OpenHome/venv/Lib/site-packages/sqlalchemy/orm/events.py

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# orm/events.py
# Copyright (C) 2005-2021 the SQLAlchemy authors and contributors
# <see AUTHORS file>
#
# This module is part of SQLAlchemy and is released under
# the MIT License: http://www.opensource.org/licenses/mit-license.php
"""ORM event interfaces.
"""
import weakref
from . import instrumentation
from . import interfaces
from . import mapperlib
from .attributes import QueryableAttribute
from .base import _mapper_or_none
from .query import Query
from .scoping import scoped_session
from .session import Session
from .session import sessionmaker
from .. import event
from .. import exc
from .. import util
from ..util.compat import inspect_getfullargspec
class InstrumentationEvents(event.Events):
"""Events related to class instrumentation events.
The listeners here support being established against
any new style class, that is any object that is a subclass
of 'type'. Events will then be fired off for events
against that class. If the "propagate=True" flag is passed
to event.listen(), the event will fire off for subclasses
of that class as well.
The Python ``type`` builtin is also accepted as a target,
which when used has the effect of events being emitted
for all classes.
Note the "propagate" flag here is defaulted to ``True``,
unlike the other class level events where it defaults
to ``False``. This means that new subclasses will also
be the subject of these events, when a listener
is established on a superclass.
"""
_target_class_doc = "SomeBaseClass"
_dispatch_target = instrumentation.InstrumentationFactory
@classmethod
def _accept_with(cls, target):
if isinstance(target, type):
return _InstrumentationEventsHold(target)
else:
return None
@classmethod
def _listen(cls, event_key, propagate=True, **kw):
target, identifier, fn = (
event_key.dispatch_target,
event_key.identifier,
event_key._listen_fn,
)
def listen(target_cls, *arg):
listen_cls = target()
# if weakref were collected, however this is not something
# that normally happens. it was occurring during test teardown
# between mapper/registry/instrumentation_manager, however this
# interaction was changed to not rely upon the event system.
if listen_cls is None:
return None
if propagate and issubclass(target_cls, listen_cls):
return fn(target_cls, *arg)
elif not propagate and target_cls is listen_cls:
return fn(target_cls, *arg)
def remove(ref):
key = event.registry._EventKey(
None,
identifier,
listen,
instrumentation._instrumentation_factory,
)
getattr(
instrumentation._instrumentation_factory.dispatch, identifier
).remove(key)
target = weakref.ref(target.class_, remove)
event_key.with_dispatch_target(
instrumentation._instrumentation_factory
).with_wrapper(listen).base_listen(**kw)
@classmethod
def _clear(cls):
super(InstrumentationEvents, cls)._clear()
instrumentation._instrumentation_factory.dispatch._clear()
def class_instrument(self, cls):
"""Called after the given class is instrumented.
To get at the :class:`.ClassManager`, use
:func:`.manager_of_class`.
"""
def class_uninstrument(self, cls):
"""Called before the given class is uninstrumented.
To get at the :class:`.ClassManager`, use
:func:`.manager_of_class`.
"""
def attribute_instrument(self, cls, key, inst):
"""Called when an attribute is instrumented."""
class _InstrumentationEventsHold(object):
"""temporary marker object used to transfer from _accept_with() to
_listen() on the InstrumentationEvents class.
"""
def __init__(self, class_):
self.class_ = class_
dispatch = event.dispatcher(InstrumentationEvents)
class InstanceEvents(event.Events):
"""Define events specific to object lifecycle.
e.g.::
from sqlalchemy import event
def my_load_listener(target, context):
print("on load!")
event.listen(SomeClass, 'load', my_load_listener)
Available targets include:
* mapped classes
* unmapped superclasses of mapped or to-be-mapped classes
(using the ``propagate=True`` flag)
* :class:`_orm.Mapper` objects
* the :class:`_orm.Mapper` class itself and the :func:`.mapper`
function indicate listening for all mappers.
Instance events are closely related to mapper events, but
are more specific to the instance and its instrumentation,
rather than its system of persistence.
When using :class:`.InstanceEvents`, several modifiers are
available to the :func:`.event.listen` function.
:param propagate=False: When True, the event listener should
be applied to all inheriting classes as well as the
class which is the target of this listener.
:param raw=False: When True, the "target" argument passed
to applicable event listener functions will be the
instance's :class:`.InstanceState` management
object, rather than the mapped instance itself.
:param restore_load_context=False: Applies to the
:meth:`.InstanceEvents.load` and :meth:`.InstanceEvents.refresh`
events. Restores the loader context of the object when the event
hook is complete, so that ongoing eager load operations continue
to target the object appropriately. A warning is emitted if the
object is moved to a new loader context from within one of these
events if this flag is not set.
.. versionadded:: 1.3.14
"""
_target_class_doc = "SomeClass"
_dispatch_target = instrumentation.ClassManager
@classmethod
def _new_classmanager_instance(cls, class_, classmanager):
_InstanceEventsHold.populate(class_, classmanager)
@classmethod
@util.preload_module("sqlalchemy.orm")
def _accept_with(cls, target):
orm = util.preloaded.orm
if isinstance(target, instrumentation.ClassManager):
return target
elif isinstance(target, mapperlib.Mapper):
return target.class_manager
elif target is orm.mapper:
return instrumentation.ClassManager
elif isinstance(target, type):
if issubclass(target, mapperlib.Mapper):
return instrumentation.ClassManager
else:
manager = instrumentation.manager_of_class(target)
if manager:
return manager
else:
return _InstanceEventsHold(target)
return None
@classmethod
def _listen(
cls,
event_key,
raw=False,
propagate=False,
restore_load_context=False,
**kw
):
target, fn = (event_key.dispatch_target, event_key._listen_fn)
if not raw or restore_load_context:
def wrap(state, *arg, **kw):
if not raw:
target = state.obj()
else:
target = state
if restore_load_context:
runid = state.runid
try:
return fn(target, *arg, **kw)
finally:
if restore_load_context:
state.runid = runid
event_key = event_key.with_wrapper(wrap)
event_key.base_listen(propagate=propagate, **kw)
if propagate:
for mgr in target.subclass_managers(True):
event_key.with_dispatch_target(mgr).base_listen(propagate=True)
@classmethod
def _clear(cls):
super(InstanceEvents, cls)._clear()
_InstanceEventsHold._clear()
def first_init(self, manager, cls):
"""Called when the first instance of a particular mapping is called.
This event is called when the ``__init__`` method of a class
is called the first time for that particular class. The event
invokes before ``__init__`` actually proceeds as well as before
the :meth:`.InstanceEvents.init` event is invoked.
"""
def init(self, target, args, kwargs):
"""Receive an instance when its constructor is called.
This method is only called during a userland construction of
an object, in conjunction with the object's constructor, e.g.
its ``__init__`` method. It is not called when an object is
loaded from the database; see the :meth:`.InstanceEvents.load`
event in order to intercept a database load.
The event is called before the actual ``__init__`` constructor
of the object is called. The ``kwargs`` dictionary may be
modified in-place in order to affect what is passed to
``__init__``.
:param target: the mapped instance. If
the event is configured with ``raw=True``, this will
instead be the :class:`.InstanceState` state-management
object associated with the instance.
:param args: positional arguments passed to the ``__init__`` method.
This is passed as a tuple and is currently immutable.
:param kwargs: keyword arguments passed to the ``__init__`` method.
This structure *can* be altered in place.
.. seealso::
:meth:`.InstanceEvents.init_failure`
:meth:`.InstanceEvents.load`
"""
def init_failure(self, target, args, kwargs):
"""Receive an instance when its constructor has been called,
and raised an exception.
This method is only called during a userland construction of
an object, in conjunction with the object's constructor, e.g.
its ``__init__`` method. It is not called when an object is loaded
from the database.
The event is invoked after an exception raised by the ``__init__``
method is caught. After the event
is invoked, the original exception is re-raised outwards, so that
the construction of the object still raises an exception. The
actual exception and stack trace raised should be present in
``sys.exc_info()``.
:param target: the mapped instance. If
the event is configured with ``raw=True``, this will
instead be the :class:`.InstanceState` state-management
object associated with the instance.
:param args: positional arguments that were passed to the ``__init__``
method.
:param kwargs: keyword arguments that were passed to the ``__init__``
method.
.. seealso::
:meth:`.InstanceEvents.init`
:meth:`.InstanceEvents.load`
"""
def load(self, target, context):
"""Receive an object instance after it has been created via
``__new__``, and after initial attribute population has
occurred.
This typically occurs when the instance is created based on
incoming result rows, and is only called once for that
instance's lifetime.
.. warning::
During a result-row load, this event is invoked when the
first row received for this instance is processed. When using
eager loading with collection-oriented attributes, the additional
rows that are to be loaded / processed in order to load subsequent
collection items have not occurred yet. This has the effect
both that collections will not be fully loaded, as well as that
if an operation occurs within this event handler that emits
another database load operation for the object, the "loading
context" for the object can change and interfere with the
existing eager loaders still in progress.
Examples of what can cause the "loading context" to change within
the event handler include, but are not necessarily limited to:
* accessing deferred attributes that weren't part of the row,
will trigger an "undefer" operation and refresh the object
* accessing attributes on a joined-inheritance subclass that
weren't part of the row, will trigger a refresh operation.
As of SQLAlchemy 1.3.14, a warning is emitted when this occurs. The
:paramref:`.InstanceEvents.restore_load_context` option may be
used on the event to prevent this warning; this will ensure that
the existing loading context is maintained for the object after the
event is called::
@event.listens_for(
SomeClass, "load", restore_load_context=True)
def on_load(instance, context):
instance.some_unloaded_attribute
.. versionchanged:: 1.3.14 Added
:paramref:`.InstanceEvents.restore_load_context`
and :paramref:`.SessionEvents.restore_load_context` flags which
apply to "on load" events, which will ensure that the loading
context for an object is restored when the event hook is
complete; a warning is emitted if the load context of the object
changes without this flag being set.
