5.9 KiB
Working with Databases, Transactions, and ORM's
Out of the box, Pecan provides no opinionated support for working with databases, but it's easy to hook into your ORM of choice with minimal effort. This article details best practices for integrating the popular Python ORM, SQLAlchemy, into your Pecan project.
init_model
and
Preparing Your Model
Pecan's default quickstart project includes an empty stub directory for implementing your model as you see fit:
.
└── test_project
├── app.py
├── __init__.py
├── controllers
├── model
│ ├── __init__.py
└── templates
By default, this module contains a special method,
init_model
:
from pecan import conf
def init_model():
"""
This is a stub method which is called at application startup time.
If you need to bind to a parse database configuration, set up tables or
ORM classes, or perform any database initialization, this is the
recommended place to do it.
For more information working with databases, and some common recipes,
see http://pecan.readthedocs.org/en/latest/databases.html
"""
pass
The purpose of this method is to determine bindings from your configuration file and create necessary engines, pools, etc... according to your ORM or database toolkit of choice.
Additionally, your project's model
module can be used to
define functions for common binding operations, such as starting
transactions, committing or rolling back work, and clearing a Session.
This is also the location in your project where object and relation
definitions should be defined. Here's what a sample Pecan configuration
file with database bindings might look like:
# Server Specific Configurations
server = {
...
}
# Pecan Application Configurations
app = {
...
}
# Bindings and options to pass to SQLAlchemy's ``create_engine``
sqlalchemy = {
'url' : 'mysql://root:@localhost/dbname?charset=utf8&use_unicode=0',
'echo' : False,
'echo_pool' : False,
'pool_recycle' : 3600,
'encoding' : 'utf-8'
}
...and a basic model implementation that can be used to configure and bind using SQLAlchemy:
from pecan import conf
from sqlalchemy import create_engine, MetaData
from sqlalchemy.orm import scoped_session, sessionmaker
Session = scoped_session(sessionmaker())
metadata = MetaData()
def _engine_from_config(configuration):
configuration = dict(configuration)
url = configuration.pop('url')
return create_engine(url, **configuration)
def init_model():
conf.sqlalchemy.engine = _engine_from_config(conf.sqlalchemy)
def start():
Session.bind = conf.sqlalchemy.engine
metadata.bind = Session.bind
def commit():
Session.commit()
def rollback():
Session.rollback()
def clear():
Session.remove()
Binding Within the Application
There are several approaches that can be taken to wrap your
application's requests with calls to appropriate model function calls.
One approach is WSGI middleware. We also recommend Pecan hooks
. Pecan comes with
TransactionHook
, a hook which can be used to wrap requests
in database transactions for you. To use it, simply include it in your
project's app.py
file and pass it a set of functions
related to database binding:
from pecan import conf, make_app
from pecan.hooks import TransactionHook
from test_project import model
app = make_app(
conf.app.root,
static_root = conf.app.static_root,
template_path = conf.app.template_path,
debug = conf.app.debug,
hooks = [
TransactionHook(
model.start,
model.start_read_only,
model.commit,
model.rollback,
model.clear
)
]
)
For the above example, on HTTP POST, PUT, and DELETE requests,
TransactionHook
behaves in the following manner:
- Before controller routing has been determined,
model.start()
is called. This function should bind to the appropriate SQLAlchemy engine and start a transaction. - Controller code is run and returns.
- If your controller or template rendering fails and raises an
exception,
model.rollback()
is called and the original exception is re-raised. This allows you to rollback your database transaction to avoid committing work when exceptions occur in your application code. - If the controller returns successfully,
model.commit()
andmodel.clear()
are called.
On idempotent operations (like HTTP GET and HEAD requests), TransactionHook behaves in the following manner:
model.start_read_only()
is called. This function should bind to your SQLAlchemy engine.- Controller code is run and returns.
- If the controller returns successfully,
model.clear()
is called.
Also note that there is a useful @after_commit
decorator
provided in pecan_decorators
.
Splitting Reads and Writes
Employing the strategy above with TransactionHook
makes
it very simple to split database reads and writes based upon HTTP
methods (i.e., GET/HEAD requests are read-only and would potentially be
routed to a read-only database slave, while POST/PUT/DELETE requests
require writing, and would always bind to a master database with
read/write privileges). It's also very easy to extend
TransactionHook
or write your own hook implementation for
more refined control over where and when database bindings are
called.