<feed xmlns='http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom'>
<title>delta/python-packages/sqlalchemy.git/test/base/test_tutorials.py, branch workflow_test_aiosqlite</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>Break up data.rst; add unions, literal_column</title>
<updated>2021-04-22T20:44:35+00:00</updated>
<author>
<name>Mike Bayer</name>
<email>mike_mp@zzzcomputing.com</email>
</author>
<published>2021-04-22T20:05:16+00:00</published>
<link rel='alternate' type='text/html' href='http://91.123.203.49/cgit/delta/python-packages/sqlalchemy.git/commit/?id=fb9e12a689f6f5c1266b7cab2eb3d6c2c4ee872e'/>
<id>fb9e12a689f6f5c1266b7cab2eb3d6c2c4ee872e</id>
<content type='text'>
This breaks data.rst into three separate sub-sections,
as SELECT is getting very long.  It then adds sections
on select() + text/literal_column as well as unions
and set operations, and also tries to improve the
ORDER BY section a bit.

Change-Id: Id90e6b4ff3699b2bbcb6e2eebbd23193e2ede00a
</content>
<content type='xhtml'>
<div xmlns='http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml'>
<pre>
This breaks data.rst into three separate sub-sections,
as SELECT is getting very long.  It then adds sections
on select() + text/literal_column as well as unions
and set operations, and also tries to improve the
ORDER BY section a bit.

Change-Id: Id90e6b4ff3699b2bbcb6e2eebbd23193e2ede00a
</pre>
</div>
</content>
</entry>
<entry>
<title>reinvent xdist hooks in terms of pytest fixtures</title>
<updated>2021-01-14T03:10:13+00:00</updated>
<author>
<name>Mike Bayer</name>
<email>mike_mp@zzzcomputing.com</email>
</author>
<published>2021-01-10T18:44:14+00:00</published>
<link rel='alternate' type='text/html' href='http://91.123.203.49/cgit/delta/python-packages/sqlalchemy.git/commit/?id=f1e96cb0874927a475d0c111393b7861796dd758'/>
<id>f1e96cb0874927a475d0c111393b7861796dd758</id>
<content type='text'>
To allow the "connection" pytest fixture and others work
correctly in conjunction with setup/teardown that expects
to be external to the transaction, remove and prevent any usage
of "xdist" style names that are hardcoded by pytest to run
inside of fixtures, even function level ones.   Instead use
pytest autouse fixtures to implement our own
r"setup|teardown_test(?:_class)?" methods so that we can ensure
function-scoped fixtures are run within them.   A new more
explicit flow is set up within plugin_base and pytestplugin
such that the order of setup/teardown steps, which there are now
many, is fully documented and controllable.   New granularity
has been added to the test teardown phase to distinguish
between "end of the test" when lock-holding structures on
connections should be released to allow for table drops,
vs. "end of the test plus its teardown steps" when we can
perform final cleanup on connections and run assertions
that everything is closed out.

From there we can remove most of the defensive "tear down everything"
logic inside of engines which for many years would frequently dispose
of pools over and over again, creating for a broken and expensive
connection flow.  A quick test shows that running test/sql/ against
a single Postgresql engine with the new approach uses 75% fewer new
connections, creating 42 new connections total, vs. 164 new
connections total with the previous system.

As part of this, the new fixtures metadata/connection/future_connection
have been integrated such that they can be combined together
effectively.  The fixture_session(), provide_metadata() fixtures
have been improved, including that fixture_session() now strongly
references sessions which are explicitly torn down before
table drops occur afer a test.

Major changes have been made to the
ConnectionKiller such that it now features different "scopes" for
testing engines and will limit its cleanup to those testing
engines corresponding to end of test, end of test class, or
end of test session.   The system by which it tracks DBAPI
connections has been reworked, is ultimately somewhat similar to
how it worked before but is organized more clearly along
with the proxy-tracking logic.  A "testing_engine" fixture
is also added that works as a pytest fixture rather than a
standalone function.  The connection cleanup logic should
now be very robust, as we now can use the same global
connection pools for the whole suite without ever disposing
them, while also running a query for PostgreSQL
locks remaining after every test and assert there are no open
transactions leaking between tests at all.  Additional steps
are added that also accommodate for asyncio connections not
explicitly closed, as is the case for legacy sync-style
tests as well as the async tests themselves.