The :meth:`.InstanceEvents.load` event is also available in a
class-method decorator format called :func:`_orm.reconstructor`.
:param target: the mapped instance. If
the event is configured with ``raw=True``, this will
instead be the :class:`.InstanceState` state-management
object associated with the instance.
:param context: the :class:`.QueryContext` corresponding to the
current :class:`_query.Query` in progress. This argument may be
``None`` if the load does not correspond to a :class:`_query.Query`,
such as during :meth:`.Session.merge`.
.. seealso::
:meth:`.InstanceEvents.init`
:meth:`.InstanceEvents.refresh`
:meth:`.SessionEvents.loaded_as_persistent`
:ref:`mapping_constructors`
"""
def refresh(self, target, context, attrs):
"""Receive an object instance after one or more attributes have
been refreshed from a query.
Contrast this to the :meth:`.InstanceEvents.load` method, which
is invoked when the object is first loaded from a query.
.. note:: This event is invoked within the loader process before
eager loaders may have been completed, and the object's state may
not be complete. Additionally, invoking row-level refresh
operations on the object will place the object into a new loader
context, interfering with the existing load context. See the note
on :meth:`.InstanceEvents.load` for background on making use of the
:paramref:`.InstanceEvents.restore_load_context` parameter, in
order to resolve this scenario.
:param target: the mapped instance. If
the event is configured with ``raw=True``, this will
instead be the :class:`.InstanceState` state-management
object associated with the instance.
:param context: the :class:`.QueryContext` corresponding to the
current :class:`_query.Query` in progress.
:param attrs: sequence of attribute names which
were populated, or None if all column-mapped, non-deferred
attributes were populated.
.. seealso::
:meth:`.InstanceEvents.load`
"""
def refresh_flush(self, target, flush_context, attrs):
"""Receive an object instance after one or more attributes that
contain a column-level default or onupdate handler have been refreshed
during persistence of the object's state.
This event is the same as :meth:`.InstanceEvents.refresh` except
it is invoked within the unit of work flush process, and includes
only non-primary-key columns that have column level default or
onupdate handlers, including Python callables as well as server side
defaults and triggers which may be fetched via the RETURNING clause.
.. note::
While the :meth:`.InstanceEvents.refresh_flush` event is triggered
for an object that was INSERTed as well as for an object that was
UPDATEd, the event is geared primarily towards the UPDATE process;
it is mostly an internal artifact that INSERT actions can also
trigger this event, and note that **primary key columns for an
INSERTed row are explicitly omitted** from this event. In order to
intercept the newly INSERTed state of an object, the
:meth:`.SessionEvents.pending_to_persistent` and
:meth:`.MapperEvents.after_insert` are better choices.
.. versionadded:: 1.0.5
:param target: the mapped instance. If
the event is configured with ``raw=True``, this will
instead be the :class:`.InstanceState` state-management
object associated with the instance.
:param flush_context: Internal :class:`.UOWTransaction` object
which handles the details of the flush.
:param attrs: sequence of attribute names which
were populated.
.. seealso::
:ref:`orm_server_defaults`
:ref:`metadata_defaults_toplevel`
"""
def expire(self, target, attrs):
"""Receive an object instance after its attributes or some subset
have been expired.
'keys' is a list of attribute names. If None, the entire
state was expired.
:param target: the mapped instance. If
the event is configured with ``raw=True``, this will
instead be the :class:`.InstanceState` state-management
object associated with the instance.
:param attrs: sequence of attribute
names which were expired, or None if all attributes were
expired.
"""
def pickle(self, target, state_dict):
"""Receive an object instance when its associated state is
being pickled.
:param target: the mapped instance. If
the event is configured with ``raw=True``, this will
instead be the :class:`.InstanceState` state-management
object associated with the instance.
:param state_dict: the dictionary returned by
:class:`.InstanceState.__getstate__`, containing the state
to be pickled.
"""
def unpickle(self, target, state_dict):
"""Receive an object instance after its associated state has
been unpickled.
:param target: the mapped instance. If
the event is configured with ``raw=True``, this will
instead be the :class:`.InstanceState` state-management
object associated with the instance.
:param state_dict: the dictionary sent to
:class:`.InstanceState.__setstate__`, containing the state
dictionary which was pickled.
"""
class _EventsHold(event.RefCollection):
"""Hold onto listeners against unmapped, uninstrumented classes.
Establish _listen() for that class' mapper/instrumentation when
those objects are created for that class.
"""
def __init__(self, class_):
self.class_ = class_
@classmethod
def _clear(cls):
cls.all_holds.clear()
class HoldEvents(object):
_dispatch_target = None
@classmethod
def _listen(
cls, event_key, raw=False, propagate=False, retval=False, **kw
):
target = event_key.dispatch_target
if target.class_ in target.all_holds:
collection = target.all_holds[target.class_]
else:
collection = target.all_holds[target.class_] = {}
event.registry._stored_in_collection(event_key, target)
collection[event_key._key] = (
event_key,
raw,
propagate,
retval,
kw,
)
if propagate:
stack = list(target.class_.__subclasses__())
while stack:
subclass = stack.pop(0)
stack.extend(subclass.__subclasses__())
subject = target.resolve(subclass)
if subject is not None:
# we are already going through __subclasses__()
# so leave generic propagate flag False
event_key.with_dispatch_target(subject).listen(
raw=raw, propagate=False, retval=retval, **kw
)
def remove(self, event_key):
target = event_key.dispatch_target
if isinstance(target, _EventsHold):
collection = target.all_holds[target.class_]
del collection[event_key._key]
@classmethod
def populate(cls, class_, subject):
for subclass in class_.__mro__:
if subclass in cls.all_holds:
collection = cls.all_holds[subclass]
for (
event_key,
raw,
propagate,
retval,
kw,
) in collection.values():
if propagate or subclass is class_:
# since we can't be sure in what order different
# classes in a hierarchy are triggered with
# populate(), we rely upon _EventsHold for all event
# assignment, instead of using the generic propagate
# flag.
event_key.with_dispatch_target(subject).listen(
raw=raw, propagate=False, retval=retval, **kw
)
class _InstanceEventsHold(_EventsHold):
all_holds = weakref.WeakKeyDictionary()
def resolve(self, class_):
return instrumentation.manager_of_class(class_)
class HoldInstanceEvents(_EventsHold.HoldEvents, InstanceEvents):
pass
dispatch = event.dispatcher(HoldInstanceEvents)
class MapperEvents(event.Events):
"""Define events specific to mappings.
e.g.::
from sqlalchemy import event
def my_before_insert_listener(mapper, connection, target):
# execute a stored procedure upon INSERT,
# apply the value to the row to be inserted
target.calculated_value = connection.execute(
text("select my_special_function(%d)" % target.special_number)
).scalar()
# associate the listener function with SomeClass,
# to execute during the "before_insert" hook
event.listen(
SomeClass, 'before_insert', my_before_insert_listener)
Available targets include:
* mapped classes
* unmapped superclasses of mapped or to-be-mapped classes
(using the ``propagate=True`` flag)
* :class:`_orm.Mapper` objects
* the :class:`_orm.Mapper` class itself and the :func:`.mapper`
function indicate listening for all mappers.
Mapper events provide hooks into critical sections of the
mapper, including those related to object instrumentation,
object loading, and object persistence. In particular, the
persistence methods :meth:`~.MapperEvents.before_insert`,
and :meth:`~.MapperEvents.before_update` are popular
places to augment the state being persisted - however, these
methods operate with several significant restrictions. The
user is encouraged to evaluate the
:meth:`.SessionEvents.before_flush` and
:meth:`.SessionEvents.after_flush` methods as more
flexible and user-friendly hooks in which to apply
additional database state during a flush.
When using :class:`.MapperEvents`, several modifiers are
available to the :func:`.event.listen` function.
:param propagate=False: When True, the event listener should
be applied to all inheriting mappers and/or the mappers of
inheriting classes, as well as any
mapper which is the target of this listener.
:param raw=False: When True, the "target" argument passed
to applicable event listener functions will be the
instance's :class:`.InstanceState` management
object, rather than the mapped instance itself.
:param retval=False: when True, the user-defined event function
must have a return value, the purpose of which is either to
control subsequent event propagation, or to otherwise alter
the operation in progress by the mapper. Possible return
values are:
* ``sqlalchemy.orm.interfaces.EXT_CONTINUE`` - continue event
processing normally.
* ``sqlalchemy.orm.interfaces.EXT_STOP`` - cancel all subsequent
event handlers in the chain.
* other values - the return value specified by specific listeners.
"""
_target_class_doc = "SomeClass"
_dispatch_target = mapperlib.Mapper
@classmethod
def _new_mapper_instance(cls, class_, mapper):
_MapperEventsHold.populate(class_, mapper)
@classmethod
@util.preload_module("sqlalchemy.orm")
def _accept_with(cls, target):
orm = util.preloaded.orm
if target is orm.mapper:
return mapperlib.Mapper
elif isinstance(target, type):
if issubclass(target, mapperlib.Mapper):
return target
else:
mapper = _mapper_or_none(target)
if mapper is not None:
return mapper
else:
return _MapperEventsHold(target)
else:
return target
@classmethod
def _listen(
cls, event_key, raw=False, retval=False, propagate=False, **kw
):
target, identifier, fn = (
event_key.dispatch_target,
event_key.identifier,
event_key._listen_fn,
)
if (
identifier in ("before_configured", "after_configured")
and target is not mapperlib.Mapper
):
util.warn(
"'before_configured' and 'after_configured' ORM events "
"only invoke with the mapper() function or Mapper class "
"as the target."
