Fixed regression caused by new support for reflection of partial indexes on
SQLite added in 1.4.45 for 🎫`8804`, where the ``index_list`` pragma
command in very old versions of SQLite (possibly prior to 3.8.9) does not
return the current expected number of columns, leading to exceptions raised
when reflecting tables and indexes.
Fixes: #8969
Change-Id: If317cdcfc6782f7e180df329b6ea0ddb48ce2269
(cherry picked from commit e026a0f3562bec5fbc18e223176be8121c147193)
Added support for the SQLite backend to reflect the "DEFERRABLE" and
"INITIALLY" keywords which may be present on a foreign key construct. Pull
request courtesy Michael Gorven.
Fixes: #8903Closes: #8904
Pull-request: https://github.com/sqlalchemy/sqlalchemy/pull/8904
Pull-request-sha: 52aa4cf774
Change-Id: I713906db1a458d8f1be39625841ca3bbc03ec835
(cherry picked from commit 07760011b5)
Added support for reflection of expression-oriented WHERE criteria included
in indexes on the SQLite dialect, in a manner similar to that of the
PostgreSQL dialect. Pull request courtesy Tobias Pfeiffer.
Fixes: #8804Closes: #8806
Pull-request: https://github.com/sqlalchemy/sqlalchemy/pull/8806
Pull-request-sha: 539dfcb372
Change-Id: I0e34d47dbe2b9c1da6fce531363084843e5127a3
(cherry picked from commit ed39e846cd)
Backported a fix for SQLite reflection of unique constraints in attached
schemas, released in 2.0 as a small part of 🎫`4379`. Previously,
unique constraints in attached schemas would be ignored by SQLite
reflection. Pull request courtesy Michael Gorven.
Fixes: #8866Closes: #8867
Pull-request: https://github.com/sqlalchemy/sqlalchemy/pull/8867
Pull-request-sha: 94a5736170
Change-Id: Id414aeed9d6ce58877d81df2459f6d4f308750a8
Fixed bug where the PostgreSQL :meth:`_postgresql.Insert.on_conflict`
method and the SQLite :meth:`_sqlite.Insert.on_conflict` method would both
fail to correctly accommodate a column with a separate ".key" when
specifying the column using its key name in the dictionary passed to
``set_``, as well as if the :attr:`_sqlite.Insert.excluded` or
:attr:`_postgresql.Insert.excluded` collection were used as the dictionary
directly.
Fixes: #8014
Change-Id: I67226aeedcb2c683e22405af64720cc1f990f274
(cherry picked from commit 927abc3b33)
Fixed issue where SQLite unique constraint reflection would not work
for an inline UNIQUE constraint where the column name had an underscore
in its name.
Added support for reflecting SQLite inline unique constraints where
the column names are formatted with SQLite "escape quotes" ``[]``
or `` ` ``, which are discarded by the database when producing the
column name.
Fixes: #7736
Change-Id: I635003478dc27193995f7d7a6448f9333a498706
(cherry picked from commit 834af17a46)
Adjusted the compiler's generation of "post compile" symbols including
those used for "expanding IN" as well as for the "schema translate map" to
not be based directly on plain bracketed strings with underscores, as this
conflicts directly with SQL Server's quoting format of also using brackets,
which produces false matches when the compiler replaces "post compile" and
"schema translate" symbols. The issue created easy to reproduce examples
both with the :meth:`.Inspector.get_schema_names` method when used in
conjunction with the
:paramref:`_engine.Connection.execution_options.schema_translate_map`
feature, as well in the unlikely case that a symbol overlapping with the
internal name "POSTCOMPILE" would be used with a feature like "expanding
in".
Fixes: #7300
Change-Id: I6255c850b140522a4aba95085216d0bca18ce230
(cherry picked from commit b919a0a85a)
Fixed bug where the error message for SQLite invalid isolation level on the
pysqlite driver would fail to indicate that "AUTOCOMMIT" is one of the
valid isolation levels.
