.
the assert_warns_message() and assert_warns() functions should
not consider a mismatched warning class as valid for a match.
Change-Id: Ib8944dd95bcec1a7e4963917a5f4829e2ba27732
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Improvements to the test suite's integration with pytest such that the
"warnings" plugin, if manually enabled, will not interfere with the test
suite, such that third parties can enable the warnings plugin or make use
of the ``-W`` parameter and SQLAlchemy's test suite will continue to pass.
Additionally, modernized the detection of the "pytest-xdist" plugin so that
plugins can be globally disabled using PYTEST_DISABLE_PLUGIN_AUTOLOAD=1
without breaking the test suite if xdist were still installed. Warning
filters that promote deprecation warnings to errors are now localized to
SQLAlchemy-specific warnings, or within SQLAlchemy-specific sources for
general Python deprecation warnings, so that non-SQLAlchemy deprecation
warnings emitted from pytest plugins should also not impact the test suite.
Fixes: #7599
Change-Id: Ibcf09af25228d39ee5a943fda82d8a9302433726
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Change-Id: I49abf2607e0eb0623650efdf0091b1fb3db737ea
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Finalize all remaining removed-in-2.0 changes so that we
can begin doing pep-484 typing without old things
getting in the way (we will also have to do public_factory).
note there are a few "moved_in_20()" and "became_legacy_in_20()"
warnings still in place. The SQLALCHEMY_WARN_20 variable
is now removed.
Also removed here are the legacy "in place mutators" for Select
statements, and some keyword-only argument signatures in Core
have been added.
Also in the big change department, the ORM mapper() function
is removed entirely; the Mapper class is otherwise unchanged,
just the public-facing API function. Mappers are now always
given a registry in which to participate, however the
argument signature of Mapper is not changed. ideally "registry"
would be the first positional argument.
Fixes: #7257
Change-Id: Ic70c57b9f1cf7eb996338af5183b11bdeb3e1623
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The :meth:`_sqltypes.TypeEngine.with_variant` method now returns a copy of
the original :class:`_sqltypes.TypeEngine` object, rather than wrapping it
inside the ``Variant`` class, which is effectively removed (the import
symbol remains for backwards compatibility with code that may be testing
for this symbol). While the previous approach maintained in-Python
behaviors, maintaining the original type allows for clearer type checking
and debugging.
Fixes: #6980
Change-Id: I158c7e56306b886b5b82b040205c428a5c4a242c
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This patch adds new warnings for all elements that
don't indicate their caching behavior, including user-defined
ClauseElement subclasses and third party dialects.
it additionally adds new documentation to discuss an apparent
performance degradation in 1.4 when caching is disabled as a
result in the significant expense incurred by ORM
lazy loaders, which in 1.3 used BakedQuery so were actually
cached.
As a result of adding the warnings, a fair degree of
lesser used SQL expression objects identified that they did not
define caching behavior so would have been producing
``[no key]``, including PostgreSQL constructs ``hstore``
and ``array``. These have been amended to use inherit
cache where appropriate. "on conflict" constructs in
PostgreSQL, MySQL, SQLite still explicitly don't generate
a cache key at this time.
The change also adds a test for all constructs via
assert_compile() to assert they will not generate cache
warnings.
Fixes: #7394
Change-Id: I85958affbb99bfad0f5efa21bc8f2a95e7e46981
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Change-Id: I8172fdcc3103ff92aa049827728484c8779af6b7
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References: #4600
Change-Id: I2a62ddfe00bc562720f0eae700a497495d7a987a
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Generalized the :paramref:`_sa.create_engine.isolation_level` parameter to
the base dialect so that it is no longer dependent on individual dialects
to be present. This parameter sets up the "isolation level" setting to
occur for all new database connections as soon as they are created by the
connection pool, where the value then stays set without being reset on
every checkin.
The :paramref:`_sa.create_engine.isolation_level` parameter is essentially
equivalent in functionality to using the
:paramref:`_engine.Engine.execution_options.isolation_level` parameter via
:meth:`_engine.Engine.execution_options` for an engine-wide setting. The
difference is in that the former setting assigns the isolation level just
once when a connection is created, the latter sets and resets the given
level on each connection checkout.
