""" Oracle database backend for Django. Requires cx_Oracle: http://cx-oracle.sourceforge.net/ """ import datetime import sys import time from decimal import Decimal def _setup_environment(environ): import platform # Cygwin requires some special voodoo to set the environment variables # properly so that Oracle will see them. if platform.system().upper().startswith('CYGWIN'): try: import ctypes except ImportError, e: from django.core.exceptions import ImproperlyConfigured raise ImproperlyConfigured("Error loading ctypes: %s; " "the Oracle backend requires ctypes to " "operate correctly under Cygwin." % e) kernel32 = ctypes.CDLL('kernel32') for name, value in environ: kernel32.SetEnvironmentVariableA(name, value) else: import os os.environ.update(environ) _setup_environment([ # Oracle takes client-side character set encoding from the environment. ('NLS_LANG', '.UTF8'), # This prevents unicode from getting mangled by getting encoded into the # potentially non-unicode database character set. ('ORA_NCHAR_LITERAL_REPLACE', 'TRUE'), ]) try: import cx_Oracle as Database except ImportError, e: from django.core.exceptions import ImproperlyConfigured raise ImproperlyConfigured("Error loading cx_Oracle module: %s" % e) from django.db import utils from django.db.backends import * from django.db.backends.signals import connection_created from django.db.backends.oracle.client import DatabaseClient from django.db.backends.oracle.creation import DatabaseCreation from django.db.backends.oracle.introspection import DatabaseIntrospection from django.utils.encoding import smart_str, force_unicode DatabaseError = Database.DatabaseError IntegrityError = Database.IntegrityError # Check whether cx_Oracle was compiled with the WITH_UNICODE option. This will # also be True in Python 3.0. if int(Database.version.split('.', 1)[0]) >= 5 and not hasattr(Database, 'UNICODE'): convert_unicode = force_unicode else: convert_unicode = smart_str class DatabaseFeatures(BaseDatabaseFeatures): empty_fetchmany_value = () needs_datetime_string_cast = False interprets_empty_strings_as_nulls = True uses_savepoints = True can_return_id_from_insert = True allow_sliced_subqueries = False supports_subqueries_in_group_by = False supports_timezones = False supports_bitwise_or = False can_defer_constraint_checks = True class DatabaseOperations(BaseDatabaseOperations): compiler_module = "django.db.backends.oracle.compiler" def autoinc_sql(self, table, column): # To simulate auto-incrementing primary keys in Oracle, we have to # create a sequence and a trigger. sq_name = get_sequence_name(table) tr_name = get_trigger_name(table) tbl_name = self.quote_name(table) col_name = self.quote_name(column) sequence_sql = """ DECLARE i INTEGER; BEGIN SELECT COUNT(*) INTO i FROM USER_CATALOG WHERE TABLE_NAME = '%(sq_name)s' AND TABLE_TYPE = 'SEQUENCE'; IF i = 0 THEN EXECUTE IMMEDIATE 'CREATE SEQUENCE "%(sq_name)s"'; END IF; END; /""" % locals() trigger_sql = """ CREATE OR REPLACE TRIGGER "%(tr_name)s" BEFORE INSERT ON %(tbl_name)s FOR EACH ROW WHEN (new.%(col_name)s IS NULL) BEGIN SELECT "%(sq_name)s".nextval INTO :new.%(col_name)s FROM dual; END; /""" % locals() return sequence_sql, trigger_sql def date_extract_sql(self, lookup_type, field_name): # http://download-east.oracle.com/docs/cd/B10501_01/server.920/a96540/functions42a.htm#1017163 if lookup_type == 'week_day': # TO_CHAR(field, 'D') returns an integer from 1-7, where 1=Sunday. return "TO_CHAR(%s, 'D')" % field_name else: return "EXTRACT(%s FROM %s)" % (lookup_type, field_name) def date_interval_sql(self, sql, connector, timedelta): """ Implements the interval functionality for expressions format for Oracle: (datefield + INTERVAL '3 00:03:20.000000' DAY(1) TO SECOND(6)) """ minutes, seconds = divmod(timedelta.seconds, 60) hours, minutes = divmod(minutes, 60) days = str(timedelta.days) day_precision = len(days) fmt = "(%s %s INTERVAL '%s %02d:%02d:%02d.