Active Record, Django-like queries, nested eager load and beauty __repr__ for SQLAlchemy
Project description
SQLAlchemy Mixin
A pack of framework-agnostic, easy-to-integrate for SQLAlchemy ORM.
Heavily inspired by Django ORM and Eloquent ORM
easy integration to your existing project like FastApi:
from sqlalchemy_mixins import BaseMixin
class User(Base, BaseMixin):
pass
Table of Contents
Installation
Use pip
pip install SqlalchemyMixin
Quick Start
Framework-agnostic
Here's a quick demo of what our mixins can do.
bob = User.create(name='Bob')
post1 = Post.create(body='Post 1', user=bob, rating=3)
post2 = Post.create(body='long-long-long-long-long body', rating=2,
user=User.create(name='Bill'),
comments=[Comment.create(body='cool!', user=bob)])
# filter using operators like 'in' and 'contains' and relations like 'user'
# will output this beauty: <Post #1 body:'Post1' user:'Bill'>
print(Post.where(rating__in=[2, 3, 4], user___name__like='%Bi%').all())
# joinedload post and user
print(Comment.with_joined('user', 'post', 'post.comments').first())
# subqueryload posts and their comments
print(User.with_subquery('posts', 'posts.comments').first())
# sort by rating DESC, user name ASC
print(Post.sort('-rating', 'user___name').all())
# created_at, updated_at timestamps added automatically
print("Created Bob at ", bob.created_at)
# serialize to dict, with relationships
Usage with Flask-SQLAlchemy
import sqlalchemy as sa
from flask import Flask
from flask_sqlalchemy import SQLAlchemy
from sqlalchemy_mixins import BaseMixin
app = Flask(__name__)
app.config['SQLALCHEMY_DATABASE_URI'] = 'sqlite://'
db = SQLAlchemy(app)
######### Models #########
class BaseModel(db.Model, BaseMixin):
__abstract__ = True
pass
class User(BaseModel):
name = sa.Column(sa.String)
######## Initialize ########
BaseModel.set_session(db.session)
######## Create test entity ########
db.create_all()
user = User.create(name='bob')
print(user)
*** Autocommit ***
This library relies on SQLAlchemy's autocommit
flag. It needs to be set to True when initializing the session i.e:
session = scoped_session(sessionmaker(bind=engine, autocommit=True))
BaseModel.set_session(session)
or with Flask-SQLAlchemy
db = SQLAlchemy(app, session_options={'autocommit': True})
Features
Main features are
Active Record
provided by ActiveRecordMixin
SQLAlchemy's Data Mapper pattern is cool, but Active Record pattern is easiest and more DRY.
Well, we implemented it on top of Data Mapper! All we need is to just inject session into ORM class while bootstrapping our app:
BaseModel.set_session(session)
# now we have access to BaseOrmModel.session property
CRUD
We all love SQLAlchemy, but doing CRUD is a bit tricky there.
For example, creating an object needs 3 lines of code:
bob = User(name='Bobby', age=1)
session.add(bob)
session.flush()
Well, having access to session from model, we can just write
bob = User.create(name='Bobby', age=1)
that's how it's done in Django ORM and Peewee
update and delete methods are provided as well
bob.update(name='Bob', age=21)
bob.delete()
And, as in Django and Eloquent, we can quickly retrieve object by id
User.get(1) # instead of session.query(User).get(1)
and fail if such id doesn't exist
User.get_or_abort(123987) # will raise sqlalchemy_mixins.ModelNotFoundError
Querying
As in Flask-SQLAlchemy, Peewee and Django ORM, you can quickly query some class
User.query # instead of session.query(User)
Also we can quickly retrieve first or all objects:
User.first() # instead of session.query(User).first()
User.all() # instead of session.query(User).all()
Eager load
provided by EagerLoadMixin
Nested eager load
If you use SQLAlchemy's eager loading, you may find it not very convenient, especially when we want, say, load user, all his posts and comments to every his post in the same query.
Well, now you can easily set what ORM relations you want to eager load
User.with_({
'posts': {
'comments': {
'user': JOINED
}
}
}).all()
or we can write class properties instead of strings:
User.with_({
User.posts: {
Post.comments: {
Comment.user: JOINED
}
}
}).all()
Subquery load
Sometimes we want to load relations in separate query, i.e. do subqueryload. For example, we load posts on page like this, and for each post we want to have user and all comments (and comment authors).