)
if not raw or not retval:
if not raw:
meth = getattr(cls, identifier)
try:
target_index = (
inspect_getfullargspec(meth)[0].index("target") - 1
)
except ValueError:
target_index = None
def wrap(*arg, **kw):
if not raw and target_index is not None:
arg = list(arg)
arg[target_index] = arg[target_index].obj()
if not retval:
fn(*arg, **kw)
return interfaces.EXT_CONTINUE
else:
return fn(*arg, **kw)
event_key = event_key.with_wrapper(wrap)
if propagate:
for mapper in target.self_and_descendants:
event_key.with_dispatch_target(mapper).base_listen(
propagate=True, **kw
)
else:
event_key.base_listen(**kw)
@classmethod
def _clear(cls):
super(MapperEvents, cls)._clear()
_MapperEventsHold._clear()
def instrument_class(self, mapper, class_):
r"""Receive a class when the mapper is first constructed,
before instrumentation is applied to the mapped class.
This event is the earliest phase of mapper construction.
Most attributes of the mapper are not yet initialized.
This listener can either be applied to the :class:`_orm.Mapper`
class overall, or to any un-mapped class which serves as a base
for classes that will be mapped (using the ``propagate=True`` flag)::
Base = declarative_base()
@event.listens_for(Base, "instrument_class", propagate=True)
def on_new_class(mapper, cls_):
" ... "
:param mapper: the :class:`_orm.Mapper` which is the target
of this event.
:param class\_: the mapped class.
"""
def before_mapper_configured(self, mapper, class_):
"""Called right before a specific mapper is to be configured.
This event is intended to allow a specific mapper to be skipped during
the configure step, by returning the :attr:`.orm.interfaces.EXT_SKIP`
symbol which indicates to the :func:`.configure_mappers` call that this
particular mapper (or hierarchy of mappers, if ``propagate=True`` is
used) should be skipped in the current configuration run. When one or
more mappers are skipped, the he "new mappers" flag will remain set,
meaning the :func:`.configure_mappers` function will continue to be
called when mappers are used, to continue to try to configure all
available mappers.
In comparison to the other configure-level events,
:meth:`.MapperEvents.before_configured`,
:meth:`.MapperEvents.after_configured`, and
:meth:`.MapperEvents.mapper_configured`, the
:meth;`.MapperEvents.before_mapper_configured` event provides for a
meaningful return value when it is registered with the ``retval=True``
parameter.
.. versionadded:: 1.3
e.g.::
from sqlalchemy.orm import EXT_SKIP
Base = declarative_base()
DontConfigureBase = declarative_base()
@event.listens_for(
DontConfigureBase,
"before_mapper_configured", retval=True, propagate=True)
def dont_configure(mapper, cls):
return EXT_SKIP
.. seealso::
:meth:`.MapperEvents.before_configured`
:meth:`.MapperEvents.after_configured`
:meth:`.MapperEvents.mapper_configured`
"""
def mapper_configured(self, mapper, class_):
r"""Called when a specific mapper has completed its own configuration
within the scope of the :func:`.configure_mappers` call.
The :meth:`.MapperEvents.mapper_configured` event is invoked
for each mapper that is encountered when the
:func:`_orm.configure_mappers` function proceeds through the current
list of not-yet-configured mappers.
:func:`_orm.configure_mappers` is typically invoked
automatically as mappings are first used, as well as each time
new mappers have been made available and new mapper use is
detected.
When the event is called, the mapper should be in its final
state, but **not including backrefs** that may be invoked from
other mappers; they might still be pending within the
configuration operation. Bidirectional relationships that
are instead configured via the
:paramref:`.orm.relationship.back_populates` argument
*will* be fully available, since this style of relationship does not
rely upon other possibly-not-configured mappers to know that they
exist.
For an event that is guaranteed to have **all** mappers ready
to go including backrefs that are defined only on other
mappings, use the :meth:`.MapperEvents.after_configured`
event; this event invokes only after all known mappings have been
fully configured.
The :meth:`.MapperEvents.mapper_configured` event, unlike
:meth:`.MapperEvents.before_configured` or
:meth:`.MapperEvents.after_configured`,
is called for each mapper/class individually, and the mapper is
passed to the event itself. It also is called exactly once for
a particular mapper. The event is therefore useful for
configurational steps that benefit from being invoked just once
on a specific mapper basis, which don't require that "backref"
configurations are necessarily ready yet.
:param mapper: the :class:`_orm.Mapper` which is the target
of this event.
:param class\_: the mapped class.
.. seealso::
:meth:`.MapperEvents.before_configured`
:meth:`.MapperEvents.after_configured`
:meth:`.MapperEvents.before_mapper_configured`
"""
# TODO: need coverage for this event
def before_configured(self):
"""Called before a series of mappers have been configured.
The :meth:`.MapperEvents.before_configured` event is invoked
each time the :func:`_orm.configure_mappers` function is
invoked, before the function has done any of its work.
:func:`_orm.configure_mappers` is typically invoked
automatically as mappings are first used, as well as each time
new mappers have been made available and new mapper use is
detected.
This event can **only** be applied to the :class:`_orm.Mapper` class
or :func:`.mapper` function, and not to individual mappings or
mapped classes. It is only invoked for all mappings as a whole::
from sqlalchemy.orm import mapper
@event.listens_for(mapper, "before_configured")
def go():
# ...
Contrast this event to :meth:`.MapperEvents.after_configured`,
which is invoked after the series of mappers has been configured,
as well as :meth:`.MapperEvents.before_mapper_configured`
and :meth:`.MapperEvents.mapper_configured`, which are both invoked
on a per-mapper basis.
Theoretically this event is called once per
application, but is actually called any time new mappers
are to be affected by a :func:`_orm.configure_mappers`
call. If new mappings are constructed after existing ones have
already been used, this event will likely be called again. To ensure
that a particular event is only called once and no further, the
``once=True`` argument (new in 0.9.4) can be applied::
from sqlalchemy.orm import mapper
@event.listens_for(mapper, "before_configured", once=True)
def go():
# ...
.. versionadded:: 0.9.3
.. seealso::
:meth:`.MapperEvents.before_mapper_configured`
:meth:`.MapperEvents.mapper_configured`
:meth:`.MapperEvents.after_configured`
"""
def after_configured(self):
"""Called after a series of mappers have been configured.
The :meth:`.MapperEvents.after_configured` event is invoked
each time the :func:`_orm.configure_mappers` function is
invoked, after the function has completed its work.
:func:`_orm.configure_mappers` is typically invoked
automatically as mappings are first used, as well as each time
new mappers have been made available and new mapper use is
detected.
Contrast this event to the :meth:`.MapperEvents.mapper_configured`
event, which is called on a per-mapper basis while the configuration
operation proceeds; unlike that event, when this event is invoked,
all cross-configurations (e.g. backrefs) will also have been made
available for any mappers that were pending.
Also contrast to :meth:`.MapperEvents.before_configured`,
which is invoked before the series of mappers has been configured.
This event can **only** be applied to the :class:`_orm.Mapper` class
or :func:`.mapper` function, and not to individual mappings or
mapped classes. It is only invoked for all mappings as a whole::
from sqlalchemy.orm import mapper
@event.listens_for(mapper, "after_configured")
def go():
# ...
Theoretically this event is called once per
application, but is actually called any time new mappers
have been affected by a :func:`_orm.configure_mappers`
call. If new mappings are constructed after existing ones have
already been used, this event will likely be called again. To ensure
that a particular event is only called once and no further, the
``once=True`` argument (new in 0.9.4) can be applied::
from sqlalchemy.orm import mapper
@event.listens_for(mapper, "after_configured", once=True)
def go():
# ...
.. seealso::
:meth:`.MapperEvents.before_mapper_configured`
:meth:`.MapperEvents.mapper_configured`
:meth:`.MapperEvents.before_configured`
"""
def before_insert(self, mapper, connection, target):
"""Receive an object instance before an INSERT statement
is emitted corresponding to that instance.
This event is used to modify local, non-object related
attributes on the instance before an INSERT occurs, as well
as to emit additional SQL statements on the given
connection.
The event is often called for a batch of objects of the
same class before their INSERT statements are emitted at
once in a later step. In the extremely rare case that
this is not desirable, the :func:`.mapper` can be
configured with ``batch=False``, which will cause
batches of instances to be broken up into individual
(and more poorly performing) event->persist->event
steps.
.. warning::
Mapper-level flush events only allow **very limited operations**,
on attributes local to the row being operated upon only,
as well as allowing any SQL to be emitted on the given
:class:`_engine.Connection`. **Please read fully** the notes
at :ref:`session_persistence_mapper` for guidelines on using
these methods; generally, the :meth:`.SessionEvents.before_flush`
method should be preferred for general on-flush changes.
:param mapper: the :class:`_orm.Mapper` which is the target
of this event.
:param connection: the :class:`_engine.Connection` being used to
emit INSERT statements for this instance. This
provides a handle into the current transaction on the
target database specific to this instance.
:param target: the mapped instance being persisted. If
the event is configured with ``raw=True``, this will
instead be the :class:`.InstanceState` state-management
object associated with the instance.
:return: No return value is supported by this event.
.. seealso::
:ref:`session_persistence_events`
"""
def after_insert(self, mapper, connection, target):
"""Receive an object instance after an INSERT statement
is emitted corresponding to that instance.
This event is used to modify in-Python-only
state on the instance after an INSERT occurs, as well
as to emit additional SQL statements on the given
connection.
The event is often called for a batch of objects of the
same class after their INSERT statements have been
emitted at once in a previous step. In the extremely
rare case that this is not desirable, the
:func:`.mapper` can be configured with ``batch=False``,
which will cause batches of instances to be broken up
into individual (and more poorly performing)
event->persist->event steps.
.. warning::
Mapper-level flush events only allow **very limited operations**,
on attributes local to the row being operated upon only,
as well as allowing any SQL to be emitted on the given
:class:`_engine.Connection`. **Please read fully** the notes
at :ref:`session_persistence_mapper` for guidelines on using
these methods; generally, the :meth:`.SessionEvents.before_flush`
method should be preferred for general on-flush changes.
:param mapper: the :class:`_orm.Mapper` which is the target
of this event.
:param connection: the :class:`_engine.Connection` being used to
emit INSERT statements for this instance. This
provides a handle into the current transaction on the
target database specific to this instance.
:param target: the mapped instance being persisted. If
the event is configured with ``raw=True``, this will
instead be the :class:`.InstanceState` state-management
object associated with the instance.