%06d' DAY(%d) TO SECOND(6))" return fmt % (sql, connector, days, hours, minutes, seconds, timedelta.microseconds, day_precision) def date_trunc_sql(self, lookup_type, field_name): # Oracle uses TRUNC() for both dates and numbers. # http://download-east.oracle.com/docs/cd/B10501_01/server.920/a96540/functions155a.htm#SQLRF06151 if lookup_type == 'day': sql = 'TRUNC(%s)' % field_name else: sql = "TRUNC(%s, '%s')" % (field_name, lookup_type) return sql def convert_values(self, value, field): if isinstance(value, Database.LOB): value = value.read() if field and field.get_internal_type() == 'TextField': value = force_unicode(value) # Oracle stores empty strings as null. We need to undo this in # order to adhere to the Django convention of using the empty # string instead of null, but only if the field accepts the # empty string. if value is None and field and field.empty_strings_allowed: value = u'' # Convert 1 or 0 to True or False elif value in (1, 0) and field and field.get_internal_type() in ('BooleanField', 'NullBooleanField'): value = bool(value) # Force floats to the correct type elif value is not None and field and field.get_internal_type() == 'FloatField': value = float(value) # Convert floats to decimals elif value is not None and field and field.get_internal_type() == 'DecimalField': value = util.typecast_decimal(field.format_number(value)) # cx_Oracle always returns datetime.datetime objects for # DATE and TIMESTAMP columns, but Django wants to see a # python datetime.date, .time, or .datetime. We use the type # of the Field to determine which to cast to, but it's not # always available. # As a workaround, we cast to date if all the time-related # values are 0, or to time if the date is 1/1/1900. # This could be cleaned a bit by adding a method to the Field # classes to normalize values from the database (the to_python # method is used for validation and isn't what we want here). elif isinstance(value, Database.Timestamp): # In Python 2.3, the cx_Oracle driver returns its own # Timestamp object that we must convert to a datetime class. if not isinstance(value, datetime.datetime): value = datetime.datetime(value.year, value.month, value.day, value.hour, value.minute, value.second, value.fsecond) if field and field.get_internal_type() == 'DateTimeField': pass elif field and field.get_internal_type() == 'DateField': value = value.date() elif field and field.get_internal_type() == 'TimeField' or (value.year == 1900 and value.month == value.day == 1): value = value.time() elif value.hour == value.minute == value.second == value.microsecond == 0: value = value.date() return value def datetime_cast_sql(self): return "TO_TIMESTAMP(%s, 'YYYY-MM-DD HH24:MI:SS.FF')" def deferrable_sql(self): return " DEFERRABLE INITIALLY DEFERRED" def drop_sequence_sql(self, table): return "DROP SEQUENCE %s;" % self.quote_name(get_sequence_name(table)) def fetch_returned_insert_id(self, cursor): return long(cursor._insert_id_var.getvalue()) def field_cast_sql(self, db_type): if db_type and db_type.endswith('LOB'): return "DBMS_LOB.SUBSTR(%s)" else: return "%s" def last_insert_id(self, cursor, table_name, pk_name): sq_name = get_sequence_name(table_name) cursor.execute('SELECT "%s".currval FROM dual' % sq_name) return cursor.fetchone()[0] def lookup_cast(self, lookup_type): if lookup_type in ('iexact', 'icontains', 'istartswith', 'iendswith'): return "UPPER(%s)" return "%s" def max_in_list_size(self): return 1000 def max_name_length(self): return 30 def prep_for_iexact_query(self, x): return x def process_clob(self, value): if value is None: return u'' return force_unicode(value.read()) def quote_name(self, name): # SQL92 requires delimited (quoted) names to be case-sensitive. When # not quoted, Oracle has case-insensitive behavior for identifiers, but # always defaults to uppercase. # We simplify things by making Oracle identifiers always uppercase. if not name.startswith('"') and not name.endswith('"'): name = '"%s"' % util.truncate_name(name.upper(), self.max_name_length()) return name.upper() def random_function_sql(self): return "DBMS_RANDOM.RANDOM" def regex_lookup_9(self, lookup_type): raise NotImplementedError("Regexes are not supported in Oracle before version 10g.") def regex_lookup_10(self, lookup_type): if lookup_type == 'regex': match_option = "'c'" else: match_option = "'i'" return 'REGEXP_LIKE(%%s, %%s, %s)' % match_option def regex_lookup(self, lookup_type): # If regex_lookup is called before it's been initialized, then create # a cursor to initialize it and recur. from django.db import connection connection.cursor() return connection.ops.regex_lookup(lookup_type) def