To speed up query, we load comments in separate query, but, in this separate query, join user
from sqlalchemy_mixins import JOINED, SUBQUERY
Post.with_({
'user': JOINED, # joinedload user
'comments': (SUBQUERY, { # load comments in separate query
'user': JOINED # but, in this separate query, join user
})
}).all()
Here, posts will be loaded on first query, and comments with users - in second one. See SQLAlchemy docs for explaining relationship loading techniques.
Quick eager load
For simple cases, when you want to just joinedload or subqueryload a few relations, we have easier syntax for you:
Comment.with_joined('user', 'post', 'post.comments').first()
User.with_subquery('posts', 'posts.comments').all()
Note that you can split relations with dot like
post.comments
due to this SQLAlchemy feature
Filter and sort by relations
provided by SmartQueryMixin
Django-like queries
We implement Django-like field lookups and automatic relation joins.
It means you can filter and sort dynamically by attributes defined in strings!
So, having defined Post
model with Post.user
relationship to User
model,
you can write
Post.where(rating__gt=2, user___name__like='%Bi%').all() # post rating > 2 and post user name like ...
Post.sort('-rating', 'user___name').all() # sort by rating DESC, user name ASC
(___
splits relation and attribute, __
splits attribute and operator)
If you need more flexibility, you can use low-level
filter_expr
methodsession.query(Post).filter(*Post.filter_expr(rating__gt=2, body='text'))
, see example.It's like
filter_by
in SQLALchemy, but also allows magic operators likerating__gt
.Note:
filter_expr
method is very low-level and does NOT do magic Django-like joins. Usesmart_query
for that.
All relations used in filtering/sorting should be explicitly set, not just being a backref
In our example,
Post.user
relationship should be defined inPost
class even ifUser.posts
is defined too.So, you can't type
class User(BaseModel): # ... user = sa.orm.relationship('User', backref='posts')and skip defining
Post.user
relationship. You must define it anyway:class Post(BaseModel): # ... user = sa.orm.relationship('User') # define it anyway
For DRY-ifying your code and incapsulating business logic, you can use SQLAlchemy's hybrid attributes and hybrid_methods. Using them in our filtering/sorting is straightforward (see examples and tests).
Automatic eager load relations
Well, as SmartQueryMixin
does auto-joins for filtering/sorting,
there's a sense to tell sqlalchemy that we already joined that relation.
So that relations are automatically set to be joinedload if they were used for filtering/sorting.
So, if we write
comments = Comment.where(post___public=True, post___user___name__like='Bi%').all()
then no additional query will be executed if we will access used relations
comments[0].post
comments[0].post.user
All-in-one: smart_query
Filter, sort and eager load in one smartest method.
provided by SmartQueryMixin
In real world, we want to filter, sort and also eager load some relations at once.
Well, if we use the same, say, User.posts
relation in filtering and sorting,
it should not be joined twice.
That's why we combined filter, sort and eager load in one smartest method:
Comment.smart_query(
filters={
'post___public': True,
'user__isnull': False
},
sort_attrs=['user___name', '-created_at'],
schema={
'post': {
'user': JOINED
}
}).all()
As developers, we need to debug things with convenience. When we play in REPL, we can see this
>>> session.query(Post).all()
[<myapp.models.Post object at 0x04287A50>, <myapp.models.Post object at 0x04287A90>]
Well, using our mixin, we can have more readable output with post IDs:
>>> session.query(Post).all()
[<Post #11>, <Post #12>]
Even more, in Post
model, we can define what else (except id) we want to see:
class User(BaseModel):
__repr_attrs__ = ['name']
# ...
class Post(BaseModel):
__repr_attrs__ = ['user', 'body'] # body is just column, user is relationship
# ...
Now we have
>>> session.query(Post).all()
[<Post #11 user:<User #1 'Bill'> body:'post 11'>,
<Post #12 user:<User #2 'Bob'> body:'post 12'>]
And you can customize max __repr__
length:
class Post(BaseModel):
# ...
__repr_max_length__ = 25
# ...
>>> long_post
<Post #2 body:'Post 2 long-long body' user:<User #1 'Bob'>>
DateMixin
provided by DateMixin
You can view the created and updated timestamps.
bob = User(name="Bob")
session.add(bob)
session.flush()
print("Created Bob: ", bob.created_at)
# Created Bob: 2019-03-04 03:53:53.606765
print("Pre-update Bob: ", bob.updated_at)
# Pre-update Bob: 2019-03-04 03:53:53.606769
time.sleep(2)
bob.name = "Robert"
session.commit()
print("Updated Bob: ", bob.updated_at)
# Updated Bob: 2019-03-04 03:53:58.613044
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