django1/django/db/backends/sqlite3/schema.py

294 lines
13 KiB
Python

import codecs
import contextlib
import copy
from decimal import Decimal
from django.apps.registry import Apps
from django.db.backends.base.schema import BaseDatabaseSchemaEditor
class DatabaseSchemaEditor(BaseDatabaseSchemaEditor):
sql_delete_table = "DROP TABLE %(table)s"
sql_create_inline_fk = "REFERENCES %(to_table)s (%(to_column)s)"
sql_create_unique = "CREATE UNIQUE INDEX %(name)s ON %(table)s (%(columns)s)"
sql_delete_unique = "DROP INDEX %(name)s"
def __enter__(self):
with self.connection.cursor() as c:
# Some SQLite schema alterations need foreign key constraints to be
# disabled. This is the default in SQLite but can be changed with a
# build flag and might change in future, so can't be relied upon.
# Enforce it here for the duration of the transaction.
c.execute('PRAGMA foreign_keys')
self._initial_pragma_fk = c.fetchone()[0]
c.execute('PRAGMA foreign_keys = 0')
return super().__enter__()
def __exit__(self, exc_type, exc_value, traceback):
super().__exit__(exc_type, exc_value, traceback)
with self.connection.cursor() as c:
# Restore initial FK setting - PRAGMA values can't be parametrized
c.execute('PRAGMA foreign_keys = %s' % int(self._initial_pragma_fk))
def quote_value(self, value):
# The backend "mostly works" without this function and there are use
# cases for compiling Python without the sqlite3 libraries (e.g.
# security hardening).
try:
import sqlite3
value = sqlite3.adapt(value)
except ImportError:
pass
except sqlite3.ProgrammingError:
pass
# Manual emulation of SQLite parameter quoting
if isinstance(value, type(True)):
return str(int(value))
elif isinstance(value, (Decimal, float, int)):
return str(value)
elif isinstance(value, str):
return "'%s'" % value.replace("\'", "\'\'")
elif value is None:
return "NULL"
elif isinstance(value, (bytes, bytearray, memoryview)):
# Bytes are only allowed for BLOB fields, encoded as string
# literals containing hexadecimal data and preceded by a single "X"
# character:
# value = b'\x01\x02' => value_hex = b'0102' => return X'0102'
value = bytes(value)
hex_encoder = codecs.getencoder('hex_codec')
value_hex, _length = hex_encoder(value)
# Use 'ascii' encoding for b'01' => '01', no need to use force_text here.
return "X'%s'" % value_hex.decode('ascii')
else:
raise ValueError("Cannot quote parameter value %r of type %s" % (value, type(value)))
def _remake_table(self, model, create_field=None, delete_field=None, alter_field=None):
"""
Shortcut to transform a model from old_model into new_model
The essential steps are:
1. rename the model's existing table, e.g. "app_model" to "app_model__old"
2. create a table with the updated definition called "app_model"
3. copy the data from the old renamed table to the new table
4. delete the "app_model__old" table
"""
# Self-referential fields must be recreated rather than copied from
# the old model to ensure their remote_field.field_name doesn't refer
# to an altered field.
def is_self_referential(f):
return f.is_relation and f.remote_field.model is model
# Work out the new fields dict / mapping
body = {
f.name: f.clone() if is_self_referential(f) else f
for f in model._meta.local_concrete_fields
}
# Since mapping might mix column names and default values,
# its values must be already quoted.
mapping = {f.column: self.quote_name(f.column) for f in model._meta.local_concrete_fields}
# This maps field names (not columns) for things like unique_together
rename_mapping = {}
# If any of the new or altered fields is introducing a new PK,
# remove the old one
restore_pk_field = None
if getattr(create_field, 'primary_key', False) or (
alter_field and getattr(alter_field[1], 'primary_key', False)):
for name, field in list(body.items()):
if field.primary_key:
field.primary_key = False
restore_pk_field = field
if field.auto_created:
del body[name]
del mapping[field.column]
# Add in any created fields
if create_field:
body[create_field.name] = create_field
# Choose a default and insert it into the copy map
if not create_field.many_to_many and create_field.concrete:
mapping[create_field.column] = self.quote_value(
self.effective_default(create_field)
)
# Add in any altered fields
if alter_field:
old_field, new_field = alter_field
body.pop(old_field.name, None)
mapping.pop(old_field.column, None)
body[new_field.name] = new_field
if old_field.null and not new_field.null:
case_sql = "coalesce(%(col)s, %(default)s)" % {
'col': self.quote_name(old_field.column),
'default': self.quote_value(self.effective_default(new_field))
}
mapping[new_field.column] = case_sql
else:
mapping[new_field.column] = self.quote_name(old_field.column)
rename_mapping[old_field.name] = new_field.name
# Remove any deleted fields
if delete_field:
del body[delete_field.name]
del mapping[delete_field.column]
# Remove any implicit M2M tables
if delete_field.many_to_many and delete_field.remote_field.through._meta.auto_created:
return self.delete_model(delete_field.remote_field.through)
# Work inside a new app registry
apps = Apps()
