<feed xmlns='http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom'>
<title>delta/python-packages/sqlalchemy.git/lib/sqlalchemy/ext, branch 2020_tutorial</title>
<subtitle>github.com: zzzeek/sqlalchemy.git
</subtitle>
<link rel='alternate' type='text/html' href='http://91.123.203.49/cgit/delta/python-packages/sqlalchemy.git/'/>
<entry>
<title>Convert remaining ORM APIs to support 2.0 style</title>
<updated>2020-07-11T18:55:51+00:00</updated>
<author>
<name>Mike Bayer</name>
<email>mike_mp@zzzcomputing.com</email>
</author>
<published>2020-07-08T18:31:17+00:00</published>
<link rel='alternate' type='text/html' href='http://91.123.203.49/cgit/delta/python-packages/sqlalchemy.git/commit/?id=5de0f1cf50cc0170d8ea61304e7b887259ab577b'/>
<id>5de0f1cf50cc0170d8ea61304e7b887259ab577b</id>
<content type='text'>
This is kind of a mixed bag of all kinds to help get us
to 1.4 betas.    The documentation stuff is a work in
progress.    Lots of other relatively small changes to
APIs and things.    More commits will follow to continue
improving the documentation and transitioning to the
1.4/2.0 hybrid documentation.  In particular some refinements
to Session usage models so that it can match Engine's
scoping / transactional patterns, and a decision to
start moving away from "subtransactions" completely.

* add select().from_statement() to produce FromStatement in an
  ORM context

* begin referring to select() that has "plugins" for the few edge
  cases where select() will have ORM-only behaviors

* convert dynamic.AppenderQuery to its own object that can use
  select(), though at the moment it uses Query to support legacy
  join calling forms.

* custom query classes for AppenderQuery are replaced by
  do_orm_execute() hooks for custom actions, a separate gerrit
  will document this

* add Session.get() to replace query.get()

* Deprecate session.begin-&gt;subtransaction.  propose within the
  test suite a hypothetical recipe for apps that rely on this
  pattern

* introduce Session construction level context manager,
  sessionmaker context manager, rewrite the whole top of the
  session_transaction.rst documentation.   Establish context manager
  patterns for Session that are identical to engine

* ensure same begin_nested() / commit() behavior as engine

* devise all new "join into an external transaction" recipe,
  add test support for it, add rules into Session so it
  just works, write new docs.  need to ensure this doesn't
  break anything

* vastly reduce the verbosity of lots of session docs as
  I dont think people read this stuff and it's difficult
  to keep current in any case

* constructs like case(), with_only_columns() really need
  to move to *columns, add a coercion rule to just change
  these.

* docs need changes everywhere I look.  in_() is not in
  the Core tutorial?  how do people even know about it?
  Remove tons of cruft from Select docs, etc.

* build a system for common ORM options like populate_existing
  and autoflush to populate from execution options.

* others?

Change-Id: Ia4bea0f804250e54d90b3884cf8aab8b66b82ecf
</content>
<content type='xhtml'>
<div xmlns='http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml'>
<pre>
This is kind of a mixed bag of all kinds to help get us
to 1.4 betas.    The documentation stuff is a work in
progress.    Lots of other relatively small changes to
APIs and things.    More commits will follow to continue
improving the documentation and transitioning to the
1.4/2.0 hybrid documentation.  In particular some refinements
to Session usage models so that it can match Engine's
scoping / transactional patterns, and a decision to
start moving away from "subtransactions" completely.

* add select().from_statement() to produce FromStatement in an
  ORM context

* begin referring to select() that has "plugins" for the few edge
  cases where select() will have ORM-only behaviors

* convert dynamic.AppenderQuery to its own object that can use
  select(), though at the moment it uses Query to support legacy
  join calling forms.

