app/django/db/models/base.py
author Sverre Rabbelier <srabbelier@gmail.com>
Sat, 22 Nov 2008 13:59:34 +0000
changeset 553 c0cc20b4afc9
parent 323 ff1a9aa48cfd
permissions -rw-r--r--
Make redirect generic using the new Lists object This makes it possible (and easier) to have the list view redirect to any page specially tailored to the current item. Patch by: Sverre Rabbelier

import copy
import types
import sys
import os
from itertools import izip
try:
    set
except NameError:
    from sets import Set as set     # Python 2.3 fallback.

import django.db.models.manager     # Imported to register signal handler.
from django.core.exceptions import ObjectDoesNotExist, MultipleObjectsReturned, FieldError
from django.db.models.fields import AutoField
from django.db.models.fields.related import OneToOneRel, ManyToOneRel, OneToOneField
from django.db.models.query import delete_objects, Q, CollectedObjects
from django.db.models.options import Options
from django.db import connection, transaction, DatabaseError
from django.db.models import signals
from django.db.models.loading import register_models, get_model
from django.utils.functional import curry
from django.utils.encoding import smart_str, force_unicode, smart_unicode
from django.conf import settings


class ModelBase(type):
    """
    Metaclass for all models.
    """
    def __new__(cls, name, bases, attrs):
        super_new = super(ModelBase, cls).__new__
        parents = [b for b in bases if isinstance(b, ModelBase)]
        if not parents:
            # If this isn't a subclass of Model, don't do anything special.
            return super_new(cls, name, bases, attrs)

        # Create the class.
        module = attrs.pop('__module__')
        new_class = super_new(cls, name, bases, {'__module__': module})
        attr_meta = attrs.pop('Meta', None)
        abstract = getattr(attr_meta, 'abstract', False)
        if not attr_meta:
            meta = getattr(new_class, 'Meta', None)
        else:
            meta = attr_meta
        base_meta = getattr(new_class, '_meta', None)

        if getattr(meta, 'app_label', None) is None:
            # Figure out the app_label by looking one level up.
            # For 'django.contrib.sites.models', this would be 'sites'.
            model_module = sys.modules[new_class.__module__]
            kwargs = {"app_label": model_module.__name__.split('.')[-2]}
        else:
            kwargs = {}

        new_class.add_to_class('_meta', Options(meta, **kwargs))
        if not abstract:
            new_class.add_to_class('DoesNotExist',
                    subclass_exception('DoesNotExist', ObjectDoesNotExist, module))
            new_class.add_to_class('MultipleObjectsReturned',
                    subclass_exception('MultipleObjectsReturned', MultipleObjectsReturned, module))
            if base_meta and not base_meta.abstract:
                # Non-abstract child classes inherit some attributes from their
                # non-abstract parent (unless an ABC comes before it in the
                # method resolution order).
                if not hasattr(meta, 'ordering'):
                    new_class._meta.ordering = base_meta.ordering
                if not hasattr(meta, 'get_latest_by'):
                    new_class._meta.get_latest_by = base_meta.get_latest_by

        if getattr(new_class, '_default_manager', None):
            new_class._default_manager = None

        # Bail out early if we have already created this class.
        m = get_model(new_class._meta.app_label, name, False)
        if m is not None:
            return m

        # Add all attributes to the class.
        for obj_name, obj in attrs.items():
            new_class.add_to_class(obj_name, obj)

        # Do the appropriate setup for any model parents.
        o2o_map = dict([(f.rel.to, f) for f in new_class._meta.local_fields
                if isinstance(f, OneToOneField)])
        for base in parents:
            if not hasattr(base, '_meta'):
                # Things without _meta aren't functional models, so they're
                # uninteresting parents.
                continue

            # All the fields of any type declared on this model
            new_fields = new_class._meta.local_fields + \
                         new_class._meta.local_many_to_many + \
                         new_class._meta.virtual_fields
            field_names = set([f.name for f in new_fields])

            if not base._meta.abstract:
                # Concrete classes...
                if base in o2o_map:
                    field = o2o_map[base]
                    field.primary_key = True
                    new_class._meta.setup_pk(field)
                else:
                    attr_name = '%s_ptr' % base._meta.module_name
                    field = OneToOneField(base, name=attr_name,
                            auto_created=True, parent_link=True)
                    new_class.add_to_class(attr_name, field)
                new_class._meta.parents[base] = field

            else:
                # .. and abstract ones.

