SickGear/lib/sqlalchemy/dialects/oracle/cx_oracle.py

941 lines
37 KiB
Python

# oracle/cx_oracle.py
# Copyright (C) 2005-2014 the SQLAlchemy authors and contributors <see AUTHORS file>
#
# This module is part of SQLAlchemy and is released under
# the MIT License: http://www.opensource.org/licenses/mit-license.php
"""
.. dialect:: oracle+cx_oracle
:name: cx-Oracle
:dbapi: cx_oracle
:connectstring: oracle+cx_oracle://user:pass@host:port/dbname[?key=value&key=value...]
:url: http://cx-oracle.sourceforge.net/
Additional Connect Arguments
----------------------------
When connecting with ``dbname`` present, the host, port, and dbname tokens are
converted to a TNS name using
the cx_oracle ``makedsn()`` function. Otherwise, the host token is taken
directly as a TNS name.
Additional arguments which may be specified either as query string arguments
on the URL, or as keyword arguments to :func:`.create_engine()` are:
* ``allow_twophase`` - enable two-phase transactions. Defaults to ``True``.
* ``arraysize`` - set the cx_oracle.arraysize value on cursors, defaulted
to 50. This setting is significant with cx_Oracle as the contents of LOB
objects are only readable within a "live" row (e.g. within a batch of
50 rows).
* ``auto_convert_lobs`` - defaults to True; See :ref:`cx_oracle_lob`.
* ``auto_setinputsizes`` - the cx_oracle.setinputsizes() call is issued for
all bind parameters. This is required for LOB datatypes but can be
disabled to reduce overhead. Defaults to ``True``. Specific types
can be excluded from this process using the ``exclude_setinputsizes``
parameter.
* ``coerce_to_unicode`` - see :ref:`cx_oracle_unicode` for detail.
* ``coerce_to_decimal`` - see :ref:`cx_oracle_numeric` for detail.
* ``exclude_setinputsizes`` - a tuple or list of string DBAPI type names to
be excluded from the "auto setinputsizes" feature. The type names here
must match DBAPI types that are found in the "cx_Oracle" module namespace,
such as cx_Oracle.UNICODE, cx_Oracle.NCLOB, etc. Defaults to
``(STRING, UNICODE)``.
.. versionadded:: 0.8 specific DBAPI types can be excluded from the
auto_setinputsizes feature via the exclude_setinputsizes attribute.
* ``mode`` - This is given the string value of SYSDBA or SYSOPER, or alternatively
an integer value. This value is only available as a URL query string
argument.
* ``threaded`` - enable multithreaded access to cx_oracle connections. Defaults
to ``True``. Note that this is the opposite default of the cx_Oracle DBAPI
itself.
.. _cx_oracle_unicode:
Unicode
-------
The cx_Oracle DBAPI as of version 5 fully supports unicode, and has the ability
to return string results as Python unicode objects natively.
When used in Python 3, cx_Oracle returns all strings as Python unicode objects
(that is, plain ``str`` in Python 3). In Python 2, it will return as Python
unicode those column values that are of type ``NVARCHAR`` or ``NCLOB``. For
column values that are of type ``VARCHAR`` or other non-unicode string types,
it will return values as Python strings (e.g. bytestrings).
The cx_Oracle SQLAlchemy dialect presents two different options for the use case of
returning ``VARCHAR`` column values as Python unicode objects under Python 2:
* the cx_Oracle DBAPI has the ability to coerce all string results to Python
unicode objects unconditionally using output type handlers. This has
the advantage that the unicode conversion is global to all statements
at the cx_Oracle driver level, meaning it works with raw textual SQL
statements that have no typing information associated. However, this system
has been observed to incur signfiicant performance overhead, not only because
it takes effect for all string values unconditionally, but also because cx_Oracle under
Python 2 seems to use a pure-Python function call in order to do the
decode operation, which under cPython can orders of magnitude slower
than doing it using C functions alone.
