""" MySQL database backend for Django. Requires MySQLdb: http://sourceforge.net/projects/mysql-python """ import re try: import MySQLdb as Database except ImportError, e: from django.core.exceptions import ImproperlyConfigured raise ImproperlyConfigured("Error loading MySQLdb module: %s" % e) # We want version (1, 2, 1, 'final', 2) or later. We can't just use # lexicographic ordering in this check because then (1, 2, 1, 'gamma') # inadvertently passes the version test. version = Database.version_info if (version < (1,2,1) or (version[:3] == (1, 2, 1) and (len(version) < 5 or version[3] != 'final' or version[4] < 2))): from django.core.exceptions import ImproperlyConfigured raise ImproperlyConfigured("MySQLdb-1.2.1p2 or newer is required; you have %s" % Database.__version__) from MySQLdb.converters import conversions from MySQLdb.constants import FIELD_TYPE, FLAG, CLIENT from django.db.backends import * from django.db.backends.signals import connection_created from django.db.backends.mysql.client import DatabaseClient from django.db.backends.mysql.creation import DatabaseCreation from django.db.backends.mysql.introspection import DatabaseIntrospection from django.db.backends.mysql.validation import DatabaseValidation from django.utils.safestring import SafeString, SafeUnicode # Raise exceptions for database warnings if DEBUG is on from django.conf import settings if settings.DEBUG: from warnings import filterwarnings filterwarnings("error", category=Database.Warning) DatabaseError = Database.DatabaseError IntegrityError = Database.IntegrityError # MySQLdb-1.2.1 returns TIME columns as timedelta -- they are more like # timedelta in terms of actual behavior as they are signed and include days -- # and Django expects time, so we still need to override that. We also need to # add special handling for SafeUnicode and SafeString as MySQLdb's type # checking is too tight to catch those (see Django ticket #6052). django_conversions = conversions.copy() django_conversions.update({ FIELD_TYPE.TIME: util.typecast_time, FIELD_TYPE.DECIMAL: util.typecast_decimal, FIELD_TYPE.NEWDECIMAL: util.typecast_decimal, }) # This should match the numerical portion of the version numbers (we can treat # versions like 5.0.24 and 5.0.24a as the same). Based on the list of version # at http://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/4.1/en/news.html and # http://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/5.0/en/news.html . server_version_re = re.compile(r'(\d{1,2})\.(\d{1,2})\.(\d{1,2})') # MySQLdb-1.2.1 and newer automatically makes use of SHOW WARNINGS on # MySQL-4.1 and newer, so the MysqlDebugWrapper is unnecessary. Since the # point is to raise Warnings as exceptions, this can be done with the Python # warning module, and this is setup when the connection is created, and the # standard util.CursorDebugWrapper can be used. Also, using sql_mode # TRADITIONAL will automatically cause most warnings to be treated as errors. class CursorWrapper(object): """ A thin wrapper around MySQLdb's normal cursor class so that we can catch particular exception instances and reraise them with the right types. Implemented as a wrapper, rather than a subclass, so that we aren't stuck to the particular underlying representation returned by Connection.cursor(). """ codes_for_integrityerror = (1048,) def __init__(self, cursor): self.cursor = cursor def execute(self, query, args=None): try: return self.cursor.execute(query, args) except Database.OperationalError, e: # Map some error codes to IntegrityError, since they seem to be # misclassified and Django would prefer the more logical place. if e[0] in self.codes_for_integrityerror: raise Database.IntegrityError(tuple(e)) raise def executemany(self, query, args): try: return self.cursor.executemany(query, args) except Database.OperationalError, e: # Map some error codes to IntegrityError, since they seem to be # misclassified and Django would prefer the more logical place. if e[0] in self.codes_for_integrityerror: raise Database.IntegrityError(tuple(e)) raise def __getattr__(self, attr): if attr in self.__dict__: return self.__dict__[attr] else: return getattr(self.cursor, attr) def __iter__(self): return iter(self.cursor) class DatabaseFeatures(BaseDatabaseFeatures): empty_fetchmany_value = () update_can_self_select = False allows_group_by_pk = True related_fields_match_type = True class DatabaseOperations(BaseDatabaseOperations): def date_extract_sql(self, lookup_type, field_name): # http://dev.mysql.com/doc/mysql/en/date-and-time-functions.html if lookup_type == 'week_day': # DAYOFWEEK() returns an integer, 1-7, Sunday=1. # Note: WEEKDAY() returns 0-6, Monday=0. return "DAYOFWEEK(%s)" % field_name else: return "EXTRACT(%s FROM %s)" % (lookup_type.upper(), field_name) def date_trunc_sql(self, lookup_type, field_name): fields = ['year', 'month', 'day', 'hour', 'minute', 'second'] format = ('%%Y-', '%%m', '-%%d', ' %%H:', '%%i', ':%%s') # Use double percents to escape. format_def = ('0000-', '01', '-01', ' 