from django.conf import settings from django.core import signals from django.core.exceptions import ImproperlyConfigured from django.db.utils import (ConnectionHandler, ConnectionRouter, load_backend, DEFAULT_DB_ALIAS, DatabaseError, IntegrityError) __all__ = ('backend', 'connection', 'connections', 'router', 'DatabaseError', 'IntegrityError', 'DEFAULT_DB_ALIAS') if DEFAULT_DB_ALIAS not in settings.DATABASES: raise ImproperlyConfigured("You must define a '%s' database" % DEFAULT_DB_ALIAS) connections = ConnectionHandler(settings.DATABASES) router = ConnectionRouter(settings.DATABASE_ROUTERS) # `connection`, `DatabaseError` and `IntegrityError` are convenient aliases # for backend bits. # DatabaseWrapper.__init__() takes a dictionary, not a settings module, so # we manually create the dictionary from the settings, passing only the # settings that the database backends care about. Note that TIME_ZONE is used # by the PostgreSQL backends. # we load all these up for backwards compatibility, you should use # connections['default'] instead. connection = connections[DEFAULT_DB_ALIAS] backend = load_backend(connection.settings_dict['ENGINE']) # Register an event that closes the database connection # when a Django request is finished. def close_connection(**kwargs): for conn in connections.all(): conn.close() signals.request_finished.connect(close_connection) # Register an event that resets connection.queries # when a Django request is started. def reset_queries(**kwargs): for conn in connections.all(): conn.queries = [] signals.request_started.connect(reset_queries) # Register an event that rolls back the connections # when a Django request has an exception. def _rollback_on_exception(**kwargs): from django.db import transaction for conn in connections: try: transaction.rollback_unless_managed(using=conn) except DatabaseError: pass signals.got_request_exception.connect(_rollback_on_exception)