* SQLAlchemy has unicode-decoding services built in, and when using SQLAlchemy's
C extensions, these functions do not use any Python function calls and
are very fast. The disadvantage to this approach is that the unicode
conversion only takes effect for statements where the :class:`.Unicode` type
or :class:`.String` type with ``convert_unicode=True`` is explicitly
associated with the result column. This is the case for any ORM or Core
query or SQL expression as well as for a :func:`.text` construct that specifies
output column types, so in the vast majority of cases this is not an issue.
However, when sending a completely raw string to :meth:`.Connection.execute`,
this typing information isn't present, unless the string is handled
within a :func:`.text` construct that adds typing information.
As of version 0.9.2 of SQLAlchemy, the default approach is to use SQLAlchemy's
typing system. This keeps cx_Oracle's expensive Python 2 approach
disabled unless the user explicitly wants it. Under Python 3, SQLAlchemy detects
that cx_Oracle is returning unicode objects natively and cx_Oracle's system
is used.
To re-enable cx_Oracle's output type handler under Python 2, the
``coerce_to_unicode=True`` flag (new in 0.9.4) can be passed to
:func:`.create_engine`::
engine = create_engine("oracle+cx_oracle://dsn", coerce_to_unicode=True)
Alternatively, to run a pure string SQL statement and get ``VARCHAR`` results
as Python unicode under Python 2 without using cx_Oracle's native handlers,
the :func:`.text` feature can be used::
from sqlalchemy import text, Unicode
result = conn.execute(text("select username from user").columns(username=Unicode))
.. versionchanged:: 0.9.2 cx_Oracle's outputtypehandlers are no longer used for
unicode results of non-unicode datatypes in Python 2, after they were identified as a major
performance bottleneck. SQLAlchemy's own unicode facilities are used
instead.
.. versionadded:: 0.9.4 Added the ``coerce_to_unicode`` flag, to re-enable
cx_Oracle's outputtypehandler and revert to pre-0.9.2 behavior.
.. _cx_oracle_returning:
RETURNING Support
-----------------
The cx_oracle DBAPI supports a limited subset of Oracle's already limited RETURNING support.
Typically, results can only be guaranteed for at most one column being returned;
this is the typical case when SQLAlchemy uses RETURNING to get just the value of a
primary-key-associated sequence value. Additional column expressions will
cause problems in a non-determinative way, due to cx_oracle's lack of support for
the OCI_DATA_AT_EXEC API which is required for more complex RETURNING scenarios.
For this reason, stability may be enhanced by disabling RETURNING support completely;
SQLAlchemy otherwise will use RETURNING to fetch newly sequence-generated
primary keys. As illustrated in :ref:`oracle_returning`::
engine = create_engine("oracle://scott:tiger@dsn", implicit_returning=False)
.. seealso::
http://docs.oracle.com/cd/B10501_01/appdev.920/a96584/oci05bnd.htm#420693 - OCI documentation for RETURNING
http://sourceforge.net/mailarchive/message.php?msg_id=31338136 - cx_oracle developer commentary
.. _cx_oracle_lob:
LOB Objects
-----------
cx_oracle returns oracle LOBs using the cx_oracle.LOB object. SQLAlchemy converts
these to strings so that the interface of the Binary type is consistent with that of
other backends, and so that the linkage to a live cursor is not needed in scenarios
like result.fetchmany() and result.fetchall(). This means that by default, LOB
objects are fully fetched unconditionally by SQLAlchemy, and the linkage to a live
cursor is broken.
To disable this processing, pass ``auto_convert_lobs=False`` to :func:`.create_engine()`.
Two Phase Transaction Support
-----------------------------
Two Phase transactions are implemented using XA transactions, and are known
to work in a rudimental fashion with recent versions of cx_Oracle
as of SQLAlchemy 0.8.0b2, 0.7.10. However, the mechanism is not yet
considered to be robust and should still be regarded as experimental.
In particular, the cx_Oracle DBAPI as recently as 5.1.2 has a bug regarding
two phase which prevents
a particular DBAPI connection from being consistently usable in both
prepared transactions as well as traditional DBAPI usage patterns; therefore
once a particular connection is used via :meth:`.Connection.begin_prepared`,
all subsequent usages of the underlying DBAPI connection must be within
the context of prepared transactions.