                # Check for clashes between locally declared fields and those
                # on the ABC.
                parent_fields = base._meta.local_fields + base._meta.local_many_to_many
                for field in parent_fields:
                    if field.name in field_names:
                        raise FieldError('Local field %r in class %r clashes '\
                                         'with field of similar name from '\
                                         'abstract base class %r' % \
                                            (field.name, name, base.__name__))
                    new_class.add_to_class(field.name, copy.deepcopy(field))

                # Pass any non-abstract parent classes onto child.
                new_class._meta.parents.update(base._meta.parents)

            # Inherit managers from the abstract base classes.
            base_managers = base._meta.abstract_managers
            base_managers.sort()
            for _, mgr_name, manager in base_managers:
                val = getattr(new_class, mgr_name, None)
                if not val or val is manager:
                    new_manager = manager._copy_to_model(new_class)
                    new_class.add_to_class(mgr_name, new_manager)

            # Inherit virtual fields (like GenericForeignKey) from the parent class
            for field in base._meta.virtual_fields:
                if base._meta.abstract and field.name in field_names:
                    raise FieldError('Local field %r in class %r clashes '\
                                     'with field of similar name from '\
                                     'abstract base class %r' % \
                                        (field.name, name, base.__name__))
                new_class.add_to_class(field.name, copy.deepcopy(field))

        if abstract:
            # Abstract base models can't be instantiated and don't appear in
            # the list of models for an app. We do the final setup for them a
            # little differently from normal models.
            attr_meta.abstract = False
            new_class.Meta = attr_meta
            return new_class

        new_class._prepare()
        register_models(new_class._meta.app_label, new_class)

        # Because of the way imports happen (recursively), we may or may not be
        # the first time this model tries to register with the framework. There
        # should only be one class for each model, so we always return the
        # registered version.
        return get_model(new_class._meta.app_label, name, False)

    def add_to_class(cls, name, value):
        if hasattr(value, 'contribute_to_class'):
            value.contribute_to_class(cls, name)
        else:
            setattr(cls, name, value)

    def _prepare(cls):
        """
        Creates some methods once self._meta has been populated.
        """
        opts = cls._meta
        opts._prepare(cls)

        if opts.order_with_respect_to:
            cls.get_next_in_order = curry(cls._get_next_or_previous_in_order, is_next=True)
            cls.get_previous_in_order = curry(cls._get_next_or_previous_in_order, is_next=False)
            setattr(opts.order_with_respect_to.rel.to, 'get_%s_order' % cls.__name__.lower(), curry(method_get_order, cls))
            setattr(opts.order_with_respect_to.rel.to, 'set_%s_order' % cls.__name__.lower(), curry(method_set_order, cls))

        # Give the class a docstring -- its definition.
        if cls.__doc__ is None:
            cls.__doc__ = "%s(%s)" % (cls.__name__, ", ".join([f.attname for f in opts.fields]))

        if hasattr(cls, 'get_absolute_url'):
            cls.get_absolute_url = curry(get_absolute_url, opts, cls.get_absolute_url)

        signals.class_prepared.send(sender=cls)


class Model(object):
    __metaclass__ = ModelBase

    def __init__(self, *args, **kwargs):
        signals.pre_init.send(sender=self.__class__, args=args, kwargs=kwargs)