# Provide isolated instances of the fields to the new model body so
# that the existing model's internals aren't interfered with when
# the dummy model is constructed.
body = copy.deepcopy(body)
# Work out the new value of unique_together, taking renames into
# account
unique_together = [
[rename_mapping.get(n, n) for n in unique]
for unique in model._meta.unique_together
]
# Work out the new value for index_together, taking renames into
# account
index_together = [
[rename_mapping.get(n, n) for n in index]
for index in model._meta.index_together
]
indexes = model._meta.indexes
if delete_field:
indexes = [
index for index in indexes
if delete_field.name not in index.fields
]
# Construct a new model for the new state
meta_contents = {
'app_label': model._meta.app_label,
'db_table': model._meta.db_table,
'unique_together': unique_together,
'index_together': index_together,
'indexes': indexes,
'apps': apps,
}
meta = type("Meta", tuple(), meta_contents)
body['Meta'] = meta
body['__module__'] = model.__module__
temp_model = type(model._meta.object_name, model.__bases__, body)
# We need to modify model._meta.db_table, but everything explodes
# if the change isn't reversed before the end of this method. This
# context manager helps us avoid that situation.
@contextlib.contextmanager
def altered_table_name(model, temporary_table_name):
original_table_name = model._meta.db_table
model._meta.db_table = temporary_table_name
yield
model._meta.db_table = original_table_name
with altered_table_name(model, model._meta.db_table + "__old"):
# Rename the old table to make way for the new
self.alter_db_table(model, temp_model._meta.db_table, model._meta.db_table)
# Create a new table with the updated schema. We remove things
# from the deferred SQL that match our table name, too
self.deferred_sql = [x for x in self.deferred_sql if temp_model._meta.db_table not in x]
self.create_model(temp_model)
# Copy data from the old table into the new table
field_maps = list(mapping.items())
self.execute("INSERT INTO %s (%s) SELECT %s FROM %s" % (
self.quote_name(temp_model._meta.db_table),
', '.join(self.quote_name(x) for x, y in field_maps),
', '.join(y for x, y in field_maps),
self.quote_name(model._meta.db_table),
))
# Delete the old table
self.delete_model(model, handle_autom2m=False)
# Run deferred SQL on correct table
for sql in self.deferred_sql:
self.execute(sql)
self.deferred_sql = []
# Fix any PK-removed field
if restore_pk_field:
restore_pk_field.primary_key = True
def delete_model(self, model, handle_autom2m=True):
if handle_autom2m:
super().delete_model(model)
else:
# Delete the table (and only that)
self.execute(self.sql_delete_table % {
"table": self.quote_name(model._meta.db_table),
})
def add_field(self, model, field):
"""
Create a field on a model. Usually involves adding a column, but may
involve adding a table instead (for M2M fields).
"""
# Special-case implicit M2M tables
if field.many_to_many and field.remote_field.through._meta.auto_created:
return self.create_model(field.remote_field.through)
self._remake_table(model, create_field=field)
def remove_field(self, model, field):
"""
Remove a field from a model. Usually involves deleting a column,
but for M2Ms may involve deleting a table.
"""
# M2M fields are a special case
if field.many_to_many:
# For implicit M2M tables, delete the auto-created table
if field.remote_field.through._meta.auto_created:
self.delete_model(field.remote_field.through)
# For explicit "through" M2M fields, do nothing
# For everything else, remake.
else:
# It might not actually have a column behind it
if field.db_parameters(connection=self.connection)['type'] is None:
return
self._remake_table(model, delete_field=field)
def _alter_field(self, model, old_field, new_field, old_type, new_type,
old_db_params, new_db_params, strict=False):
"""Perform a "physical" (non-ManyToMany) field update."""
# Alter by remaking table
self._remake_table(model, alter_field=(old_field, new_field))
def _alter_many_to_many(self, model, old_field, new_field, strict):
"""Alter M2Ms to repoint their to= endpoints."""
if old_field.remote_field.through._meta.db_table == new_field.remote_field.through._meta.db_table:
# The field name didn't change, but some options did; we have to propagate this altering.
self._remake_table(
old_field.remote_field.through,
alter_field=(
# We need the field that points to the target model, so we can tell alter_field to change it -
# this is m2m_reverse_field_name() (as opposed to m2m_field_name, which points to our model)
old_field.remote_field.through._meta.get_field(old_field.m2m_reverse_field_name()),
new_field.remote_field.through._meta.get_field(new_field.m2m_reverse_field_name()),
),
)
return
# Make a new through table
self.create_model(new_field.remote_field.through)
# Copy the data across
self.execute("INSERT INTO %s (%s) SELECT %s FROM %s" % (
self.quote_name(new_field.remote_field.through._meta.db_table),
', '.join([
"id",
new_field.m2m_column_name(),
new_field.m2m_reverse_name(),
]),
', '.join([
"id",
old_field.m2m_column_name(),
old_field.m2m_reverse_name(),
]),
self.quote_name(old_field.remote_field.through._meta.db_table),
))
# Delete the old through table
self.delete_model(old_field.remote_field.through)