Change-Id: Icbceab9a28af6a560859761fa92320b5473269a9
References: #6959
The fix for pysqlcipher released in version 1.4.3 🎫`5848` was
unfortunately non-working, in that the new ``on_connect_url`` hook was
erroneously not receiving a ``URL`` object under normal usage of
:func:`_sa.create_engine` and instead received a string that was unhandled;
the test suite failed to fully set up the actual conditions under which
this hook is called. This has been fixed.
Fixes: #6586
Change-Id: I3bf738daec35877a10fdad740f08dca9e7420829
The :class:`.TypeDecorator` class will now emit a warning when used in SQL
compilation with caching unless the ``.cache_ok`` flag is set to ``True``
or ``False``. ``.cache_ok`` indicates that all the parameters passed to the
object are safe to be used as a cache key, ``False`` means they are not.
Fixes: #6436
Change-Id: Ib1bb7dc4b124e38521d615c2e2e691e4915594fb
database created using filename uri
Default to using ``SingletonThreadPool`` for in-memory SQLite databases
created using URI filenames. Previously the default pool used was the
``NullPool`` that precented sharing the same database between multiple
engines.
Fixes: #6379Closes: #6380
Pull-request: https://github.com/sqlalchemy/sqlalchemy/pull/6380
Pull-request-sha: 3b8024417a
Change-Id: Ice09622796455e796ede7711c98f3ceec13aa949
The ``pysqlcipher`` dialect now imports the ``sqlcipher3`` module
for Python 3 by default. Regressions have been repaired such that
the connection routine was not working.
To better support the post-connection steps of the pysqlcipher
dialect, a new hook Dialect.on_connect_url() is added, which
supersedes Dialect.on_connect() and is passed the URL object.
The dialect now pulls the passphrase and other cipher args
from the URL directly without including them in the
"connect" args. This will allow any user-defined extensibility
to connecting to work as it would for other dialects.
The commit also builds upon the extended routines in
sqlite/provisioning.py to better support running tests against
multiple simultaneous SQLite database files. Additionally enables
backend for test_sqlite which was skipping everything
for aiosqlite too, fortunately everything there is passing.
Fixes: #5848
Change-Id: I43f53ebc62298a84a4abe149e1eb699a027b7915
Added support for the aiosqlite database driver for use with the
SQLAlchemy asyncio extension.
Fixes: #5920
Change-Id: Id11a320516a44e886a6f518d2866a0f992413e55
This introduces the ``_exclusive_against()`` utility decorator
that can be used to prevent repeated invocations of methods that
typically should only be called once.
An informative error message is now raised for a selected set of DML
methods (currently all part of :class:`_dml.Insert` constructs) if they are
called a second time, which would implicitly cancel out the previous
setting. The methods altered include:
:class:`_sqlite.Insert.on_conflict_do_update`,
:class:`_sqlite.Insert.on_conflict_do_nothing` (SQLite),
:class:`_postgresql.Insert.on_conflict_do_update`,
:class:`_postgresql.Insert.on_conflict_do_nothing` (PostgreSQL),
:class:`_mysql.Insert.on_duplicate_key_update` (MySQL)
Fixes: #5169
Change-Id: I9278fa87cd3470dcf296ff96bb0fb17a3236d49d
Fixed bug in "future" version of :class:`.Engine` where emitting SQL during
the :meth:`.EngineEvents.do_begin` event hook would cause a re-entrant
condition due to autobegin, including the recipe documented for SQLite to
allow for savepoints and serializable isolation support.
Fixed issue in new :class:`_orm.Session` similar to that of the
:class:`_engine.Connection` where the new "autobegin" logic could be
tripped into a re-entrant state if SQL were executed within the
:meth:`.SessionEvents.after_transaction_create` event hook.
Also repair the new "testing_engine" pytest fixture to
set up for "future" engine appropriately, which wasn't working
leading to the test_execute.py tests not using the future
engine since recent f1e96cb087.
Fixes: #5845
Change-Id: Ib2432d8c8bd753e24be60720ec47affb2df15a4a
continuing with producing a SQLAlchemy 1.4.0b2 that internally
does not emit any of its own 2.0 deprecation warnings,
migrate the *args and **kwargs passed to execute() methods
that now must be a single list or dictionary.
Alembic 1.5 is again waiting on this internal consistency to
be present so that it can pass all tests with no 2.0
deprecation warnings.