        # There is a rather weird disparity here; if kwargs, it's set, then args
        # overrides it. It should be one or the other; don't duplicate the work
        # The reason for the kwargs check is that standard iterator passes in by
        # args, and instantiation for iteration is 33% faster.
        args_len = len(args)
        if args_len > len(self._meta.fields):
            # Daft, but matches old exception sans the err msg.
            raise IndexError("Number of args exceeds number of fields")

        fields_iter = iter(self._meta.fields)
        if not kwargs:
            # The ordering of the izip calls matter - izip throws StopIteration
            # when an iter throws it. So if the first iter throws it, the second
            # is *not* consumed. We rely on this, so don't change the order
            # without changing the logic.
            for val, field in izip(args, fields_iter):
                setattr(self, field.attname, val)
        else:
            # Slower, kwargs-ready version.
            for val, field in izip(args, fields_iter):
                setattr(self, field.attname, val)
                kwargs.pop(field.name, None)
                # Maintain compatibility with existing calls.
                if isinstance(field.rel, ManyToOneRel):
                    kwargs.pop(field.attname, None)

        # Now we're left with the unprocessed fields that *must* come from
        # keywords, or default.

        for field in fields_iter:
            rel_obj = None
            if kwargs:
                if isinstance(field.rel, ManyToOneRel):
                    try:
                        # Assume object instance was passed in.
                        rel_obj = kwargs.pop(field.name)
                    except KeyError:
                        try:
                            # Object instance wasn't passed in -- must be an ID.
                            val = kwargs.pop(field.attname)
                        except KeyError:
                            val = field.get_default()
                    else:
                        # Object instance was passed in. Special case: You can
                        # pass in "None" for related objects if it's allowed.
                        if rel_obj is None and field.null:
                            val = None
                else:
                    val = kwargs.pop(field.attname, field.get_default())
            else:
                val = field.get_default()
            # If we got passed a related instance, set it using the field.name
            # instead of field.attname (e.g. "user" instead of "user_id") so
            # that the object gets properly cached (and type checked) by the
            # RelatedObjectDescriptor.
            if rel_obj:
                setattr(self, field.name, rel_obj)
            else:
                setattr(self, field.attname, val)

        if kwargs:
            for prop in kwargs.keys():
                try:
                    if isinstance(getattr(self.__class__, prop), property):
                        setattr(self, prop, kwargs.pop(prop))
                except AttributeError:
                    pass
            if kwargs:
                raise TypeError, "'%s' is an invalid keyword argument for this function" % kwargs.keys()[0]
        signals.post_init.send(sender=self.__class__, instance=self)

    def __repr__(self):
        return smart_str(u'<%s: %s>' % (self.__class__.__name__, unicode(self)))

    def __str__(self):
        if hasattr(self, '__unicode__'):
            return force_unicode(self).encode('utf-8')
        return '%s object' % self.__class__.__name__

    def __eq__(self, other):
        return isinstance(other, self.__class__) and self._get_pk_val() == other._get_pk_val()

    def __ne__(self, other):
        return not self.__eq__(other)

    def __hash__(self):
        return hash(self._get_pk_val())

    def _get_pk_val(self, meta=None):
        if not meta:
            meta = self._meta
        return getattr(self, meta.pk.attname)

    def _set_pk_val(self, value):
        return setattr(self, self._meta.pk.attname, value)

    pk = property(_get_pk_val, _set_pk_val)

    def save(self, force_insert=False, force_update=False):
        """
        Saves the current instance. Override this in a subclass if you want to
        control the saving process.

        The 'force_insert' and 'force_update' parameters can be used to insist
        that the "save" must be an SQL insert or update (or equivalent for
        non-SQL backends), respectively. Normally, they should not be set.
        """
        if force_insert and force_update:
            raise ValueError("Cannot force both insert and updating in "
                    "model saving.")
        self.save_base(force_insert=force_insert, force_update=force_update)

    save.alters_data = True

    def save_base(self, raw=False, cls=None, force_insert=False,
            force_update=False):
        """
        Does the heavy-lifting involved in saving. Subclasses shouldn't need to
        override this method. It's separate from save() in order to hide the
        need for overrides of save() to pass around internal-only parameters
        ('raw' and 'cls').
        """
        assert not (force_insert and force_update)
        if not cls:
            cls = self.__class__
            meta = self._meta
            signal = True
            signals.pre_save.send(sender=self.__class__, instance=self, raw=raw)
        else:
            meta = cls._meta
            signal = False

