1
0
mirror of https://github.com/django/django.git synced 2024-12-23 01:25:58 +00:00

Fixed #14334 -- Query relation lookups now check object types.

Thanks rpbarlow for the suggestion; and loic, akaariai, and jorgecarleitao
for reviews.
This commit is contained in:
Anubhav Joshi 2014-06-14 12:54:19 +05:30 committed by Tim Graham
parent 81edf2d006
commit 34ba86706f
6 changed files with 144 additions and 21 deletions

View File

@ -569,7 +569,7 @@ class SQLCompiler(object):
if (len(self.query.get_meta().concrete_fields) == len(self.query.select)
and self.connection.features.allows_group_by_pk):
self.query.group_by = [
(self.query.get_meta().db_table, self.query.get_meta().pk.column)
(self.query.get_initial_alias(), self.query.get_meta().pk.column)
]
select_cols = []
seen = set()

View File

@ -1084,6 +1084,32 @@ class Query(object):
(lookup, self.get_meta().model.__name__))
return lookup_parts, field_parts, False
def check_query_object_type(self, value, opts):
"""
Checks whether the object passed while querying is of the correct type.
If not, it raises a ValueError specifying the wrong object.
"""
if hasattr(value, '_meta'):
if not (value._meta.concrete_model == opts.concrete_model
or opts.concrete_model in value._meta.get_parent_list()
or value._meta.concrete_model in opts.get_parent_list()):
raise ValueError(
'Cannot query "%s": Must be "%s" instance.' %
(value, opts.object_name))
def check_related_objects(self, field, value, opts):
"""
Checks the type of object passed to query relations.
"""
if field.rel:
# testing for iterable of models
if hasattr(value, '__iter__'):
for v in value:
self.check_query_object_type(v, opts)
else:
# expecting single model instance here
self.check_query_object_type(value, opts)
def build_lookup(self, lookups, lhs, rhs):
lookups = lookups[:]
while lookups:
@ -1159,6 +1185,9 @@ class Query(object):
try:
field, sources, opts, join_list, path = self.setup_joins(
parts, opts, alias, can_reuse=can_reuse, allow_many=allow_many)
self.check_related_objects(field, value, opts)
# split_exclude() needs to know which joins were generated for the
# lookup parts
self._lookup_joins = join_list