Change-Id: If6b792e57c8c5dff205419644ab68e631575a2fa
To allow the "connection" pytest fixture and others work
correctly in conjunction with setup/teardown that expects
to be external to the transaction, remove and prevent any usage
of "xdist" style names that are hardcoded by pytest to run
inside of fixtures, even function level ones. Instead use
pytest autouse fixtures to implement our own
r"setup|teardown_test(?:_class)?" methods so that we can ensure
function-scoped fixtures are run within them. A new more
explicit flow is set up within plugin_base and pytestplugin
such that the order of setup/teardown steps, which there are now
many, is fully documented and controllable. New granularity
has been added to the test teardown phase to distinguish
between "end of the test" when lock-holding structures on
connections should be released to allow for table drops,
vs. "end of the test plus its teardown steps" when we can
perform final cleanup on connections and run assertions
that everything is closed out.
From there we can remove most of the defensive "tear down everything"
logic inside of engines which for many years would frequently dispose
of pools over and over again, creating for a broken and expensive
connection flow. A quick test shows that running test/sql/ against
a single Postgresql engine with the new approach uses 75% fewer new
connections, creating 42 new connections total, vs. 164 new
connections total with the previous system.
As part of this, the new fixtures metadata/connection/future_connection
have been integrated such that they can be combined together
effectively. The fixture_session(), provide_metadata() fixtures
have been improved, including that fixture_session() now strongly
references sessions which are explicitly torn down before
table drops occur afer a test.
Major changes have been made to the
ConnectionKiller such that it now features different "scopes" for
testing engines and will limit its cleanup to those testing
engines corresponding to end of test, end of test class, or
end of test session. The system by which it tracks DBAPI
connections has been reworked, is ultimately somewhat similar to
how it worked before but is organized more clearly along
with the proxy-tracking logic. A "testing_engine" fixture
is also added that works as a pytest fixture rather than a
standalone function. The connection cleanup logic should
now be very robust, as we now can use the same global
connection pools for the whole suite without ever disposing
them, while also running a query for PostgreSQL
locks remaining after every test and assert there are no open
transactions leaking between tests at all. Additional steps
are added that also accommodate for asyncio connections not
explicitly closed, as is the case for legacy sync-style
tests as well as the async tests themselves.
As always, hundreds of tests are further refined to use the
new fixtures where problems with loose connections were identified,
largely as a result of the new PostgreSQL assertions,
many more tests have moved from legacy patterns into the newest.
An unfortunate discovery during the creation of this system is that
autouse fixtures (as well as if they are set up by
@pytest.mark.usefixtures) are not usable at our current scale with pytest
4.6.11 running under Python 2. It's unclear if this is due
to the older version of pytest or how it implements itself for
Python 2, as well as if the issue is CPU slowness or just large
memory use, but collecting the full span of tests takes over
a minute for a single process when any autouse fixtures are in
place and on CI the jobs just time out after ten minutes.
So at the moment this patch also reinvents a small version of
"autouse" fixtures when py2k is running, which skips generating
the real fixture and instead uses two global pytest fixtures
(which don't seem to impact performance) to invoke the
"autouse" fixtures ourselves outside of pytest.
This will limit our ability to do more with fixtures
until we can remove py2k support.
py.test is still observed to be much slower in collection in the
4.6.11 version compared to modern 6.2 versions, so add support for new
TOX_POSTGRESQL_PY2K and TOX_MYSQL_PY2K environment variables that
will run the suite for fewer backends under Python 2. For Python 3
pin pytest to modern 6.2 versions where performance for collection
has been improved greatly.
Includes the following improvements:
Fixed bug in asyncio connection pool where ``asyncio.TimeoutError`` would
be raised rather than :class:`.exc.TimeoutError`. Also repaired the
:paramref:`_sa.create_engine.pool_timeout` parameter set to zero when using
the async engine, which previously would ignore the timeout and block
rather than timing out immediately as is the behavior with regular
:class:`.QueuePool`.
For asyncio the connection pool will now also not interact
at all with an asyncio connection whose ConnectionFairy is
being garbage collected; a warning that the connection was
not properly closed is emitted and the connection is discarded.
