to support dialect-level reflection options for all :class:`.Table`
objects reflected.
- Added a new dialect-level argument ``postgresql_ignore_search_path``;
this argument is accepted by both the :class:`.Table` constructor
as well as by the :meth:`.MetaData.reflect` method. When in use
against Postgresql, a foreign-key referenced table which specifies
a remote schema name will retain that schema name even if the name
is present in the ``search_path``; the default behavior since 0.7.3
has been that schemas present in ``search_path`` would not be copied
to reflected :class:`.ForeignKey` objects. The documentation has been
updated to describe in detail the behavior of the ``pg_get_constraintdef()``
function and how the ``postgresql_ignore_search_path`` feature essentially
determines if we will honor the schema qualification reported by
this function or not. [ticket:2922]
the schema target of a :class:`.ForeignKey` will not be changed unless
that schema matches that of the parent table. That is, if
a table "schema_a.user" has a foreign key to "schema_b.order.id",
the "schema_b" target will be maintained whether or not the
"schema" argument is passed to :meth:`.Table.tometadata`. However
if a table "schema_a.user" refers to "schema_a.order.id", the presence
of "schema_a" will be updated on both the parent and referred tables.
This is a behavioral change hence isn't likely to be backported to
0.8; it is assumed that the previous behavior is pretty buggy
however and that it's unlikely anyone was relying upon it.
Additionally, a new parameter has been added
:paramref:`.Table.tometadata.referred_schema_fn`. This refers to a
callable function which will be used to determine the new referred
schema for any :class:`.ForeignKeyConstraint` encountered in the
tometadata operation. This callable can be used to revert to the
previous behavior or to customize how referred schemas are treated
on a per-constraint basis. [ticket:2913]
- rework the tests in test.sql.test_metadata, all the "tometadata" tests
now under new class ToMetaDataTest
oriented row lookups were not matching up to the ad-hoc :class:`.ColumnClause`
objects that :class:`.TextAsFrom` generates, thereby making it not
usable as a target in :meth:`.Query.from_statement`. Also fixed
:meth:`.Query.from_statement` mechanics to not mistake a :class:`.TextAsFrom`
for a :class:`.Select` construct. This bug is also an 0.9 regression
as the :meth:`.Text.columns` method is called to accommodate the
:paramref:`.text.typemap` argument. [ticket:2932]
applied to :class:`.Constraint` and :class:`.Index` objects. Based
on a recipe in the wiki, the new feature uses schema-events to set up
names as various schema objects are associated with each other. The
events then expose a configuration system through a new argument
:paramref:`.MetaData.naming_convention`. This system allows production
of both simple and custom naming schemes for constraints and indexes
on a per-:class:`.MetaData` basis. [ticket:2923]
commit 7e65e52c086652de3dd3303c723f98f09af54db8
Author: Mike Bayer <mike_mp@zzzcomputing.com>
Date: Sat Feb 1 15:09:04 2014 -0500
- first pass at new naming approach
to disable autoflush, in the case that the attribute needs to lazy-load
the "old" value, as in when replacing one-to-one values or some
kinds of many-to-one. A flush at this point otherwise occurs
at the point that the attribute is None and can cause NULL violations.
[ticket:2921]
flag allows a custom op from :meth:`.Operators.op` to be considered
as a "comparison" operator, thus usable for custom
:paramref:`.relationship.primaryjoin` conditions.
such as "literal binds" into a CAST expression.
- Fixed bug whereby binary type would fail in some cases
if used with a "test" dialect, such as a DefaultDialect or other
dialect with no DBAPI.
- Fixed bug where "literal binds" wouldn't work with a bound parameter
that's a binary type. A similar, but different, issue is fixed
in 0.8.
into the names used by standard functions in :mod:`sqlalchemy.sql.functions`,
such as ``func.coalesce()`` and ``func.max()``. Using these functions
in ORM attributes and thus producing annotated versions of them could
corrupt the actual function name rendered in the SQL. [ticket:2927]
would lead to ``TypeError`` when compared to non-tuple types as it attempted
to apply tuple() to the "other" object unconditionally. The
full range of Python comparison operators have now been implemented on
:class:`.RowProxy`, using an approach that guarantees a comparison
system that is equivalent to that of a tuple, and the "other" object
is only coerced if it's an instance of RowProxy. [ticket:2924]
:class:`.Query` and in other situations where selects or joins
were aliased (such as joined table inheritance) could fail if a
user-defined :class:`.Column` subclass were used in the expression.
In this case, the subclass would fail to propagate ORM-specific
"annotations" along needed by the adaptation. The "expression
annotations" system has been corrected to account for this case.
[ticket:2918]
target of :paramref:`.relationship.secondary` for the purposes
of creating very complex :func:`.relationship` join conditions.
The change includes adjustments to query joining, joined eager loading
to not render a SELECT subquery, changes to lazy loading such that
the "secondary" target is properly included in the SELECT, and
changes to declarative to better support specification of a
join() object with classes as targets.
where a more specific type is adapted to a more generic one - this
use case is needed by some third party tools such as ``sqlacodegen``.
The specific cases that needed repair within this test suite were that
of :class:`.mysql.ENUM` being downcast into a :class:`.types.Enum`,
and that of SQLite date types being cast into generic date types.
The ``adapt()`` method needed to become more specific here to counteract
the removal of a "catch all" ``**kwargs`` collection on the base
:class:`.TypeEngine` class that was removed in 0.9. [ticket:2917]
MySQL, to correctly render the SET clause among multiple columns
with the same name across tables. This also changes the name used for
the bound parameter in the SET clause to "<tablename>_<colname>" for
the non-primary table only; as this parameter is typically specified
using the :class:`.Column` object directly this should not have an
impact on applications. The fix takes effect for both
:meth:`.Table.update` as well as :meth:`.Query.update` in the ORM.
[ticket:2912]
reflection now updates the PKC in place.
- support the use case of the empty PrimaryKeyConstraint in order to specify
constraint options; the columns marked as primary_key=True will now be gathered
into the columns collection, rather than being ignored. [ticket:2910]
- add validation such that column specification should only take place
in the PrimaryKeyConstraint directly, or by using primary_key=True flags;
if both are present, they have to match exactly, otherwise the condition is
assumed to be ambiguous, and a warning is emitted; the old behavior of
using the PKC columns only is maintained.
now represents exactly the kwargs that were passed, and not the defaults.
the defaults are still in dialect_options. This allows repr() schemes such as that
of alembic to not need to look through and compare for defaults.