:return: No return value is supported by this event.
.. seealso::
:ref:`session_persistence_events`
"""
def before_update(self, mapper, connection, target):
"""Receive an object instance before an UPDATE statement
is emitted corresponding to that instance.
This event is used to modify local, non-object related
attributes on the instance before an UPDATE occurs, as well
as to emit additional SQL statements on the given
connection.
This method is called for all instances that are
marked as "dirty", *even those which have no net changes
to their column-based attributes*. An object is marked
as dirty when any of its column-based attributes have a
"set attribute" operation called or when any of its
collections are modified. If, at update time, no
column-based attributes have any net changes, no UPDATE
statement will be issued. This means that an instance
being sent to :meth:`~.MapperEvents.before_update` is
*not* a guarantee that an UPDATE statement will be
issued, although you can affect the outcome here by
modifying attributes so that a net change in value does
exist.
To detect if the column-based attributes on the object have net
changes, and will therefore generate an UPDATE statement, use
``object_session(instance).is_modified(instance,
include_collections=False)``.
The event is often called for a batch of objects of the
same class before their UPDATE statements are emitted at
once in a later step. In the extremely rare case that
this is not desirable, the :func:`.mapper` can be
configured with ``batch=False``, which will cause
batches of instances to be broken up into individual
(and more poorly performing) event->persist->event
steps.
.. warning::
Mapper-level flush events only allow **very limited operations**,
on attributes local to the row being operated upon only,
as well as allowing any SQL to be emitted on the given
:class:`_engine.Connection`. **Please read fully** the notes
at :ref:`session_persistence_mapper` for guidelines on using
these methods; generally, the :meth:`.SessionEvents.before_flush`
method should be preferred for general on-flush changes.
:param mapper: the :class:`_orm.Mapper` which is the target
of this event.
:param connection: the :class:`_engine.Connection` being used to
emit UPDATE statements for this instance. This
provides a handle into the current transaction on the
target database specific to this instance.
:param target: the mapped instance being persisted. If
the event is configured with ``raw=True``, this will
instead be the :class:`.InstanceState` state-management
object associated with the instance.
:return: No return value is supported by this event.
.. seealso::
:ref:`session_persistence_events`
"""
def after_update(self, mapper, connection, target):
"""Receive an object instance after an UPDATE statement
is emitted corresponding to that instance.
This event is used to modify in-Python-only
state on the instance after an UPDATE occurs, as well
as to emit additional SQL statements on the given
connection.
This method is called for all instances that are
marked as "dirty", *even those which have no net changes
to their column-based attributes*, and for which
no UPDATE statement has proceeded. An object is marked
as dirty when any of its column-based attributes have a
"set attribute" operation called or when any of its
collections are modified. If, at update time, no
column-based attributes have any net changes, no UPDATE
statement will be issued. This means that an instance
being sent to :meth:`~.MapperEvents.after_update` is
*not* a guarantee that an UPDATE statement has been
issued.
To detect if the column-based attributes on the object have net
changes, and therefore resulted in an UPDATE statement, use
``object_session(instance).is_modified(instance,
include_collections=False)``.
The event is often called for a batch of objects of the
same class after their UPDATE statements have been emitted at
once in a previous step. In the extremely rare case that
this is not desirable, the :func:`.mapper` can be
configured with ``batch=False``, which will cause
batches of instances to be broken up into individual
(and more poorly performing) event->persist->event
steps.
.. warning::
Mapper-level flush events only allow **very limited operations**,
on attributes local to the row being operated upon only,
as well as allowing any SQL to be emitted on the given
:class:`_engine.Connection`. **Please read fully** the notes
at :ref:`session_persistence_mapper` for guidelines on using
these methods; generally, the :meth:`.SessionEvents.before_flush`
method should be preferred for general on-flush changes.
:param mapper: the :class:`_orm.Mapper` which is the target
of this event.
:param connection: the :class:`_engine.Connection` being used to
emit UPDATE statements for this instance. This
provides a handle into the current transaction on the
target database specific to this instance.
:param target: the mapped instance being persisted. If
the event is configured with ``raw=True``, this will
instead be the :class:`.InstanceState` state-management
object associated with the instance.
:return: No return value is supported by this event.
.. seealso::
:ref:`session_persistence_events`
"""
def before_delete(self, mapper, connection, target):
"""Receive an object instance before a DELETE statement
is emitted corresponding to that instance.
This event is used to emit additional SQL statements on
the given connection as well as to perform application
specific bookkeeping related to a deletion event.
The event is often called for a batch of objects of the
same class before their DELETE statements are emitted at
once in a later step.
.. warning::
Mapper-level flush events only allow **very limited operations**,
on attributes local to the row being operated upon only,
as well as allowing any SQL to be emitted on the given
:class:`_engine.Connection`. **Please read fully** the notes
at :ref:`session_persistence_mapper` for guidelines on using
these methods; generally, the :meth:`.SessionEvents.before_flush`
method should be preferred for general on-flush changes.
:param mapper: the :class:`_orm.Mapper` which is the target
of this event.
:param connection: the :class:`_engine.Connection` being used to
emit DELETE statements for this instance. This
provides a handle into the current transaction on the
target database specific to this instance.
:param target: the mapped instance being deleted. If
the event is configured with ``raw=True``, this will
instead be the :class:`.InstanceState` state-management
object associated with the instance.
:return: No return value is supported by this event.
.. seealso::
:ref:`session_persistence_events`
"""
def after_delete(self, mapper, connection, target):
"""Receive an object instance after a DELETE statement
has been emitted corresponding to that instance.
This event is used to emit additional SQL statements on
the given connection as well as to perform application
specific bookkeeping related to a deletion event.
The event is often called for a batch of objects of the
same class after their DELETE statements have been emitted at
once in a previous step.
.. warning::
Mapper-level flush events only allow **very limited operations**,
on attributes local to the row being operated upon only,
as well as allowing any SQL to be emitted on the given
:class:`_engine.Connection`. **Please read fully** the notes
at :ref:`session_persistence_mapper` for guidelines on using
these methods; generally, the :meth:`.SessionEvents.before_flush`
method should be preferred for general on-flush changes.
:param mapper: the :class:`_orm.Mapper` which is the target
of this event.
:param connection: the :class:`_engine.Connection` being used to
emit DELETE statements for this instance. This
provides a handle into the current transaction on the
target database specific to this instance.
:param target: the mapped instance being deleted. If
the event is configured with ``raw=True``, this will
instead be the :class:`.InstanceState` state-management
object associated with the instance.
:return: No return value is supported by this event.
.. seealso::
:ref:`session_persistence_events`
"""
class _MapperEventsHold(_EventsHold):
all_holds = weakref.WeakKeyDictionary()
def resolve(self, class_):
return _mapper_or_none(class_)
class HoldMapperEvents(_EventsHold.HoldEvents, MapperEvents):
pass
dispatch = event.dispatcher(HoldMapperEvents)
_sessionevents_lifecycle_event_names = set()
class SessionEvents(event.Events):
"""Define events specific to :class:`.Session` lifecycle.
e.g.::
from sqlalchemy import event
from sqlalchemy.orm import sessionmaker
def my_before_commit(session):
print("before commit!")
Session = sessionmaker()
event.listen(Session, "before_commit", my_before_commit)
The :func:`~.event.listen` function will accept
:class:`.Session` objects as well as the return result
of :class:`~.sessionmaker()` and :class:`~.scoped_session()`.
Additionally, it accepts the :class:`.Session` class which
will apply listeners to all :class:`.Session` instances
globally.
:param raw=False: When True, the "target" argument passed
to applicable event listener functions that work on individual
objects will be the instance's :class:`.InstanceState` management
object, rather than the mapped instance itself.
.. versionadded:: 1.3.14
:param restore_load_context=False: Applies to the
:meth:`.SessionEvents.loaded_as_persistent` event. Restores the loader
context of the object when the event hook is complete, so that ongoing
eager load operations continue to target the object appropriately. A
warning is emitted if the object is moved to a new loader context from
within this event if this flag is not set.
.. versionadded:: 1.3.14
"""
_target_class_doc = "SomeSessionOrFactory"
_dispatch_target = Session
def _lifecycle_event(fn):
_sessionevents_lifecycle_event_names.add(fn.__name__)
return fn
@classmethod
def _accept_with(cls, target):
if isinstance(target, scoped_session):
target = target.session_factory
if not isinstance(target, sessionmaker) and (
not isinstance(target, type) or not issubclass(target, Session)
):
raise exc.ArgumentError(
"Session event listen on a scoped_session "
"requires that its creation callable "
"is associated with the Session class."
)
if isinstance(target, sessionmaker):
return target.class_
elif isinstance(target, type):
if issubclass(target, scoped_session):
return Session
elif issubclass(target, Session):
return target
elif isinstance(target, Session):
return target
else:
# allows alternate SessionEvents-like-classes to be consulted
return event.Events._accept_with(target)
@classmethod
def _listen(cls, event_key, raw=False, restore_load_context=False, **kw):
is_instance_event = (
event_key.identifier in _sessionevents_lifecycle_event_names
)
if is_instance_event:
if not raw or restore_load_context:
fn = event_key._listen_fn
def wrap(session, state, *arg, **kw):
if not raw:
target = state.obj()
if target is None:
# existing behavior is that if the object is
# garbage collected, no event is emitted
return
else:
target = state
if restore_load_context:
runid = state.runid
try:
return fn(session, target, *arg, **kw)
finally:
if restore_load_context:
state.runid = runid
event_key = event_key.with_wrapper(wrap)
event_key.base_listen(**kw)
def do_orm_execute(self, orm_execute_state):
"""Intercept statement executions that occur in terms of a :class:`.Session`.
This event is invoked for all top-level SQL statements invoked
from the :meth:`_orm.Session.execute` method. As of SQLAlchemy 1.4,
all ORM queries emitted on behalf of a :class:`_orm.Session` will
flow through this method, so this event hook provides the single
point at which ORM queries of all types may be intercepted before
they are invoked, and additionally to replace their execution with
a different process.