return_insert_id(self): return "RETURNING %s INTO %%s", (InsertIdVar(),) def savepoint_create_sql(self, sid): return convert_unicode("SAVEPOINT " + self.quote_name(sid)) def savepoint_rollback_sql(self, sid): return convert_unicode("ROLLBACK TO SAVEPOINT " + self.quote_name(sid)) def sql_flush(self, style, tables, sequences): # Return a list of 'TRUNCATE x;', 'TRUNCATE y;', # 'TRUNCATE z;'... style SQL statements if tables: # Oracle does support TRUNCATE, but it seems to get us into # FK referential trouble, whereas DELETE FROM table works. sql = ['%s %s %s;' % \ (style.SQL_KEYWORD('DELETE'), style.SQL_KEYWORD('FROM'), style.SQL_FIELD(self.quote_name(table))) for table in tables] # Since we've just deleted all the rows, running our sequence # ALTER code will reset the sequence to 0. for sequence_info in sequences: sequence_name = get_sequence_name(sequence_info['table']) table_name = self.quote_name(sequence_info['table']) column_name = self.quote_name(sequence_info['column'] or 'id') query = _get_sequence_reset_sql() % {'sequence': sequence_name, 'table': table_name, 'column': column_name} sql.append(query) return sql else: return [] def sequence_reset_sql(self, style, model_list): from django.db import models output = [] query = _get_sequence_reset_sql() for model in model_list: for f in model._meta.local_fields: if isinstance(f, models.AutoField): table_name = self.quote_name(model._meta.db_table) sequence_name = get_sequence_name(model._meta.db_table) column_name = self.quote_name(f.column) output.append(query % {'sequence': sequence_name, 'table': table_name, 'column': column_name}) # Only one AutoField is allowed per model, so don't # continue to loop break for f in model._meta.many_to_many: if not f.rel.through: table_name = self.quote_name(f.m2m_db_table()) sequence_name = get_sequence_name(f.m2m_db_table()) column_name = self.quote_name('id') output.append(query % {'sequence': sequence_name, 'table': table_name, 'column': column_name}) return output def start_transaction_sql(self): return '' def tablespace_sql(self, tablespace, inline=False): return "%sTABLESPACE %s" % ((inline and "USING INDEX " or ""), self.quote_name(tablespace)) def value_to_db_datetime(self, value): # Oracle doesn't support tz-aware datetimes if getattr(value, 'tzinfo', None) is not None: raise ValueError("Oracle backend does not support timezone-aware datetimes.") return super(DatabaseOperations, self).value_to_db_datetime(value) def value_to_db_time(self, value): if value is None: return None if isinstance(value, basestring): return datetime.datetime(*(time.strptime(value, '%H:%M:%S')[:6])) # Oracle doesn't support tz-aware datetimes if value.tzinfo is not None: raise ValueError("Oracle backend does not support timezone-aware datetimes.") return datetime.datetime(1900, 1, 1, value.hour, value.minute, value.second, value.microsecond) def year_lookup_bounds_for_date_field(self, value): first = '%s-01-01' second = '%s-12-31' return [first % value, second % value] def combine_expression(self, connector, sub_expressions): "Oracle requires special cases for %% and & operators in query expressions" if connector == '%%': return 'MOD(%s)' % ','.join(sub_expressions) elif connector == '&': return 'BITAND(%s)' % ','.join(sub_expressions) elif connector == '|': raise NotImplementedError("Bit-wise or is not supported in Oracle.") return super(DatabaseOperations, self).combine_expression(connector, sub_expressions) class _UninitializedOperatorsDescriptor(object): def __get__(self, instance, owner): # If connection.operators is looked up before a connection has been # created, transparently initialize connection.operators to avert an # AttributeError. if instance is None: raise AttributeError("operators not available as class attribute") # Creating a cursor will initialize the operators. instance.cursor().close() return instance.