from django.core import checks from django.db.backends.base.validation import BaseDatabaseValidation from django.utils.version import get_docs_version class DatabaseValidation(BaseDatabaseValidation): def check(self, **kwargs): issues = super(DatabaseValidation, self).check(**kwargs) issues.extend(self._check_sql_mode(**kwargs)) return issues def _check_sql_mode(self, **kwargs): with self.connection.cursor() as cursor: cursor.execute("SELECT @@sql_mode") sql_mode = cursor.fetchone() modes = set(sql_mode[0].split(',') if sql_mode else ()) if not (modes & {'STRICT_TRANS_TABLES', 'STRICT_ALL_TABLES'}): return [checks.Warning( "MySQL Strict Mode is not set for database connection '%s'" % self.connection.alias, hint="MySQL's Strict Mode fixes many data integrity problems in MySQL, " "such as data truncation upon insertion, by escalating warnings into " "errors. It is strongly recommended you activate it. See: " "https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/%s/ref/databases/#mysql-sql-mode" % (get_docs_version(),), id='mysql.W002', )] return [] def check_field(self, field, **kwargs): """ MySQL has the following field length restriction: No character (varchar) fields can have a length exceeding 255 characters if they have a unique index on them. """ from django.db import connection errors = super(DatabaseValidation, self).check_field(field, **kwargs) # Ignore any related fields. if getattr(field, 'remote_field', None) is None: field_type = field.db_type(connection) # Ignore any non-concrete fields if field_type is None: return errors if (field_type.startswith('varchar') and field.unique and (field.max_length is None or int(field.max_length) > 255)): errors.append( checks.Error( 'MySQL does not allow unique CharFields to have a max_length > 255.', obj=field, id='mysql.E001', ) ) return errors