""" SQLite3 backend for the sqlite3 module in the standard library. """ import decimal import math import re import warnings from sqlite3 import dbapi2 as Database import pytz from django.core.exceptions import ImproperlyConfigured from django.db import utils from django.db.backends import utils as backend_utils from django.db.backends.base.base import BaseDatabaseWrapper from django.utils import timezone from django.utils.dateparse import ( parse_date, parse_datetime, parse_duration, parse_time, ) from .client import DatabaseClient # isort:skip from .creation import DatabaseCreation # isort:skip from .features import DatabaseFeatures # isort:skip from .introspection import DatabaseIntrospection # isort:skip from .operations import DatabaseOperations # isort:skip from .schema import DatabaseSchemaEditor # isort:skip def decoder(conv_func): """ Convert bytestrings from Python's sqlite3 interface to a regular string. """ return lambda s: conv_func(s.decode()) Database.register_converter("bool", decoder(lambda s: s == '1')) Database.register_converter("time", decoder(parse_time)) Database.register_converter("date", decoder(parse_date)) Database.register_converter("datetime", decoder(parse_datetime)) Database.register_converter("timestamp", decoder(parse_datetime)) Database.register_converter("TIMESTAMP", decoder(parse_datetime)) Database.register_converter("decimal", decoder(backend_utils.typecast_decimal)) Database.register_adapter(decimal.Decimal, backend_utils.rev_typecast_decimal) class DatabaseWrapper(BaseDatabaseWrapper): vendor = 'sqlite' display_name = 'SQLite' # SQLite doesn't actually support most of these types, but it "does the right # thing" given more verbose field definitions, so leave them as is so that # schema inspection is more useful. data_types = { 'AutoField': 'integer', 'BigAutoField': 'integer', 'BinaryField': 'BLOB', 'BooleanField': 'bool', 'CharField': 'varchar(%(max_length)s)', 'DateField': 'date', 'DateTimeField': 'datetime', 'DecimalField': 'decimal', 'DurationField': 'bigint', 'FileField': 'varchar(%(max_length)s)', 'FilePathField': 'varchar(%(max_length)s)', 'FloatField': 'real', 'IntegerField': 'integer', 'BigIntegerField': 'bigint', 'IPAddressField': 'char(15)', 'GenericIPAddressField': 'char(39)', 'NullBooleanField': 'bool', 'OneToOneField': 'integer', 'PositiveIntegerField': 'integer unsigned', 'PositiveSmallIntegerField': 'smallint unsigned', 'SlugField': 'varchar(%(max_length)s)', 'SmallIntegerField': 'smallint', 'TextField': 'text', 'TimeField': 'time', 'UUIDField': 'char(32)', } data_types_suffix = { 'AutoField': 'AUTOINCREMENT', 'BigAutoField': 'AUTOINCREMENT', } # SQLite requires LIKE statements to include an ESCAPE clause if the value # being escaped has a percent or underscore in it. # See http://www.sqlite.org/lang_expr.html for an explanation. operators = { 'exact': '= %s', 'iexact': "LIKE %s ESCAPE '\\'", 'contains': "LIKE %s ESCAPE '\\'", 'icontains': "LIKE %s ESCAPE '\\'", 'regex': 'REGEXP %s', 'iregex': "REGEXP '(?i)' || %s", 'gt': '> %s', 'gte': '>= %s', 'lt': '< %s', 'lte': '<= %s', 'startswith': "LIKE %s ESCAPE '\\'", 'endswith': "LIKE %s ESCAPE '\\'", 'istartswith': "LIKE %s ESCAPE '\\'", 'iendswith': "LIKE %s ESCAPE '\\'", } # The patterns below are used to generate SQL pattern lookup clauses when # the right-hand side of the lookup isn't a raw string (it might be an expression # or the result of a bilateral transformation). # In those cases, special characters for LIKE operators (e.g. \, *, _) should be # escaped on database side. # # Note: we use str.format() here for readability as '%' is used as a wildcard for # the LIKE operator. pattern_esc = r"REPLACE(REPLACE(REPLACE({}, '\', '\\'), '%%', '\%%'), '_', '\_')" pattern_ops = { 'contains': r"LIKE '%%' || {} || '%%' ESCAPE '\'", 'icontains': r"LIKE '%%' || UPPER({}) || '%%' ESCAPE '\'", 'startswith': r"LIKE {} || '%%' ESCAPE '\'", 'istartswith': r"LIKE UPPER({}) || '%%' ESCAPE '\'", 'endswith': r"LIKE '%%' || {} ESCAPE '\'", 'iendswith': r"LIKE '%%' || UPPER({}) ESCAPE '\'", } Database = Database SchemaEditorClass = DatabaseSchemaEditor # Classes instantiated in __init__(). client_class = DatabaseClient creation_class = DatabaseCreation features_class = DatabaseFeatures introspection_class = DatabaseIntrospection ops_class = DatabaseOperations def get_connection_params(self): settings_dict = self.settings_dict if not settings_dict['NAME']: raise ImproperlyConfigured( "settings.DATABASES is improperly configured. " "Please supply the NAME value.") kwargs = { 'database': settings_dict['NAME'], 'detect_types': Database.PARSE_DECLTYPES | Database.PARSE_COLNAMES, } kwargs.update(settings_dict['OPTIONS']) # Always allow the underlying SQLite connection to be shareable # between multiple threads. The safe-guarding will be handled at a # higher level by the `BaseDatabaseWrapper.allow_thread_sharing` # property. This is necessary as the shareability is disabled by # default in pysqlite and it cannot