Fixed #22343 -- Disallowed select_for_update in autocommit mode

The ticket was originally about two failing tests, which are
fixed by putting their queries in transactions.

Thanks Tim Graham for the report, Aymeric Augustin for the fix,
and Simon Charette, Tim Graham & Loïc Bistuer for review.
This commit is contained in:
Shai Berger 2014-03-30 20:03:35 +03:00
parent 071c933775
commit f095356ba2
6 changed files with 94 additions and 4 deletions

View File

@ -11,6 +11,7 @@ from django.db.models.sql.constants import (CURSOR, SINGLE, MULTI, NO_RESULTS,
from django.db.models.sql.datastructures import EmptyResultSet
from django.db.models.sql.expressions import SQLEvaluator
from django.db.models.sql.query import get_order_dir, Query
from django.db.transaction import TransactionManagementError
from django.db.utils import DatabaseError
from django.utils import six
from django.utils.six.moves import zip
@ -157,6 +158,9 @@ class SQLCompiler(object):
result.append('OFFSET %d' % self.query.low_mark)
if self.query.select_for_update and self.connection.features.has_select_for_update:
if self.connection.get_autocommit():
raise TransactionManagementError("select_for_update cannot be used outside of a transaction.")
# If we've been asked for a NOWAIT query but the backend does not support it,
# raise a DatabaseError otherwise we could get an unexpected deadlock.
nowait = self.query.select_for_update_nowait

View File

@ -1365,9 +1365,19 @@ do not support ``nowait``, such as MySQL, will cause a
:exc:`~django.db.DatabaseError` to be raised. This is in order to prevent code
unexpectedly blocking.
Executing a queryset with ``select_for_update`` in autocommit mode is
an error because the rows are then not locked. If allowed, this would
facilitate data corruption, and could easily be caused by calling,
outside of any transaction, code that expects to be run in one.
Using ``select_for_update`` on backends which do not support
``SELECT ... FOR UPDATE`` (such as SQLite) will have no effect.
.. versionchanged:: 1.6.3
It is now an error to execute a query with ``select_for_update()`` in
autocommit mode. With earlier releases in the 1.6 series it was a no-op.
raw
~~~

View File

@ -5,7 +5,33 @@ Django 1.6.3 release notes
*Under development*
This is Django 1.6.3, a bugfix release for Django 1.6. Django 1.6.3 fixes
several bugs in 1.6.2:
several bugs in 1.6.2 and makes one backwards-incompatible change:
``select_for_update()`` requires a transaction
==============================================
Historically, queries that use
:meth:`~django.db.models.query.QuerySet.select_for_update()` could be
executed in autocommit mode, outside of a transaction. Before Django
1.6, Django's automatic transactions mode allowed this to be used to
lock records until the next write operation. Django 1.6 introduced
database-level autocommit; since then, execution in such a context
voids the effect of ``select_for_update()``. It is, therefore, assumed
now to be an error, and raises an exception.
This change may cause test failures if you use ``select_for_update()``
in a test class which is a subclass of
:class:`~django.test.TransactionTestCase` rather than
:class:`~django.test.TestCase`.
This change was made because such errors can be caused by including an
app which expects global transactions (e.g. :setting:`ATOMIC_REQUESTS
<DATABASE-ATOMIC_REQUESTS>` set to True), or Django's old autocommit
behavior, in a project which runs without them; and further, such
errors may manifest as data-corruption bugs.
Other bugfixes and changes
==========================
* Content retrieved from the GeoIP library is now properly decoded from its
default ``iso-8859-1`` encoding

View File

@ -1086,6 +1086,31 @@ Note also that the admin login form has been updated to not contain the
``this_is_the_login_form`` field (now unused) and the ``ValidationError`` code
has been set to the more regular ``invalid_login`` key.
``select_for_update()`` requires a transaction
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Historically, queries that use
:meth:`~django.db.models.query.QuerySet.select_for_update()` could be
executed in autocommit mode, outside of a transaction. Before Django
1.6, Django's automatic transactions mode allowed this to be used to
lock records until the next write operation. Django 1.6 introduced
database-level autocommit; since then, execution in such a context
voids the effect of ``select_for_update()``. It is, therefore, assumed
now to be an error, and raises an exception.
This change may cause test failures if you use ``select_for_update()``
in a test class which is a subclass of
:class:`~django.test.TransactionTestCase` rather than
:class:`~django.test.TestCase`.
This change was made because such errors can be caused by including an
app which expects global transactions (e.g. :setting:`ATOMIC_REQUESTS
<DATABASE-ATOMIC_REQUESTS>` set to True), or Django's old autocommit
behavior, in a project which runs without them; and further, such
errors may manifest as data-corruption bugs.
This was also fixed in Django 1.6.3.
Miscellaneous
~~~~~~~~~~~~~

View File

@ -695,7 +695,10 @@ Select for update
If you were relying on "automatic transactions" to provide locking between
:meth:`~django.db.models.query.QuerySet.select_for_update` and a subsequent
write operation — an extremely fragile design, but nonetheless possible — you
must wrap the relevant code in :func:`atomic`.
must wrap the relevant code in :func:`atomic`. Since Django 1.6.3, executing
a query with :meth:`~django.db.models.query.QuerySet.select_for_update` in
autocommit mode will raise a
:exc:`~django.db.transaction.TransactionManagementError`.
Using a high isolation level
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

View File

@ -77,7 +77,8 @@ class SelectForUpdateTests(TransactionTestCase):
Test that the backend's FOR UPDATE variant appears in
generated SQL when select_for_update is invoked.
"""
list(Person.objects.all().select_for_update())
with transaction.atomic():
list(Person.objects.all().select_for_update())
self.assertTrue(self.has_for_update_sql(connection))
@skipUnlessDBFeature('has_select_for_update_nowait')
@ -86,7 +87,8 @@ class SelectForUpdateTests(TransactionTestCase):
Test that the backend's FOR UPDATE NOWAIT variant appears in
generated SQL when select_for_update is invoked.
"""
list(Person.objects.all().select_for_update(nowait=True))
with transaction.atomic():
list(Person.objects.all().select_for_update(nowait=True))
self.assertTrue(self.has_for_update_sql(connection, nowait=True))
@requires_threading
@ -125,6 +127,26 @@ class SelectForUpdateTests(TransactionTestCase):
Person.objects.all().select_for_update(nowait=True)
)
@skipUnlessDBFeature('has_select_for_update')
def test_for_update_requires_transaction(self):
"""
Test that a TransactionManagementError is raised
when a select_for_update query is executed outside of a transaction.
"""
with self.assertRaises(transaction.TransactionManagementError):
list(Person.objects.all().select_for_update())
@skipUnlessDBFeature('has_select_for_update')
def test_for_update_requires_transaction_only_in_execution(self):
"""
Test that no TransactionManagementError is raised
when select_for_update is invoked outside of a transaction -
only when the query is executed.
"""
people = Person.objects.all().select_for_update()
with self.assertRaises(transaction.TransactionManagementError):
list(people)
def run_select_for_update(self, status, nowait=False):
"""
Utility method that runs a SELECT FOR UPDATE against all