This event is a ``do_`` event, meaning it has the capability to replace
the operation that the :meth:`_orm.Session.execute` method normally
performs. The intended use for this includes sharding and
result-caching schemes which may seek to invoke the same statement
across multiple database connections, returning a result that is
merged from each of them, or which don't invoke the statement at all,
instead returning data from a cache.
The hook intends to replace the use of the
``Query._execute_and_instances`` method that could be subclassed prior
to SQLAlchemy 1.4.
:param orm_execute_state: an instance of :class:`.ORMExecuteState`
which contains all information about the current execution, as well
as helper functions used to derive other commonly required
information. See that object for details.
.. seealso::
:ref:`session_execute_events` - top level documentation on how
to use :meth:`_orm.SessionEvents.do_orm_execute`
:class:`.ORMExecuteState` - the object passed to the
:meth:`_orm.SessionEvents.do_orm_execute` event which contains
all information about the statement to be invoked. It also
provides an interface to extend the current statement, options,
and parameters as well as an option that allows programmatic
invocation of the statement at any point.
:ref:`examples_session_orm_events` - includes examples of using
:meth:`_orm.SessionEvents.do_orm_execute`
:ref:`examples_caching` - an example of how to integrate
Dogpile caching with the ORM :class:`_orm.Session` making use
of the :meth:`_orm.SessionEvents.do_orm_execute` event hook.
:ref:`examples_sharding` - the Horizontal Sharding example /
extension relies upon the
:meth:`_orm.SessionEvents.do_orm_execute` event hook to invoke a
SQL statement on multiple backends and return a merged result.
.. versionadded:: 1.4
"""
def after_transaction_create(self, session, transaction):
"""Execute when a new :class:`.SessionTransaction` is created.
This event differs from :meth:`~.SessionEvents.after_begin`
in that it occurs for each :class:`.SessionTransaction`
overall, as opposed to when transactions are begun
on individual database connections. It is also invoked
for nested transactions and subtransactions, and is always
matched by a corresponding
:meth:`~.SessionEvents.after_transaction_end` event
(assuming normal operation of the :class:`.Session`).
:param session: the target :class:`.Session`.
:param transaction: the target :class:`.SessionTransaction`.
To detect if this is the outermost
:class:`.SessionTransaction`, as opposed to a "subtransaction" or a
SAVEPOINT, test that the :attr:`.SessionTransaction.parent` attribute
is ``None``::
@event.listens_for(session, "after_transaction_create")
def after_transaction_create(session, transaction):
if transaction.parent is None:
# work with top-level transaction
To detect if the :class:`.SessionTransaction` is a SAVEPOINT, use the
:attr:`.SessionTransaction.nested` attribute::
@event.listens_for(session, "after_transaction_create")
def after_transaction_create(session, transaction):
if transaction.nested:
# work with SAVEPOINT transaction
.. seealso::
:class:`.SessionTransaction`
:meth:`~.SessionEvents.after_transaction_end`
"""
def after_transaction_end(self, session, transaction):
"""Execute when the span of a :class:`.SessionTransaction` ends.
This event differs from :meth:`~.SessionEvents.after_commit`
in that it corresponds to all :class:`.SessionTransaction`
objects in use, including those for nested transactions
and subtransactions, and is always matched by a corresponding
:meth:`~.SessionEvents.after_transaction_create` event.
:param session: the target :class:`.Session`.
:param transaction: the target :class:`.SessionTransaction`.
To detect if this is the outermost
:class:`.SessionTransaction`, as opposed to a "subtransaction" or a
SAVEPOINT, test that the :attr:`.SessionTransaction.parent` attribute
is ``None``::
@event.listens_for(session, "after_transaction_create")
def after_transaction_end(session, transaction):
if transaction.parent is None:
# work with top-level transaction
To detect if the :class:`.SessionTransaction` is a SAVEPOINT, use the
:attr:`.SessionTransaction.nested` attribute::
@event.listens_for(session, "after_transaction_create")
def after_transaction_end(session, transaction):
if transaction.nested:
# work with SAVEPOINT transaction
.. seealso::
:class:`.SessionTransaction`
:meth:`~.SessionEvents.after_transaction_create`
"""
def before_commit(self, session):
"""Execute before commit is called.
.. note::
The :meth:`~.SessionEvents.before_commit` hook is *not* per-flush,
that is, the :class:`.Session` can emit SQL to the database
many times within the scope of a transaction.
For interception of these events, use the
:meth:`~.SessionEvents.before_flush`,
:meth:`~.SessionEvents.after_flush`, or
:meth:`~.SessionEvents.after_flush_postexec`
events.
:param session: The target :class:`.Session`.
.. seealso::
:meth:`~.SessionEvents.after_commit`
:meth:`~.SessionEvents.after_begin`
:meth:`~.SessionEvents.after_transaction_create`
:meth:`~.SessionEvents.after_transaction_end`
"""
def after_commit(self, session):
"""Execute after a commit has occurred.
.. note::
The :meth:`~.SessionEvents.after_commit` hook is *not* per-flush,
that is, the :class:`.Session` can emit SQL to the database
many times within the scope of a transaction.
For interception of these events, use the
:meth:`~.SessionEvents.before_flush`,
:meth:`~.SessionEvents.after_flush`, or
:meth:`~.SessionEvents.after_flush_postexec`
events.
.. note::
The :class:`.Session` is not in an active transaction
when the :meth:`~.SessionEvents.after_commit` event is invoked,
and therefore can not emit SQL. To emit SQL corresponding to
every transaction, use the :meth:`~.SessionEvents.before_commit`
event.
:param session: The target :class:`.Session`.
.. seealso::
:meth:`~.SessionEvents.before_commit`
:meth:`~.SessionEvents.after_begin`
:meth:`~.SessionEvents.after_transaction_create`
:meth:`~.SessionEvents.after_transaction_end`
"""
def after_rollback(self, session):
"""Execute after a real DBAPI rollback has occurred.
Note that this event only fires when the *actual* rollback against
the database occurs - it does *not* fire each time the
:meth:`.Session.rollback` method is called, if the underlying
DBAPI transaction has already been rolled back. In many
cases, the :class:`.Session` will not be in
an "active" state during this event, as the current
transaction is not valid. To acquire a :class:`.Session`
which is active after the outermost rollback has proceeded,
use the :meth:`.SessionEvents.after_soft_rollback` event, checking the
:attr:`.Session.is_active` flag.
:param session: The target :class:`.Session`.
"""
def after_soft_rollback(self, session, previous_transaction):
"""Execute after any rollback has occurred, including "soft"
rollbacks that don't actually emit at the DBAPI level.
This corresponds to both nested and outer rollbacks, i.e.
the innermost rollback that calls the DBAPI's
rollback() method, as well as the enclosing rollback
calls that only pop themselves from the transaction stack.
The given :class:`.Session` can be used to invoke SQL and
:meth:`.Session.query` operations after an outermost rollback
by first checking the :attr:`.Session.is_active` flag::
@event.listens_for(Session, "after_soft_rollback")
def do_something(session, previous_transaction):
if session.is_active:
session.execute("select * from some_table")
:param session: The target :class:`.Session`.
:param previous_transaction: The :class:`.SessionTransaction`
transactional marker object which was just closed. The current
:class:`.SessionTransaction` for the given :class:`.Session` is
available via the :attr:`.Session.transaction` attribute.
"""
def before_flush(self, session, flush_context, instances):
"""Execute before flush process has started.
:param session: The target :class:`.Session`.
:param flush_context: Internal :class:`.UOWTransaction` object
which handles the details of the flush.
:param instances: Usually ``None``, this is the collection of
objects which can be passed to the :meth:`.Session.flush` method
(note this usage is deprecated).
.. seealso::
:meth:`~.SessionEvents.after_flush`
:meth:`~.SessionEvents.after_flush_postexec`
:ref:`session_persistence_events`
"""
def after_flush(self, session, flush_context):
"""Execute after flush has completed, but before commit has been
called.
Note that the session's state is still in pre-flush, i.e. 'new',
'dirty', and 'deleted' lists still show pre-flush state as well
as the history settings on instance attributes.
.. warning:: This event runs after the :class:`.Session` has emitted
SQL to modify the database, but **before** it has altered its
internal state to reflect those changes, including that newly
inserted objects are placed into the identity map. ORM operations
emitted within this event such as loads of related items
may produce new identity map entries that will immediately
be replaced, sometimes causing confusing results. SQLAlchemy will
emit a warning for this condition as of version 1.3.9.
:param session: The target :class:`.Session`.
:param flush_context: Internal :class:`.UOWTransaction` object
which handles the details of the flush.
.. seealso::
:meth:`~.SessionEvents.before_flush`
:meth:`~.SessionEvents.after_flush_postexec`
:ref:`session_persistence_events`
"""
def after_flush_postexec(self, session, flush_context):
"""Execute after flush has completed, and after the post-exec
state occurs.
This will be when the 'new', 'dirty', and 'deleted' lists are in
their final state. An actual commit() may or may not have
occurred, depending on whether or not the flush started its own
transaction or participated in a larger transaction.
:param session: The target :class:`.Session`.
:param flush_context: Internal :class:`.UOWTransaction` object
which handles the details of the flush.
.. seealso::
:meth:`~.SessionEvents.before_flush`
:meth:`~.SessionEvents.after_flush`
:ref:`session_persistence_events`
"""
def after_begin(self, session, transaction, connection):
"""Execute after a transaction is begun on a connection
:param session: The target :class:`.Session`.
:param transaction: The :class:`.SessionTransaction`.
:param connection: The :class:`_engine.Connection` object
which will be used for SQL statements.
.. seealso::
:meth:`~.SessionEvents.before_commit`
:meth:`~.SessionEvents.after_commit`
:meth:`~.SessionEvents.after_transaction_create`
:meth:`~.SessionEvents.after_transaction_end`
"""
@_lifecycle_event
def before_attach(self, session, instance):
"""Execute before an instance is attached to a session.
This is called before an add, delete or merge causes
the object to be part of the session.