        # If we are in a raw save, save the object exactly as presented.
        # That means that we don't try to be smart about saving attributes
        # that might have come from the parent class - we just save the
        # attributes we have been given to the class we have been given.
        if not raw:
            for parent, field in meta.parents.items():
                # At this point, parent's primary key field may be unknown
                # (for example, from administration form which doesn't fill
                # this field). If so, fill it.
                if getattr(self, parent._meta.pk.attname) is None and getattr(self, field.attname) is not None:
                    setattr(self, parent._meta.pk.attname, getattr(self, field.attname))

                self.save_base(raw, parent)
                setattr(self, field.attname, self._get_pk_val(parent._meta))

        non_pks = [f for f in meta.local_fields if not f.primary_key]

        # First, try an UPDATE. If that doesn't update anything, do an INSERT.
        pk_val = self._get_pk_val(meta)
        pk_set = pk_val is not None
        record_exists = True
        manager = cls._default_manager
        if pk_set:
            # Determine whether a record with the primary key already exists.
            if (force_update or (not force_insert and
                    manager.filter(pk=pk_val).extra(select={'a': 1}).values('a').order_by())):
                # It does already exist, so do an UPDATE.
                if force_update or non_pks:
                    values = [(f, None, f.get_db_prep_save(raw and getattr(self, f.attname) or f.pre_save(self, False))) for f in non_pks]
                    rows = manager.filter(pk=pk_val)._update(values)
                    if force_update and not rows:
                        raise DatabaseError("Forced update did not affect any rows.")
            else:
                record_exists = False
        if not pk_set or not record_exists:
            if not pk_set:
                if force_update:
                    raise ValueError("Cannot force an update in save() with no primary key.")
                values = [(f, f.get_db_prep_save(raw and getattr(self, f.attname) or f.pre_save(self, True))) for f in meta.local_fields if not isinstance(f, AutoField)]
            else:
                values = [(f, f.get_db_prep_save(raw and getattr(self, f.attname) or f.pre_save(self, True))) for f in meta.local_fields]

            if meta.order_with_respect_to:
                field = meta.order_with_respect_to
                values.append((meta.get_field_by_name('_order')[0], manager.filter(**{field.name: getattr(self, field.attname)}).count()))
            record_exists = False

            update_pk = bool(meta.has_auto_field and not pk_set)
            if values:
                # Create a new record.
                result = manager._insert(values, return_id=update_pk)
            else:
                # Create a new record with defaults for everything.
                result = manager._insert([(meta.pk, connection.ops.pk_default_value())], return_id=update_pk, raw_values=True)

            if update_pk:
                setattr(self, meta.pk.attname, result)
        transaction.commit_unless_managed()

        if signal:
            signals.post_save.send(sender=self.__class__, instance=self,
                created=(not record_exists), raw=raw)

    save_base.alters_data = True

    def _collect_sub_objects(self, seen_objs, parent=None, nullable=False):
        """
        Recursively populates seen_objs with all objects related to this
        object.

        When done, seen_objs.items() will be in the format:
            [(model_class, {pk_val: obj, pk_val: obj, ...}),
             (model_class, {pk_val: obj, pk_val: obj, ...}), ...]
        """
        pk_val = self._get_pk_val()
        if seen_objs.add(self.__class__, pk_val, self, parent, nullable):
            return

        for related in self._meta.get_all_related_objects():
            rel_opts_name = related.get_accessor_name()
            if isinstance(related.field.rel, OneToOneRel):
                try:
                    sub_obj = getattr(self, rel_opts_name)
                except ObjectDoesNotExist:
                    pass
                else:
                    sub_obj._collect_sub_objects(seen_objs, self.__class__, related.field.null)
            else:
                for sub_obj in getattr(self, rel_opts_name).all():
                    sub_obj._collect_sub_objects(seen_objs, self.__class__, related.field.null)

