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Fixed #9919 -- Added note on the need to mark transactions as dirty when using raw SQL.
git-svn-id: http://code.djangoproject.com/svn/django/trunk@11022 bcc190cf-cafb-0310-a4f2-bffc1f526a37
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@ -616,6 +616,8 @@ call, since they are conflicting options.
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Both the ``depth`` argument and the ability to specify field names in the call
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to ``select_related()`` are new in Django version 1.0.
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.. _extra:
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``extra(select=None, where=None, params=None, tables=None, order_by=None, select_params=None)``
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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@ -29,6 +29,45 @@ is required. For example::
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return row
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.. _transactions-and-raw-sql:
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Transactions and raw SQL
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------------------------
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If you are using transaction decorators (such as ``commit_on_success``) to
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wrap your views and provide transaction control, you don't have to make a
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manual call to ``transaction.commit_unless_managed()`` -- you can manually
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commit if you want to, but you aren't required to, since the decorator will
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commit for you. However, if you don't manually commit your changes, you will
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need to manually mark the transaction as dirty, using
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``transaction.set_dirty()``::
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@commit_on_success
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def my_custom_sql_view(request, value):
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from django.db import connection, transaction
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cursor = connection.cursor()
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# Data modifying operation
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cursor.execute("UPDATE bar SET foo = 1 WHERE baz = %s", [value])
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# Since we modified data, mark the transaction as dirty
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transaction.set_dirty()
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# Data retrieval operation. This doesn't dirty the transaction,
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# so no call to set_dirty() is required.
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cursor.execute("SELECT foo FROM bar WHERE baz = %s", [value])
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row = cursor.fetchone()
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return render_to_response('template.html', {'row': row})
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The call to ``set_dirty()`` is made automatically when you use the Django ORM
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to make data modifying database calls. However, when you use raw SQL, Django
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has no way of knowing if your SQL modifies data or not. The manual call to
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``set_dirty()`` ensures that Django knows that there are modifications that
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must be committed.
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Connections and cursors
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-----------------------
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``connection`` and ``cursor`` mostly implement the standard `Python DB-API`_
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(except when it comes to :ref:`transaction handling <topics-db-transactions>`).
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If you're not familiar with the Python DB-API, note that the SQL statement in
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@ -39,9 +78,12 @@ necessary. (Also note that Django expects the ``"%s"`` placeholder, *not* the
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``"?"`` placeholder, which is used by the SQLite Python bindings. This is for
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the sake of consistency and sanity.)
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An easier option?
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-----------------
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A final note: If all you want to do is a custom ``WHERE`` clause, you can just
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use the ``where``, ``tables`` and ``params`` arguments to the standard lookup
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API.
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use the ``where``, ``tables`` and ``params`` arguments to the
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:ref:`extra clause <extra>` in the standard queryset API.
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.. _Python DB-API: http://www.python.org/peps/pep-0249.html
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