be changed once a connection is # opened. if 'check_same_thread' in kwargs and kwargs['check_same_thread']: warnings.warn( 'The `check_same_thread` option was provided and set to ' 'True. It will be overridden with False. Use the ' '`DatabaseWrapper.allow_thread_sharing` property instead ' 'for controlling thread shareability.', RuntimeWarning ) kwargs.update({'check_same_thread': False}) if self.features.can_share_in_memory_db: kwargs.update({'uri': True}) return kwargs def get_new_connection(self, conn_params): conn = Database.connect(**conn_params) conn.create_function("django_date_extract", 2, _sqlite_date_extract) conn.create_function("django_date_trunc", 2, _sqlite_date_trunc) conn.create_function("django_datetime_cast_date", 2, _sqlite_datetime_cast_date) conn.create_function("django_datetime_cast_time", 2, _sqlite_datetime_cast_time) conn.create_function("django_datetime_extract", 3, _sqlite_datetime_extract) conn.create_function("django_datetime_trunc", 3, _sqlite_datetime_trunc) conn.create_function("django_time_extract", 2, _sqlite_time_extract) conn.create_function("django_time_trunc", 2, _sqlite_time_trunc) conn.create_function("django_time_diff", 2, _sqlite_time_diff) conn.create_function("django_timestamp_diff", 2, _sqlite_timestamp_diff) conn.create_function("regexp", 2, _sqlite_regexp) conn.create_function("django_format_dtdelta", 3, _sqlite_format_dtdelta) conn.create_function("django_power", 2, _sqlite_power) return conn def init_connection_state(self): pass def create_cursor(self, name=None): return self.connection.cursor(factory=SQLiteCursorWrapper) def close(self): self.validate_thread_sharing() # If database is in memory, closing the connection destroys the # database. To prevent accidental data loss, ignore close requests on # an in-memory db. if not self.is_in_memory_db(): BaseDatabaseWrapper.close(self) def _savepoint_allowed(self): # Two conditions are required here: # - A sufficiently recent version of SQLite to support savepoints, # - Being in a transaction, which can only happen inside 'atomic'. # When 'isolation_level' is not None, sqlite3 commits before each # savepoint; it's a bug. When it is None, savepoints don't make sense # because autocommit is enabled. The only exception is inside 'atomic' # blocks. To work around that bug, on SQLite, 'atomic' starts a # transaction explicitly rather than simply disable autocommit. return self.features.uses_savepoints and self.in_atomic_block def _set_autocommit(self, autocommit): if autocommit: level = None else: # sqlite3's internal default is ''. It's different from None. # See Modules/_sqlite/connection.c. level = '' # 'isolation_level' is a misleading API. # SQLite always runs at the SERIALIZABLE isolation level. with self.wrap_database_errors: self.connection.isolation_level = level def check_constraints(self, table_names=None): """ Check each table name in `table_names` for rows with invalid foreign key references. This method is intended to be used in conjunction with `disable_constraint_checking()` and `enable_constraint_checking()`, to determine if rows with invalid references were entered while constraint checks were off. Raise an IntegrityError on the first invalid foreign key reference encountered (if any) and provide detailed information about the invalid reference in the error message. Backends can override this method if they can more directly apply constraint checking (e.g. via "SET CONSTRAINTS ALL IMMEDIATE") """ cursor = self.cursor() if table_names is None: table_names = self.introspection.table_names(cursor) for table_name in table_names: primary_key_column_name = self.introspection.get_primary_key_column(cursor, table_name) if not primary_key_column_name: continue key_columns = self.introspection.get_key_columns(cursor, table_name) for column_name, referenced_table_name, referenced_column_name in key_columns: cursor.execute( """ SELECT REFERRING.`%s`, REFERRING.`%s` FROM `%s` as REFERRING LEFT JOIN `%s` as REFERRED ON (REFERRING.`%s` = REFERRED.`%s`) WHERE REFERRING.`%s` IS NOT NULL AND REFERRED.`%s` IS NULL """ % ( primary_key_column_name, column_name, table_name, referenced_table_name, column_name, referenced_column_name, column_name, referenced_column_name, ) ) for bad_row in cursor.fetchall(): raise utils.IntegrityError( "The row in table '%s' with primary key '%s' has an " "invalid foreign key: %s.%s contains a value '%s' that " "does not have a corresponding value in %s.%s." % ( table_name, bad_row[0], table_name, column_name, bad_row[1], referenced_table_name, referenced_column_name, ) ) def is_usable(self): return True def _start_transaction_under_autocommit(self): """ Start a transaction explicitly in autocommit mode. Staying in autocommit mode works around a bug of sqlite3 that breaks savepoints when autocommit is disabled. """ self.cursor().execute("BEGIN") def is_in_memory_db(self): return self.creation.is_in_memory_db(self.settings_dict['NAME']) FORMAT_QMARK_REGEX = re.compile(r'(?