.. seealso::
:meth:`~.SessionEvents.after_attach`
:ref:`session_lifecycle_events`
"""
@_lifecycle_event
def after_attach(self, session, instance):
"""Execute after an instance is attached to a session.
This is called after an add, delete or merge.
.. note::
As of 0.8, this event fires off *after* the item
has been fully associated with the session, which is
different than previous releases. For event
handlers that require the object not yet
be part of session state (such as handlers which
may autoflush while the target object is not
yet complete) consider the
new :meth:`.before_attach` event.
.. seealso::
:meth:`~.SessionEvents.before_attach`
:ref:`session_lifecycle_events`
"""
@event._legacy_signature(
"0.9",
["session", "query", "query_context", "result"],
lambda update_context: (
update_context.session,
update_context.query,
None,
update_context.result,
),
)
def after_bulk_update(self, update_context):
"""Execute after an ORM UPDATE against a WHERE expression has been
invoked.
This is called as a result of the :meth:`_query.Query.update` method.
:param update_context: an "update context" object which contains
details about the update, including these attributes:
* ``session`` - the :class:`.Session` involved
* ``query`` -the :class:`_query.Query`
object that this update operation
was called upon.
* ``values`` The "values" dictionary that was passed to
:meth:`_query.Query.update`.
* ``result`` the :class:`_engine.CursorResult`
returned as a result of the
bulk UPDATE operation.
.. versionchanged:: 1.4 the update_context no longer has a
``QueryContext`` object associated with it.
.. seealso::
:meth:`.QueryEvents.before_compile_update`
:meth:`.SessionEvents.after_bulk_delete`
"""
@event._legacy_signature(
"0.9",
["session", "query", "query_context", "result"],
lambda delete_context: (
delete_context.session,
delete_context.query,
None,
delete_context.result,
),
)
def after_bulk_delete(self, delete_context):
"""Execute after ORM DELETE against a WHERE expression has been
invoked.
This is called as a result of the :meth:`_query.Query.delete` method.
:param delete_context: a "delete context" object which contains
details about the update, including these attributes:
* ``session`` - the :class:`.Session` involved
* ``query`` -the :class:`_query.Query`
object that this update operation
was called upon.
* ``result`` the :class:`_engine.CursorResult`
returned as a result of the
bulk DELETE operation.
.. versionchanged:: 1.4 the update_context no longer has a
``QueryContext`` object associated with it.
.. seealso::
:meth:`.QueryEvents.before_compile_delete`
:meth:`.SessionEvents.after_bulk_update`
"""
@_lifecycle_event
def transient_to_pending(self, session, instance):
"""Intercept the "transient to pending" transition for a specific object.
This event is a specialization of the
:meth:`.SessionEvents.after_attach` event which is only invoked
for this specific transition. It is invoked typically during the
:meth:`.Session.add` call.
:param session: target :class:`.Session`
:param instance: the ORM-mapped instance being operated upon.
.. versionadded:: 1.1
.. seealso::
:ref:`session_lifecycle_events`
"""
@_lifecycle_event
def pending_to_transient(self, session, instance):
"""Intercept the "pending to transient" transition for a specific object.
This less common transition occurs when an pending object that has
not been flushed is evicted from the session; this can occur
when the :meth:`.Session.rollback` method rolls back the transaction,
or when the :meth:`.Session.expunge` method is used.
:param session: target :class:`.Session`
:param instance: the ORM-mapped instance being operated upon.
.. versionadded:: 1.1
.. seealso::
:ref:`session_lifecycle_events`
"""
@_lifecycle_event
def persistent_to_transient(self, session, instance):
"""Intercept the "persistent to transient" transition for a specific object.
This less common transition occurs when an pending object that has
has been flushed is evicted from the session; this can occur
when the :meth:`.Session.rollback` method rolls back the transaction.
:param session: target :class:`.Session`
:param instance: the ORM-mapped instance being operated upon.
.. versionadded:: 1.1
.. seealso::
:ref:`session_lifecycle_events`
"""
@_lifecycle_event
def pending_to_persistent(self, session, instance):
"""Intercept the "pending to persistent"" transition for a specific object.
This event is invoked within the flush process, and is
similar to scanning the :attr:`.Session.new` collection within
the :meth:`.SessionEvents.after_flush` event. However, in this
case the object has already been moved to the persistent state
when the event is called.
:param session: target :class:`.Session`
:param instance: the ORM-mapped instance being operated upon.
.. versionadded:: 1.1
.. seealso::
:ref:`session_lifecycle_events`
"""
@_lifecycle_event
def detached_to_persistent(self, session, instance):
"""Intercept the "detached to persistent" transition for a specific object.
This event is a specialization of the
:meth:`.SessionEvents.after_attach` event which is only invoked
for this specific transition. It is invoked typically during the
:meth:`.Session.add` call, as well as during the
:meth:`.Session.delete` call if the object was not previously
associated with the
:class:`.Session` (note that an object marked as "deleted" remains
in the "persistent" state until the flush proceeds).
.. note::
If the object becomes persistent as part of a call to
:meth:`.Session.delete`, the object is **not** yet marked as
deleted when this event is called. To detect deleted objects,
check the ``deleted`` flag sent to the
:meth:`.SessionEvents.persistent_to_detached` to event after the
flush proceeds, or check the :attr:`.Session.deleted` collection
within the :meth:`.SessionEvents.before_flush` event if deleted
objects need to be intercepted before the flush.
:param session: target :class:`.Session`
:param instance: the ORM-mapped instance being operated upon.
.. versionadded:: 1.1
.. seealso::
:ref:`session_lifecycle_events`
"""
@_lifecycle_event
def loaded_as_persistent(self, session, instance):
"""Intercept the "loaded as persistent" transition for a specific object.
This event is invoked within the ORM loading process, and is invoked
very similarly to the :meth:`.InstanceEvents.load` event. However,
the event here is linkable to a :class:`.Session` class or instance,
rather than to a mapper or class hierarchy, and integrates
with the other session lifecycle events smoothly. The object
is guaranteed to be present in the session's identity map when
this event is called.
.. note:: This event is invoked within the loader process before
eager loaders may have been completed, and the object's state may
not be complete. Additionally, invoking row-level refresh
operations on the object will place the object into a new loader
context, interfering with the existing load context. See the note
on :meth:`.InstanceEvents.load` for background on making use of the
:paramref:`.SessionEvents.restore_load_context` parameter, which
works in the same manner as that of
:paramref:`.InstanceEvents.restore_load_context`, in order to
resolve this scenario.
:param session: target :class:`.Session`
:param instance: the ORM-mapped instance being operated upon.
.. versionadded:: 1.1
.. seealso::
:ref:`session_lifecycle_events`
"""
@_lifecycle_event
def persistent_to_deleted(self, session, instance):
"""Intercept the "persistent to deleted" transition for a specific object.
This event is invoked when a persistent object's identity
is deleted from the database within a flush, however the object
still remains associated with the :class:`.Session` until the
transaction completes.
If the transaction is rolled back, the object moves again
to the persistent state, and the
:meth:`.SessionEvents.deleted_to_persistent` event is called.
If the transaction is committed, the object becomes detached,
which will emit the :meth:`.SessionEvents.deleted_to_detached`
event.
Note that while the :meth:`.Session.delete` method is the primary
public interface to mark an object as deleted, many objects
get deleted due to cascade rules, which are not always determined
until flush time. Therefore, there's no way to catch
every object that will be deleted until the flush has proceeded.
the :meth:`.SessionEvents.persistent_to_deleted` event is therefore
invoked at the end of a flush.
.. versionadded:: 1.1
.. seealso::
:ref:`session_lifecycle_events`
"""
@_lifecycle_event
def deleted_to_persistent(self, session, instance):
"""Intercept the "deleted to persistent" transition for a specific object.
This transition occurs only when an object that's been deleted
successfully in a flush is restored due to a call to
:meth:`.Session.rollback`. The event is not called under
any other circumstances.
.. versionadded:: 1.1
.. seealso::
:ref:`session_lifecycle_events`
"""
@_lifecycle_event
def deleted_to_detached(self, session, instance):
"""Intercept the "deleted to detached" transition for a specific object.
This event is invoked when a deleted object is evicted
from the session. The typical case when this occurs is when
the transaction for a :class:`.Session` in which the object
was deleted is committed; the object moves from the deleted
state to the detached state.
It is also invoked for objects that were deleted in a flush
when the :meth:`.Session.expunge_all` or :meth:`.Session.close`
events are called, as well as if the object is individually
expunged from its deleted state via :meth:`.Session.expunge`.
.. versionadded:: 1.1
.. seealso::
:ref:`session_lifecycle_events`
"""
@_lifecycle_event
def persistent_to_detached(self, session, instance):
"""Intercept the "persistent to detached" transition for a specific object.
This event is invoked when a persistent object is evicted
from the session. There are many conditions that cause this
to happen, including:
* using a method such as :meth:`.Session.expunge`
or :meth:`.Session.close`
* Calling the :meth:`.Session.rollback` method, when the object
was part of an INSERT statement for that session's transaction
:param session: target :class:`.Session`
:param instance: the ORM-mapped instance being operated upon.
:param deleted: boolean. If True, indicates this object moved
to the detached state because it was marked as deleted and flushed.
.. versionadded:: 1.1
.. seealso::
:ref:`session_lifecycle_events`
"""
class AttributeEvents(event.Events):
r"""Define events for object attributes.
These are typically defined on the class-bound descriptor for the
target class.
e.g.::
from sqlalchemy import event
@event.listens_for(MyClass.collection, 'append', propagate=True)
def my_append_listener(target, value, initiator):
print("received append event for target: %s" % target)
Listeners have the option to return a possibly modified version of the
value, when the :paramref:`.AttributeEvents.retval` flag is passed to
:func:`.event.listen` or :func:`.event.listens_for`::
def validate_phone(target, value, oldvalue, initiator):
"Strip non-numeric characters from a phone number"
return re.sub(r'\D', '', value)
# setup listener on UserContact.phone attribute, instructing
# it to use the return value
listen(UserContact.phone, 'set', validate_phone, retval=True)
A validation function like the above can also raise an exception
such as :exc:`ValueError` to halt the operation.