Fixes: #6342
Change-Id: Id81d6b1c1a94371d901ada728a610696e09e9741
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in order to remove LegacyRow / LegacyResult, we have
to also lose close_with_result, which connectionless
execution relies upon.
also includes a new profiles.txt file that's all against
py310, as that's what CI is on now. some result counts
changed by one function call which was enough to fail the
low-count result tests.
Replaces Connectable as the common interface between
Connection and Engine with EngineEventsTarget. Engine
is no longer Connectable. Connection and MockConnection
still are.
References: #7257
Change-Id: Iad5eba0313836d347e65490349a22b061356896a
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most of the work for aliased / from_joinpoint has been done
already as I added all new tests for these and moved
most aliased/from_joinpoint to test/orm/test_deprecations.py
already
Change-Id: Ia23e332dec183de17b2fb9d89d946af8d5e89ae7
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An extra layer of warning messages has been added to the functionality
of :meth:`_orm.Query.join` and the ORM version of
:meth:`_sql.Select.join`, where a few places where "automatic aliasing"
continues to occur will now be called out as a pattern to avoid, mostly
specific to the area of joined table inheritance where classes that share
common base tables are being joined together without using explicit aliases.
One case emits a legacy warning for a pattern that's not recommended,
the other case is fully deprecated.
The automatic aliasing within ORM join() which occurs for overlapping
mapped tables does not work consistently with all APIs such as
``contains_eager()``, and rather than continue to try to make these use
cases work everywhere, replacing with a more user-explicit pattern
is clearer, less prone to bugs and simplifies SQLAlchemy's internals
further.
The warnings include links to the errors.rst page where each pattern is
demonstrated along with the recommended pattern to fix.
* Improved the exception message generated when configuring a mapping with
joined table inheritance where the two tables either have no foreign key
relationships set up, or where they have multiple foreign key relationships
set up. The message is now ORM specific and includes context that the
:paramref:`_orm.Mapper.inherit_condition` parameter may be needed
particularly for the ambiguous foreign keys case.
* Add explicit support in the _expect_warnings() assertion for nested
_expect_warnings calls
* generalize the NoCache fixture, which we also need to catch warnings
during compilation consistently
* generalize the __str__() method for the HasCode mixin so all warnings
and errors include the code link in their string
Fixes: #6974
Change-Id: I84ed79ba2112c39eaab7973b6d6f46de7fa80842
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Also replace http://pypi.python.org/pypi with https://pypi.org/project
Change-Id: I84b5005c39969a82140706472989f2a30b0c7685
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Fixed issue in experimental "select ORM objects from INSERT/UPDATE" use
case where an error was raised if the statement were against a
single-table-inheritance subclass.
Additionally makes some adjustments in the SQL assertion
fixture to test a FromStatement w/ DML.
Fixes: #6591
Change-Id: I53a627ab18a01dc6d9b5037e28312a1177891327
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a new segfault is observed in python 3.10.0b2 in conjunction
with asyncio and possibly greenlet. Ensuring the
traceback object is deleted from scope here, which is a
good idea anyway, apparently seems to resolve the issue.
Change-Id: Ia83bafb088ef19853044f1d436db259cbfd1e5f4
References: https://github.com/python-greenlet/greenlet/issues/242
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Fixed regression where the introduction of the INSERT syntax "INSERT...
VALUES (DEFAULT)" was not supported on some backends that do however
support "INSERT..DEFAULT VALUES", including SQLite. The two syntaxes are
now each individually supported or non-supported for each dialect, for
example MySQL supports "VALUES (DEFAULT)" but not "DEFAULT VALUES".
Support for Oracle is still not enabled as there are unresolved issues
in using RETURNING at the same time.
Fixes: #6254
Change-Id: I47959bc826e3d9d2396ccfa290eb084841b02e77
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Fixed issue where a "removed in 2.0" warning were generated internally by
the relationship loader mechanics.
This changeset started the effort of converting all string usage
in the test suite, however this is a much longer job as the
use of strings in loader options is widespread. In particular
I'm not totally comfortable with strings not being accepted
in obvious spots like Load(User).load_only("x", "y", "z"), which
points to a new string expecting functionality that's not
what's there now. However at the moment it seems like we need
to continue removing all support for strings and then figure out
"immediate strings from an explicit class" later.