* custom query classes for AppenderQuery are replaced by
  do_orm_execute() hooks for custom actions, a separate gerrit
  will document this

* add Session.get() to replace query.get()

* Deprecate session.begin-&gt;subtransaction.  propose within the
  test suite a hypothetical recipe for apps that rely on this
  pattern

* introduce Session construction level context manager,
  sessionmaker context manager, rewrite the whole top of the
  session_transaction.rst documentation.   Establish context manager
  patterns for Session that are identical to engine

* ensure same begin_nested() / commit() behavior as engine

* devise all new "join into an external transaction" recipe,
  add test support for it, add rules into Session so it
  just works, write new docs.  need to ensure this doesn't
  break anything

* vastly reduce the verbosity of lots of session docs as
  I dont think people read this stuff and it's difficult
  to keep current in any case

* constructs like case(), with_only_columns() really need
  to move to *columns, add a coercion rule to just change
  these.

* docs need changes everywhere I look.  in_() is not in
  the Core tutorial?  how do people even know about it?
  Remove tons of cruft from Select docs, etc.

* build a system for common ORM options like populate_existing
  and autoflush to populate from execution options.

* others?

Change-Id: Ia4bea0f804250e54d90b3884cf8aab8b66b82ecf
</pre>
</div>
</content>
</entry>
<entry>
<title>Merge "Add future=True to create_engine/Session; unify select()"</title>
<updated>2020-07-08T15:07:44+00:00</updated>
<author>
<name>mike bayer</name>
<email>mike_mp@zzzcomputing.com</email>
</author>
<published>2020-07-08T15:07:44+00:00</published>
<link rel='alternate' type='text/html' href='http://91.123.203.49/cgit/delta/python-packages/sqlalchemy.git/commit/?id=b330ffbc13ddb4274a004eab6a13ce40d641e555'/>
<id>b330ffbc13ddb4274a004eab6a13ce40d641e555</id>
<content type='text'>
</content>
<content type='xhtml'>
<div xmlns='http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml'>
<pre>
</pre>
</div>
</content>
</entry>
<entry>
<title>Add future=True to create_engine/Session; unify select()</title>
<updated>2020-07-08T15:05:11+00:00</updated>
<author>
<name>Mike Bayer</name>
<email>mike_mp@zzzcomputing.com</email>
</author>
<published>2020-06-26T20:15:19+00:00</published>
<link rel='alternate' type='text/html' href='http://91.123.203.49/cgit/delta/python-packages/sqlalchemy.git/commit/?id=91f376692d472a5bf0c4b4033816250ec1ce3ab6'/>
<id>91f376692d472a5bf0c4b4033816250ec1ce3ab6</id>
<content type='text'>
Several weeks of using the future_select() construct
has led to the proposal there be just one select() construct
again which features the new join() method, and otherwise accepts
both the 1.x and 2.x argument styles.   This would make
migration simpler and reduce confusion.

However, confusion may be increased by the fact that select().join()
is different  Current thinking is we may be better off
with a few hard behavioral changes to old and relatively unknown APIs
rather than trying to play both sides within two extremely similar
but subtly different APIs.  At the moment, the .join() thing seems
to be the only behavioral change that occurs without the user
taking any explicit steps.   Session.execute() will still
behave the old way as we are adding a future flag.

This change also adds the "future" flag to Session() and
session.execute(), so that interpretation of the incoming statement,
as well as that the new style result is returned, does not
occur for existing applications unless they add the use
of this flag.

The change in general is moving the "removed in 2.0" system
further along where we want the test suite to fully pass
even if the SQLALCHEMY_WARN_20 flag is set.

Get many tests to pass when SQLALCHEMY_WARN_20 is set; this
should be ongoing after this patch merges.

Improve the RemovedIn20 warning; these are all deprecated
"since" 1.4, so ensure that's what the messages read.
Make sure the inforamtion link is on all warnings.
Add deprecation warnings for parameters present and
add warnings to all FromClause.select() types of methods.

Fixes: #5379
Fixes: #5284
Change-Id: I765a0b912b3dcd0e995426427d8bb7997cbffd51
References: #5159
</content>
<content type='xhtml'>
<div xmlns='http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml'>
<pre>
Several weeks of using the future_select() construct
has led to the proposal there be just one select() construct
again which features the new join() method, and otherwise accepts
both the 1.x and 2.x argument styles.   This would make
migration simpler and reduce confusion.