The default behavior of :class:`.Engine` is to maintain a pool of DBAPI
connections. Therefore, due to the above glitch, a DBAPI connection that has
been used in a two-phase operation, and is then returned to the pool, will
not be usable in a non-two-phase context. To avoid this situation,
the application can make one of several choices:
* Disable connection pooling using :class:`.NullPool`
* Ensure that the particular :class:`.Engine` in use is only used
for two-phase operations. A :class:`.Engine` bound to an ORM
:class:`.Session` which includes ``twophase=True`` will consistently
use the two-phase transaction style.
* For ad-hoc two-phase operations without disabling pooling, the DBAPI
connection in use can be evicted from the connection pool using the
:meth:`.Connection.detach` method.
.. versionchanged:: 0.8.0b2,0.7.10
Support for cx_oracle prepared transactions has been implemented
and tested.
.. _cx_oracle_numeric:
Precision Numerics
------------------
The SQLAlchemy dialect goes through a lot of steps to ensure
that decimal numbers are sent and received with full accuracy.
An "outputtypehandler" callable is associated with each
cx_oracle connection object which detects numeric types and
receives them as string values, instead of receiving a Python
``float`` directly, which is then passed to the Python
``Decimal`` constructor. The :class:`.Numeric` and
:class:`.Float` types under the cx_oracle dialect are aware of
this behavior, and will coerce the ``Decimal`` to ``float`` if
the ``asdecimal`` flag is ``False`` (default on :class:`.Float`,
optional on :class:`.Numeric`).
Because the handler coerces to ``Decimal`` in all cases first,
the feature can detract significantly from performance.
If precision numerics aren't required, the decimal handling
can be disabled by passing the flag ``coerce_to_decimal=False``
to :func:`.create_engine`::
engine = create_engine("oracle+cx_oracle://dsn", coerce_to_decimal=False)
.. versionadded:: 0.7.6
Add the ``coerce_to_decimal`` flag.
Another alternative to performance is to use the
`cdecimal <http://pypi.python.org/pypi/cdecimal/>`_ library;
see :class:`.Numeric` for additional notes.
The handler attempts to use the "precision" and "scale"
attributes of the result set column to best determine if
subsequent incoming values should be received as ``Decimal`` as
opposed to int (in which case no processing is added). There are
several scenarios where OCI_ does not provide unambiguous data
as to the numeric type, including some situations where
individual rows may return a combination of floating point and
integer values. Certain values for "precision" and "scale" have
been observed to determine this scenario. When it occurs, the
outputtypehandler receives as string and then passes off to a
processing function which detects, for each returned value, if a
decimal point is present, and if so converts to ``Decimal``,
otherwise to int. The intention is that simple int-based
statements like "SELECT my_seq.nextval() FROM DUAL" continue to
return ints and not ``Decimal`` objects, and that any kind of
floating point value is received as a string so that there is no
floating point loss of precision.
The "decimal point is present" logic itself is also sensitive to
locale. Under OCI_, this is controlled by the NLS_LANG
environment variable. Upon first connection, the dialect runs a
test to determine the current "decimal" character, which can be
a comma "," for european locales. From that point forward the
outputtypehandler uses that character to represent a decimal
point. Note that cx_oracle 5.0.3 or greater is required
when dealing with numerics with locale settings that don't use
a period "." as the decimal character.
.. versionchanged:: 0.6.6
The outputtypehandler supports the case where the locale uses a
comma "," character to represent a decimal point.