Fixes: #6115
Change-Id: I6b314d135d2bc049fd66500914b772c1fe60b5b3
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Fixed regression where :meth:`_orm.Query.join` would produce no effect if
the query itself as well as the join target were against a
:class:`_schema.Table` object, rather than a mapped class. This was part of
a more systemic issue where the legacy ORM query compiler would not be
correctly used from a :class:`_orm.Query` if the statement produced had not
ORM entities present within it.
Also repair the assert_compile() method, which was using
Query._compile_state() which was bypassing the bug. A handful
of ORM tests with Query objects and Core-only objects were actually
failing if the default compilation path were used.
Fixes: #6003
Change-Id: I97478b2d06bf6c01fe1f09ee118e1f2ac4c849bc
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We are unfortunately stuck with this class completely
until we get rid of "dynamic" altogether. The usage
contract includes the "query_class" mixin feature where
users add their own methods, and this use case very
well in line with 2.0's contract. As Query is not going away
in any case this has to stay in "legacy" style, there's no
point trying to change it as the new version was still fully
dependent on Query.
Fixes: #5981
Change-Id: I1bc623b17d976b4bb417ab623248d4ac227db74d
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Fixed bug where the "cartesian product" assertion was not correctly
accommodating for joins between tables that relied upon the use of LATERAL
to connect from a subquery to another subquery in the enclosing context.
Additionally, enabled from_linting for the base assert_compile(),
however it remains off by default; to enable by default we would
have to make sure it isn't set for DDL compiles and there's also
a lot of tests that would also need to turn it off, so leaving
this off for expediency.
Fixes: #5924
Change-Id: I22604baf572f8c4d96befcc610b3dcb79c13fc4a
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Adjusted the "literal_binds" feature of :class:`_sql.Compiler` to render
NULL for a bound parameter that has ``None`` as the value, either
explicitly passed or omitted. The previous error message "bind parameter
without a renderable value" is removed, and a missing or ``None`` value
will now render NULL in all cases. Previously, rendering of NULL was
starting to happen for DML statements due to internal refactorings, but was
not explicitly part of test coverage, which it now is.
While no error is raised, when the context is within that of a column
comparison, and the operator is not "IS"/"IS NOT", a warning is emitted
that this is not generally useful from a SQL perspective.
Fixes: #5888
Change-Id: Id5939d8dbfb1156a9f8a7f7e76cf18327155331a
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I added an extra is_none() by mistake the other day and for
some reason it sneaked past flake8. it's breaking all the
builds so get it back in
Change-Id: I17b311341169571efa856e062c6be7e8f362618f
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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
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Implemented "connection-binding" for :class:`.AsyncSession`, the ability to
pass an :class:`.AsyncConnection` to create an :class:`.AsyncSession`.
Previously, this use case was not implemented and would use the associated
engine when the connection were passed. This fixes the issue where the
"join a session to an external transaction" use case would not work
correctly for the :class:`.AsyncSession`. Additionally, added methods
:meth:`.AsyncConnection.in_transaction`,
:meth:`.AsyncConnection.in_nested_transaction`,
:meth:`.AsyncConnection.get_transaction`.
The :class:`.AsyncEngine`, :class:`.AsyncConnection` and
:class:`.AsyncTransaction` objects may be compared using Python ``==`` or
``!=``, which will compare the two given objects based on the "sync" object
they are proxying towards. This is useful as there are cases particularly
for :class:`.AsyncTransaction` where multiple instances of
:class:`.AsyncTransaction` can be proxying towards the same sync
:class:`_engine.Transaction`, and are actually equivalent. The
:meth:`.AsyncConnection.get_transaction` method will currently return a new
proxying :class:`.AsyncTransaction` each time as the
:class:`.AsyncTransaction` is not otherwise statefully associated with its
originating :class:`.AsyncConnection`.
Fixes: #5811
Change-Id: I5a3a6b2f088541eee7b0e0f393510e61bc9f986b
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Change-Id: Ic5bb19ca8be3cb47c95a0d3315d84cb484bac47c
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importantly this means we can remove bound metadata from
the fixtures that are used by Alembic's test suite.
hopefully this is the last one that has to happen to allow
Alembic to be fully 1.4/2.0.