As always, hundreds of tests are further refined to use the
new fixtures where problems with loose connections were identified,
largely as a result of the new PostgreSQL assertions,
many more tests have moved from legacy patterns into the newest.

An unfortunate discovery during the creation of this system is that
autouse fixtures (as well as if they are set up by
@pytest.mark.usefixtures) are not usable at our current scale with pytest
4.6.11 running under Python 2.  It's unclear if this is due
to the older version of pytest or how it implements itself for
Python 2, as well as if the issue is CPU slowness or just large
memory use, but collecting the full span of tests takes over
a minute for a single process when any autouse fixtures are in
place and on CI the jobs just time out after ten minutes.
So at the moment this patch also reinvents a small version of
"autouse" fixtures when py2k is running, which skips generating
the real fixture and instead uses two global pytest fixtures
(which don't seem to impact performance) to invoke the
"autouse" fixtures ourselves outside of pytest.
This will limit our ability to do more with fixtures
until we can remove py2k support.

py.test is still observed to be much slower in collection in the
4.6.11 version compared to modern 6.2 versions, so add support for new
TOX_POSTGRESQL_PY2K and TOX_MYSQL_PY2K environment variables that
will run the suite for fewer backends under Python 2.  For Python 3
pin pytest to modern 6.2 versions where performance for collection
has been improved greatly.

Includes the following improvements:

Fixed bug in asyncio connection pool where ``asyncio.TimeoutError`` would
be raised rather than :class:`.exc.TimeoutError`.  Also repaired the
:paramref:`_sa.create_engine.pool_timeout` parameter set to zero when using
the async engine, which previously would ignore the timeout and block
rather than timing out immediately as is the behavior with regular
:class:`.QueuePool`.

For asyncio the connection pool will now also not interact
at all with an asyncio connection whose ConnectionFairy is
being garbage collected; a warning that the connection was
not properly closed is emitted and the connection is discarded.
Within the test suite the ConnectionKiller is now maintaining
strong references to all DBAPI connections and ensuring they
are released when tests end, including those whose ConnectionFairy
proxies are GCed.

Identified cx_Oracle.stmtcachesize as a major factor in Oracle
test scalability issues, this can be reset on a per-test basis
rather than setting it to zero across the board.  the addition
of this flag has resolved the long-standing oracle "two task"
error problem.

For SQL Server, changed the temp table style used by the
"suite" tests to be the double-pound-sign, i.e. global,
variety, which is much easier to test generically.  There
are already reflection tests that are more finely tuned
to both styles of temp table within the mssql test
suite.  Additionally, added an extra step to the
"dropfirst" mechanism for SQL Server that will remove
all foreign key constraints first as some issues were
observed when using this flag when multiple schemas
had not been torn down.

Identified and fixed two subtle failure modes in the
engine, when commit/rollback fails in a begin()
context manager, the connection is explicitly closed,
and when "initialize()" fails on the first new connection
of a dialect, the transactional state on that connection
is still rolled back.

Fixes: #5826
Fixes: #5827
Change-Id: Ib1d05cb8c7cf84f9a4bfd23df397dc23c9329bfe
</content>
<content type='xhtml'>
<div xmlns='http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml'>
<pre>
To allow the "connection" pytest fixture and others work
correctly in conjunction with setup/teardown that expects
to be external to the transaction, remove and prevent any usage
of "xdist" style names that are hardcoded by pytest to run
inside of fixtures, even function level ones.   Instead use
pytest autouse fixtures to implement our own
r"setup|teardown_test(?:_class)?" methods so that we can ensure
function-scoped fixtures are run within them.   A new more
explicit flow is set up within plugin_base and pytestplugin
such that the order of setup/teardown steps, which there are now
many, is fully documented and controllable.   New granularity
has been added to the test teardown phase to distinguish
between "end of the test" when lock-holding structures on
connections should be released to allow for table drops,
vs. "end of the test plus its teardown steps" when we can
perform final cleanup on connections and run assertions
that everything is closed out.