.. _OCI: http://www.oracle.com/technetwork/database/features/oci/index.html
"""
from __future__ import absolute_import
from .base import OracleCompiler, OracleDialect, OracleExecutionContext
from . import base as oracle
from ...engine import result as _result
from sqlalchemy import types as sqltypes, util, exc, processors
import random
import collections
import decimal
import re
class _OracleNumeric(sqltypes.Numeric):
def bind_processor(self, dialect):
# cx_oracle accepts Decimal objects and floats
return None
def result_processor(self, dialect, coltype):
# we apply a cx_oracle type handler to all connections
# that converts floating point strings to Decimal().
# However, in some subquery situations, Oracle doesn't
# give us enough information to determine int or Decimal.
# It could even be int/Decimal differently on each row,
# regardless of the scale given for the originating type.
# So we still need an old school isinstance() handler
# here for decimals.
if dialect.supports_native_decimal:
if self.asdecimal:
fstring = "%%.%df" % self._effective_decimal_return_scale
def to_decimal(value):
if value is None:
return None
elif isinstance(value, decimal.Decimal):
return value
else:
return decimal.Decimal(fstring % value)
return to_decimal
else:
if self.precision is None and self.scale is None:
return processors.to_float
elif not getattr(self, '_is_oracle_number', False) \
and self.scale is not None:
return processors.to_float
else:
return None
else:
# cx_oracle 4 behavior, will assume
# floats
return super(_OracleNumeric, self).\
result_processor(dialect, coltype)
class _OracleDate(sqltypes.Date):
def bind_processor(self, dialect):
return None
def result_processor(self, dialect, coltype):
def process(value):
if value is not None:
return value.date()
else:
return value
return process
class _LOBMixin(object):
def result_processor(self, dialect, coltype):
if not dialect.auto_convert_lobs:
# return the cx_oracle.LOB directly.
return None
def process(value):
if value is not None:
return value.read()
else:
return value
return process
class _NativeUnicodeMixin(object):
if util.py2k:
def bind_processor(self, dialect):
if dialect._cx_oracle_with_unicode:
def process(value):
if value is None:
return value
else:
return unicode(value)
return process
else:
return super(_NativeUnicodeMixin, self).bind_processor(dialect)
# we apply a connection output handler that returns
# unicode in all cases, so the "native_unicode" flag
# will be set for the default String.result_processor.
class _OracleChar(_NativeUnicodeMixin, sqltypes.CHAR):
def get_dbapi_type(self, dbapi):
return dbapi.FIXED_CHAR
class _OracleNVarChar(_NativeUnicodeMixin, sqltypes.NVARCHAR):
def get_dbapi_type(self, dbapi):
return getattr(dbapi, 'UNICODE', dbapi.STRING)
class _OracleText(_LOBMixin, sqltypes.Text):
def get_dbapi_type(self, dbapi):
return dbapi.CLOB
class _OracleLong(oracle.LONG):
# a raw LONG is a text type, but does *not*
# get the LobMixin with cx_oracle.
def get_dbapi_type(self, dbapi):
return dbapi.LONG_STRING
class _OracleString(_NativeUnicodeMixin, sqltypes.String):
pass
class _OracleUnicodeText(_LOBMixin, _NativeUnicodeMixin, sqltypes.UnicodeText):
def get_dbapi_type(self, dbapi):
return dbapi.NCLOB
def result_processor(self, dialect, coltype):
lob_processor = _LOBMixin.result_processor(self, dialect, coltype)
if lob_processor is None:
return None
string_processor = sqltypes.UnicodeText.result_processor(self, dialect, coltype)
if string_processor is None:
return lob_processor
else:
def process(value):
return string_processor(lob_processor(value))
return process
class _OracleInteger(sqltypes.Integer):
def result_processor(self, dialect, coltype):
def to_int(val):
if val is not None:
val = int(val)
return val
return to_int
class _OracleBinary(_LOBMixin, sqltypes.LargeBinary):
def get_dbapi_type(self, dbapi):
return dbapi.BLOB
def bind_processor(self, dialect):
return None
class _OracleInterval(oracle.INTERVAL):
def get_dbapi_type(self, dbapi):
return dbapi.INTERVAL
class _OracleRaw(oracle.RAW):
pass
class _OracleRowid(oracle.ROWID):
def get_dbapi_type(self, dbapi):
return dbapi.ROWID
class OracleCompiler_cx_oracle(OracleCompiler):
def bindparam_string(self, name, **kw):
quote = getattr(name, 'quote', None)
if quote is True or quote is not False and \
self.preparer._bindparam_requires_quotes(name):
quoted_name = '"%s"' % name
self._quoted_bind_names[name] = quoted_name
return OracleCompiler.bindparam_string(self, quoted_name, **kw)
else:
return OracleCompiler.bindparam_string(self, name, **kw)
class OracleExecutionContext_cx_oracle(OracleExecutionContext):
def pre_exec(self):
quoted_bind_names = \
getattr(self.compiled, '_quoted_bind_names', None)
if quoted_bind_names:
if not self.dialect.supports_unicode_statements:
# if DBAPI doesn't accept unicode statements,
# keys in self.parameters would have been encoded
# here. so convert names in quoted_bind_names
# to encoded as well.
quoted_bind_names = \
dict(
(fromname.encode(self.dialect.encoding),
toname.encode(self.dialect.encoding))
for fromname, toname in
quoted_bind_names.items()
)
for param in self.parameters:
for fromname, toname in quoted_bind_names.items():
param[toname] = param[fromname]
del param[fromname]
if self.dialect.auto_setinputsizes:
# cx_oracle really has issues when you setinputsizes
# on String, including that outparams/RETURNING
# breaks for varchars
self.set_input_sizes(quoted_bind_names,
exclude_types=self.dialect.exclude_setinputsizes
)
# if a single execute, check for outparams
if len(self.compiled_parameters) == 1:
for bindparam in self.compiled.binds.values():
if bindparam.isoutparam:
dbtype = bindparam.type.dialect_impl(self.dialect).\
get_dbapi_type(self.dialect.dbapi)
if not hasattr(self, 'out_parameters'):
self.out_parameters = {}
if dbtype is None:
raise exc.InvalidRequestError(
"Cannot create out parameter for parameter "
"%r - it's type %r is not supported by"
" cx_oracle" %
(bindparam.key, bindparam.type)
)
name = self.compiled.bind_names[bindparam]
self.out_parameters[name] = self.cursor.var(dbtype)
self.parameters[0][quoted_bind_names.get(name, name)] = \
self.out_parameters[name]
def create_cursor(self):
c = self._dbapi_connection.cursor()
if self.dialect.arraysize:
c.arraysize = self.dialect.arraysize
return c
def get_result_proxy(self):
if hasattr(self, 'out_parameters') and self.compiled.returning:
returning_params = dict(
(k, v.getvalue())
for k, v in self.out_parameters.items()
)
return ReturningResultProxy(self, returning_params)
result = None
if self.cursor.description is not None:
for column in self.cursor.description:
type_code = column[1]
if type_code in self.dialect._cx_oracle_binary_types:
result = _result.BufferedColumnResultProxy(self)
if result is None:
result = _result.ResultProxy(self)
if hasattr(self, 'out_parameters'):
if self.compiled_parameters is not None and \
len(self.compiled_parameters) == 1:
result.out_parameters = out_parameters = {}
for bind, name in self.compiled.bind_names.items():
if name in self.out_parameters:
type = bind.type
impl_type = type.dialect_impl(self.dialect)
dbapi_type = impl_type.get_dbapi_type(self.dialect.dbapi)
result_processor = impl_type.\
result_processor(self.dialect,
dbapi_type)
if result_processor is not None:
out_parameters[name] = \
result_processor(self.out_parameters[name].getvalue())
else:
out_parameters[name] = self.out_parameters[name].getvalue()
else:
result.out_parameters = dict(
(k, v.getvalue())
for k, v in self.out_parameters.items()
)
return result
class OracleExecutionContext_cx_oracle_with_unicode(OracleExecutionContext_cx_oracle):
"""Support WITH_UNICODE in Python 2.xx.
WITH_UNICODE allows cx_Oracle's Python 3 unicode handling
behavior under Python 2.x. This mode in some cases disallows
and in other cases silently passes corrupted data when
non-Python-unicode strings (a.k.a. plain old Python strings)
are passed as arguments to connect(), the statement sent to execute(),
or any of the bind parameter keys or values sent to execute().
