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django/tests/regressiontests/transactions_regress/tests.py
Ramiro Morales 8312b85c97 Added support for savepoints to the MySQL DB backend.
MySQL provides the savepoint functionality starting with version 5.0.3
when using the MyISAM storage engine.

Thanks lamby for the report and patch.

Fixes #15507.

git-svn-id: http://code.djangoproject.com/svn/django/trunk@17341 bcc190cf-cafb-0310-a4f2-bffc1f526a37
2012-01-05 00:45:31 +00:00

219 lines
8.3 KiB
Python

from __future__ import absolute_import
from django.core.exceptions import ImproperlyConfigured
from django.db import connection, transaction
from django.db.transaction import commit_on_success, commit_manually, TransactionManagementError
from django.test import TransactionTestCase, skipUnlessDBFeature
from django.utils.unittest import skipIf
from .models import Mod, M2mA, M2mB
class TestTransactionClosing(TransactionTestCase):
"""
Tests to make sure that transactions are properly closed
when they should be, and aren't left pending after operations
have been performed in them. Refs #9964.
"""
def test_raw_committed_on_success(self):
"""
Make sure a transaction consisting of raw SQL execution gets
committed by the commit_on_success decorator.
"""
@commit_on_success
def raw_sql():
"Write a record using raw sql under a commit_on_success decorator"
cursor = connection.cursor()
cursor.execute("INSERT into transactions_regress_mod (id,fld) values (17,18)")
raw_sql()
# Rollback so that if the decorator didn't commit, the record is unwritten
transaction.rollback()
try:
# Check that the record is in the DB
obj = Mod.objects.get(pk=17)
self.assertEqual(obj.fld, 18)
except Mod.DoesNotExist:
self.fail("transaction with raw sql not committed")
def test_commit_manually_enforced(self):
"""
Make sure that under commit_manually, even "read-only" transaction require closure
(commit or rollback), and a transaction left pending is treated as an error.
"""
@commit_manually
def non_comitter():
"Execute a managed transaction with read-only operations and fail to commit"
_ = Mod.objects.count()
self.assertRaises(TransactionManagementError, non_comitter)
def test_commit_manually_commit_ok(self):
"""
Test that under commit_manually, a committed transaction is accepted by the transaction
management mechanisms
"""
@commit_manually
def committer():
"""
Perform a database query, then commit the transaction
"""
_ = Mod.objects.count()
transaction.commit()
try:
committer()
except TransactionManagementError:
self.fail("Commit did not clear the transaction state")
def test_commit_manually_rollback_ok(self):
"""
Test that under commit_manually, a rolled-back transaction is accepted by the transaction
management mechanisms
"""
@commit_manually
def roller_back():
"""
Perform a database query, then rollback the transaction
"""
_ = Mod.objects.count()
transaction.rollback()
try:
roller_back()
except TransactionManagementError:
self.fail("Rollback did not clear the transaction state")
def test_commit_manually_enforced_after_commit(self):
"""
Test that under commit_manually, if a transaction is committed and an operation is
performed later, we still require the new transaction to be closed
"""
@commit_manually
def fake_committer():
"Query, commit, then query again, leaving with a pending transaction"
_ = Mod.objects.count()
transaction.commit()
_ = Mod.objects.count()
self.assertRaises(TransactionManagementError, fake_committer)
@skipUnlessDBFeature('supports_transactions')
def test_reuse_cursor_reference(self):
"""
Make sure transaction closure is enforced even when the queries are performed
through a single cursor reference retrieved in the beginning
(this is to show why it is wrong to set the transaction dirty only when a cursor
is fetched from the connection).
"""
@commit_on_success
def reuse_cursor_ref():
"""
Fetch a cursor, perform an query, rollback to close the transaction,
then write a record (in a new transaction) using the same cursor object
(reference). All this under commit_on_success, so the second insert should
be committed.
"""
cursor = connection.cursor()
cursor.execute("INSERT into transactions_regress_mod (id,fld) values (1,2)")
transaction.rollback()
cursor.execute("INSERT into transactions_regress_mod (id,fld) values (1,2)")
reuse_cursor_ref()
# Rollback so that if the decorator didn't commit, the record is unwritten
transaction.rollback()
try:
# Check that the record is in the DB
obj = Mod.objects.get(pk=1)
self.assertEqual(obj.fld, 2)
except Mod.DoesNotExist:
self.fail("After ending a transaction, cursor use no longer sets dirty")
def test_failing_query_transaction_closed(self):
"""
Make sure that under commit_on_success, a transaction is rolled back even if
the first database-modifying operation fails.
This is prompted by http://code.djangoproject.com/ticket/6669 (and based on sample
code posted there to exemplify the problem): Before Django 1.3,
transactions were only marked "dirty" by the save() function after it successfully
wrote the object to the database.
"""
from django.contrib.auth.models import User
@transaction.commit_on_success
def create_system_user():
"Create a user in a transaction"
user = User.objects.create_user(username='system', password='iamr00t', email='root@SITENAME.com')
# Redundant, just makes sure the user id was read back from DB
Mod.objects.create(fld=user.id)
# Create a user
create_system_user()
try:
# The second call to create_system_user should fail for violating a unique constraint
# (it's trying to re-create the same user)
create_system_user()
except:
pass
else:
raise ImproperlyConfigured('Unique constraint not enforced on django.contrib.auth.models.User')
try:
# Try to read the database. If the last transaction was indeed closed,
# this should cause no problems
_ = User.objects.all()[0]
except:
self.fail("A transaction consisting of a failed operation was not closed.")
class TestManyToManyAddTransaction(TransactionTestCase):
def test_manyrelated_add_commit(self):
"Test for https://code.djangoproject.com/ticket/16818"
a = M2mA.objects.create()
b = M2mB.objects.create(fld=10)
a.others.add(b)
# We're in a TransactionTestCase and have not changed transaction
# behavior from default of "autocommit", so this rollback should not
# actually do anything. If it does in fact undo our add, that's a bug
# that the bulk insert was not auto-committed.
transaction.rollback()
self.assertEqual(a.others.count(), 1)
class SavepointTest(TransactionTestCase):
@skipUnlessDBFeature('uses_savepoints')
def test_savepoint_commit(self):
@commit_manually
def work():
mod = Mod.objects.create(fld=1)
pk = mod.pk
sid = transaction.savepoint()
mod1 = Mod.objects.filter(pk=pk).update(fld=10)
transaction.savepoint_commit(sid)
mod2 = Mod.objects.get(pk=pk)
transaction.commit()
self.assertEqual(mod2.fld, 10)
work()
@skipIf(connection.vendor == 'mysql' and \
connection.features._mysql_storage_engine() == 'MyISAM',
"MyISAM MySQL storage engine doesn't support savepoints")
@skipUnlessDBFeature('uses_savepoints')
def test_savepoint_rollback(self):
@commit_manually
def work():
mod = Mod.objects.create(fld=1)
pk = mod.pk
sid = transaction.savepoint()
mod1 = Mod.objects.filter(pk=pk).update(fld=20)
transaction.savepoint_rollback(sid)
mod2 = Mod.objects.get(pk=pk)
transaction.commit()
self.assertEqual(mod2.fld, 1)
work()