The :paramref:`.AttributeEvents.propagate` flag is also important when
applying listeners to mapped classes that also have mapped subclasses,
as when using mapper inheritance patterns::
@event.listens_for(MySuperClass.attr, 'set', propagate=True)
def receive_set(target, value, initiator):
print("value set: %s" % target)
The full list of modifiers available to the :func:`.event.listen`
and :func:`.event.listens_for` functions are below.
:param active_history=False: When True, indicates that the
"set" event would like to receive the "old" value being
replaced unconditionally, even if this requires firing off
database loads. Note that ``active_history`` can also be
set directly via :func:`.column_property` and
:func:`_orm.relationship`.
:param propagate=False: When True, the listener function will
be established not just for the class attribute given, but
for attributes of the same name on all current subclasses
of that class, as well as all future subclasses of that
class, using an additional listener that listens for
instrumentation events.
:param raw=False: When True, the "target" argument to the
event will be the :class:`.InstanceState` management
object, rather than the mapped instance itself.
:param retval=False: when True, the user-defined event
listening must return the "value" argument from the
function. This gives the listening function the opportunity
to change the value that is ultimately used for a "set"
or "append" event.
"""
_target_class_doc = "SomeClass.some_attribute"
_dispatch_target = QueryableAttribute
@staticmethod
def _set_dispatch(cls, dispatch_cls):
dispatch = event.Events._set_dispatch(cls, dispatch_cls)
dispatch_cls._active_history = False
return dispatch
@classmethod
def _accept_with(cls, target):
# TODO: coverage
if isinstance(target, interfaces.MapperProperty):
return getattr(target.parent.class_, target.key)
else:
return target
@classmethod
def _listen(
cls,
event_key,
active_history=False,
raw=False,
retval=False,
propagate=False,
):
target, fn = event_key.dispatch_target, event_key._listen_fn
if active_history:
target.dispatch._active_history = True
if not raw or not retval:
def wrap(target, *arg):
if not raw:
target = target.obj()
if not retval:
if arg:
value = arg[0]
else:
value = None
fn(target, *arg)
return value
else:
return fn(target, *arg)
event_key = event_key.with_wrapper(wrap)
event_key.base_listen(propagate=propagate)
if propagate:
manager = instrumentation.manager_of_class(target.class_)
for mgr in manager.subclass_managers(True):
event_key.with_dispatch_target(mgr[target.key]).base_listen(
propagate=True
)
if active_history:
mgr[target.key].dispatch._active_history = True
def append(self, target, value, initiator):
"""Receive a collection append event.
The append event is invoked for each element as it is appended
to the collection. This occurs for single-item appends as well
as for a "bulk replace" operation.
:param target: the object instance receiving the event.
If the listener is registered with ``raw=True``, this will
be the :class:`.InstanceState` object.
:param value: the value being appended. If this listener
is registered with ``retval=True``, the listener
function must return this value, or a new value which
replaces it.
:param initiator: An instance of :class:`.attributes.Event`
representing the initiation of the event. May be modified
from its original value by backref handlers in order to control
chained event propagation, as well as be inspected for information
about the source of the event.
:return: if the event was registered with ``retval=True``,
the given value, or a new effective value, should be returned.
.. seealso::
:class:`.AttributeEvents` - background on listener options such
as propagation to subclasses.
:meth:`.AttributeEvents.bulk_replace`
"""
def append_wo_mutation(self, target, value, initiator):
"""Receive a collection append event where the collection was not
actually mutated.
This event differs from :meth:`_orm.AttributeEvents.append` in that
it is fired off for de-duplicating collections such as sets and
dictionaries, when the object already exists in the target collection.
The event does not have a return value and the identity of the
given object cannot be changed.
The event is used for cascading objects into a :class:`_orm.Session`
when the collection has already been mutated via a backref event.
:param target: the object instance receiving the event.
If the listener is registered with ``raw=True``, this will
be the :class:`.InstanceState` object.
:param value: the value that would be appended if the object did not
already exist in the collection.
:param initiator: An instance of :class:`.attributes.Event`
representing the initiation of the event. May be modified
from its original value by backref handlers in order to control
chained event propagation, as well as be inspected for information
about the source of the event.
:return: No return value is defined for this event.
.. versionadded:: 1.4.15
"""
def bulk_replace(self, target, values, initiator):
"""Receive a collection 'bulk replace' event.
This event is invoked for a sequence of values as they are incoming
to a bulk collection set operation, which can be
modified in place before the values are treated as ORM objects.
This is an "early hook" that runs before the bulk replace routine
attempts to reconcile which objects are already present in the
collection and which are being removed by the net replace operation.
It is typical that this method be combined with use of the
:meth:`.AttributeEvents.append` event. When using both of these
events, note that a bulk replace operation will invoke
the :meth:`.AttributeEvents.append` event for all new items,
even after :meth:`.AttributeEvents.bulk_replace` has been invoked
for the collection as a whole. In order to determine if an
:meth:`.AttributeEvents.append` event is part of a bulk replace,
use the symbol :attr:`~.attributes.OP_BULK_REPLACE` to test the
incoming initiator::
from sqlalchemy.orm.attributes import OP_BULK_REPLACE
@event.listens_for(SomeObject.collection, "bulk_replace")
def process_collection(target, values, initiator):
values[:] = [_make_value(value) for value in values]
@event.listens_for(SomeObject.collection, "append", retval=True)
def process_collection(target, value, initiator):
# make sure bulk_replace didn't already do it
if initiator is None or initiator.op is not OP_BULK_REPLACE:
return _make_value(value)
else:
return value
.. versionadded:: 1.2
:param target: the object instance receiving the event.
If the listener is registered with ``raw=True``, this will
be the :class:`.InstanceState` object.
:param value: a sequence (e.g. a list) of the values being set. The
handler can modify this list in place.
:param initiator: An instance of :class:`.attributes.Event`
representing the initiation of the event.
.. seealso::
:class:`.AttributeEvents` - background on listener options such
as propagation to subclasses.
"""
def remove(self, target, value, initiator):
"""Receive a collection remove event.
:param target: the object instance receiving the event.
If the listener is registered with ``raw=True``, this will
be the :class:`.InstanceState` object.
:param value: the value being removed.
:param initiator: An instance of :class:`.attributes.Event`
representing the initiation of the event. May be modified
from its original value by backref handlers in order to control
chained event propagation.
.. versionchanged:: 0.9.0 the ``initiator`` argument is now
passed as a :class:`.attributes.Event` object, and may be
modified by backref handlers within a chain of backref-linked
events.
:return: No return value is defined for this event.
.. seealso::
:class:`.AttributeEvents` - background on listener options such
as propagation to subclasses.
"""
def set(self, target, value, oldvalue, initiator):
"""Receive a scalar set event.
:param target: the object instance receiving the event.
If the listener is registered with ``raw=True``, this will
be the :class:`.InstanceState` object.
:param value: the value being set. If this listener
is registered with ``retval=True``, the listener
function must return this value, or a new value which
replaces it.
:param oldvalue: the previous value being replaced. This
may also be the symbol ``NEVER_SET`` or ``NO_VALUE``.
If the listener is registered with ``active_history=True``,
the previous value of the attribute will be loaded from
the database if the existing value is currently unloaded
or expired.
:param initiator: An instance of :class:`.attributes.Event`
representing the initiation of the event. May be modified
from its original value by backref handlers in order to control
chained event propagation.
.. versionchanged:: 0.9.0 the ``initiator`` argument is now
passed as a :class:`.attributes.Event` object, and may be
modified by backref handlers within a chain of backref-linked
events.
:return: if the event was registered with ``retval=True``,
the given value, or a new effective value, should be returned.
.. seealso::
:class:`.AttributeEvents` - background on listener options such
as propagation to subclasses.
"""
def init_scalar(self, target, value, dict_):
r"""Receive a scalar "init" event.
This event is invoked when an uninitialized, unpersisted scalar
attribute is accessed, e.g. read::
x = my_object.some_attribute
The ORM's default behavior when this occurs for an un-initialized
attribute is to return the value ``None``; note this differs from
Python's usual behavior of raising ``AttributeError``. The
event here can be used to customize what value is actually returned,
with the assumption that the event listener would be mirroring
a default generator that is configured on the Core
:class:`_schema.Column`
object as well.
Since a default generator on a :class:`_schema.Column`
might also produce
a changing value such as a timestamp, the
:meth:`.AttributeEvents.init_scalar`
event handler can also be used to **set** the newly returned value, so
that a Core-level default generation function effectively fires off
only once, but at the moment the attribute is accessed on the
non-persisted object. Normally, no change to the object's state
is made when an uninitialized attribute is accessed (much older
SQLAlchemy versions did in fact change the object's state).
If a default generator on a column returned a particular constant,
a handler might be used as follows::
SOME_CONSTANT = 3.1415926
class MyClass(Base):
# ...
some_attribute = Column(Numeric, default=SOME_CONSTANT)
@event.listens_for(
MyClass.some_attribute, "init_scalar",
retval=True, propagate=True)
def _init_some_attribute(target, dict_, value):
dict_['some_attribute'] = SOME_CONSTANT
return SOME_CONSTANT
Above, we initialize the attribute ``MyClass.some_attribute`` to the
value of ``SOME_CONSTANT``. The above code includes the following
features:
* By setting the value ``SOME_CONSTANT`` in the given ``dict_``,
we indicate that this value is to be persisted to the database.
This supersedes the use of ``SOME_CONSTANT`` in the default generator
for the :class:`_schema.Column`. The ``active_column_defaults.py``
example given at :ref:`examples_instrumentation` illustrates using
the same approach for a changing default, e.g. a timestamp
generator. In this particular example, it is not strictly
necessary to do this since ``SOME_CONSTANT`` would be part of the
INSERT statement in either case.
