Adust the as_table tag to render a pick link if appropriate
The templates are adjusted to pass on a 'reference' value, which
is the url_name of the view from which the entity should be picked.
The as_table (and related) function(s) construct and then pass on
this argument and enable takes_contex so that we have access to the
context of the enclosing template.
We only extract ReferenceProperties that end with '_link_id' since
that is how all RP's are currently named. It is not possible to
create a field with the same name as the RP, as GAE will try to
interpret it's contents as the key of an entity before even calling
any function we can override.
Patch by: Sverre Rabbelier
from django.db.backends import BaseDatabaseIntrospection
class DatabaseIntrospection(BaseDatabaseIntrospection):
# Maps type codes to Django Field types.
data_types_reverse = {
16: 'BooleanField',
21: 'SmallIntegerField',
23: 'IntegerField',
25: 'TextField',
701: 'FloatField',
869: 'IPAddressField',
1043: 'CharField',
1082: 'DateField',
1083: 'TimeField',
1114: 'DateTimeField',
1184: 'DateTimeField',
1266: 'TimeField',
1700: 'DecimalField',
}
def get_table_list(self, cursor):
"Returns a list of table names in the current database."
cursor.execute("""
SELECT c.relname
FROM pg_catalog.pg_class c
LEFT JOIN pg_catalog.pg_namespace n ON n.oid = c.relnamespace
WHERE c.relkind IN ('r', 'v', '')
AND n.nspname NOT IN ('pg_catalog', 'pg_toast')
AND pg_catalog.pg_table_is_visible(c.oid)""")
return [row[0] for row in cursor.fetchall()]
def get_table_description(self, cursor, table_name):
"Returns a description of the table, with the DB-API cursor.description interface."
cursor.execute("SELECT * FROM %s LIMIT 1" % self.connection.ops.quote_name(table_name))
return cursor.description
def get_relations(self, cursor, table_name):
"""
Returns a dictionary of {field_index: (field_index_other_table, other_table)}
representing all relationships to the given table. Indexes are 0-based.
"""
cursor.execute("""
SELECT con.conkey, con.confkey, c2.relname
FROM pg_constraint con, pg_class c1, pg_class c2
WHERE c1.oid = con.conrelid
AND c2.oid = con.confrelid
AND c1.relname = %s
AND con.contype = 'f'""", [table_name])
relations = {}
for row in cursor.fetchall():
try:
# row[0] and row[1] are like "{2}", so strip the curly braces.
relations[int(row[0][1:-1]) - 1] = (int(row[1][1:-1]) - 1, row[2])
except ValueError:
continue
return relations
def get_indexes(self, cursor, table_name):
"""
Returns a dictionary of fieldname -> infodict for the given table,
where each infodict is in the format:
{'primary_key': boolean representing whether it's the primary key,
'unique': boolean representing whether it's a unique index}
"""
# This query retrieves each index on the given table, including the
# first associated field name
cursor.execute("""
SELECT attr.attname, idx.indkey, idx.indisunique, idx.indisprimary
FROM pg_catalog.pg_class c, pg_catalog.pg_class c2,
pg_catalog.pg_index idx, pg_catalog.pg_attribute attr
WHERE c.oid = idx.indrelid
AND idx.indexrelid = c2.oid
AND attr.attrelid = c.oid
AND attr.attnum = idx.indkey[0]
AND c.relname = %s""", [table_name])
indexes = {}
for row in cursor.fetchall():
# row[1] (idx.indkey) is stored in the DB as an array. It comes out as
# a string of space-separated integers. This designates the field
# indexes (1-based) of the fields that have indexes on the table.
# Here, we skip any indexes across multiple fields.
if ' ' in row[1]:
continue
indexes[row[0]] = {'primary_key': row[3], 'unique': row[2]}
return indexes