Generic Relationship ==================== Generic relationship is a form of relationship that supports creating a 1 to many relationship to any target model. :: from sqlalchemy_utils import generic_relationship class User(Base): __tablename__ = 'user' id = sa.Column(sa.Integer, primary_key=True) class Customer(Base): __tablename__ = 'customer' id = sa.Column(sa.Integer, primary_key=True) class Event(Base): __tablename__ = 'event' id = sa.Column(sa.Integer, primary_key=True) # This is used to discriminate between the linked tables. object_type = sa.Column(sa.Unicode(255)) # This is used to point to the primary key of the linked row. object_id = sa.Column(sa.Integer) object = generic_relationship(object_type, object_id) # Some general usage to attach an event to a user. us_1 = User() cu_1 = Customer() session.add_all([us_1, cu_1]) session.commit() ev = Event() ev.object = us_1 session.add(ev) session.commit() # Find the event we just made. session.query(Event).filter_by(object=us_1).first() # Find any events that are bound to users. session.query(Event).filter(Event.object.is_type(User)).all() Abstract base classes ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ Generic relationships also allows using string arguments. When using generic_relationship with abstract base classes you need to set up the relationship using declared_attr decorator and string arguments. :: class Building(self.Base): __tablename__ = 'building' id = sa.Column(sa.Integer, primary_key=True) class User(self.Base): __tablename__ = 'user' id = sa.Column(sa.Integer, primary_key=True) class EventBase(self.Base): __abstract__ = True object_type = sa.Column(sa.Unicode(255)) object_id = sa.Column(sa.Integer, nullable=False) @declared_attr def object(cls): return generic_relationship('object_type', 'object_id') class Event(EventBase): __tablename__ = 'event' id = sa.Column(sa.Integer, primary_key=True) Composite keys ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ For some very rare cases you may need to use generic_relationships with composite primary keys. There is a limitation here though: you can only set up generic_relationship for similar composite primary key types. In other words you can't mix generic relationship to both composite keyed objects and single keyed objects. :: from sqlalchemy_utils import generic_relationship class Customer(Base): __tablename__ = 'customer' code1 = sa.Column(sa.Integer, primary_key=True) code2 = sa.Column(sa.Integer, primary_key=True) class Event(Base): __tablename__ = 'event' id = sa.Column(sa.Integer, primary_key=True) # This is used to discriminate between the linked tables. object_type = sa.Column(sa.Unicode(255)) object_code1 = sa.Column(sa.Integer) object_code2 = sa.Column(sa.Integer) object = generic_relationship( object_type, (object_code1, object_code2) )