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261 lines
9.9 KiB
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261 lines
9.9 KiB
Plaintext
============================
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Database access optimization
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============================
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Django's database layer provides various ways to help developers get the most
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out of their databases. This document gathers together links to the relevant
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documentation, and adds various tips, organized under an number of headings that
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outline the steps to take when attempting to optimize your database usage.
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Profile first
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=============
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As general programming practice, this goes without saying. Find out :ref:`what
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queries you are doing and what they are costing you
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<faq-see-raw-sql-queries>`. You may also want to use an external project like
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'django-debug-toolbar', or a tool that monitors your database directly.
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Remember that you may be optimizing for speed or memory or both, depending on
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your requirements. Sometimes optimizing for one will be detrimental to the
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other, but sometimes they will help each other. Also, work that is done by the
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database process might not have the same cost (to you) as the same amount of
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work done in your Python process. It is up to you to decide what your
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priorities are, where the balance must lie, and profile all of these as required
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since this will depend on your application and server.
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With everything that follows, remember to profile after every change to ensure
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that the change is a benefit, and a big enough benefit given the decrease in
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readability of your code. **All** of the suggestions below come with the caveat
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that in your circumstances the general principle might not apply, or might even
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be reversed.
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Use standard DB optimization techniques
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=======================================
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...including:
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* Indexes. This is a number one priority, *after* you have determined from
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profiling what indexes should be added. Use :attr:`django.db.models.Field.db_index` to add
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these from Django.
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* Appropriate use of field types.
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We will assume you have done the obvious things above. The rest of this document
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focuses on how to use Django in such a way that you are not doing unnecessary
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work. This document also does not address other optimization techniques that
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apply to all expensive operations, such as :doc:`general purpose caching
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</topics/cache>`.
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Understand QuerySets
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====================
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Understanding :doc:`QuerySets </ref/models/querysets>` is vital to getting good
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performance with simple code. In particular:
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Understand QuerySet evaluation
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------------------------------
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To avoid performance problems, it is important to understand:
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* that :ref:`QuerySets are lazy <querysets-are-lazy>`.
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* when :ref:`they are evaluated <when-querysets-are-evaluated>`.
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* how :ref:`the data is held in memory <caching-and-querysets>`.
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Understand cached attributes
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----------------------------
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As well as caching of the whole ``QuerySet``, there is caching of the result of
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attributes on ORM objects. In general, attributes that are not callable will be
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cached. For example, assuming the :ref:`example Weblog models
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<queryset-model-example>`:
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>>> entry = Entry.objects.get(id=1)
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>>> entry.blog # Blog object is retrieved at this point
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>>> entry.blog # cached version, no DB access
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But in general, callable attributes cause DB lookups every time::
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>>> entry = Entry.objects.get(id=1)
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>>> entry.authors.all() # query performed
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>>> entry.authors.all() # query performed again
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Be careful when reading template code - the template system does not allow use
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of parentheses, but will call callables automatically, hiding the above
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distinction.
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Be careful with your own custom properties - it is up to you to implement
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caching.
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Use the ``with`` template tag
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-----------------------------
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To make use of the caching behaviour of ``QuerySet``, you may need to use the
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:ttag:`with` template tag.
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Use ``iterator()``
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------------------
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When you have a lot of objects, the caching behaviour of the ``QuerySet`` can
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cause a large amount of memory to be used. In this case,
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:meth:`~django.db.models.QuerySet.iterator()` may help.
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Do database work in the database rather than in Python
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======================================================
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For instance:
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* At the most basic level, use :ref:`filter and exclude <queryset-api>` to do
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filtering in the database.
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* Use :ref:`F() object query expressions <query-expressions>` to do filtering
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against other fields within the same model.
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* Use :doc:`annotate to do aggregation in the database </topics/db/aggregation>`.
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If these aren't enough to generate the SQL you need:
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Use ``QuerySet.extra()``
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------------------------
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A less portable but more powerful method is
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:meth:`~django.db.models.QuerySet.extra()`, which allows some SQL to be
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explicitly added to the query. If that still isn't powerful enough:
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Use raw SQL
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-----------
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Write your own :doc:`custom SQL to retrieve data or populate models
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</topics/db/sql>`. Use ``django.db.connection.queries`` to find out what Django
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is writing for you and start from there.