* By establishing the ``retval=True`` flag, the value we return
from the function will be returned by the attribute getter.
Without this flag, the event is assumed to be a passive observer
and the return value of our function is ignored.
* The ``propagate=True`` flag is significant if the mapped class
includes inheriting subclasses, which would also make use of this
event listener. Without this flag, an inheriting subclass will
not use our event handler.
In the above example, the attribute set event
:meth:`.AttributeEvents.set` as well as the related validation feature
provided by :obj:`_orm.validates` is **not** invoked when we apply our
value to the given ``dict_``. To have these events to invoke in
response to our newly generated value, apply the value to the given
object as a normal attribute set operation::
SOME_CONSTANT = 3.1415926
@event.listens_for(
MyClass.some_attribute, "init_scalar",
retval=True, propagate=True)
def _init_some_attribute(target, dict_, value):
# will also fire off attribute set events
target.some_attribute = SOME_CONSTANT
return SOME_CONSTANT
When multiple listeners are set up, the generation of the value
is "chained" from one listener to the next by passing the value
returned by the previous listener that specifies ``retval=True``
as the ``value`` argument of the next listener.
.. versionadded:: 1.1
:param target: the object instance receiving the event.
If the listener is registered with ``raw=True``, this will
be the :class:`.InstanceState` object.
:param value: the value that is to be returned before this event
listener were invoked. This value begins as the value ``None``,
however will be the return value of the previous event handler
function if multiple listeners are present.
:param dict\_: the attribute dictionary of this mapped object.
This is normally the ``__dict__`` of the object, but in all cases
represents the destination that the attribute system uses to get
at the actual value of this attribute. Placing the value in this
dictionary has the effect that the value will be used in the
INSERT statement generated by the unit of work.
.. seealso::
:meth:`.AttributeEvents.init_collection` - collection version
of this event
:class:`.AttributeEvents` - background on listener options such
as propagation to subclasses.
:ref:`examples_instrumentation` - see the
``active_column_defaults.py`` example.
"""
def init_collection(self, target, collection, collection_adapter):
"""Receive a 'collection init' event.
This event is triggered for a collection-based attribute, when
the initial "empty collection" is first generated for a blank
attribute, as well as for when the collection is replaced with
a new one, such as via a set event.
E.g., given that ``User.addresses`` is a relationship-based
collection, the event is triggered here::
u1 = User()
u1.addresses.append(a1) # <- new collection
and also during replace operations::
u1.addresses = [a2, a3] # <- new collection
:param target: the object instance receiving the event.
If the listener is registered with ``raw=True``, this will
be the :class:`.InstanceState` object.
:param collection: the new collection. This will always be generated
from what was specified as
:paramref:`_orm.relationship.collection_class`, and will always
be empty.
:param collection_adapter: the :class:`.CollectionAdapter` that will
mediate internal access to the collection.
.. versionadded:: 1.0.0 :meth:`.AttributeEvents.init_collection`
and :meth:`.AttributeEvents.dispose_collection` events.
.. seealso::
:class:`.AttributeEvents` - background on listener options such
as propagation to subclasses.
:meth:`.AttributeEvents.init_scalar` - "scalar" version of this
event.
"""
def dispose_collection(self, target, collection, collection_adapter):
"""Receive a 'collection dispose' event.
This event is triggered for a collection-based attribute when
a collection is replaced, that is::
u1.addresses.append(a1)
u1.addresses = [a2, a3] # <- old collection is disposed
The old collection received will contain its previous contents.
.. versionchanged:: 1.2 The collection passed to
:meth:`.AttributeEvents.dispose_collection` will now have its
contents before the dispose intact; previously, the collection
would be empty.
.. versionadded:: 1.0.0 the :meth:`.AttributeEvents.init_collection`
and :meth:`.AttributeEvents.dispose_collection` events.
.. seealso::
:class:`.AttributeEvents` - background on listener options such
as propagation to subclasses.
"""
def modified(self, target, initiator):
"""Receive a 'modified' event.
This event is triggered when the :func:`.attributes.flag_modified`
function is used to trigger a modify event on an attribute without
any specific value being set.
.. versionadded:: 1.2
:param target: the object instance receiving the event.
If the listener is registered with ``raw=True``, this will
be the :class:`.InstanceState` object.
:param initiator: An instance of :class:`.attributes.Event`
representing the initiation of the event.
.. seealso::
:class:`.AttributeEvents` - background on listener options such
as propagation to subclasses.
"""
class QueryEvents(event.Events):
"""Represent events within the construction of a :class:`_query.Query`
object.
The :class:`_orm.QueryEvents` hooks are now superseded by the
:meth:`_orm.SessionEvents.do_orm_execute` event hook.
"""
_target_class_doc = "SomeQuery"
_dispatch_target = Query
def before_compile(self, query):
"""Receive the :class:`_query.Query`
object before it is composed into a
core :class:`_expression.Select` object.
.. deprecated:: 1.4 The :meth:`_orm.QueryEvents.before_compile` event
is superseded by the much more capable
:meth:`_orm.SessionEvents.do_orm_execute` hook. In version 1.4,
the :meth:`_orm.QueryEvents.before_compile` event is **no longer
used** for ORM-level attribute loads, such as loads of deferred
or expired attributes as well as relationship loaders. See the
new examples in :ref:`examples_session_orm_events` which
illustrate new ways of intercepting and modifying ORM queries
for the most common purpose of adding arbitrary filter criteria.
This event is intended to allow changes to the query given::
@event.listens_for(Query, "before_compile", retval=True)
def no_deleted(query):
for desc in query.column_descriptions:
if desc['type'] is User:
entity = desc['entity']
query = query.filter(entity.deleted == False)
return query
The event should normally be listened with the ``retval=True``
parameter set, so that the modified query may be returned.
The :meth:`.QueryEvents.before_compile` event by default
will disallow "baked" queries from caching a query, if the event
hook returns a new :class:`_query.Query` object.
This affects both direct
use of the baked query extension as well as its operation within
lazy loaders and eager loaders for relationships. In order to
re-establish the query being cached, apply the event adding the
``bake_ok`` flag::
@event.listens_for(
Query, "before_compile", retval=True, bake_ok=True)
def my_event(query):
for desc in query.column_descriptions:
if desc['type'] is User:
entity = desc['entity']
query = query.filter(entity.deleted == False)
return query
When ``bake_ok`` is set to True, the event hook will only be invoked
once, and not called for subsequent invocations of a particular query
that is being cached.
.. versionadded:: 1.3.11 - added the "bake_ok" flag to the
:meth:`.QueryEvents.before_compile` event and disallowed caching via
the "baked" extension from occurring for event handlers that
return a new :class:`_query.Query` object if this flag is not set.
.. seealso::
:meth:`.QueryEvents.before_compile_update`
:meth:`.QueryEvents.before_compile_delete`
:ref:`baked_with_before_compile`
"""
def before_compile_update(self, query, update_context):
"""Allow modifications to the :class:`_query.Query` object within
:meth:`_query.Query.update`.
.. deprecated:: 1.4 The :meth:`_orm.QueryEvents.before_compile_update`
event is superseded by the much more capable
:meth:`_orm.SessionEvents.do_orm_execute` hook.
Like the :meth:`.QueryEvents.before_compile` event, if the event
is to be used to alter the :class:`_query.Query` object, it should
be configured with ``retval=True``, and the modified
:class:`_query.Query` object returned, as in ::
@event.listens_for(Query, "before_compile_update", retval=True)
def no_deleted(query, update_context):
for desc in query.column_descriptions:
if desc['type'] is User:
entity = desc['entity']
query = query.filter(entity.deleted == False)
update_context.values['timestamp'] = datetime.utcnow()
return query
The ``.values`` dictionary of the "update context" object can also
be modified in place as illustrated above.
:param query: a :class:`_query.Query` instance; this is also
the ``.query`` attribute of the given "update context"
object.
:param update_context: an "update context" object which is
the same kind of object as described in
:paramref:`.QueryEvents.after_bulk_update.update_context`.
The object has a ``.values`` attribute in an UPDATE context which is
the dictionary of parameters passed to :meth:`_query.Query.update`.
This
dictionary can be modified to alter the VALUES clause of the
resulting UPDATE statement.
.. versionadded:: 1.2.17
.. seealso::
:meth:`.QueryEvents.before_compile`
:meth:`.QueryEvents.before_compile_delete`
"""
def before_compile_delete(self, query, delete_context):
"""Allow modifications to the :class:`_query.Query` object within
:meth:`_query.Query.delete`.
.. deprecated:: 1.4 The :meth:`_orm.QueryEvents.before_compile_delete`
event is superseded by the much more capable
:meth:`_orm.SessionEvents.do_orm_execute` hook.
Like the :meth:`.QueryEvents.before_compile` event, this event
should be configured with ``retval=True``, and the modified
:class:`_query.Query` object returned, as in ::
@event.listens_for(Query, "before_compile_delete", retval=True)
def no_deleted(query, delete_context):
for desc in query.column_descriptions:
if desc['type'] is User:
entity = desc['entity']
query = query.filter(entity.deleted == False)
return query
:param query: a :class:`_query.Query` instance; this is also
the ``.query`` attribute of the given "delete context"
object.
:param delete_context: a "delete context" object which is
the same kind of object as described in
:paramref:`.QueryEvents.after_bulk_delete.delete_context`.
.. versionadded:: 1.2.17
.. seealso::
:meth:`.QueryEvents.before_compile`
:meth:`.QueryEvents.before_compile_update`
"""
@classmethod
def _listen(cls, event_key, retval=False, bake_ok=False, **kw):
fn = event_key._listen_fn
if not retval:
def wrap(*arg, **kw):
if not retval:
query = arg[0]
fn(*arg, **kw)
return query
else:
return fn(*arg, **kw)
event_key = event_key.with_wrapper(wrap)
else:
# don't assume we can apply an attribute to the callable
def wrap(*arg, **kw):
return fn(*arg, **kw)
event_key = event_key.with_wrapper(wrap)
wrap._bake_ok = bake_ok
event_key.base_listen(**kw)