django/tests/regressiontests/transactions_regress/tests.py

165 lines
6.4 KiB
Python
Raw Normal View History

from django.core.exceptions import ImproperlyConfigured
from django.db import connection, transaction
from django.db.transaction import commit_on_success, commit_manually, TransactionManagementError
from django.test import TransactionTestCase, skipUnlessDBFeature
from models import Mod
class TestTransactionClosing(TransactionTestCase):
"""
Tests to make sure that transactions are properly closed
when they should be, and aren't left pending after operations
have been performed in them. Refs #9964.
"""
def test_raw_committed_on_success(self):
"""
Make sure a transaction consisting of raw SQL execution gets
committed by the commit_on_success decorator.
"""
@commit_on_success
def raw_sql():
"Write a record using raw sql under a commit_on_success decorator"
cursor = connection.cursor()
cursor.execute("INSERT into transactions_regress_mod (id,fld) values (17,18)")
raw_sql()
# Rollback so that if the decorator didn't commit, the record is unwritten
transaction.rollback()
try:
# Check that the record is in the DB
obj = Mod.objects.get(pk=17)
self.assertEqual(obj.fld, 18)
except Mod.DoesNotExist:
self.fail("transaction with raw sql not committed")
def test_commit_manually_enforced(self):
"""
Make sure that under commit_manually, even "read-only" transaction require closure
(commit or rollback), and a transaction left pending is treated as an error.
"""
@commit_manually
def non_comitter():
"Execute a managed transaction with read-only operations and fail to commit"
_ = Mod.objects.count()
self.assertRaises(TransactionManagementError, non_comitter)
def test_commit_manually_commit_ok(self):
"""
Test that under commit_manually, a committed transaction is accepted by the transaction
management mechanisms
"""
@commit_manually
def committer():
"""
Perform a database query, then commit the transaction
"""
_ = Mod.objects.count()
transaction.commit()
try:
committer()
except TransactionManagementError:
self.fail("Commit did not clear the transaction state")
def test_commit_manually_rollback_ok(self):
"""
Test that under commit_manually, a rolled-back transaction is accepted by the transaction
management mechanisms
"""
@commit_manually
def roller_back():
"""
Perform a database query, then rollback the transaction
"""
_ = Mod.objects.count()
transaction.rollback()
try:
roller_back()
except TransactionManagementError:
self.fail("Rollback did not clear the transaction state")
def test_commit_manually_enforced_after_commit(self):
"""
Test that under commit_manually, if a transaction is committed and an operation is
performed later, we still require the new transaction to be closed
"""
@commit_manually
def fake_committer():
"Query, commit, then query again, leaving with a pending transaction"
_ = Mod.objects.count()
transaction.commit()
_ = Mod.objects.count()
self.assertRaises(TransactionManagementError, fake_committer)
@skipUnlessDBFeature('supports_transactions')
def test_reuse_cursor_reference(self):
"""
Make sure transaction closure is enforced even when the queries are performed
through a single cursor reference retrieved in the beginning
(this is to show why it is wrong to set the transaction dirty only when a cursor
is fetched from the connection).
"""
@commit_on_success
def reuse_cursor_ref():
"""
Fetch a cursor, perform an query, rollback to close the transaction,
then write a record (in a new transaction) using the same cursor object
(reference). All this under commit_on_success, so the second insert should
be committed.
"""
cursor = connection.cursor()
cursor.execute("INSERT into transactions_regress_mod (id,fld) values (1,2)")
transaction.rollback()
cursor.execute("INSERT into transactions_regress_mod (id,fld) values (1,2)")
reuse_cursor_ref()
# Rollback so that if the decorator didn't commit, the record is unwritten
transaction.rollback()
try:
# Check that the record is in the DB
obj = Mod.objects.get(pk=1)
self.assertEquals(obj.fld, 2)
except Mod.DoesNotExist:
self.fail("After ending a transaction, cursor use no longer sets dirty")
def test_failing_query_transaction_closed(self):
"""
Make sure that under commit_on_success, a transaction is rolled back even if
the first database-modifying operation fails.
This is prompted by http://code.djangoproject.com/ticket/6669 (and based on sample
code posted there to exemplify the problem): Before Django 1.3,
transactions were only marked "dirty" by the save() function after it successfully
wrote the object to the database.
"""
from django.contrib.auth.models import User
@transaction.commit_on_success
def create_system_user():
"Create a user in a transaction"
user = User.objects.create_user(username='system', password='iamr00t', email='root@SITENAME.com')
# Redundant, just makes sure the user id was read back from DB
Mod.objects.create(fld=user.id)
# Create a user
create_system_user()
try:
# The second call to create_system_user should fail for violating a unique constraint
# (it's trying to re-create the same user)
create_system_user()
except:
pass
else:
raise ImproperlyConfigured('Unique constraint not enforced on django.contrib.auth.models.User')
try:
# Try to read the database. If the last transaction was indeed closed,
# this should cause no problems
_ = User.objects.all()[0]
except:
self.fail("A transaction consisting of a failed operation was not closed.")