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Thanks Lily Foote and Simon Charette for reviews and mentoring this Google Summer of Code 2024 project. Co-authored-by: Simon Charette <charette.s@gmail.com> Co-authored-by: Lily Foote <code@lilyf.org>
184 lines
5.8 KiB
Plaintext
184 lines
5.8 KiB
Plaintext
======================
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Composite primary keys
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======================
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.. versionadded:: 5.2
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In Django, each model has a primary key. By default, this primary key consists
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of a single field.
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In most cases, a single primary key should suffice. In database design,
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however, defining a primary key consisting of multiple fields is sometimes
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necessary.
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To use a composite primary key, when creating a model set the ``pk`` field to
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be a :class:`.CompositePrimaryKey`::
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class Product(models.Model):
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name = models.CharField(max_length=100)
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class Order(models.Model):
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reference = models.CharField(max_length=20, primary_key=True)
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class OrderLineItem(models.Model):
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pk = models.CompositePrimaryKey("product_id", "order_id")
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product = models.ForeignKey(Product, on_delete=models.CASCADE)
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order = models.ForeignKey(Order, on_delete=models.CASCADE)
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quantity = models.IntegerField()
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This will instruct Django to create a composite primary key
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(``PRIMARY KEY (product_id, order_id)``) when creating the table.
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A composite primary key is represented by a ``tuple``:
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.. code-block:: pycon
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>>> product = Product.objects.create(name="apple")
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>>> order = Order.objects.create(reference="A755H")
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>>> item = OrderLineItem.objects.create(product=product, order=order, quantity=1)
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>>> item.pk
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(1, "A755H")
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You can assign a ``tuple`` to a composite primary key. This sets the associated
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field values.
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.. code-block:: pycon
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>>> item = OrderLineItem(pk=(2, "B142C"))
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>>> item.pk
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(2, "B142C")
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>>> item.product_id
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2
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>>> item.order_id
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"B142C"
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A composite primary key can also be filtered by a ``tuple``:
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.. code-block:: pycon
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>>> OrderLineItem.objects.filter(pk=(1, "A755H")).count()
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1
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We're still working on composite primary key support for
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:ref:`relational fields <cpk-and-relations>`, including
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:class:`.GenericForeignKey` fields, and the Django admin. Models with composite
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primary keys cannot be registered in the Django admin at this time. You can
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expect to see this in future releases.
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Migrating to a composite primary key
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====================================
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Django doesn't support migrating to, or from, a composite primary key after the
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table is created. It also doesn't support adding or removing fields from the
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composite primary key.
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If you would like to migrate an existing table from a single primary key to a
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composite primary key, follow your database backend's instructions to do so.
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Once the composite primary key is in place, add the ``CompositePrimaryKey``
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field to your model. This allows Django to recognize and handle the composite
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primary key appropriately.
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While migration operations (e.g. ``AddField``, ``AlterField``) on primary key
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fields are not supported, ``makemigrations`` will still detect changes.
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In order to avoid errors, it's recommended to apply such migrations with
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``--fake``.
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Alternatively, :class:`.SeparateDatabaseAndState` may be used to execute the
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backend-specific migrations and Django-generated migrations in a single
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operation.
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.. _cpk-and-relations:
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Composite primary keys and relations
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====================================
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:ref:`Relationship fields <relationship-fields>`, including
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:ref:`generic relations <generic-relations>` do not support composite primary
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keys.
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For example, given the ``OrderLineItem`` model, the following is not
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supported::
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class Foo(models.Model):
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item = models.ForeignKey(OrderLineItem, on_delete=models.CASCADE)
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Because ``ForeignKey`` currently cannot reference models with composite primary
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keys.
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To work around this limitation, ``ForeignObject`` can be used as an
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alternative::
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class Foo(models.Model):
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item_order_id = models.IntegerField()
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item_product_id = models.CharField(max_length=20)
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item = models.ForeignObject(
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OrderLineItem,
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on_delete=models.CASCADE,
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from_fields=("item_order_id", "item_product_id"),
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to_fields=("order_id", "product_id"),
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)
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``ForeignObject`` is much like ``ForeignKey``, except that it doesn't create
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any columns (e.g. ``item_id``), foreign key constraints or indexes in the
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database.
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.. warning::
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``ForeignObject`` is an internal API. This means it is not covered by our
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:ref:`deprecation policy <internal-release-deprecation-policy>`.
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Composite primary keys and database functions
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=============================================
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Many database functions only accept a single expression.
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.. code-block:: sql
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MAX("order_id") -- OK
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MAX("product_id", "order_id") -- ERROR
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As a consequence, they cannot be used with composite primary key references as
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they are composed of multiple column expressions.
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.. code-block:: python
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Max("order_id") # OK
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Max("pk") # ERROR
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Composite primary keys in forms
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===============================
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As a composite primary key is a virtual field, a field which doesn't represent
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a single database column, this field is excluded from ModelForms.
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For example, take the following form::
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class OrderLineItemForm(forms.ModelForm):
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class Meta:
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model = OrderLineItem
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fields = "__all__"
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This form does not have a form field ``pk`` for the composite primary key:
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.. code-block:: pycon
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>>> OrderLineItemForm()
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<OrderLineItemForm bound=False, valid=Unknown, fields=(product;order;quantity)>
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Setting the primary composite field ``pk`` as a form field raises an unknown
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field :exc:`.FieldError`.
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.. admonition:: Primary key fields are read only
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If you change the value of a primary key on an existing object and then
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save it, a new object will be created alongside the old one (see
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:attr:`.Field.primary_key`).
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This is also true of composite primary keys. Hence, you may want to set
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:attr:`.Field.editable` to ``False`` on all primary key fields to exclude
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them from ModelForms.
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