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Retrieve everything at once if you know you will need it
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========================================================
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Hitting the database multiple times for different parts of a single 'set' of
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data that you will need all parts of is, in general, less efficient than
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retrieving it all in one query. This is particularly important if you have a
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query that is executed in a loop, and could therefore end up doing many database
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queries, when only one was needed. So:
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Use ``QuerySet.select_related()``
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---------------------------------
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Understand :ref:`QuerySet.select_related() <select-related>` thoroughly, and use it:
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* in view code,
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* and in :doc:`managers and default managers </topics/db/managers>` where
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appropriate. Be aware when your manager is and is not used; sometimes this is
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tricky so don't make assumptions.
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Don't retrieve things you don't need
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====================================
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Use ``QuerySet.values()`` and ``values_list()``
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-----------------------------------------------
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When you just want a dict/list of values, and don't need ORM model objects, make
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appropriate usage of :meth:`~django.db.models.QuerySet.values()`.
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These can be useful for replacing model objects in template code - as long as
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the dicts you supply have the same attributes as those used in the template, you
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are fine.
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Use ``QuerySet.defer()`` and ``only()``
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---------------------------------------
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Use :meth:`~django.db.models.QuerySet.defer()` and
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:meth:`~django.db.models.QuerySet.only()` if there are database columns you
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know that you won't need (or won't need in most cases) to avoid loading
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them. Note that if you *do* use them, the ORM will have to go and get them in a
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separate query, making this a pessimization if you use it inappropriately.
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Also, be aware that there is some (small extra) overhead incurred inside Django when constructing a model with deferred fields. Don't be too aggressive in deferring fields without profiling as the database has to read most of the non-text, non-VARCHAR data from the disk for a single row in the results, even if it ends up only using a few columns. The `defer()` and `only()` methods are most useful when you can avoid loading a lot of text data or for fields that might take a lot of processing to convert back to Python. As always, profile first, then optimize.
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Use QuerySet.count()
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--------------------
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...if you only want the count, rather than doing ``len(queryset)``.
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Use QuerySet.exists()
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---------------------
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...if you only want to find out if at least one result exists, rather than ``if
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queryset``.
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But:
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Don't overuse ``count()`` and ``exists()``
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------------------------------------------
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If you are going to need other data from the QuerySet, just evaluate it.
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For example, assuming an Email class that has a ``body`` attribute and a
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many-to-many relation to User, the following template code is optimal:
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.. code-block:: html+django
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{% if display_inbox %}
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{% with user.emails.all as emails %}
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{% if emails %}
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<p>You have {{ emails|length }} email(s)</p>
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{% for email in emails %}
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<p>{{ email.body }}</p>
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{% endfor %}
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{% else %}
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<p>No messages today.</p>
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{% endif %}
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{% endwith %}
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{% endif %}
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It is optimal because:
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1. Since QuerySets are lazy, this does no database if 'display_inbox' is False.
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#. Use of ``with`` means that we store ``user.emails.all`` in a variable for
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later use, allowing its cache to be re-used.
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#. The line ``{% if emails %}`` causes ``QuerySet.__nonzero__()`` to be called,
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which causes the ``user.emails.all()`` query to be run on the database, and
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at the least the first line to be turned into an ORM object. If there aren't
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any results, it will return False, otherwise True.
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#. The use of ``{{ emails|length }}`` calls ``QuerySet.__len__()``, filling
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out the rest of the cache without doing another query.
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#. The ``for`` loop iterates over the already filled cache.
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In total, this code does either one or zero database queries. The only
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deliberate optimization performed is the use of the ``with`` tag. Using
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``QuerySet.exists()`` or ``QuerySet.count()`` at any point would cause
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additional queries.
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Use ``QuerySet.update()`` and ``delete()``
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------------------------------------------
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Rather than retrieve a load of objects, set some values, and save them
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individual, use a bulk SQL UPDATE statement, via :ref:`QuerySet.update()
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<topics-db-queries-update>`. Similarly, do :ref:`bulk deletes
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<topics-db-queries-delete>` where possible.
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Note, however, that these bulk update methods cannot call the ``save()`` or ``delete()``
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methods of individual instances, which means that any custom behaviour you have
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added for these methods will not be executed, including anything driven from the
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normal database object :doc:`signals </ref/signals>`.
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Use foreign key values directly
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-------------------------------
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If you only need a foreign key value, use the foreign key value that is already on
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the object you've got, rather than getting the whole related object and taking
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its primary key. i.e. do::
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entry.blog_id
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instead of::
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entry.blog.id
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