This optional context therefore ensures that all statements are
passed as Python unicode objects.
"""
def __init__(self, *arg, **kw):
OracleExecutionContext_cx_oracle.__init__(self, *arg, **kw)
self.statement = util.text_type(self.statement)
def _execute_scalar(self, stmt):
return super(OracleExecutionContext_cx_oracle_with_unicode, self).\
_execute_scalar(util.text_type(stmt))
class ReturningResultProxy(_result.FullyBufferedResultProxy):
"""Result proxy which stuffs the _returning clause + outparams into the fetch."""
def __init__(self, context, returning_params):
self._returning_params = returning_params
super(ReturningResultProxy, self).__init__(context)
def _cursor_description(self):
returning = self.context.compiled.returning
return [
("ret_%d" % i, None)
for i, col in enumerate(returning)
]
def _buffer_rows(self):
return collections.deque([tuple(self._returning_params["ret_%d" % i]
for i, c in enumerate(self._returning_params))])
class OracleDialect_cx_oracle(OracleDialect):
execution_ctx_cls = OracleExecutionContext_cx_oracle
statement_compiler = OracleCompiler_cx_oracle
driver = "cx_oracle"
colspecs = colspecs = {
sqltypes.Numeric: _OracleNumeric,
sqltypes.Date: _OracleDate, # generic type, assume datetime.date is desired
sqltypes.LargeBinary: _OracleBinary,
sqltypes.Boolean: oracle._OracleBoolean,
sqltypes.Interval: _OracleInterval,
oracle.INTERVAL: _OracleInterval,
sqltypes.Text: _OracleText,
sqltypes.String: _OracleString,
sqltypes.UnicodeText: _OracleUnicodeText,
sqltypes.CHAR: _OracleChar,
# a raw LONG is a text type, but does *not*
# get the LobMixin with cx_oracle.
oracle.LONG: _OracleLong,
# this is only needed for OUT parameters.
# it would be nice if we could not use it otherwise.
sqltypes.Integer: _OracleInteger,
oracle.RAW: _OracleRaw,
sqltypes.Unicode: _OracleNVarChar,
sqltypes.NVARCHAR: _OracleNVarChar,
oracle.ROWID: _OracleRowid,
}
execute_sequence_format = list
def __init__(self,
auto_setinputsizes=True,
exclude_setinputsizes=("STRING", "UNICODE"),
auto_convert_lobs=True,
threaded=True,
allow_twophase=True,
coerce_to_decimal=True,
coerce_to_unicode=False,
arraysize=50, **kwargs):
OracleDialect.__init__(self, **kwargs)
self.threaded = threaded
self.arraysize = arraysize
self.allow_twophase = allow_twophase
self.supports_timestamp = self.dbapi is None or \
hasattr(self.dbapi, 'TIMESTAMP')
self.auto_setinputsizes = auto_setinputsizes
self.auto_convert_lobs = auto_convert_lobs
if hasattr(self.dbapi, 'version'):
self.cx_oracle_ver = tuple([int(x) for x in
self.dbapi.version.split('.')])
else:
self.cx_oracle_ver = (0, 0, 0)
def types(*names):
return set(
getattr(self.dbapi, name, None) for name in names
).difference([None])
self.exclude_setinputsizes = types(*(exclude_setinputsizes or ()))
self._cx_oracle_string_types = types("STRING", "UNICODE",
"NCLOB", "CLOB")
self._cx_oracle_unicode_types = types("UNICODE", "NCLOB")
self._cx_oracle_binary_types = types("BFILE", "CLOB", "NCLOB", "BLOB")
self.supports_unicode_binds = self.cx_oracle_ver >= (5, 0)
self.coerce_to_unicode = (
self.cx_oracle_ver >= (5, 0) and
coerce_to_unicode
)
self.supports_native_decimal = (
self.cx_oracle_ver >= (5, 0) and
coerce_to_decimal
)
self._cx_oracle_native_nvarchar = self.cx_oracle_ver >= (5, 0)
if self.cx_oracle_ver is None:
# this occurs in tests with mock DBAPIs
self._cx_oracle_string_types = set()
self._cx_oracle_with_unicode = False
elif self.cx_oracle_ver >= (5,) and not hasattr(self.dbapi, 'UNICODE'):
# cx_Oracle WITH_UNICODE mode. *only* python
# unicode objects accepted for anything
self.supports_unicode_statements = True
self.supports_unicode_binds = True
self._cx_oracle_with_unicode = True
if util.py2k:
# There's really no reason to run with WITH_UNICODE under Python 2.x.
# Give the user a hint.
util.warn(
"cx_Oracle is compiled under Python 2.xx using the "
"WITH_UNICODE flag. Consider recompiling cx_Oracle "
"without this flag, which is in no way necessary for full "
"support of Unicode. Otherwise, all string-holding bind "
"parameters must be explicitly typed using SQLAlchemy's "
"String type or one of its subtypes,"
"or otherwise be passed as Python unicode. "
"Plain Python strings passed as bind parameters will be "
"silently corrupted by cx_Oracle."
)
self.execution_ctx_cls = \
OracleExecutionContext_cx_oracle_with_unicode
else:
self._cx_oracle_with_unicode = False
if self.cx_oracle_ver is None or \
not self.auto_convert_lobs or \
not hasattr(self.dbapi, 'CLOB'):
self.dbapi_type_map = {}
else:
# only use this for LOB objects. using it for strings, dates
# etc. leads to a little too much magic, reflection doesn't know if it should
# expect encoded strings or unicodes, etc.
self.dbapi_type_map = {
self.dbapi.CLOB: oracle.CLOB(),
self.dbapi.NCLOB: oracle.NCLOB(),
self.dbapi.BLOB: oracle.BLOB(),
self.dbapi.BINARY: oracle.RAW(),
}
@classmethod
def dbapi(cls):
import cx_Oracle
return cx_Oracle
def initialize(self, connection):
super(OracleDialect_cx_oracle, self).initialize(connection)
if self._is_oracle_8:
self.supports_unicode_binds = False
self._detect_decimal_char(connection)
def _detect_decimal_char(self, connection):
"""detect if the decimal separator character is not '.', as
is the case with european locale settings for NLS_LANG.
cx_oracle itself uses similar logic when it formats Python
Decimal objects to strings on the bind side (as of 5.0.3),
as Oracle sends/receives string numerics only in the
current locale.
"""
if self.cx_oracle_ver < (5,):
# no output type handlers before version 5
return
cx_Oracle = self.dbapi
conn = connection.connection
# override the output_type_handler that's
# on the cx_oracle connection with a plain
# one on the cursor
def output_type_handler(cursor, name, defaultType,
size, precision, scale):
return cursor.var(
cx_Oracle.STRING,
255, arraysize=cursor.arraysize)
cursor = conn.cursor()
cursor.outputtypehandler = output_type_handler
cursor.execute("SELECT 0.1 FROM DUAL")
val = cursor.fetchone()[0]
cursor.close()
char = re.match(r"([\.,])", val).group(1)
if char != '.':
_detect_decimal = self._detect_decimal
self._detect_decimal = \
lambda value: _detect_decimal(value.replace(char, '.'))
self._to_decimal = \
lambda value: decimal.Decimal(value.replace(char, '.'))
def _detect_decimal(self, value):
if "." in value:
return decimal.Decimal(value)
else:
return int(value)
_to_decimal = decimal.Decimal
def on_connect(self):
if self.cx_oracle_ver < (5,):
# no output type handlers before version 5
return
cx_Oracle = self.dbapi
def output_type_handler(cursor, name, defaultType,
size, precision, scale):
# convert all NUMBER with precision + positive scale to Decimal
# this almost allows "native decimal" mode.
if self.supports_native_decimal and \
defaultType == cx_Oracle.NUMBER and \
precision and scale > 0:
return cursor.var(
cx_Oracle.STRING,
255,
outconverter=self._to_decimal,
arraysize=cursor.arraysize)