__dict__['operators'] class DatabaseWrapper(BaseDatabaseWrapper): vendor = 'oracle' operators = _UninitializedOperatorsDescriptor() _standard_operators = { 'exact': '= %s', 'iexact': '= UPPER(%s)', 'contains': "LIKE TRANSLATE(%s USING NCHAR_CS) ESCAPE TRANSLATE('\\' USING NCHAR_CS)", 'icontains': "LIKE UPPER(TRANSLATE(%s USING NCHAR_CS)) ESCAPE TRANSLATE('\\' USING NCHAR_CS)", 'gt': '> %s', 'gte': '>= %s', 'lt': '< %s', 'lte': '<= %s', 'startswith': "LIKE TRANSLATE(%s USING NCHAR_CS) ESCAPE TRANSLATE('\\' USING NCHAR_CS)", 'endswith': "LIKE TRANSLATE(%s USING NCHAR_CS) ESCAPE TRANSLATE('\\' USING NCHAR_CS)", 'istartswith': "LIKE UPPER(TRANSLATE(%s USING NCHAR_CS)) ESCAPE TRANSLATE('\\' USING NCHAR_CS)", 'iendswith': "LIKE UPPER(TRANSLATE(%s USING NCHAR_CS)) ESCAPE TRANSLATE('\\' USING NCHAR_CS)", } _likec_operators = _standard_operators.copy() _likec_operators.update({ 'contains': "LIKEC %s ESCAPE '\\'", 'icontains': "LIKEC UPPER(%s) ESCAPE '\\'", 'startswith': "LIKEC %s ESCAPE '\\'", 'endswith': "LIKEC %s ESCAPE '\\'", 'istartswith': "LIKEC UPPER(%s) ESCAPE '\\'", 'iendswith': "LIKEC UPPER(%s) ESCAPE '\\'", }) def __init__(self, *args, **kwargs): super(DatabaseWrapper, self).__init__(*args, **kwargs) self.oracle_version = None self.features = DatabaseFeatures(self) use_returning_into = self.settings_dict["OPTIONS"].get('use_returning_into', True) self.features.can_return_id_from_insert = use_returning_into self.ops = DatabaseOperations() self.client = DatabaseClient(self) self.creation = DatabaseCreation(self) self.introspection = DatabaseIntrospection(self) self.validation = BaseDatabaseValidation(self) def _valid_connection(self): return self.connection is not None def _connect_string(self): settings_dict = self.settings_dict if not settings_dict['HOST'].strip(): settings_dict['HOST'] = 'localhost' if settings_dict['PORT'].strip(): dsn = Database.makedsn(settings_dict['HOST'], int(settings_dict['PORT']), settings_dict['NAME']) else: dsn = settings_dict['NAME'] return "%s/%s@%s" % (settings_dict['USER'], settings_dict['PASSWORD'], dsn) def _cursor(self): cursor = None if not self._valid_connection(): conn_string = convert_unicode(self._connect_string()) conn_params = self.settings_dict['OPTIONS'].copy() if 'use_returning_into' in conn_params: del conn_params['use_returning_into'] self.connection = Database.connect(conn_string, **conn_params) cursor = FormatStylePlaceholderCursor(self.connection) # Set oracle date to ansi date format. This only needs to execute # once when we create a new connection. We also set the Territory # to 'AMERICA' which forces Sunday to evaluate to a '1' in TO_CHAR(). cursor.execute("ALTER SESSION SET NLS_DATE_FORMAT = 'YYYY-MM-DD HH24:MI:SS' " "NLS_TIMESTAMP_FORMAT = 'YYYY-MM-DD HH24:MI:SS.FF' " "NLS_TERRITORY = 'AMERICA'") if 'operators' not in self.__dict__: # Ticket #14149: Check whether our LIKE implementation will # work for this connection or we need to fall back on LIKEC. # This check is performed only once per DatabaseWrapper # instance per thread, since subsequent connections will use # the same settings. try: cursor.execute("SELECT 1 FROM DUAL WHERE DUMMY %s" % self._standard_operators['contains'], ['X']) except utils.DatabaseError: self.operators = self._likec_operators else: self.operators = self._standard_operators try: self.oracle_version = int(self.connection.version.split('.')[0]) # There's no way for the DatabaseOperations class to know the # currently active Oracle version, so we do some setups here. # TODO: Multi-db support will need a better solution (a way to # communicate the current version). if self.oracle_version <= 9: self.ops.regex_lookup = self.ops.regex_lookup_9 else: self.ops.regex_lookup = self.ops.regex_lookup_10 except ValueError: pass try: self.connection.stmtcachesize = 20 except: # Django docs specify cx_Oracle version 4.3.1 or higher, but # stmtcachesize is available only in 4.3.2 and up. pass connection_created.send(sender=self.__class__, connection=self) if not cursor: cursor = FormatStylePlaceholderCursor(self.connection) return cursor # Oracle doesn't support savepoint commits. Ignore them. def _savepoint_commit(self, sid): pass def _commit(self): if self.connection is not None: try: return self.connection.commit() except Database.IntegrityError, e: # In case cx_Oracle implements (now or in a future version) # raising this specific exception raise utils.IntegrityError, utils.IntegrityError(*tuple(e)), sys.exc_info()[2] except Database.DatabaseError, e: # cx_Oracle 5.0.4 raises a cx_Oracle.DatabaseError exception # with the following attributes and values: # code = 2091 # message = 'ORA-02091: transaction rolled back # 'ORA-02291: integrity constraint (TEST_DJANGOTEST.SYS # _C00102056) violated - parent key not found' # We convert that particular case to our IntegrityError exception x = e.args[0] if hasattr(x, 'code') and hasattr(x, 'message') \ and x.code == 2091 and 'ORA-02291' in x.message: raise utils.IntegrityError, utils.IntegrityError(*tuple(e)), sys.exc_info()[2] raise utils.DatabaseError, utils.DatabaseError(*tuple(e)), sys.exc_info()[2] class OracleParam(object): """ Wrapper object for formatting parameters for Oracle. If the string representation of the value is large enough (greater than 4000 characters) the input size needs to be set as CLOB. Alternatively, if the parameter has an `input_size` attribute, then the value of the `input_size` attribute will be used instead. Otherwise, no input size will be set for the parameter when executing the query. """ def __init__(self, param, cursor, strings_only=False): if hasattr(param, 'bind_parameter'): self.smart_str = param.bind_parameter(cursor) else: self.smart_str = convert_unicode(param, cursor.charset, strings_only) if hasattr(param, 'input_size'): # If parameter has `input_size` attribute, use that. self.input_size = param.input_size elif isinstance(param, basestring) and len(param) > 4000: # Mark any string param greater than 4000 characters as a CLOB. self.input_size = Database.CLOB else: self.input_size = None class VariableWrapper(object): """ An adapter class for cursor variables that prevents the wrapped object from being converted into a string when used to instanciate an OracleParam. This can be used generally for any other object that should be passed into Cursor.execute as-is. """ def __init__(self, var): self.var = var def bind_parameter(self, cursor): return self.var def __getattr__(self, key): return getattr(self.var, key) def __setattr__(self, key, value): if key == 'var': self.__dict__[key] = value else: setattr(self.var, key, value) class InsertIdVar(object): """ A late-binding cursor variable that can be passed to Cursor.execute as a parameter, in order to receive the id of the row created by an insert statement. """ def bind_parameter(self, cursor): param = cursor.cursor.var(Database.NUMBER) cursor._insert_id_var = param return param class FormatStylePlaceholderCursor(object): """ Django uses "format" (e.g. '%s') style placeholders, but Oracle uses ":var" style. This fixes it -- but note that if you want to use a literal "%s" in a query, you'll need to use "%%s". We also do automatic conversion between Unicode on the Python side and UTF-8 -- for talking to Oracle -- in here. """ charset = 'utf-8' def __init__(self, connection): self.cursor = connection.cursor() # Necessary to retrieve decimal values without rounding error. self.cursor.numbersAsStrings = True # Default arraysize of 1 is highly sub-optimal. self.cursor.arraysize = 100 def _format_params(self, params): return tuple([OracleParam(p, self, True) for p in params]) def _guess_input_sizes(self, params_list): sizes = [None] * len(params_list[0]) for params in params_list: for i, value in enumerate(params): if value.input_size: sizes[i] = value.input_size self.setinputsizes(*sizes) def _param_generator(self, params): return [p.smart_str for p in params] def execute(self, query, params=None): if params is None: params = [] else: params = self._format_params(params) args = [(':arg%d' % i) for i in range(len(params))] # cx_Oracle wants no trailing ';' for SQL statements. For PL/SQL, it # it does want a trailing ';' but not a trailing '/'. However, these # characters must be included in the original query in case the query # is being passed to SQL*Plus. if query.endswith(';') or query.endswith('/'): query = query[:-1] query = convert_unicode(query % tuple(args), self.charset) self._guess_input_sizes([params]) try: return self.cursor.execute(query, self._param_generator(params)) except Database.IntegrityError, e: raise utils.IntegrityError, utils.IntegrityError(*tuple(e)), sys.exc_info()[2] except Database.DatabaseError, e: # cx_Oracle <= 4.4.0 wrongly raises a DatabaseError for ORA-01400. if hasattr(e.args[0], 'code') and e.args[0].code == 1400 and not isinstance(e, IntegrityError): raise utils.IntegrityError, utils.IntegrityError(*tuple(e)), sys.exc_info()[2] raise utils.DatabaseError, utils.DatabaseError(*tuple(e)), sys.exc_info()[2] def