1021 lines
39 KiB
Python
1021 lines
39 KiB
Python
# oracle/cx_oracle.py
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# Copyright (C) 2005-2017 the SQLAlchemy authors and contributors
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# <see AUTHORS file>
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#
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# This module is part of SQLAlchemy and is released under
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# the MIT License: http://www.opensource.org/licenses/mit-license.php
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"""
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.. dialect:: oracle+cx_oracle
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:name: cx-Oracle
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:dbapi: cx_oracle
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:connectstring: oracle+cx_oracle://user:pass@host:port/dbname\
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[?key=value&key=value...]
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:url: http://cx-oracle.sourceforge.net/
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Additional Connect Arguments
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----------------------------
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When connecting with ``dbname`` present, the host, port, and dbname tokens are
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converted to a TNS name using
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the cx_oracle ``makedsn()`` function. Otherwise, the host token is taken
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directly as a TNS name.
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Additional arguments which may be specified either as query string arguments
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on the URL, or as keyword arguments to :func:`.create_engine()` are:
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* ``allow_twophase`` - enable two-phase transactions. Defaults to ``True``.
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* ``arraysize`` - set the cx_oracle.arraysize value on cursors, defaulted
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to 50. This setting is significant with cx_Oracle as the contents of LOB
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objects are only readable within a "live" row (e.g. within a batch of
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50 rows).
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* ``auto_convert_lobs`` - defaults to True; See :ref:`cx_oracle_lob`.
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* ``auto_setinputsizes`` - the cx_oracle.setinputsizes() call is issued for
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all bind parameters. This is required for LOB datatypes but can be
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disabled to reduce overhead. Defaults to ``True``. Specific types
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can be excluded from this process using the ``exclude_setinputsizes``
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parameter.
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* ``coerce_to_unicode`` - see :ref:`cx_oracle_unicode` for detail.
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* ``coerce_to_decimal`` - see :ref:`cx_oracle_numeric` for detail.
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* ``exclude_setinputsizes`` - a tuple or list of string DBAPI type names to
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be excluded from the "auto setinputsizes" feature. The type names here
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must match DBAPI types that are found in the "cx_Oracle" module namespace,
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such as cx_Oracle.UNICODE, cx_Oracle.NCLOB, etc. Defaults to
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``(STRING, UNICODE)``.
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.. versionadded:: 0.8 specific DBAPI types can be excluded from the
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auto_setinputsizes feature via the exclude_setinputsizes attribute.
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* ``mode`` - This is given the string value of SYSDBA or SYSOPER, or
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alternatively an integer value. This value is only available as a URL query
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string argument.
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* ``threaded`` - enable multithreaded access to cx_oracle connections.
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Defaults to ``True``. Note that this is the opposite default of the
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cx_Oracle DBAPI itself.
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* ``service_name`` - An option to use connection string (DSN) with
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``SERVICE_NAME`` instead of ``SID``. It can't be passed when a ``database``
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part is given.
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E.g. ``oracle+cx_oracle://scott:tiger@host:1521/?service_name=hr``
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is a valid url. This value is only available as a URL query string argument.
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.. versionadded:: 1.0.0
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.. _cx_oracle_unicode:
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Unicode
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-------
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The cx_Oracle DBAPI as of version 5 fully supports unicode, and has the
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ability to return string results as Python unicode objects natively.
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When used in Python 3, cx_Oracle returns all strings as Python unicode objects
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(that is, plain ``str`` in Python 3). In Python 2, it will return as Python
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unicode those column values that are of type ``NVARCHAR`` or ``NCLOB``. For
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column values that are of type ``VARCHAR`` or other non-unicode string types,
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it will return values as Python strings (e.g. bytestrings).
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The cx_Oracle SQLAlchemy dialect presents two different options for the use
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case of returning ``VARCHAR`` column values as Python unicode objects under
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Python 2:
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* the cx_Oracle DBAPI has the ability to coerce all string results to Python
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unicode objects unconditionally using output type handlers. This has
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the advantage that the unicode conversion is global to all statements
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at the cx_Oracle driver level, meaning it works with raw textual SQL
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statements that have no typing information associated. However, this system
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has been observed to incur signfiicant performance overhead, not only
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because it takes effect for all string values unconditionally, but also
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because cx_Oracle under Python 2 seems to use a pure-Python function call in
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order to do the decode operation, which under cPython can orders of
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magnitude slower than doing it using C functions alone.
