6.2 KiB
Upgrading
Upgrading to 2.1 from 2.0
Version 2.1 of the DataStax Python driver for Apache Cassandra adds support for Cassandra 2.1 and version 3 of the native protocol.
Cassandra 1.2, 2.0, and 2.1 are all supported. However, 1.2 only supports protocol version 1, and 2.0 only supports versions 1 and 2, so some features may not be available.
Using the v3 Native Protocol
By default, the driver will attempt to use version 2 of the native
protocol. To use version 3, you must explicitly set the ~.Cluster.protocol_version:
from cassandra.cluster import Cluster
cluster = Cluster(protocol_version=3)Note that protocol version 3 is only supported by Cassandra 2.1+.
In future releases, the driver may default to using protocol version 3.
Working with User-Defined Types
Cassandra 2.1 introduced the ability to define new types:
USE KEYSPACE mykeyspace;
CREATE TYPE address (street text, city text, zip int);
The driver generally expects you to use instances of a specific class
to represent column values of this type. You can let the driver know
what class to use with .Cluster.register_user_type:
cluster = Cluster()
class Address(object):
def __init__(self, street, city, zipcode):
self.street = street
self.city = text
self.zipcode = zipcode
cluster.register_user_type('mykeyspace', 'address', Address)When inserting data for address columns, you should pass
in instances of Address. When querying data,
address column values will be instances of
Address.
If no class is registered for a user-defined type, query results will
use a namedtuple class and data may only be inserted though
prepared statements.
See udts for more
details.
Customizing Encoders for Non-prepared Statements
Starting with version 2.1 of the driver, it is possible to customize
how Python types are converted to CQL literals when working with
non-prepared statements. This is done on a per-~.Session basis through
.Session.encoder:
cluster = Cluster()
session = cluster.connect()
session.encoder.mapping[tuple] = session.encoder.cql_encode_tupleSee type-conversions
for the table of default CQL literal conversions.
Using Client-Side Protocol-Level Timestamps
With version 3 of the native protocol, timestamps may be supplied by the client at the protocol level. (Normally, if they are not specified within the CQL query itself, a timestamp is generated server-side.)
When ~.Cluster.protocol_version is set to 3 or higher, the
driver will automatically use client-side timestamps with microsecond
precision unless .Session.use_client_timestamp is changed to False. If a timestamp is
specified within the CQL query, it will override the timestamp generated
by the driver.
Upgrading to 2.0 from 1.x
Version 2.0 of the DataStax Python driver for Apache Cassandra includes some notable improvements over version 1.x. This version of the driver supports Cassandra 1.2, 2.0, and 2.1. However, not all features may be used with Cassandra 1.2, and some new features in 2.1 are not yet supported.
Using the v2 Native Protocol
By default, the driver will attempt to use version 2 of Cassandra's native protocol. You can explicitly set the protocol version to 2, though:
from cassandra.cluster import Cluster
cluster = Cluster(protocol_version=2)When working with Cassandra 1.2, you will need to explicitly set the
~.Cluster.protocol_version to 1:
from cassandra.cluster import Cluster
cluster = Cluster(protocol_version=1)Automatic Query Paging
Version 2 of the native protocol adds support for automatic query paging, which can make dealing with large result sets much simpler.
See query-paging for
full details.
Protocol-Level Batch Statements
With version 1 of the native protocol, batching of statements required using a BATCH cql query. With version 2 of the native protocol, you can now batch statements at the protocol level. This allows you to use many different prepared statements within a single batch.
See ~.query.BatchStatement for details and usage
examples.
SASL-based Authentication
Also new in version 2 of the native protocol is SASL-based
authentication. See the section on security for details and examples.
Lightweight Transactions
Lightweight
transactions are another new feature. To use lightweight
transactions, add IF clauses to your CQL queries and set
the ~.Statement.serial_consistency_level on your
statements.
Calling Cluster.shutdown()
In order to fix some issues around garbage collection and unclean
interpreter shutdowns, version 2.0 of the driver requires you to call
.Cluster.shutdown() on
your ~.Cluster
objects when you are through with them. This helps to guarantee a clean
shutdown.
Deprecations
The following functions have moved from
cassandra.decoder to cassandra.query. The
original functions have been left in place with a DeprecationWarning for
now:
cassandra.decoder.tuple_factoryhas moved tocassandra.query.tuple_factorycassandra.decoder.named_tuple_factoryhas moved tocassandra.query.named_tuple_factorycassandra.decoder.dict_factoryhas moved tocassandra.query.dict_factorycassandra.decoder.ordered_dict_factoryhas moved tocassandra.query.ordered_dict_factory
Dependency Changes
The following dependencies have officially been made optional:
scalesblist
And one new dependency has been added (to enable Python 3 support):
six