Do not rely on dicts.merge to change target
Also make dicts.merge actually not touch target. This is much cleaner
than modifying in place, especially since we assign the result of the
dicts.merge call to target most of the time anyway.
Patch by: Sverre Rabbelier
from django.db.backends import BaseDatabaseIntrospection
# This light wrapper "fakes" a dictionary interface, because some SQLite data
# types include variables in them -- e.g. "varchar(30)" -- and can't be matched
# as a simple dictionary lookup.
class FlexibleFieldLookupDict:
# Maps SQL types to Django Field types. Some of the SQL types have multiple
# entries here because SQLite allows for anything and doesn't normalize the
# field type; it uses whatever was given.
base_data_types_reverse = {
'bool': 'BooleanField',
'boolean': 'BooleanField',
'smallint': 'SmallIntegerField',
'smallint unsigned': 'PositiveSmallIntegerField',
'smallinteger': 'SmallIntegerField',
'int': 'IntegerField',
'integer': 'IntegerField',
'integer unsigned': 'PositiveIntegerField',
'decimal': 'DecimalField',
'real': 'FloatField',
'text': 'TextField',
'char': 'CharField',
'date': 'DateField',
'datetime': 'DateTimeField',
'time': 'TimeField',
}
def __getitem__(self, key):
key = key.lower()
try:
return self.base_data_types_reverse[key]
except KeyError:
import re
m = re.search(r'^\s*(?:var)?char\s*\(\s*(\d+)\s*\)\s*$', key)
if m:
return ('CharField', {'max_length': int(m.group(1))})
raise KeyError
class DatabaseIntrospection(BaseDatabaseIntrospection):
data_types_reverse = FlexibleFieldLookupDict()
def get_table_list(self, cursor):
"Returns a list of table names in the current database."
# Skip the sqlite_sequence system table used for autoincrement key
# generation.
cursor.execute("""
SELECT name FROM sqlite_master
WHERE type='table' AND NOT name='sqlite_sequence'
ORDER BY name""")
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."
return [(info['name'], info['type'], None, None, None, None,
info['null_ok']) for info in self._table_info(cursor, table_name)]
def get_relations(self, cursor, table_name):
raise NotImplementedError
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}
"""
indexes = {}
for info in self._table_info(cursor, table_name):
indexes[info['name']] = {'primary_key': info['pk'] != 0,
'unique': False}
cursor.execute('PRAGMA index_list(%s)' % self.connection.ops.quote_name(table_name))
# seq, name, unique
for index, unique in [(field[1], field[2]) for field in cursor.fetchall()]:
if not unique:
continue
cursor.execute('PRAGMA index_info(%s)' % self.connection.ops.quote_name(index))
info = cursor.fetchall()
# Skip indexes across multiple fields
if len(info) != 1:
continue
name = info[0][2] # seqno, cid, name
indexes[name]['unique'] = True
return indexes
def _table_info(self, cursor, name):
cursor.execute('PRAGMA table_info(%s)' % self.connection.ops.quote_name(name))
# cid, name, type, notnull, dflt_value, pk
return [{'name': field[1],
'type': field[2],
'null_ok': not field[3],
'pk': field[5] # undocumented
} for field in cursor.fetchall()]