from __future__ import absolute_import from django.test import TestCase from django.utils import six from .models import Person, Book, Car, PersonManager, PublishedBookManager class CustomManagerTests(TestCase): def test_manager(self): p1 = Person.objects.create(first_name="Bugs", last_name="Bunny", fun=True) p2 = Person.objects.create(first_name="Droopy", last_name="Dog", fun=False) # Test a custom `Manager` method. self.assertQuerysetEqual( Person.objects.get_fun_people(), [ "Bugs Bunny" ], six.text_type ) # Test that the methods of a custom `QuerySet` are properly # copied onto the default `Manager`. for manager in ['custom_queryset_default_manager', 'custom_queryset_custom_manager']: manager = getattr(Person, manager) # Copy public methods. manager.public_method() # Don't copy private methods. with self.assertRaises(AttributeError): manager._private_method() # Copy methods with `manager=True` even if they are private. manager._optin_private_method() # Don't copy methods with `manager=False` even if they are public. with self.assertRaises(AttributeError): manager.optout_public_method() # Test that the overriden method is called. queryset = manager.filter() self.assertQuerysetEqual(queryset, ["Bugs Bunny"], six.text_type) self.assertEqual(queryset._filter_CustomQuerySet, True) # Test that specialized querysets inherit from our custom queryset. queryset = manager.values_list('first_name', flat=True).filter() self.assertEqual(list(queryset), [six.text_type("Bugs")]) self.assertEqual(queryset._filter_CustomQuerySet, True) # Test that the custom manager `__init__()` argument has been set. self.assertEqual(Person.custom_queryset_custom_manager.init_arg, 'hello') # Test that the custom manager method is only available on the manager. Person.custom_queryset_custom_manager.manager_only() with self.assertRaises(AttributeError): Person.custom_queryset_custom_manager.all().manager_only() # Test that the queryset method doesn't override the custom manager method. queryset = Person.custom_queryset_custom_manager.filter() self.assertQuerysetEqual(queryset, ["Bugs Bunny"], six.text_type) self.assertEqual(queryset._filter_CustomManager, True) # The RelatedManager used on the 'books' descriptor extends the default # manager self.assertIsInstance(p2.books, PublishedBookManager) b1 = Book.published_objects.create( title="How to program", author="Rodney Dangerfield", is_published=True ) b2 = Book.published_objects.create( title="How to be smart", author="Albert Einstein", is_published=False ) # The default manager, "objects", doesn't exist, because a custom one # was provided. self.assertRaises(AttributeError, lambda: Book.objects) # The RelatedManager used on the 'authors' descriptor extends the # default manager self.assertIsInstance(b2.authors, PersonManager) self.assertQuerysetEqual( Book.published_objects.all(), [ "How to program", ], lambda b: b.title ) c1 = Car.cars.create(name="Corvette", mileage=21, top_speed=180) c2 = Car.cars.create(name="Neon", mileage=31, top_speed=100) self.assertQuerysetEqual( Car.cars.order_by("name"), [ "Corvette", "Neon", ], lambda c: c.name ) self.assertQuerysetEqual( Car.fast_cars.all(), [ "Corvette", ], lambda c: c.name ) # Each model class gets a "_default_manager" attribute, which is a # reference to the first manager defined in the class. In this case, # it's "cars". self.assertQuerysetEqual( Car._default_manager.order_by("name"), [ "Corvette", "Neon", ], lambda c: c.name )