00:', '00', ':00') try: i = fields.index(lookup_type) + 1 except ValueError: sql = field_name else: format_str = ''.join([f for f in format[:i]] + [f for f in format_def[i:]]) sql = "CAST(DATE_FORMAT(%s, '%s') AS DATETIME)" % (field_name, format_str) return sql def drop_foreignkey_sql(self): return "DROP FOREIGN KEY" def force_no_ordering(self): """ "ORDER BY NULL" prevents MySQL from implicitly ordering by grouped columns. If no ordering would otherwise be applied, we don't want any implicit sorting going on. """ return ["NULL"] def fulltext_search_sql(self, field_name): return 'MATCH (%s) AGAINST (%%s IN BOOLEAN MODE)' % field_name def no_limit_value(self): # 2**64 - 1, as recommended by the MySQL documentation return 18446744073709551615L def quote_name(self, name): if name.startswith("`") and name.endswith("`"): return name # Quoting once is enough. return "`%s`" % name def random_function_sql(self): return 'RAND()' def sql_flush(self, style, tables, sequences): # NB: The generated SQL below is specific to MySQL # 'TRUNCATE x;', 'TRUNCATE y;', 'TRUNCATE z;'... style SQL statements # to clear all tables of all data if tables: sql = ['SET FOREIGN_KEY_CHECKS = 0;'] for table in tables: sql.append('%s %s;' % (style.SQL_KEYWORD('TRUNCATE'), style.SQL_FIELD(self.quote_name(table)))) sql.append('SET FOREIGN_KEY_CHECKS = 1;') # 'ALTER TABLE table AUTO_INCREMENT = 1;'... style SQL statements # to reset sequence indices sql.extend(["%s %s %s %s %s;" % \ (style.SQL_KEYWORD('ALTER'), style.SQL_KEYWORD('TABLE'), style.SQL_TABLE(self.quote_name(sequence['table'])), style.SQL_KEYWORD('AUTO_INCREMENT'), style.SQL_FIELD('= 1'), ) for sequence in sequences]) return sql else: return [] def value_to_db_datetime(self, value): if value is None: return None # MySQL doesn't support tz-aware datetimes if value.tzinfo is not None: raise ValueError("MySQL backend does not support timezone-aware datetimes.") # MySQL doesn't support microseconds return unicode(value.replace(microsecond=0)) def value_to_db_time(self, value): if value is None: return None # MySQL doesn't support tz-aware datetimes if value.tzinfo is not None: raise ValueError("MySQL backend does not support timezone-aware datetimes.") # MySQL doesn't support microseconds return unicode(value.replace(microsecond=0)) def year_lookup_bounds(self, value): # Again, no microseconds first = '%s-01-01 00:00:00' second = '%s-12-31 23:59:59.99' return [first % value, second % value] class DatabaseWrapper(BaseDatabaseWrapper): operators = { 'exact': '= %s', 'iexact': 'LIKE %s', 'contains': 'LIKE BINARY %s', 'icontains': 'LIKE %s', 'regex': 'REGEXP BINARY %s', 'iregex': 'REGEXP %s', 'gt': '> %s', 'gte': '>= %s', 'lt': '< %s', 'lte': '<= %s', 'startswith': 'LIKE BINARY %s', 'endswith': 'LIKE BINARY %s', 'istartswith': 'LIKE %s', 'iendswith': 'LIKE %s', } def __init__(self, *args, **kwargs): super(DatabaseWrapper, self).__init__(*args, **kwargs) self.server_version = None self.features = DatabaseFeatures() self.ops = DatabaseOperations() self.client = DatabaseClient(self) self.creation = DatabaseCreation(self) self.introspection = DatabaseIntrospection(self) self.validation = DatabaseValidation() def _valid_connection(self): if self.connection is not None: try: self.connection.ping() return True except DatabaseError: self.connection.close() self.connection = None return False def _cursor(self): if not self._valid_connection(): kwargs = { 'conv': django_conversions, 'charset': 'utf8', 'use_unicode': True, } settings_dict = self.settings_dict if settings_dict['DATABASE_USER']: kwargs['user'] = settings_dict['DATABASE_USER'] if settings_dict['DATABASE_NAME']: kwargs['db'] = settings_dict['DATABASE_NAME'] if settings_dict['DATABASE_PASSWORD']: kwargs['passwd'] = settings_dict['DATABASE_PASSWORD'] if settings_dict['DATABASE_HOST'].startswith('/'): kwargs['unix_socket'] = settings_dict['DATABASE_HOST'] elif settings_dict['DATABASE_HOST']: kwargs['host'] = settings_dict['DATABASE_HOST'] if settings_dict['DATABASE_PORT']: kwargs['port'] = int(settings_dict['DATABASE_PORT']) # We need the number of potentially affected rows after an # "UPDATE", not the number of changed rows. kwargs['client_flag'] = CLIENT.FOUND_ROWS kwargs.update(settings_dict['DATABASE_OPTIONS']) self.connection = Database.connect(**kwargs) self.connection.encoders[SafeUnicode] = self.connection.encoders[unicode] self.connection.encoders[SafeString] = self.connection.encoders[str] connection_created.send(sender=self.__class__) cursor = CursorWrapper(self.connection.cursor()) return cursor def _rollback(self): try: BaseDatabaseWrapper._rollback(self) except Database.NotSupportedError: pass def get_server_version(self): if not self.server_version: if not self._valid_connection(): self.cursor() m = server_version_re.match(self.connection.get_server_info()) if not m: raise Exception('Unable to determine MySQL version from version string %r' % self.connection.get_server_info()) self.server_version = tuple([int(x) for x in m.groups()]) return self.server_version