from django.db import models from django.db.models.loading import BaseAppCache from django.db.models.options import DEFAULT_NAMES from django.utils.module_loading import import_by_path class ProjectState(object): """ Represents the entire project's overall state. This is the item that is passed around - we do it here rather than at the app level so that cross-app FKs/etc. resolve properly. """ def __init__(self, models=None): self.models = models or {} self.app_cache = None def add_model_state(self, model_state): self.models[(model_state.app_label, model_state.name.lower())] = model_state def clone(self): "Returns an exact copy of this ProjectState" return ProjectState( models = dict((k, v.clone()) for k, v in self.models.items()) ) def render(self): "Turns the project state into actual models in a new AppCache" if self.app_cache is None: self.app_cache = BaseAppCache() for model in self.models.values(): model.render(self.app_cache) return self.app_cache @classmethod def from_app_cache(cls, app_cache): "Takes in an AppCache and returns a ProjectState matching it" models = {} for model in app_cache.get_models(): model_state = ModelState.from_model(model) models[(model_state.app_label, model_state.name.lower())] = model_state return cls(models) class ModelState(object): """ Represents a Django Model. We don't use the actual Model class as it's not designed to have its options changed - instead, we mutate this one and then render it into a Model as required. Note that while you are allowed to mutate .fields, you are not allowed to mutate the Field instances inside there themselves - you must instead assign new ones, as these are not detached during a clone. """ def __init__(self, app_label, name, fields, options=None, bases=None): self.app_label = app_label self.name = name self.fields = fields self.options = options or {} self.bases = bases or (models.Model, ) # Sanity-check that fields is NOT a dict. It must be ordered. if isinstance(self.fields, dict): raise ValueError("ModelState.fields cannot be a dict - it must be a list of 2-tuples.") @classmethod def from_model(cls, model): """ Feed me a model, get a ModelState representing it out. """ # Deconstruct the fields fields = [] for field in model._meta.local_fields: name, path, args, kwargs = field.deconstruct() field_class = import_by_path(path) fields.append((name, field_class(*args, **kwargs))) # Extract the options options = {} for name in DEFAULT_NAMES: # Ignore some special options if name in ["app_cache", "app_label"]: continue if name in model._meta.original_attrs: options[name] = model._meta.original_attrs[name] # Make our record return cls( model._meta.app_label, model._meta.object_name, fields, options, model.__bases__, ) def clone(self): "Returns an exact copy of this ModelState" return self.__class__( app_label = self.app_label, name = self.name, fields = list(self.fields), options = dict(self.options), bases = self.bases, ) def render(self, app_cache): "Creates a Model object from our current state into the given app_cache" # First, make a Meta object meta_contents = {'app_label': self.app_label, "app_cache": app_cache} meta_contents.update(self.options) meta = type("Meta", tuple(), meta_contents) # Then, work out our bases # TODO: Use the actual bases # Turn fields into a dict for the body, add other bits body = dict(self.fields) body['Meta'] = meta body['__module__'] = "__fake__" # Then, make a Model object return type( self.name, tuple(self.bases), body, )