However, confusion may be increased by the fact that select().join()
is different  Current thinking is we may be better off
with a few hard behavioral changes to old and relatively unknown APIs
rather than trying to play both sides within two extremely similar
but subtly different APIs.  At the moment, the .join() thing seems
to be the only behavioral change that occurs without the user
taking any explicit steps.   Session.execute() will still
behave the old way as we are adding a future flag.

This change also adds the "future" flag to Session() and
session.execute(), so that interpretation of the incoming statement,
as well as that the new style result is returned, does not
occur for existing applications unless they add the use
of this flag.

The change in general is moving the "removed in 2.0" system
further along where we want the test suite to fully pass
even if the SQLALCHEMY_WARN_20 flag is set.

Get many tests to pass when SQLALCHEMY_WARN_20 is set; this
should be ongoing after this patch merges.

Improve the RemovedIn20 warning; these are all deprecated
"since" 1.4, so ensure that's what the messages read.
Make sure the inforamtion link is on all warnings.
Add deprecation warnings for parameters present and
add warnings to all FromClause.select() types of methods.

Fixes: #5379
Fixes: #5284
Change-Id: I765a0b912b3dcd0e995426427d8bb7997cbffd51
References: #5159
</pre>
</div>
</content>
</entry>
<entry>
<title>Add **kw support to DeclarativeMeta.__init__</title>
<updated>2020-07-06T20:43:06+00:00</updated>
<author>
<name>EwenGillies</name>
<email>elg112@ic.ac.uk</email>
</author>
<published>2020-07-05T14:50:50+00:00</published>
<link rel='alternate' type='text/html' href='http://91.123.203.49/cgit/delta/python-packages/sqlalchemy.git/commit/?id=67504137e96547664754691bdd3269b473a488d1'/>
<id>67504137e96547664754691bdd3269b473a488d1</id>
<content type='text'>
Added a ``**kw`` argument to the :meth:`.DeclarativeMeta.__init__` method.
This allows a class to support the :pep:`487` metaclass hook
``__init_subclass__``.  Pull request courtesy Ewen Gillies.

Fixes: #5357
Closes: #5363
Pull-request: https://github.com/sqlalchemy/sqlalchemy/pull/5363
Pull-request-sha: 0ad05a768316cba03a4d312ab39d3e8fbca7ac54

Change-Id: I1654befe9eb1c8b8e7fc0784bdbe64284614f0ea
</content>
<content type='xhtml'>
<div xmlns='http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml'>
<pre>
Added a ``**kw`` argument to the :meth:`.DeclarativeMeta.__init__` method.
This allows a class to support the :pep:`487` metaclass hook
``__init_subclass__``.  Pull request courtesy Ewen Gillies.

Fixes: #5357
Closes: #5363
Pull-request: https://github.com/sqlalchemy/sqlalchemy/pull/5363
Pull-request-sha: 0ad05a768316cba03a4d312ab39d3e8fbca7ac54

Change-Id: I1654befe9eb1c8b8e7fc0784bdbe64284614f0ea
</pre>
</div>
</content>
</entry>
<entry>
<title>Remove _generate_path_cache_key()</title>
<updated>2020-06-29T17:46:44+00:00</updated>
<author>
<name>Mike Bayer</name>
<email>mike_mp@zzzcomputing.com</email>
</author>
<published>2020-06-28T16:47:32+00:00</published>
<link rel='alternate' type='text/html' href='http://91.123.203.49/cgit/delta/python-packages/sqlalchemy.git/commit/?id=0286dcb23d8f6facb09391b46581d525982c20a0'/>
<id>0286dcb23d8f6facb09391b46581d525982c20a0</id>
<content type='text'>
loader options can now make a deterministic cache key based
 on the structure they are given, and this accommodates for
aliased classes as well so that these cache keys are now
"safe".     Have baked query call upon
the regular cache key method.

Change-Id: Iaa2ef4064cfb16146f415ca73080f32003dd830d
</content>
<content type='xhtml'>
<div xmlns='http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml'>
<pre>
loader options can now make a deterministic cache key based
 on the structure they are given, and this accommodates for
aliased classes as well so that these cache keys are now
"safe".     Have baked query call upon
the regular cache key method.