Start moving from @testing.provide_metadata to a pytest
metadata fixture. This does not seem to have any negative
effects even though TablesTest uses a "self.metadata" attribute.
Change-Id: Iae6ab95938a7e92b6d42086aec534af27b5577d3
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Fixed structural compiler issue where some constructs such as MySQL /
PostgreSQL "on conflict / on duplicate key" would rely upon the state of
the :class:`_sql.Compiler` object being fixed against their statement as
the top level statement, which would fail in cases where those statements
are branched from a different context, such as a DDL construct linked to a
SQL statement.
Fixes: #5656
Change-Id: I568bf40adc7edcf72ea6c7fd6eb9d07790de189e
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It's better, the majority of these changes look more readable to me.
also found some docstrings that had formatting / quoting issues.
Change-Id: I582a45fde3a5648b2f36bab96bad56881321899b
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The :meth:`_sql.Join.alias` method is deprecated and will be removed in
SQLAlchemy 2.0. An explicit select + subquery, or aliasing of the inner
tables, should be used instead.
Fixes: #5010
Change-Id: Ic913afc31f0d70b0605f9a7af2742a0de1f9ad19
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this is safe for 1.3.x
Change-Id: Icba38fdc20f5d8ac407383a4278ccb346e09af38
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"Implicit autocommit", which is the COMMIT that occurs when a DML or DDL
statement is emitted on a connection, is deprecated and won't be part of
SQLAlchemy 2.0. A 2.0-style warning is emitted when autocommit takes
effect, so that the calling code may be adjusted to use an explicit
transaction.
As part of this change, DDL methods such as
:meth:`_schema.MetaData.create_all` when used against a
:class:`_engine.Engine` or :class:`_engine.Connection` will run the
operation in a BEGIN block if one is not started already.
The MySQL and MariaDB dialects now query from the information_schema.tables
system view in order to determine if a particular table exists or not.
Previously, the "DESCRIBE" command was used with an exception catch to
detect non-existent, which would have the undesirable effect of emitting a
ROLLBACK on the connection. There appeared to be legacy encoding issues
which prevented the use of "SHOW TABLES", for this, but as MySQL support is
now at 5.0.2 or above due to :ticket:`4189`, the information_schema tables
are now available in all cases.
Fixes: #4846
Change-Id: I733a7e0e17477a63607fb9931c87c393bbd7ac57
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it's not really correct that URL is mutable and doesn't do
any argument checking. propose replacing it with an immutable
named tuple with rich copy-and-mutate methods.
At the moment this makes a hard change to the CreateEnginePlugin
docs that previously recommended url.query.pop(). I can't find
any plugins on github other than my own that are using this
feature, so see if we can just make a hard change on this one.
Fixes: #5526
Change-Id: I28a0a471d80792fa8c28f4fa573d6352966a4a79
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The pg8000 dialect has been revised and modernized for the most recent
version of the pg8000 driver for PostgreSQL. Changes to the dialect
include:
* All data types are now sent as text rather than binary.
* Using adapters, custom types can be plugged in to pg8000.
* Previously, named prepared statements were used for all statements.
Now unnamed prepared statements are used by default, and named
prepared statements can be used explicitly by calling the
Connection.prepare() method, which returns a PreparedStatement
object.
Pull request courtesy Tony Locke.
Notes by Mike: to get this all working it was needed to break
up JSONIndexType into "str" and "int" subtypes; this will be
needed for any dialect that is dependent on setinputsizes().
also includes @caselit's idea to include query params
in the dbdriver parameter.
Co-authored-by: Mike Bayer <mike_mp@zzzcomputing.com>
Closes: #5451
Pull-request: https://github.com/sqlalchemy/sqlalchemy/pull/5451
Pull-request-sha: 639751ca9c7544801b9ede02e6cbe15a16c59c82
Change-Id: I2869bc52c330916773a41d11d12c297aecc8fcd8
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Using the approach introduced at
https://gist.github.com/zzzeek/6287e28054d3baddc07fa21a7227904e
We can now create asyncio endpoints that are then handled
in "implicit IO" form within the majority of the Core internals.
Then coroutines are re-exposed at the point at which we call
into asyncpg methods.