Within the test suite the ConnectionKiller is now maintaining
strong references to all DBAPI connections and ensuring they
are released when tests end, including those whose ConnectionFairy
proxies are GCed.
Identified cx_Oracle.stmtcachesize as a major factor in Oracle
test scalability issues, this can be reset on a per-test basis
rather than setting it to zero across the board. the addition
of this flag has resolved the long-standing oracle "two task"
error problem.
For SQL Server, changed the temp table style used by the
"suite" tests to be the double-pound-sign, i.e. global,
variety, which is much easier to test generically. There
are already reflection tests that are more finely tuned
to both styles of temp table within the mssql test
suite. Additionally, added an extra step to the
"dropfirst" mechanism for SQL Server that will remove
all foreign key constraints first as some issues were
observed when using this flag when multiple schemas
had not been torn down.
Identified and fixed two subtle failure modes in the
engine, when commit/rollback fails in a begin()
context manager, the connection is explicitly closed,
and when "initialize()" fails on the first new connection
of a dialect, the transactional state on that connection
is still rolled back.
Fixes: #5826Fixes: #5827
Change-Id: Ib1d05cb8c7cf84f9a4bfd23df397dc23c9329bfe
importantly this means we can remove bound metadata from
the fixtures that are used by Alembic's test suite.
hopefully this is the last one that has to happen to allow
Alembic to be fully 1.4/2.0.
Start moving from @testing.provide_metadata to a pytest
metadata fixture. This does not seem to have any negative
effects even though TablesTest uses a "self.metadata" attribute.
Change-Id: Iae6ab95938a7e92b6d42086aec534af27b5577d3
CI missed a few SQL Server tests because we run mssql-backendonly
in the gerrit job. As there was a test that was "only on"
mssql but didn't have backendonly, it never got run and then
fails in master where we run mssql fully.
Any suite that has an __only_on__ is inherently specific to
a backend, so if present this should imply __backend__ so that
it definitely runs when we have that backend present.
This in turn meant we had to fix a few sqlite_file tests that
weren't cleaning up or sharing well as they suddenly became
backend tests under sqlite_file. Added a sqlite_file cleanup
to test class cleanup for now.
Change-Id: I9de1ceabd6596547a65c59059a55b7e5156103fd
The nesting pattern will be removed in 2.0, so the use of the
MarkerTransaction should emit a 2.0 deprecation warning
unconditionally.
Change-Id: I96aed22c4e5db9b59e9b28a7f2d1283cd99a9cb6
Ensure no autocommit warnings occur internally or
within tests.
Also includes fixes for SQL Server full text tests
which apparently have not been working at all for a long
time, as it used long removed APIs. CI has not had
fulltext running for some years and is now installed.
Change-Id: Id806e1856c9da9f0a9eac88cebc7a94ecc95eb96
Established support for :class:`_schema.Column` objects as well as ORM
instrumented attributes as keys in the ``set_`` dictionary passed to the
:meth:`_postgresql.Insert.on_conflict_do_update` and
:meth:`_sqlite.Insert.on_conflict_do_update` methods, which match to the
:class:`_schema.Column` objects in the ``.c`` collection of the target
:class:`_schema.Table`. Previously, only string column names were
expected; a column expression would be assumed to be an out-of-table
expression that would render fully along with a warning.
Fixes: #5722
Change-Id: Ice73b501d721c28d978a0277a83cedc6aff756a9
This adds support for creating tables WITHOUT ROWID in the SQLite
dialect. WITHOUT ROWID tables were introduced in SQLite version 3.8.2
(2013-12-06). They do not use an implicit rowid column as the primary
key. This may result in space and performance savings for tables without
INTEGER primary keys and tables with composite primary keys. For more
information about this feature, see the sqlite documentation [1].
[1] https://www.sqlite.org/withoutrowid.htmlFixes: #5685
### Checklist
This pull request is:
- [x] A new feature implementation
- please include the issue number, and create an issue if none exists, which must
include a complete example of how the feature would look.
- Please include: `Fixes: #<issue number>` in the commit message
- please include tests.