Change-Id: Iaa2ef4064cfb16146f415ca73080f32003dd830d
</pre>
</div>
</content>
</entry>
<entry>
<title>Fix a wide variety of typos and broken links</title>
<updated>2020-06-25T23:42:28+00:00</updated>
<author>
<name>aplatkouski</name>
<email>5857672+aplatkouski@users.noreply.github.com</email>
</author>
<published>2020-06-22T15:34:39+00:00</published>
<link rel='alternate' type='text/html' href='http://91.123.203.49/cgit/delta/python-packages/sqlalchemy.git/commit/?id=2a1a9f5f5a9723f757439657d2bdf224baed8748'/>
<id>2a1a9f5f5a9723f757439657d2bdf224baed8748</id>
<content type='text'>
Note the PR has a few remaining doc linking issues
listed in the comment that must be addressed separately.

Signed-off-by: aplatkouski &lt;5857672+aplatkouski@users.noreply.github.com&gt;
Closes: #5371
Pull-request: https://github.com/sqlalchemy/sqlalchemy/pull/5371
Pull-request-sha: 7e7d233cf3a0c66980c27db0fcdb3c7d93bc2510

Change-Id: I9c36e8d8804483950db4b42c38ee456e384c59e3
</content>
<content type='xhtml'>
<div xmlns='http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml'>
<pre>
Note the PR has a few remaining doc linking issues
listed in the comment that must be addressed separately.

Signed-off-by: aplatkouski &lt;5857672+aplatkouski@users.noreply.github.com&gt;
Closes: #5371
Pull-request: https://github.com/sqlalchemy/sqlalchemy/pull/5371
Pull-request-sha: 7e7d233cf3a0c66980c27db0fcdb3c7d93bc2510

Change-Id: I9c36e8d8804483950db4b42c38ee456e384c59e3
</pre>
</div>
</content>
</entry>
<entry>
<title>Propose using RETURNING for bulk updates, deletes</title>
<updated>2020-06-23T14:41:39+00:00</updated>
<author>
<name>Mike Bayer</name>
<email>mike_mp@zzzcomputing.com</email>
</author>
<published>2020-06-21T16:21:21+00:00</published>
<link rel='alternate' type='text/html' href='http://91.123.203.49/cgit/delta/python-packages/sqlalchemy.git/commit/?id=62be25cdfaab377319602a1852a1fddcbf6acd45'/>
<id>62be25cdfaab377319602a1852a1fddcbf6acd45</id>
<content type='text'>
This patch makes several improvements in the area of
bulk updates and deletes as well as the new session mechanics.

RETURNING is now used for an UPDATE or DELETE statement
emitted for a diaelct that supports "full returning"
in order to satisfy the "fetch" strategy; this currently
includes PostgreSQL and SQL Server.  The Oracle dialect
does not support RETURNING for more than one row,
so a new dialect capability "full_returning" is added
in addition to the existing "implicit_returning", indicating
this dialect supports RETURNING for zero or more rows,
not just a single identity row.

The "fetch" strategy will gracefully degrade to
the previous SELECT mechanics for dialects that do not
support RETURNING.

Additionally, the "fetch" strategy will attempt to use
evaluation for the VALUES that were UPDATEd, rather
than just expiring the updated attributes.   Values should
be evalutable in all cases where the value is not
a SQL expression.

The new approach also incurs some changes in the
session.execute mechanics, where do_orm_execute() event
handlers can now be chained to each return results;
this is in turn used by the handler to detect on a
per-bind basis if the fetch strategy needs to
do a SELECT or if it can do RETURNING.  A test suite is
added to test_horizontal_shard that breaks up a single
UPDATE or DELETE operation among multiple backends
where some are SQLite and don't support RETURNING and
others are PostgreSQL and do.

The session event mechanics are corrected
in terms of the "orm pre execute" hook, which now
receives a flag "is_reentrant" so that the two
ORM implementations for this can skip on their work
if they are being called inside of ORMExecuteState.invoke(),
where previously bulk update/delete were calling its
SELECT a second time.

In order for "fetch" to get the correct identity when
called as pre-execute, it also requests the identity_token
for each mapped instance which is now added as an optional
capability of a SELECT for ORM columns.   the identity_token
that's placed by horizontal_sharding is now made available
within each result row, so that even when fetching a
merged result of plain rows we can tell which row belongs
to which identity token.