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* SQLAlchemy has unicode-decoding services built in, and when using
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SQLAlchemy's C extensions, these functions do not use any Python function
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calls and are very fast. The disadvantage to this approach is that the
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unicode conversion only takes effect for statements where the
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:class:`.Unicode` type or :class:`.String` type with
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``convert_unicode=True`` is explicitly associated with the result column.
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This is the case for any ORM or Core query or SQL expression as well as for
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a :func:`.text` construct that specifies output column types, so in the vast
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majority of cases this is not an issue. However, when sending a completely
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raw string to :meth:`.Connection.execute`, this typing information isn't
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present, unless the string is handled within a :func:`.text` construct that
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adds typing information.
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As of version 0.9.2 of SQLAlchemy, the default approach is to use SQLAlchemy's
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typing system. This keeps cx_Oracle's expensive Python 2 approach
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disabled unless the user explicitly wants it. Under Python 3, SQLAlchemy
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detects that cx_Oracle is returning unicode objects natively and cx_Oracle's
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system is used.
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To re-enable cx_Oracle's output type handler under Python 2, the
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``coerce_to_unicode=True`` flag (new in 0.9.4) can be passed to
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:func:`.create_engine`::
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engine = create_engine("oracle+cx_oracle://dsn", coerce_to_unicode=True)
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Alternatively, to run a pure string SQL statement and get ``VARCHAR`` results
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as Python unicode under Python 2 without using cx_Oracle's native handlers,
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the :func:`.text` feature can be used::
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from sqlalchemy import text, Unicode
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result = conn.execute(
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text("select username from user").columns(username=Unicode))
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.. versionchanged:: 0.9.2 cx_Oracle's outputtypehandlers are no longer used
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for unicode results of non-unicode datatypes in Python 2, after they were
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identified as a major performance bottleneck. SQLAlchemy's own unicode
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facilities are used instead.
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.. versionadded:: 0.9.4 Added the ``coerce_to_unicode`` flag, to re-enable
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cx_Oracle's outputtypehandler and revert to pre-0.9.2 behavior.
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.. _cx_oracle_returning:
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RETURNING Support
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-----------------
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The cx_oracle DBAPI supports a limited subset of Oracle's already limited
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RETURNING support. Typically, results can only be guaranteed for at most one
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column being returned; this is the typical case when SQLAlchemy uses RETURNING
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to get just the value of a primary-key-associated sequence value.
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Additional column expressions will cause problems in a non-determinative way,
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due to cx_oracle's lack of support for the OCI_DATA_AT_EXEC API which is
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required for more complex RETURNING scenarios.
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For this reason, stability may be enhanced by disabling RETURNING support
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completely; SQLAlchemy otherwise will use RETURNING to fetch newly
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sequence-generated primary keys. As illustrated in :ref:`oracle_returning`::
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engine = create_engine("oracle://scott:tiger@dsn",
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implicit_returning=False)
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.. seealso::
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http://docs.oracle.com/cd/B10501_01/appdev.920/a96584/oci05bnd.htm#420693
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- OCI documentation for RETURNING
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http://sourceforge.net/mailarchive/message.php?msg_id=31338136
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- cx_oracle developer commentary
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.. _cx_oracle_lob:
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LOB Objects
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-----------
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cx_oracle returns oracle LOBs using the cx_oracle.LOB object. SQLAlchemy
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converts these to strings so that the interface of the Binary type is
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consistent with that of other backends, and so that the linkage to a live
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cursor is not needed in scenarios like result.fetchmany() and
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result.fetchall(). This means that by default, LOB objects are fully fetched
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unconditionally by SQLAlchemy, and the linkage to a live cursor is broken.
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To disable this processing, pass ``auto_convert_lobs=False`` to
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:func:`.create_engine()`.
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Two Phase Transaction Support
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-----------------------------
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Two Phase transactions are implemented using XA transactions, and are known
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to work in a rudimental fashion with recent versions of cx_Oracle
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as of SQLAlchemy 0.8.0b2, 0.7.10. However, the mechanism is not yet
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considered to be robust and should still be regarded as experimental.