        # Handle any ancestors (for the model-inheritance case). We do this by
        # traversing to the most remote parent classes -- those with no parents
        # themselves -- and then adding those instances to the collection. That
        # will include all the child instances down to "self".
        parent_stack = self._meta.parents.values()
        while parent_stack:
            link = parent_stack.pop()
            parent_obj = getattr(self, link.name)
            if parent_obj._meta.parents:
                parent_stack.extend(parent_obj._meta.parents.values())
                continue
            # At this point, parent_obj is base class (no ancestor models). So
            # delete it and all its descendents.
            parent_obj._collect_sub_objects(seen_objs)

    def delete(self):
        assert self._get_pk_val() is not None, "%s object can't be deleted because its %s attribute is set to None." % (self._meta.object_name, self._meta.pk.attname)

        # Find all the objects than need to be deleted.
        seen_objs = CollectedObjects()
        self._collect_sub_objects(seen_objs)

        # Actually delete the objects.
        delete_objects(seen_objs)

    delete.alters_data = True

    def _get_FIELD_display(self, field):
        value = getattr(self, field.attname)
        return force_unicode(dict(field.flatchoices).get(value, value), strings_only=True)

    def _get_next_or_previous_by_FIELD(self, field, is_next, **kwargs):
        op = is_next and 'gt' or 'lt'
        order = not is_next and '-' or ''
        param = smart_str(getattr(self, field.attname))
        q = Q(**{'%s__%s' % (field.name, op): param})
        q = q|Q(**{field.name: param, 'pk__%s' % op: self.pk})
        qs = self.__class__._default_manager.filter(**kwargs).filter(q).order_by('%s%s' % (order, field.name), '%spk' % order)
        try:
            return qs[0]
        except IndexError:
            raise self.DoesNotExist, "%s matching query does not exist." % self.__class__._meta.object_name

    def _get_next_or_previous_in_order(self, is_next):
        cachename = "__%s_order_cache" % is_next
        if not hasattr(self, cachename):
            qn = connection.ops.quote_name
            op = is_next and '>' or '<'
            order = not is_next and '-_order' or '_order'
            order_field = self._meta.order_with_respect_to
            # FIXME: When querysets support nested queries, this can be turned
            # into a pure queryset operation.
            where = ['%s %s (SELECT %s FROM %s WHERE %s=%%s)' % \
                (qn('_order'), op, qn('_order'),
                qn(self._meta.db_table), qn(self._meta.pk.column))]
            params = [self.pk]
            obj = self._default_manager.filter(**{order_field.name: getattr(self, order_field.attname)}).extra(where=where, params=params).order_by(order)[:1].get()
            setattr(self, cachename, obj)
        return getattr(self, cachename)



############################################
# HELPER FUNCTIONS (CURRIED MODEL METHODS) #
############################################

# ORDERING METHODS #########################

def method_set_order(ordered_obj, self, id_list):
    rel_val = getattr(self, ordered_obj._meta.order_with_respect_to.rel.field_name)
    order_name = ordered_obj._meta.order_with_respect_to.name
    # FIXME: It would be nice if there was an "update many" version of update
    # for situations like this.
    for i, j in enumerate(id_list):
        ordered_obj.objects.filter(**{'pk': j, order_name: rel_val}).update(_order=i)
    transaction.commit_unless_managed()


def method_get_order(ordered_obj, self):
    rel_val = getattr(self, ordered_obj._meta.order_with_respect_to.rel.field_name)
    order_name = ordered_obj._meta.order_with_respect_to.name
    pk_name = ordered_obj._meta.pk.name
    return [r[pk_name] for r in
            ordered_obj.objects.filter(**{order_name: rel_val}).values(pk_name)]


##############################################
# HELPER FUNCTIONS (CURRIED MODEL FUNCTIONS) #
##############################################

def get_absolute_url(opts, func, self, *args, **kwargs):
    return settings.ABSOLUTE_URL_OVERRIDES.get('%s.%s' % (opts.app_label, opts.module_name), func)(self, *args, **kwargs)


########
# MISC #
########

class Empty(object):
    pass

if sys.version_info < (2, 5):
    # Prior to Python 2.5, Exception was an old-style class
    def subclass_exception(name, parent, unused):
        return types.ClassType(name, (parent,), {})
else:
    def subclass_exception(name, parent, module):
        return type(name, (parent,), {'__module__': module})