The evaluator that takes place within the ORM bulk update and delete for
synchronize_session="evaluate" now supports the IN and NOT IN operators.
Tuple IN is also supported.

Fixes: #1653

Change-Id: I2292b56ae004b997cef0ba4d3fc350ae1dd5efc1
</content>
<content type='xhtml'>
<div xmlns='http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml'>
<pre>
This patch makes several improvements in the area of
bulk updates and deletes as well as the new session mechanics.

RETURNING is now used for an UPDATE or DELETE statement
emitted for a diaelct that supports "full returning"
in order to satisfy the "fetch" strategy; this currently
includes PostgreSQL and SQL Server.  The Oracle dialect
does not support RETURNING for more than one row,
so a new dialect capability "full_returning" is added
in addition to the existing "implicit_returning", indicating
this dialect supports RETURNING for zero or more rows,
not just a single identity row.

The "fetch" strategy will gracefully degrade to
the previous SELECT mechanics for dialects that do not
support RETURNING.

Additionally, the "fetch" strategy will attempt to use
evaluation for the VALUES that were UPDATEd, rather
than just expiring the updated attributes.   Values should
be evalutable in all cases where the value is not
a SQL expression.

The new approach also incurs some changes in the
session.execute mechanics, where do_orm_execute() event
handlers can now be chained to each return results;
this is in turn used by the handler to detect on a
per-bind basis if the fetch strategy needs to
do a SELECT or if it can do RETURNING.  A test suite is
added to test_horizontal_shard that breaks up a single
UPDATE or DELETE operation among multiple backends
where some are SQLite and don't support RETURNING and
others are PostgreSQL and do.

The session event mechanics are corrected
in terms of the "orm pre execute" hook, which now
receives a flag "is_reentrant" so that the two
ORM implementations for this can skip on their work
if they are being called inside of ORMExecuteState.invoke(),
where previously bulk update/delete were calling its
SELECT a second time.

In order for "fetch" to get the correct identity when
called as pre-execute, it also requests the identity_token
for each mapped instance which is now added as an optional
capability of a SELECT for ORM columns.   the identity_token
that's placed by horizontal_sharding is now made available
within each result row, so that even when fetching a
merged result of plain rows we can tell which row belongs
to which identity token.

The evaluator that takes place within the ORM bulk update and delete for
synchronize_session="evaluate" now supports the IN and NOT IN operators.
Tuple IN is also supported.

Fixes: #1653

Change-Id: I2292b56ae004b997cef0ba4d3fc350ae1dd5efc1
</pre>
</div>
</content>
</entry>
<entry>
<title>Turn on caching everywhere, add logging</title>
<updated>2020-06-10T19:29:01+00:00</updated>
<author>
<name>Mike Bayer</name>
<email>mike_mp@zzzcomputing.com</email>
</author>
<published>2020-06-07T00:40:43+00:00</published>
<link rel='alternate' type='text/html' href='http://91.123.203.49/cgit/delta/python-packages/sqlalchemy.git/commit/?id=b0cfa7379cf8513a821a3dbe3028c4965d9f85bd'/>
<id>b0cfa7379cf8513a821a3dbe3028c4965d9f85bd</id>
<content type='text'>
A variety of caching issues found by running
all tests with statement caching turned on.

The cache system now has a more conservative approach where
any subclass of a SQL element will by default invalidate
the cache key unless it adds the flag inherit_cache=True
at the class level, or if it implements its own caching.

Add working caching to a few elements that were
omitted previously; fix some caching implementations
to suit lesser used edge cases such as json casts
and array slices.

Refine the way BaseCursorResult and CursorMetaData
interact with caching; to suit cases like Alembic
modifying table structures, don't cache the
cursor metadata if it were created against a
cursor.description using non-positional matching,
e.g. "select *".   if a table re-ordered its columns
or added/removed, now that data is obsolete.

Additionally we have to adapt the cursor metadata
_keymap regardless of if we just processed
cursor.description, because if we ran against
a cached SQLCompiler we won't have the right
columns in _keymap.

