from django.db.models import Q from django.test import TestCase from .models import (Address, Place, Restaurant, Link, CharLink, TextLink, Person, Contact, Note, Organization, OddRelation1, OddRelation2, Company) class GenericRelationTests(TestCase): def test_inherited_models_content_type(self): """ Test that GenericRelations on inherited classes use the correct content type. """ p = Place.objects.create(name="South Park") r = Restaurant.objects.create(name="Chubby's") l1 = Link.objects.create(content_object=p) l2 = Link.objects.create(content_object=r) self.assertEqual(list(p.links.all()), [l1]) self.assertEqual(list(r.links.all()), [l2]) def test_reverse_relation_pk(self): """ Test that the correct column name is used for the primary key on the originating model of a query. See #12664. """ p = Person.objects.create(account=23, name='Chef') a = Address.objects.create(street='123 Anywhere Place', city='Conifer', state='CO', zipcode='80433', content_object=p) qs = Person.objects.filter(addresses__zipcode='80433') self.assertEqual(1, qs.count()) self.assertEqual('Chef', qs[0].name) def test_charlink_delete(self): oddrel = OddRelation1.objects.create(name='clink') cl = CharLink.objects.create(content_object=oddrel) oddrel.delete() def test_textlink_delete(self): oddrel = OddRelation2.objects.create(name='tlink') tl = TextLink.objects.create(content_object=oddrel) oddrel.delete() def test_q_object_or(self): """ Tests that SQL query parameters for generic relations are properly grouped when OR is used. Test for bug http://code.djangoproject.com/ticket/11535 In this bug the first query (below) works while the second, with the query parameters the same but in reverse order, does not. The issue is that the generic relation conditions do not get properly grouped in parentheses. """ note_contact = Contact.objects.create() org_contact = Contact.objects.create() note = Note.objects.create(note='note', content_object=note_contact) org = Organization.objects.create(name='org name') org.contacts.add(org_contact) # search with a non-matching note and a matching org name qs = Contact.objects.filter(Q(notes__note__icontains=r'other note') | Q(organizations__name__icontains=r'org name')) self.assertTrue(org_contact in qs) # search again, with the same query parameters, in reverse order qs = Contact.objects.filter( Q(organizations__name__icontains=r'org name') | Q(notes__note__icontains=r'other note')) self.assertTrue(org_contact in qs) def test_join_reuse(self): qs = Person.objects.filter( addresses__street='foo' ).filter( addresses__street='bar' ) self.assertEqual(str(qs.query).count('JOIN'), 2) def test_generic_relation_ordering(self): """ Test that ordering over a generic relation does not include extraneous duplicate results, nor excludes rows not participating in the relation. """ p1 = Place.objects.create(name="South Park") p2 = Place.objects.create(name="The City") c = Company.objects.create(name="Chubby's Intl.") l1 = Link.objects.create(content_object=p1) l2 = Link.objects.create(content_object=c) places = list(Place.objects.order_by('links__id')) def count_places(place): return len([p for p in places if p.id == place.id]) self.assertEqual(len(places), 2) self.assertEqual(count_places(p1), 1) self.assertEqual(count_places(p2), 1)