# if NUMBER with zero precision and 0 or neg scale, this appears
# to indicate "ambiguous". Use a slower converter that will
# make a decision based on each value received - the type
# may change from row to row (!). This kills
# off "native decimal" mode, handlers still needed.
elif self.supports_native_decimal and \
defaultType == cx_Oracle.NUMBER \
and not precision and scale <= 0:
return cursor.var(
cx_Oracle.STRING,
255,
outconverter=self._detect_decimal,
arraysize=cursor.arraysize)
# allow all strings to come back natively as Unicode
elif self.coerce_to_unicode and \
defaultType in (cx_Oracle.STRING, cx_Oracle.FIXED_CHAR):
return cursor.var(util.text_type, size, cursor.arraysize)
def on_connect(conn):
conn.outputtypehandler = output_type_handler
return on_connect
def create_connect_args(self, url):
dialect_opts = dict(url.query)
for opt in ('use_ansi', 'auto_setinputsizes', 'auto_convert_lobs',
'threaded', 'allow_twophase'):
if opt in dialect_opts:
util.coerce_kw_type(dialect_opts, opt, bool)
setattr(self, opt, dialect_opts[opt])
if url.database:
# if we have a database, then we have a remote host
port = url.port
if port:
port = int(port)
else:
port = 1521
dsn = self.dbapi.makedsn(url.host, port, url.database)
else:
# we have a local tnsname
dsn = url.host
opts = dict(
user=url.username,
password=url.password,
dsn=dsn,
threaded=self.threaded,
twophase=self.allow_twophase,
)
if util.py2k:
if self._cx_oracle_with_unicode:
for k, v in opts.items():
if isinstance(v, str):
opts[k] = unicode(v)
else:
for k, v in opts.items():
if isinstance(v, unicode):
opts[k] = str(v)
if 'mode' in url.query:
opts['mode'] = url.query['mode']
if isinstance(opts['mode'], util.string_types):
mode = opts['mode'].upper()
if mode == 'SYSDBA':
opts['mode'] = self.dbapi.SYSDBA
elif mode == 'SYSOPER':
opts['mode'] = self.dbapi.SYSOPER
else:
util.coerce_kw_type(opts, 'mode', int)
return ([], opts)
def _get_server_version_info(self, connection):
return tuple(
int(x)
for x in connection.connection.version.split('.')
)
def is_disconnect(self, e, connection, cursor):
error, = e.args
if isinstance(e, self.dbapi.InterfaceError):
return "not connected" in str(e)
elif hasattr(error, 'code'):
# ORA-00028: your session has been killed
# ORA-03114: not connected to ORACLE
# ORA-03113: end-of-file on communication channel
# ORA-03135: connection lost contact
# ORA-01033: ORACLE initialization or shutdown in progress
# ORA-02396: exceeded maximum idle time, please connect again
# TODO: Others ?
return error.code in (28, 3114, 3113, 3135, 1033, 2396)
else:
return False
def create_xid(self):
"""create a two-phase transaction ID.
this id will be passed to do_begin_twophase(), do_rollback_twophase(),
do_commit_twophase(). its format is unspecified."""
id = random.randint(0, 2 ** 128)
return (0x1234, "%032x" % id, "%032x" % 9)
def do_executemany(self, cursor, statement, parameters, context=None):
if isinstance(parameters, tuple):
parameters = list(parameters)
cursor.executemany(statement, parameters)
def do_begin_twophase(self, connection, xid):
connection.connection.begin(*xid)
def do_prepare_twophase(self, connection, xid):
result = connection.connection.prepare()
connection.info['cx_oracle_prepared'] = result
def do_rollback_twophase(self, connection, xid, is_prepared=True,
recover=False):
self.do_rollback(connection.connection)
def do_commit_twophase(self, connection, xid, is_prepared=True,
recover=False):
if not is_prepared:
self.do_commit(connection.connection)
else:
oci_prepared = connection.info['cx_oracle_prepared']
if oci_prepared:
self.do_commit(connection.connection)
def do_recover_twophase(self, connection):
connection.info.pop('cx_oracle_prepared', None)
dialect = OracleDialect_cx_oracle