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zope.sqlalchemy
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.. contents::
:local:
Introduction
============
The aim of this package is to unify the plethora of existing packages
integrating SQLAlchemy with Zope's transaction management. As such it seeks
only to provide a data manager and makes no attempt to define a `zopeish` way
to configure engines.
For WSGI applications, Zope style automatic transaction management is
available with `repoze.tm2`_, a part of `Repoze BFG`_ and `Turbogears 2`_.
You need to understand `SQLAlchemy`_ for this package and this README to make
any sense.
.. _repoze.tm2: http://docs.repoze.org/tm2/
.. _Repoze BFG: http://bfg.repoze.org/
.. _Turbogears 2: http://turbogears.org/
.. _SQLAlchemy: http://sqlalchemy.org/docs/
Running the tests
=================
This package is distributed as a buildout. Using your desired python run:
$ python bootstrap.py
This will download the dependent packages and setup the test script, which may
be run with:
$ ./bin/test
or with the standard setuptools test command:
$ ./bin/py setup.py test
To enable testing with your own database set the TEST_DSN environment variable
to your sqlalchemy database dsn. Two-phase commit behaviour may be tested by
setting the TEST_TWOPHASE variable to a non empty string. e.g:
$ TEST_DSN=postgres://test:test@localhost/test TEST_TWOPHASE=True bin/test
Example
=======
This example is lifted directly from the SQLAlchemy declarative documentation.
First the necessary imports.
>>> from sqlalchemy import *
>>> from sqlalchemy.ext.declarative import declarative_base
>>> from sqlalchemy.orm import scoped_session, sessionmaker, relation
>>> from zope.sqlalchemy import ZopeTransactionExtension
>>> import transaction
Now to define the mapper classes.
>>> Base = declarative_base()
>>> class User(Base):
... __tablename__ = 'test_users'
... id = Column('id', Integer, primary_key=True)
... name = Column('name', String(50))
... addresses = relation("Address", backref="user")
>>> class Address(Base):
... __tablename__ = 'test_addresses'
... id = Column('id', Integer, primary_key=True)
... email = Column('email', String(50))
... user_id = Column('user_id', Integer, ForeignKey('test_users.id'))
Create an engine and setup the tables. Note that for this example to work a
recent version of sqlite/pysqlite is required. 3.4.0 seems to be sufficient.
>>> engine = create_engine(TEST_DSN, convert_unicode=True)
>>> Base.metadata.create_all(engine)
Now to create the session itself. As zope is a threaded web server we must use
scoped sessions. Zope and SQLAlchemy sessions are tied together by using the
ZopeTransactionExtension from this package.
>>> Session = scoped_session(sessionmaker(bind=engine,
... twophase=TEST_TWOPHASE, extension=ZopeTransactionExtension()))
Call the scoped session factory to retrieve a session. You may call this as
many times as you like within a transaction and you will always retrieve the
same session. At present there are no users in the database.
>>> session = Session()
>>> session.query(User).all()
[]
We can now create a new user and commit the changes using Zope's transaction
machinary, just as Zope's publisher would.
>>> session.add(User(id=1, name='bob'))
>>> transaction.commit()
Engine level connections are outside the scope of the transaction integration.
>>> engine.connect().execute('SELECT * FROM test_users').fetchall()
[(1, ...'bob')]
A new transaction requires a new session. Let's add an address.
>>> session = Session()
>>> bob = session.query(User).all()[0]
>>> bob.name
u'bob'
>>> bob.addresses
[]
>>> bob.addresses.append(Address(id=1, email='bob@bob.bob'))
>>> transaction.commit()
>>> session = Session()
>>> bob = session.query(User).all()[0]
>>> bob.addresses
[<Address object at ...>]
>>> bob.addresses[0].email
u'bob@bob.bob'
>>> bob.addresses[0].email = 'wrong@wrong'
To rollback a transaction, use transaction.abort().
>>> transaction.abort()
>>> session = Session()
>>> bob = session.query(User).all()[0]
>>> bob.addresses[0].email
u'bob@bob.bob'
>>> transaction.abort()
By default, zope.sqlalchemy puts sessions in an 'active' state when they are
first used. ORM write operations automatically move the session into a
'changed' state. This avoids unnecessary database commits. Sometimes it
is necessary to interact with the database directly through SQL. It is not
possible to guess whether such an operation is a read or a write. Therefore we
must manually mark the session as changed when manual SQL statements write
to the DB.
>>> session = Session()
>>> conn = session.connection()
>>> users = Base.metadata.tables['test_users']
>>> conn.execute(users.update(users.c.name=='bob'), name='ben')
<sqlalchemy.engine.base.ResultProxy object at ...>
>>> from zope.sqlalchemy import mark_changed
>>> mark_changed(session)
>>> transaction.commit()
>>> session = Session()
>>> session.query(User).all()[0].name
u'ben'
>>> transaction.abort()
If this is a problem you may tell the extension to place the session in the
'changed' state initially.
>>> Session.configure(extension=ZopeTransactionExtension('changed'))
>>> Session.remove()
>>> session = Session()
>>> conn = session.connection()
>>> conn.execute(users.update(users.c.name=='ben'), name='bob')
<sqlalchemy.engine.base.ResultProxy object at ...>
>>> transaction.commit()
>>> session = Session()
>>> session.query(User).all()[0].name
u'bob'
>>> transaction.abort()
Development version
===================
`SVN version <svn://svn.zope.org/repos/main/zope.sqlalchemy/trunk#egg=zope.sqlalchemy-dev>`_
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