Closes: #5686
Pull-request: https://github.com/sqlalchemy/sqlalchemy/pull/5686
Pull-request-sha: 2b44782d1b
Change-Id: Ifcf727b0c07c90e267b79828a8e3fd7a8260a074
Fixed bug where the now-deprecated ``autoload`` parameter was being called
internally within the reflection routines when a related table were
reflected.
Fixes: #5684
Change-Id: I6ab439a2f49ff1ae2d3c7a15b531cbafbc3cf594
The operator changes are:
* `isfalse` is now `is_false`
* `isnot_distinct_from` is now `is_not_distinct_from`
* `istrue` is now `is_true`
* `notbetween` is now `not_between`
* `notcontains` is now `not_contains`
* `notendswith` is now `not_endswith`
* `notilike` is now `not_ilike`
* `notlike` is now `not_like`
* `notmatch` is now `not_match`
* `notstartswith` is now `not_startswith`
* `nullsfirst` is now `nulls_first`
* `nullslast` is now `nulls_last`
Because these are core operators, the internal migration strategy for this
change is to support legacy terms for an extended period of time -- if not
indefinitely -- but update all documentation, tutorials, and internal usage
to the new terms. The new terms are used to define the functions, and
the legacy terms have been deprecated into aliases of the new terms.
Fixes: #5435
Change-Id: Ifbd7cb1cdda5981990243c4fc4b4ff467dc132ac
It's better, the majority of these changes look more readable to me.
also found some docstrings that had formatting / quoting issues.
Change-Id: I582a45fde3a5648b2f36bab96bad56881321899b
This change includes mainly that the bracketed use within
select() is moved to positional, and keyword arguments are
removed from calls to the select() function. it does not
yet fully address other issues such as keyword arguments passed
to the table.select().
Additionally, allows False / None to both be considered
as "disable" for all of select.correlate(), select.correlate_except(),
query.correlate(), which establishes consistency with
passing of ``False`` for the legact select(correlate=False)
argument.
Change-Id: Ie6c6e6abfbd3d75d4c8de504c0cf0159e6999108
Two operations have been defined:
* :meth:`~.ColumnOperators.regexp_match` implementing a regular
expression match like function.
* :meth:`~.ColumnOperators.regexp_replace` implementing a regular
expression string replace function.
Fixes: #1390
Change-Id: I44556846e4668ccf329023613bd26861d5c674e6
Several weeks of using the future_select() construct
has led to the proposal there be just one select() construct
again which features the new join() method, and otherwise accepts
both the 1.x and 2.x argument styles. This would make
migration simpler and reduce confusion.
However, confusion may be increased by the fact that select().join()
is different Current thinking is we may be better off
with a few hard behavioral changes to old and relatively unknown APIs
rather than trying to play both sides within two extremely similar
but subtly different APIs. At the moment, the .join() thing seems
to be the only behavioral change that occurs without the user
taking any explicit steps. Session.execute() will still
behave the old way as we are adding a future flag.
This change also adds the "future" flag to Session() and
session.execute(), so that interpretation of the incoming statement,
as well as that the new style result is returned, does not
occur for existing applications unless they add the use
of this flag.
The change in general is moving the "removed in 2.0" system
further along where we want the test suite to fully pass
even if the SQLALCHEMY_WARN_20 flag is set.
Get many tests to pass when SQLALCHEMY_WARN_20 is set; this
should be ongoing after this patch merges.
Improve the RemovedIn20 warning; these are all deprecated
"since" 1.4, so ensure that's what the messages read.
Make sure the inforamtion link is on all warnings.
Add deprecation warnings for parameters present and
add warnings to all FromClause.select() types of methods.
Fixes: #5379Fixes: #5284
Change-Id: I765a0b912b3dcd0e995426427d8bb7997cbffd51
References: #5159
Added "exists" to the list of reserved words for SQLite so that this word
will be quoted when used as a label or column name. Pull request courtesy
Thodoris Sotiropoulos.
Fixes: #5395Closes: #5396
Pull-request: https://github.com/sqlalchemy/sqlalchemy/pull/5396
Pull-request-sha: 5608317a38
Change-Id: Ia4769de2dec159dcf282eb4b30c11560da51a5c7
The :paramref:`.Enum.create_constraint` and
:paramref:`.Boolean.create_constraint` parameters now default to False,
indicating when a so-called "non-native" version of these two datatypes is
created, a CHECK constraint will not be generated by default. These CHECK
constraints present schema-management maintenance complexities that should
be opted in to, rather than being turned on by default.