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In particular, the cx_Oracle DBAPI as recently as 5.1.2 has a bug regarding
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two phase which prevents
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a particular DBAPI connection from being consistently usable in both
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prepared transactions as well as traditional DBAPI usage patterns; therefore
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once a particular connection is used via :meth:`.Connection.begin_prepared`,
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all subsequent usages of the underlying DBAPI connection must be within
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the context of prepared transactions.
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The default behavior of :class:`.Engine` is to maintain a pool of DBAPI
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connections. Therefore, due to the above glitch, a DBAPI connection that has
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been used in a two-phase operation, and is then returned to the pool, will
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not be usable in a non-two-phase context. To avoid this situation,
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the application can make one of several choices:
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* Disable connection pooling using :class:`.NullPool`
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* Ensure that the particular :class:`.Engine` in use is only used
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for two-phase operations. A :class:`.Engine` bound to an ORM
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:class:`.Session` which includes ``twophase=True`` will consistently
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use the two-phase transaction style.
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* For ad-hoc two-phase operations without disabling pooling, the DBAPI
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connection in use can be evicted from the connection pool using the
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:meth:`.Connection.detach` method.
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.. versionchanged:: 0.8.0b2,0.7.10
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Support for cx_oracle prepared transactions has been implemented
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and tested.
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.. _cx_oracle_numeric:
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Precision Numerics
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------------------
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The SQLAlchemy dialect goes through a lot of steps to ensure
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that decimal numbers are sent and received with full accuracy.
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An "outputtypehandler" callable is associated with each
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cx_oracle connection object which detects numeric types and
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receives them as string values, instead of receiving a Python
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``float`` directly, which is then passed to the Python
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``Decimal`` constructor. The :class:`.Numeric` and
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:class:`.Float` types under the cx_oracle dialect are aware of
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this behavior, and will coerce the ``Decimal`` to ``float`` if
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the ``asdecimal`` flag is ``False`` (default on :class:`.Float`,
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optional on :class:`.Numeric`).
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Because the handler coerces to ``Decimal`` in all cases first,
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the feature can detract significantly from performance.
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If precision numerics aren't required, the decimal handling
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can be disabled by passing the flag ``coerce_to_decimal=False``
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to :func:`.create_engine`::
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engine = create_engine("oracle+cx_oracle://dsn", coerce_to_decimal=False)
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.. versionadded:: 0.7.6
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Add the ``coerce_to_decimal`` flag.
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Another alternative to performance is to use the
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`cdecimal <http://pypi.python.org/pypi/cdecimal/>`_ library;
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see :class:`.Numeric` for additional notes.
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The handler attempts to use the "precision" and "scale"
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attributes of the result set column to best determine if
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subsequent incoming values should be received as ``Decimal`` as
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opposed to int (in which case no processing is added). There are
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several scenarios where OCI_ does not provide unambiguous data
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as to the numeric type, including some situations where
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individual rows may return a combination of floating point and
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integer values. Certain values for "precision" and "scale" have
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been observed to determine this scenario. When it occurs, the
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outputtypehandler receives as string and then passes off to a
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processing function which detects, for each returned value, if a
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decimal point is present, and if so converts to ``Decimal``,
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otherwise to int. The intention is that simple int-based
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statements like "SELECT my_seq.nextval() FROM DUAL" continue to
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return ints and not ``Decimal`` objects, and that any kind of
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floating point value is received as a string so that there is no
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floating point loss of precision.
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The "decimal point is present" logic itself is also sensitive to
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locale. Under OCI_, this is controlled by the NLS_LANG
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environment variable. Upon first connection, the dialect runs a
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test to determine the current "decimal" character, which can be
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a comma "," for European locales. From that point forward the
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outputtypehandler uses that character to represent a decimal
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point. Note that cx_oracle 5.0.3 or greater is required
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when dealing with numerics with locale settings that don't use
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a period "." as the decimal character.
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.. versionchanged:: 0.6.6
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The outputtypehandler supports the case where the locale uses a
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comma "," character to represent a decimal point.