Other refinements to how and when we do this
adaption as some weird cases
were exposed in the Postgresql dialect,
a text() construct that names just one column that
is not actually in the statement.   Fixed that
also as it looks like a cut-and-paste artifact
that doesn't actually affect anything.

Various issues with re-use of compiled result maps
and cursor metadata in conjunction with tables being
changed, such as change in order of columns.

mappers can be cleared but the class remains, meaning
a mapper has to use itself as the cache key not the class.

lots of bound parameter / literal issues, due to Alembic
creating a straight subclass of bindparam that renders
inline directly.   While we can update Alembic to not
do this, we have to assume other people might be doing
this, so bindparam() implements the inherit_cache=True
logic as well that was a bit involved.

turn on cache stats in logging.

Includes a fix to subqueryloader which moves all setup to
the create_row_processor() phase and elminates any storage
within the compiled context.   This includes some changes
to create_row_processor() signature and a revising of the
technique used to determine if the loader can participate
in polymorphic queries, which is also applied to
selectinloading.

DML update.values() and ordered_values() now coerces the
keys as we have tests that pass an arbitrary class here
which only includes __clause_element__(), so the
key can't be cached unless it is coerced.  this in turn
changed how composite attributes support bulk update
to use the standard approach of ClauseElement with
annotations that are parsed in the ORM context.

memory profiling successfully caught that the Session
from Query was getting passed into _statement_20()
so that was a big win for that test suite.

Apparently Compiler had .execute() and .scalar() methods
stuck on it, these date back to version 0.4 and there
was a single test in the PostgreSQL dialect tests
that exercised it for no apparent reason.   Removed
these methods as well as the concept of a Compiler
holding onto a "bind".

Fixes: #5386

Change-Id: I990b43aab96b42665af1b2187ad6020bee778784
</content>
<content type='xhtml'>
<div xmlns='http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml'>
<pre>
A variety of caching issues found by running
all tests with statement caching turned on.

The cache system now has a more conservative approach where
any subclass of a SQL element will by default invalidate
the cache key unless it adds the flag inherit_cache=True
at the class level, or if it implements its own caching.

Add working caching to a few elements that were
omitted previously; fix some caching implementations
to suit lesser used edge cases such as json casts
and array slices.

Refine the way BaseCursorResult and CursorMetaData
interact with caching; to suit cases like Alembic
modifying table structures, don't cache the
cursor metadata if it were created against a
cursor.description using non-positional matching,
e.g. "select *".   if a table re-ordered its columns
or added/removed, now that data is obsolete.

Additionally we have to adapt the cursor metadata
_keymap regardless of if we just processed
cursor.description, because if we ran against
a cached SQLCompiler we won't have the right
columns in _keymap.

Other refinements to how and when we do this
adaption as some weird cases
were exposed in the Postgresql dialect,
a text() construct that names just one column that
is not actually in the statement.   Fixed that
also as it looks like a cut-and-paste artifact
that doesn't actually affect anything.

Various issues with re-use of compiled result maps
and cursor metadata in conjunction with tables being
changed, such as change in order of columns.

mappers can be cleared but the class remains, meaning
a mapper has to use itself as the cache key not the class.

lots of bound parameter / literal issues, due to Alembic
creating a straight subclass of bindparam that renders
inline directly.   While we can update Alembic to not
do this, we have to assume other people might be doing
this, so bindparam() implements the inherit_cache=True
logic as well that was a bit involved.

turn on cache stats in logging.

Includes a fix to subqueryloader which moves all setup to
the create_row_processor() phase and elminates any storage
within the compiled context.   This includes some changes
to create_row_processor() signature and a revising of the
technique used to determine if the loader can participate
in polymorphic queries, which is also applied to
selectinloading.

DML update.values() and ordered_values() now coerces the
keys as we have tests that pass an arbitrary class here
which only includes __clause_element__(), so the
key can't be cached unless it is coerced.  this in turn
changed how composite attributes support bulk update
to use the standard approach of ClauseElement with
annotations that are parsed in the ORM context.

memory profiling successfully caught that the Session
from Query was getting passed into _statement_20()
so that was a big win for that test suite.