Fixes: #5367
Change-Id: I0a3fb608ce32143fa757546cc17ba2013e93272a
Execution of literal sql string is deprecated in the
:meth:`.Connection.execute` and a warning is raised when used stating
that it will be coerced to :func:`.text` in a future release.
To execute a raw sql string the new connection method
:meth:`.Connection.exec_driver_sql` was added, that will retain the previous
behavior, passing the string to the DBAPI driver unchanged.
Usage of scalar or tuple positional parameters in :meth:`.Connection.execute`
is also deprecated.
Fixes: #4848Fixes: #5178
Change-Id: I2830181054327996d594f7f0d59c157d477c3aa9
This builds on cc718cccc0 which moved
RowProxy to Row, allowing Row to be more like a named tuple.
- KeyedTuple in ORM is replaced with Row
- ResultSetMetaData broken out into "simple" and "cursor" versions
for ORM and Core, as well as LegacyCursor version.
- Row now has _mapping attribute that supplies full mapping behavior.
Row and SimpleRow both have named tuple behavior otherwise.
LegacyRow has some mapping features on the tuple which emit
deprecation warnings (e.g. keys(), values(), etc). the biggest
change for mapping->tuple is the behavior of __contains__ which
moves from testing of "key in row" to "value in row".
- ResultProxy breaks into ResultProxy and FutureResult (interim),
the latter has the newer APIs. Made available to dialects
using execution options.
- internal reflection methods and most tests move off of implicit
Row mapping behavior and move to row._mapping, result.mappings()
method using future result
- a new strategy system for cursor handling replaces the various
subclasses of RowProxy
- some execution context adjustments. We will leave EC in but
refined things like get_result_proxy() and out parameter handling.
Dialects for 1.4 will need to adjust from get_result_proxy()
to get_result_cursor_strategy(), if they are using this method
- out parameter handling now accommodated by get_out_parameter_values()
EC method. Oracle changes for this. external dialect for
DB2 for example will also need to adjust for this.
- deprecate case_insensitive flag for engine / result, this
feature is not used
mapping-methods on Row are deprecated, and replaced with
Row._mapping.<meth>, including:
row.keys() -> use row._mapping.keys()
row.items() -> use row._mapping.items()
row.values() -> use row._mapping.values()
key in row -> use key in row._mapping
int in row -> use int < len(row)
Fixes: #4710Fixes: #4878
Change-Id: Ieb9085e9bcff564359095b754da9ae0af55679f0
The :meth:`.Connection.connect` method is deprecated as is the concept of
"connection branching", which copies a :class:`.Connection` into a new one
that has a no-op ".close()" method. This pattern is oriented around the
"connectionless execution" concept which is also being removed in 2.0.
As part of this change we begin to move the internals away from
"connectionless execution" overall. Remove the "connectionless
execution" concept from the reflection internals and replace with
explicit patterns at the Inspector level.
Fixes: #5131
Change-Id: Id23d28a9889212ac5ae7329b85136157815d3e6f
Fixed a few test failures which would occur on Windows due to SQLite file
locking issues, as well as some timing issues in connection pool related
tests; pull request courtesy Federico Caselli.
Note the pool related issues were fixed by Mike in
I1a7162e67912d22c135fa517b687a073f8fd9151 but are being ticketed
here.
Fixes: #4946Closes: #5055
Pull-request: https://github.com/sqlalchemy/sqlalchemy/pull/5055
Pull-request-sha: 36925573af
Change-Id: Ic53ec82f5d588d0e26a2d033a17c6109900d7f63
The "expanding IN" feature, which generates IN expressions at query
execution time which are based on the particular parameters associated with
the statement execution, is now used for all IN expressions made against
lists of literal values. This allows IN expressions to be fully cacheable
independently of the list of values being passed, and also includes support
for empty lists. For any scenario where the IN expression contains
non-literal SQL expressions, the old behavior of pre-rendering for each
position in the IN is maintained. The change also completes support for
expanding IN with tuples, where previously type-specific bind processors
weren't taking effect.