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.. _OCI: http://www.oracle.com/technetwork/database/features/oci/index.html
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"""
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from __future__ import absolute_import
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from .base import OracleCompiler, OracleDialect, OracleExecutionContext
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from . import base as oracle
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from ...engine import result as _result
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from sqlalchemy import types as sqltypes, util, exc, processors
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from sqlalchemy import util
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import random
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import collections
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import decimal
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import re
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import time
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class _OracleNumeric(sqltypes.Numeric):
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def bind_processor(self, dialect):
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# cx_oracle accepts Decimal objects and floats
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return None
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def result_processor(self, dialect, coltype):
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# we apply a cx_oracle type handler to all connections
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# that converts floating point strings to Decimal().
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# However, in some subquery situations, Oracle doesn't
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# give us enough information to determine int or Decimal.
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# It could even be int/Decimal differently on each row,
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# regardless of the scale given for the originating type.
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# So we still need an old school isinstance() handler
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# here for decimals.
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if dialect.supports_native_decimal:
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if self.asdecimal:
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fstring = "%%.%df" % self._effective_decimal_return_scale
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def to_decimal(value):
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if value is None:
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return None
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elif isinstance(value, decimal.Decimal):
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return value
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else:
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return decimal.Decimal(fstring % value)
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return to_decimal
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else:
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if self.precision is None and self.scale is None:
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return processors.to_float
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elif not getattr(self, '_is_oracle_number', False) \
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and self.scale is not None:
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return processors.to_float
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else:
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return None
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else:
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# cx_oracle 4 behavior, will assume
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# floats
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return super(_OracleNumeric, self).\
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result_processor(dialect, coltype)
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class _OracleDate(sqltypes.Date):
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def bind_processor(self, dialect):
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return None
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def result_processor(self, dialect, coltype):
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def process(value):
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if value is not None:
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return value.date()
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else:
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return value
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return process
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class _LOBMixin(object):
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def result_processor(self, dialect, coltype):
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if not dialect.auto_convert_lobs:
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# return the cx_oracle.LOB directly.
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return None
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def process(value):
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if value is not None:
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return value.read()
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else:
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return value
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return process
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class _NativeUnicodeMixin(object):
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if util.py2k:
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def bind_processor(self, dialect):
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if dialect._cx_oracle_with_unicode:
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def process(value):
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if value is None:
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return value
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else:
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return unicode(value)
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return process
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else:
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return super(
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_NativeUnicodeMixin, self).bind_processor(dialect)
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# we apply a connection output handler that returns
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# unicode in all cases, so the "native_unicode" flag
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# will be set for the default String.result_processor.
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class _OracleChar(_NativeUnicodeMixin, sqltypes.CHAR):
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def get_dbapi_type(self, dbapi):
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return dbapi.FIXED_CHAR
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class _OracleNVarChar(_NativeUnicodeMixin, sqltypes.NVARCHAR):
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def get_dbapi_type(self, dbapi):
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return getattr(dbapi, 'UNICODE', dbapi.STRING)
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class _OracleText(_LOBMixin, sqltypes.Text):
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def get_dbapi_type(self, dbapi):
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return dbapi.CLOB
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class _OracleLong(oracle.LONG):
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# a raw LONG is a text type, but does *not*
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# get the LobMixin with cx_oracle.