Patch includes:
* asyncpg dialect
* asyncio package
* engine, result, ORM session classes
* new test fixtures, tests
* some work with pep-484 and a short plugin for the
pyannotate package, which seems to have so-so results
Change-Id: Idbcc0eff72c4cad572914acdd6f40ddb1aef1a7d
Fixes: #3414
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This is kind of a mixed bag of all kinds to help get us
to 1.4 betas. The documentation stuff is a work in
progress. Lots of other relatively small changes to
APIs and things. More commits will follow to continue
improving the documentation and transitioning to the
1.4/2.0 hybrid documentation. In particular some refinements
to Session usage models so that it can match Engine's
scoping / transactional patterns, and a decision to
start moving away from "subtransactions" completely.
* add select().from_statement() to produce FromStatement in an
ORM context
* begin referring to select() that has "plugins" for the few edge
cases where select() will have ORM-only behaviors
* convert dynamic.AppenderQuery to its own object that can use
select(), though at the moment it uses Query to support legacy
join calling forms.
* custom query classes for AppenderQuery are replaced by
do_orm_execute() hooks for custom actions, a separate gerrit
will document this
* add Session.get() to replace query.get()
* Deprecate session.begin->subtransaction. propose within the
test suite a hypothetical recipe for apps that rely on this
pattern
* introduce Session construction level context manager,
sessionmaker context manager, rewrite the whole top of the
session_transaction.rst documentation. Establish context manager
patterns for Session that are identical to engine
* ensure same begin_nested() / commit() behavior as engine
* devise all new "join into an external transaction" recipe,
add test support for it, add rules into Session so it
just works, write new docs. need to ensure this doesn't
break anything
* vastly reduce the verbosity of lots of session docs as
I dont think people read this stuff and it's difficult
to keep current in any case
* constructs like case(), with_only_columns() really need
to move to *columns, add a coercion rule to just change
these.
* docs need changes everywhere I look. in_() is not in
the Core tutorial? how do people even know about it?
Remove tons of cruft from Select docs, etc.
* build a system for common ORM options like populate_existing
and autoflush to populate from execution options.
* others?
Change-Id: Ia4bea0f804250e54d90b3884cf8aab8b66b82ecf
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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
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Build on #5401 to allow the ORM to take advanage
of executemany INSERT + RETURNING.
Implemented the feature
updated tests
to support INSERT DEFAULT VALUES, needed to come up with
a new syntax for compiler INSERT INTO table (anycol) VALUES (DEFAULT)
which can then be iterated out for executemany.
Added graceful degrade to plain executemany for PostgreSQL <= 8.2
Renamed EXECUTEMANY_DEFAULT to EXECUTEMANY_PLAIN
Fix issue where unicode identifiers or parameter names wouldn't
work with execute_values() under Py2K, because we have to
encode the statement and therefore have to encode the
insert_single_values_expr too.
Correct issue from #5401 to support executemany + return_defaults
for a PK that is explicitly pre-generated, meaning we aren't actually
getting RETURNING but need to return it from compiled_parameters.
Fixes: #5263
Change-Id: Id68e5c158c4f9ebc33b61c06a448907921c2a657
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The psycopg2 dialect now defaults to using the very performant
``execute_values()`` psycopg2 extension for compiled INSERT statements,
and also impements RETURNING support when this extension is used. This
allows INSERT statements that even include an autoincremented SERIAL
or IDENTITY value to run very fast while still being able to return the
newly generated primary key values. The ORM will then integrate this
new feature in a separate change.
Implements RETURNING for insert with executemany
Adds support to return_defaults() mode and inserted_primary_key
to support mutiple INSERTed rows, via return_defauls_rows
and inserted_primary_key_rows accessors.
within default execution context, new cached compiler
getters are used to fetch primary keys from rows
inserted_primary_key now returns a plain tuple. this
is not yet a row-like object however this can be
added.
Adds distinct "values_only" and "batch" modes, as
"values" has a lot of benefits but "batch" breaks
cursor.rowcount
psycopg2 minimum version 2.7 so we can remove the
large number of checks for very old versions of
psycopg2
simplify tests to no longer distinguish between
native and non-native json
Fixes: #5401
Change-Id: Ic08fd3423d4c5d16ca50994460c0c234868bd61c
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