As part of this change, a more explicit separation between
"literal execute" and "post compile" bound parameters is being made;
as the "ansi bind rules" feature is rendering bound parameters
inline, as we now support "postcompile" generically, these should
be used here, however we have to render literal values at
execution time even for "expanding" parameters. new test fixtures
etc. are added to assert everything goes to the right place.
Fixes: #4645
Change-Id: Iaa2b7bfbfaaf5b80799ee17c9b8507293cba6ed1
Added DDL support for "computed columns"; these are DDL column
specifications for columns that have a server-computed value, either upon
SELECT (known as "virtual") or at the point of which they are INSERTed or
UPDATEd (known as "stored"). Support is established for Postgresql, MySQL,
Oracle SQL Server and Firebird. Thanks to Federico Caselli for lots of work
on this one.
ORM round trip tests included. The ORM makes use of existing
FetchedValue support and no additional ORM logic is present for
the basic feature.
It has been observed that Oracle RETURNING does not return the
new value of a computed column upon UPDATE; it returns the
prior value. As this is very dangerous, a warning is emitted
if a computed column is rendered into the RETURNING clause
of an UPDATE statement.
Fixes: #4894Closes: #4928
Pull-request: https://github.com/sqlalchemy/sqlalchemy/pull/4928
Pull-request-sha: d39c521d5a
Change-Id: I2610b2999a5b1b127ed927dcdaeee98b769643ce
Dropped support for right-nested join rewriting to support old SQLite
versions prior to 3.7.16, released in 2013. It is expected that
all modern Python versions among those now supported should all include
much newer versions of SQLite.
Fixes: #4895
Change-Id: I7f0cfc2b7d988ff147b9a4c6d5e2adec87e27029
Added support for sqlite "URI" connections, which allow for sqlite-specific
flags to be passed in the query string such as "read only" for Python
sqlite3 drivers that support this.
Fixes: #4863
Change-Id: I7740b55ee8f2ede72a5c49ee94a7540e4d0250f2
Fixed bug where a FOREIGN KEY that was set up to refer to the parent table
by table name only without the column names would not correctly be
reflected as far as setting up the "referred columns", since SQLite's
PRAGMA does not report on these columns if they weren't given explicitly.
For some reason this was harcoded to assume the name of the local column,
which might work for some cases but is not correct. The new approach
reflects the primary key of the referred table and uses the constraint
columns list as the referred columns list, if the remote column(s) aren't
present in the reflected pragma directly.
Fixes: #4810
Change-Id: I7789f83d68845ae197a782080af8ec64a7bf48cc
The dialects that support json are supposed to take arguments
``json_serializer`` and ``json_deserializer`` at the create_engine() level,
however the SQLite dialect calls them ``_json_serilizer`` and
``_json_deserilalizer``. The names have been corrected, the old names are
accepted with a change warning, and these parameters are now documented as
:paramref:`.create_engine.json_serializer` and
:paramref:`.create_engine.json_deserializer`.
Fixes: #4798
Change-Id: I1dbfe439b421fe9bb7ff3594ef455af8156f8851
Fixed bug where usage of "PRAGMA table_info" in SQLite dialect meant that
reflection features to detect for table existence, list of table columns,
and list of foreign keys, would default to any table in any attached
database, when no schema name was given and the table did not exist in the
base schema. The fix explicitly runs PRAGMA for the 'main' schema and then
the 'temp' schema if the 'main' returned no rows, to maintain the behavior
of tables + temp tables in the "no schema" namespace, attached tables only
in the "schema" namespace.
Fixes: #4793
Change-Id: I75bc03ef42581c46b98987510d2d2e701df07412
Added support for composite (tuple) IN operators with SQLite, by rendering
the VALUES keyword for this backend. As other backends such as DB2 are
known to use the same syntax, the syntax is enabled in the base compiler
using a dialect-level flag ``tuple_in_values``. The change also includes
support for "empty IN tuple" expressions for SQLite when using "in_()"
between a tuple value and an empty set.
Fixes: #4766
Change-Id: I416e1af29b31d78f9ae06ec3c3a48ef6d6e813f5