executemany(self, query, params=None): try: args = [(':arg%d' % i) for i in range(len(params[0]))] except (IndexError, TypeError): # No params given, nothing to do return None # cx_Oracle wants no trailing ';' for SQL statements. For PL/SQL, it # it does want a trailing ';' but not a trailing '/'. However, these # characters must be included in the original query in case the query # is being passed to SQL*Plus. if query.endswith(';') or query.endswith('/'): query = query[:-1] query = convert_unicode(query % tuple(args), self.charset) formatted = [self._format_params(i) for i in params] self._guess_input_sizes(formatted) try: return self.cursor.executemany(query, [self._param_generator(p) for p in formatted]) except Database.IntegrityError, e: raise utils.IntegrityError, utils.IntegrityError(*tuple(e)), sys.exc_info()[2] except Database.DatabaseError, e: # cx_Oracle <= 4.4.0 wrongly raises a DatabaseError for ORA-01400. if hasattr(e.args[0], 'code') and e.args[0].code == 1400 and not isinstance(e, IntegrityError): raise utils.IntegrityError, utils.IntegrityError(*tuple(e)), sys.exc_info()[2] raise utils.DatabaseError, utils.DatabaseError(*tuple(e)), sys.exc_info()[2] def fetchone(self): row = self.cursor.fetchone() if row is None: return row return _rowfactory(row, self.cursor) def fetchmany(self, size=None): if size is None: size = self.arraysize return tuple([_rowfactory(r, self.cursor) for r in self.cursor.fetchmany(size)]) def fetchall(self): return tuple([_rowfactory(r, self.cursor) for r in self.cursor.fetchall()]) def var(self, *args): return VariableWrapper(self.cursor.var(*args)) def arrayvar(self, *args): return VariableWrapper(self.cursor.arrayvar(*args)) def __getattr__(self, attr): if attr in self.__dict__: return self.__dict__[attr] else: return getattr(self.cursor, attr) def __iter__(self): return CursorIterator(self.cursor) class CursorIterator(object): """Cursor iterator wrapper that invokes our custom row factory.""" def __init__(self, cursor): self.cursor = cursor self.iter = iter(cursor) def __iter__(self): return self def next(self): return _rowfactory(self.iter.next(), self.cursor) def _rowfactory(row, cursor): # Cast numeric values as the appropriate Python type based upon the # cursor description, and convert strings to unicode. casted = [] for value, desc in zip(row, cursor.description): if value is not None and desc[1] is Database.NUMBER: precision, scale = desc[4:6] if scale == -127: if precision == 0: # NUMBER column: decimal-precision floating point # This will normally be an integer from a sequence, # but it could be a decimal value. if '.' in value: value = Decimal(value) else: value = int(value) else: # FLOAT column: binary-precision floating point. # This comes from FloatField columns. value = float(value) elif precision > 0: # NUMBER(p,s) column: decimal-precision fixed point. # This comes from IntField and DecimalField columns. if scale == 0: value = int(value) else: value = Decimal(value) elif '.' in value: # No type information. This normally comes from a # mathematical expression in the SELECT list. Guess int # or Decimal based on whether it has a decimal point. value = Decimal(value) else: value = int(value) elif desc[1] in (Database.STRING, Database.FIXED_CHAR, Database.LONG_STRING): value = to_unicode(value) casted.append(value) return tuple(casted) def to_unicode(s): """ Convert strings to Unicode objects (and return all other data types unchanged). """ if isinstance(s, basestring): return force_unicode(s) return s def _get_sequence_reset_sql(): # TODO: colorize this SQL code with style.SQL_KEYWORD(), etc. return """ DECLARE table_value integer; seq_value integer; BEGIN SELECT NVL(MAX(%(column)s), 0) INTO table_value FROM %(table)s; SELECT NVL(last_number - cache_size, 0) INTO seq_value FROM user_sequences WHERE sequence_name = '%(sequence)s'; WHILE table_value > seq_value LOOP SELECT "%(sequence)s".nextval INTO seq_value FROM dual; END LOOP; END; /""" def get_sequence_name(table): name_length = DatabaseOperations().max_name_length() - 3 return '%s_SQ' % util.truncate_name(table, name_length).upper() def get_trigger_name(table): name_length = DatabaseOperations().max_name_length() - 3 return '%s_TR' % util.truncate_name(table, name_length).upper()