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def get_dbapi_type(self, dbapi):
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return dbapi.LONG_STRING
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class _OracleString(_NativeUnicodeMixin, sqltypes.String):
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pass
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class _OracleEnum(_NativeUnicodeMixin, sqltypes.Enum):
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def bind_processor(self, dialect):
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enum_proc = sqltypes.Enum.bind_processor(self, dialect)
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if util.py2k:
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unicode_proc = _NativeUnicodeMixin.bind_processor(self, dialect)
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else:
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unicode_proc = None
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def process(value):
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raw_str = enum_proc(value)
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if unicode_proc:
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raw_str = unicode_proc(raw_str)
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return raw_str
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return process
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class _OracleUnicodeText(
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_LOBMixin, _NativeUnicodeMixin, sqltypes.UnicodeText):
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def get_dbapi_type(self, dbapi):
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return dbapi.NCLOB
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def result_processor(self, dialect, coltype):
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lob_processor = _LOBMixin.result_processor(self, dialect, coltype)
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if lob_processor is None:
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return None
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string_processor = sqltypes.UnicodeText.result_processor(
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self, dialect, coltype)
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if string_processor is None:
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return lob_processor
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else:
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def process(value):
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return string_processor(lob_processor(value))
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return process
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class _OracleInteger(sqltypes.Integer):
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def result_processor(self, dialect, coltype):
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def to_int(val):
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if val is not None:
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val = int(val)
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return val
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return to_int
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class _OracleBinary(_LOBMixin, sqltypes.LargeBinary):
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def get_dbapi_type(self, dbapi):
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return dbapi.BLOB
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def bind_processor(self, dialect):
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return None
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class _OracleInterval(oracle.INTERVAL):
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def get_dbapi_type(self, dbapi):
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return dbapi.INTERVAL
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class _OracleRaw(oracle.RAW):
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pass
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class _OracleRowid(oracle.ROWID):
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def get_dbapi_type(self, dbapi):
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return dbapi.ROWID
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class OracleCompiler_cx_oracle(OracleCompiler):
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def bindparam_string(self, name, **kw):
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quote = getattr(name, 'quote', None)
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if quote is True or quote is not False and \
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self.preparer._bindparam_requires_quotes(name):
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quoted_name = '"%s"' % name
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self._quoted_bind_names[name] = quoted_name
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return OracleCompiler.bindparam_string(self, quoted_name, **kw)
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else:
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return OracleCompiler.bindparam_string(self, name, **kw)
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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 - its 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, type_):
|
|
return super(OracleExecutionContext_cx_oracle_with_unicode, self).\
|
|
_execute_scalar(util.text_type(stmt), type_)
|
|
|
|
|
|
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,
|
|
# generic type, assume datetime.date is desired
|
|
sqltypes.Date: _OracleDate,
|
|
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,
|
|
sqltypes.Enum: _OracleEnum,
|
|
|
|
# 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, _retry_on_12516=False,
|
|
**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
|
|
self._retry_on_12516 = _retry_on_12516
|
|
|
|
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 util.py3k or (
|
|
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. However as of cx_oracle 5.3 it seems to be
|
|
# set to ON for default builds
|
|
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 connect(self, *cargs, **cparams):
|
|
if self._retry_on_12516:
|
|
# emergency flag for the SQLAlchemy test suite, which has
|
|
# decreased in stability since cx_oracle 5.3; generalized
|
|
# "retry on connect" functionality is part of an upcoming
|
|
# SQLAlchemy feature
|
|
try:
|
|
return self.dbapi.connect(*cargs, **cparams)
|
|
except self.dbapi.DatabaseError as err:
|
|
if "ORA-12516" in str(err):
|
|
time.sleep(2)
|
|
return self.dbapi.connect(*cargs, **cparams)
|
|
else:
|
|
raise
|
|
else:
|
|
return super(OracleDialect_cx_oracle, self).connect(
|
|
*cargs, **cparams)
|
|
|
|
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])
|
|
|
|
database = url.database
|
|
service_name = dialect_opts.get('service_name', None)
|
|
if database or service_name:
|
|
# if we have a database, then we have a remote host
|
|
port = url.port
|
|
if port:
|
|
port = int(port)
|
|
else:
|
|
port = 1521
|
|
|
|
if database and service_name:
|
|
raise exc.InvalidRequestError(
|
|
'"service_name" option shouldn\'t '
|
|
'be used with a "database" part of the url')
|
|
if database:
|
|
makedsn_kwargs = {'sid': database}
|
|
if service_name:
|
|
makedsn_kwargs = {'service_name': service_name}
|
|
|
|
dsn = self.dbapi.makedsn(url.host, port, **makedsn_kwargs)
|
|
else:
|
|
# we have a local tnsname
|
|
dsn = url.host
|
|
|
|
opts = dict(
|
|
threaded=self.threaded,
|
|
twophase=self.allow_twophase,
|
|
)
|
|
|
|
if dsn is not None:
|
|
opts['dsn'] = dsn
|
|
if url.password is not None:
|
|
opts['password'] = url.password
|
|
if url.username is not None:
|
|
opts['user'] = url.username
|
|
|
|
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
|