Apparently Compiler had .execute() and .scalar() methods
stuck on it, these date back to version 0.4 and there
was a single test in the PostgreSQL dialect tests
that exercised it for no apparent reason.   Removed
these methods as well as the concept of a Compiler
holding onto a "bind".

Fixes: #5386

Change-Id: I990b43aab96b42665af1b2187ad6020bee778784
</pre>
</div>
</content>
</entry>
<entry>
<title>Convert bulk update/delete to new execution model</title>
<updated>2020-06-06T17:31:54+00:00</updated>
<author>
<name>Mike Bayer</name>
<email>mike_mp@zzzcomputing.com</email>
</author>
<published>2020-06-03T21:38:35+00:00</published>
<link rel='alternate' type='text/html' href='http://91.123.203.49/cgit/delta/python-packages/sqlalchemy.git/commit/?id=3ab2364e78641c4f0e4b6456afc2cbed39b0d0e6'/>
<id>3ab2364e78641c4f0e4b6456afc2cbed39b0d0e6</id>
<content type='text'>
This reorganizes the BulkUD model in sqlalchemy.orm.persistence
to be based on the CompileState concept and to allow plain
update() / delete() to be passed to session.execute() where
the ORM synchronize session logic will take place.
Also gets "synchronize_session='fetch'" working with horizontal
sharding.

Adding a few more result.scalar_one() types of methods
as scalar_one() seems like what is normally desired.

Fixes: #5160
Change-Id: I8001ebdad089da34119eb459709731ba6c0ba975
</content>
<content type='xhtml'>
<div xmlns='http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml'>
<pre>
This reorganizes the BulkUD model in sqlalchemy.orm.persistence
to be based on the CompileState concept and to allow plain
update() / delete() to be passed to session.execute() where
the ORM synchronize session logic will take place.
Also gets "synchronize_session='fetch'" working with horizontal
sharding.

Adding a few more result.scalar_one() types of methods
as scalar_one() seems like what is normally desired.

Fixes: #5160
Change-Id: I8001ebdad089da34119eb459709731ba6c0ba975
</pre>
</div>
</content>
</entry>
<entry>
<title>Improve rendering of core statements w/ ORM elements</title>
<updated>2020-06-01T01:41:52+00:00</updated>
<author>
<name>Mike Bayer</name>
<email>mike_mp@zzzcomputing.com</email>
</author>
<published>2020-04-29T23:46:43+00:00</published>
<link rel='alternate' type='text/html' href='http://91.123.203.49/cgit/delta/python-packages/sqlalchemy.git/commit/?id=4ecd352a9fbb9dbac7b428fe0f098f665c1f0cb1'/>
<id>4ecd352a9fbb9dbac7b428fe0f098f665c1f0cb1</id>
<content type='text'>
This patch contains a variety of ORM and expression layer
tweaks to support ORM constructs in select() statements,
without the 1.3.x requiremnt in Query that a full
_compile_context() + new select() is needed in order to
get a working statement object.

Includes such tweaks as the ability to implement
aliased class of an aliased class,
as we are looking to fully support ACs against subqueries,
as well as the ability to access anonymously-labeled
ColumnProperty expressions within subqueries by
naming the ".key" of the label after the property
key.   Some tuning to query.join() as well
as ORMJoin internals to allow things to work more
smoothly.

Change-Id: Id810f485c5f7ed971529489b84694e02a3356d6d
</content>
<content type='xhtml'>
<div xmlns='http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml'>
<pre>
This patch contains a variety of ORM and expression layer
tweaks to support ORM constructs in select() statements,
without the 1.3.x requiremnt in Query that a full
_compile_context() + new select() is needed in order to
get a working statement object.

Includes such tweaks as the ability to implement
aliased class of an aliased class,
as we are looking to fully support ACs against subqueries,
as well as the ability to access anonymously-labeled
ColumnProperty expressions within subqueries by
naming the ".key" of the label after the property
key.   Some tuning to query.join() as well
as ORMJoin internals to allow things to work more
smoothly.

Change-Id: Id810f485c5f7ed971529489b84694e02a3356d6d
</pre>
</div>
</content>
</entry>
</feed>