View File

@ -350,6 +350,21 @@ The check also applies to the columns generated in an implicit
and then specify :attr:`~django.db.models.Field.db_column` on its column(s)
as needed.
Query relation lookups now check object types
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Querying for model lookups now checks if the object passed is of correct type
and raises a :exc:`ValueError` if not. Previously, Django didn't care if the
object was of correct type; it just used the object's related field attribute
(e.g. ``id``) for the lookup. Now, an error is raised to prevent incorrect
lookups::
>>> book = Book.objects.create(name="Django")
>>> book = Book.objects.filter(author=book)
Traceback (most recent call last):
...
ValueError: Cannot query "<Book: Django>": Must be "Author" instance.
Miscellaneous
~~~~~~~~~~~~~

View File

@ -100,7 +100,6 @@ class OneToOneTests(TestCase):
assert_filter_waiters(restaurant__place__exact=self.p1)
assert_filter_waiters(restaurant__place__pk=self.p1.pk)
assert_filter_waiters(restaurant__exact=self.p1.pk)
assert_filter_waiters(restaurant__exact=self.p1)
assert_filter_waiters(restaurant__pk=self.p1.pk)
assert_filter_waiters(restaurant=self.p1.pk)
assert_filter_waiters(restaurant=self.r)

View File

@ -409,6 +409,15 @@ class ObjectA(models.Model):
return self.name
class ProxyObjectA(ObjectA):
class Meta:
proxy = True
class ChildObjectA(ObjectA):
pass
@python_2_unicode_compatible
class ObjectB(models.Model):
name = models.CharField(max_length=50)
@ -419,11 +428,17 @@ class ObjectB(models.Model):
return self.name
class ProxyObjectB(ObjectB):
class Meta:
proxy = True
@python_2_unicode_compatible
class ObjectC(models.Model):
name = models.CharField(max_length=50)
objecta = models.ForeignKey(ObjectA, null=True)
objectb = models.ForeignKey(ObjectB, null=True)
childobjecta = models.ForeignKey(ChildObjectA, null=True, related_name='ca_pk')
def __str__(self):
return self.name

View File

@ -22,12 +22,12 @@ from .models import (
ExtraInfo, Fan, Item, LeafA, Join, LeafB, LoopX, LoopZ, ManagedModel,
Member, NamedCategory, Note, Number, Plaything, PointerA, Ranking, Related,
Report, ReservedName, Tag, TvChef, Valid, X, Food, Eaten, Node, ObjectA,
ObjectB, ObjectC, CategoryItem, SimpleCategory, SpecialCategory,
OneToOneCategory, NullableName, ProxyCategory, SingleObject, RelatedObject,
ModelA, ModelB, ModelC, ModelD, Responsibility, Job, JobResponsibilities,
BaseA, FK1, Identifier, Program, Channel, Page, Paragraph, Chapter, Book,
MyObject, Order, OrderItem, SharedConnection, Task, Staff, StaffUser,
CategoryRelationship, Ticket21203Parent, Ticket21203Child, Person,
ProxyObjectA, ChildObjectA, ObjectB, ProxyObjectB, ObjectC, CategoryItem,
SimpleCategory, SpecialCategory, OneToOneCategory, NullableName, ProxyCategory,
SingleObject, RelatedObject, ModelA, ModelB, ModelC, ModelD, Responsibility, Job,
JobResponsibilities, BaseA, FK1, Identifier, Program, Channel, Page, Paragraph,
Chapter, Book, MyObject, Order, OrderItem, SharedConnection, Task, Staff,
StaffUser, CategoryRelationship, Ticket21203Parent, Ticket21203Child, Person,
Company, Employment, CustomPk, CustomPkTag, Classroom, School, Student)
@ -3361,20 +3361,85 @@ class Ticket12807Tests(TestCase):
class RelatedLookupTypeTests(TestCase):
error = 'Cannot query "%s": Must be "%s" instance.'
def setUp(self):
self.oa = ObjectA.objects.create(name="oa")
self.poa = ProxyObjectA.objects.get(name="oa")
self.coa = ChildObjectA.objects.create(name="coa")
self.wrong_type = Order.objects.create(id=self.oa.pk)
self.ob = ObjectB.objects.create(name="ob", objecta=self.oa, num=1)
ProxyObjectB.objects.create(name="pob", objecta=self.oa, num=2)
self.pob = ProxyObjectB.objects.all()
ObjectC.objects.create(childobjecta=self.coa)
def test_wrong_type_lookup(self):
oa = ObjectA.objects.create(name="oa")
wrong_type = Order.objects.create(id=oa.pk)
ob = ObjectB.objects.create(name="ob", objecta=oa, num=1)
# Currently Django doesn't care if the object is of correct
# type, it will just use the objecta's related fields attribute
# (id) for model lookup. Making things more restrictive could
# be a good idea...
self.assertQuerysetEqual(
ObjectB.objects.filter(objecta=wrong_type),
[ob], lambda x: x)
self.assertQuerysetEqual(
ObjectB.objects.filter(objecta__in=[wrong_type]),
[ob], lambda x: x)
"""
A ValueError is raised when the incorrect object type is passed to a
query lookup.
"""
# Passing incorrect object type
with self.assertRaisesMessage(ValueError,
self.error % (self.wrong_type, ObjectA._meta.object_name)):
ObjectB.objects.get(objecta=self.wrong_type)
with self.assertRaisesMessage(ValueError,
self.error % (self.wrong_type, ObjectA._meta.object_name)):
ObjectB.objects.filter(objecta__in=[self.wrong_type])
with self.assertRaisesMessage(ValueError,
self.error % (self.wrong_type, ObjectA._meta.object_name)):
ObjectB.objects.filter(objecta=self.wrong_type)
with self.assertRaisesMessage(ValueError,
self.error % (self.wrong_type, ObjectB._meta.object_name)):
ObjectA.objects.filter(objectb__in=[self.wrong_type, self.ob])
# Passing an object of the class on which query is done.
with self.assertRaisesMessage(ValueError,
self.error % (self.ob, ObjectA._meta.object_name)):
ObjectB.objects.filter(objecta__in=[self.poa, self.ob])
with self.assertRaisesMessage(ValueError,
self.error % (self.ob, ChildObjectA._meta.object_name)):
ObjectC.objects.exclude(childobjecta__in=[self.coa, self.ob])
def test_wrong_backward_lookup(self):
"""
A ValueError is raised when the incorrect object type is passed to a
query lookup for backward relations.
"""
with self.assertRaisesMessage(ValueError,
self.error % (self.oa, ObjectB._meta.object_name)):
ObjectA.objects.filter(objectb__in=[self.oa, self.ob])
with self.assertRaisesMessage(ValueError,
self.error % (self.oa, ObjectB._meta.object_name)):
ObjectA.objects.exclude(objectb=self.oa)
with self.assertRaisesMessage(ValueError,
self.error % (self.wrong_type, ObjectB._meta.object_name)):
ObjectA.objects.get(objectb=self.wrong_type)
def test_correct_lookup(self):
"""
When passing proxy model objects, child objects, or parent objects,
lookups work fine.
"""
out_a = ['<ObjectA: oa>', ]
out_b = ['<ObjectB: ob>', '<ObjectB: pob>']
out_c = ['<ObjectC: >']
# proxy model objects
self.assertQuerysetEqual(ObjectB.objects.filter(objecta=self.poa).order_by('name'), out_b)
self.assertQuerysetEqual(ObjectA.objects.filter(objectb__in=self.pob).order_by('pk'), out_a * 2)
# child objects
self.assertQuerysetEqual(ObjectB.objects.filter(objecta__in=[self.coa]), [])
self.assertQuerysetEqual(ObjectB.objects.filter(objecta__in=[self.poa, self.coa]).order_by('name'), out_b)
# parent objects
self.assertQuerysetEqual(ObjectC.objects.exclude(childobjecta=self.oa), out_c)
class Ticket14056Tests(TestCase):