From there we can remove most of the defensive "tear down everything"
logic inside of engines which for many years would frequently dispose
of pools over and over again, creating for a broken and expensive
connection flow.  A quick test shows that running test/sql/ against
a single Postgresql engine with the new approach uses 75% fewer new
connections, creating 42 new connections total, vs. 164 new
connections total with the previous system.

As part of this, the new fixtures metadata/connection/future_connection
have been integrated such that they can be combined together
effectively.  The fixture_session(), provide_metadata() fixtures
have been improved, including that fixture_session() now strongly
references sessions which are explicitly torn down before
table drops occur afer a test.

Major changes have been made to the
ConnectionKiller such that it now features different "scopes" for
testing engines and will limit its cleanup to those testing
engines corresponding to end of test, end of test class, or
end of test session.   The system by which it tracks DBAPI
connections has been reworked, is ultimately somewhat similar to
how it worked before but is organized more clearly along
with the proxy-tracking logic.  A "testing_engine" fixture
is also added that works as a pytest fixture rather than a
standalone function.  The connection cleanup logic should
now be very robust, as we now can use the same global
connection pools for the whole suite without ever disposing
them, while also running a query for PostgreSQL
locks remaining after every test and assert there are no open
transactions leaking between tests at all.  Additional steps
are added that also accommodate for asyncio connections not
explicitly closed, as is the case for legacy sync-style
tests as well as the async tests themselves.

As always, hundreds of tests are further refined to use the
new fixtures where problems with loose connections were identified,
largely as a result of the new PostgreSQL assertions,
many more tests have moved from legacy patterns into the newest.

An unfortunate discovery during the creation of this system is that
autouse fixtures (as well as if they are set up by
@pytest.mark.usefixtures) are not usable at our current scale with pytest
4.6.11 running under Python 2.  It's unclear if this is due
to the older version of pytest or how it implements itself for
Python 2, as well as if the issue is CPU slowness or just large
memory use, but collecting the full span of tests takes over
a minute for a single process when any autouse fixtures are in
place and on CI the jobs just time out after ten minutes.
So at the moment this patch also reinvents a small version of
"autouse" fixtures when py2k is running, which skips generating
the real fixture and instead uses two global pytest fixtures
(which don't seem to impact performance) to invoke the
"autouse" fixtures ourselves outside of pytest.
This will limit our ability to do more with fixtures
until we can remove py2k support.

py.test is still observed to be much slower in collection in the
4.6.11 version compared to modern 6.2 versions, so add support for new
TOX_POSTGRESQL_PY2K and TOX_MYSQL_PY2K environment variables that
will run the suite for fewer backends under Python 2.  For Python 3
pin pytest to modern 6.2 versions where performance for collection
has been improved greatly.

Includes the following improvements:

Fixed bug in asyncio connection pool where ``asyncio.TimeoutError`` would
be raised rather than :class:`.exc.TimeoutError`.  Also repaired the
:paramref:`_sa.create_engine.pool_timeout` parameter set to zero when using
the async engine, which previously would ignore the timeout and block
rather than timing out immediately as is the behavior with regular
:class:`.QueuePool`.

For asyncio the connection pool will now also not interact
at all with an asyncio connection whose ConnectionFairy is
being garbage collected; a warning that the connection was
not properly closed is emitted and the connection is discarded.
Within the test suite the ConnectionKiller is now maintaining
strong references to all DBAPI connections and ensuring they
are released when tests end, including those whose ConnectionFairy
proxies are GCed.

Identified cx_Oracle.stmtcachesize as a major factor in Oracle
test scalability issues, this can be reset on a per-test basis
rather than setting it to zero across the board.  the addition
of this flag has resolved the long-standing oracle "two task"
error problem.

For SQL Server, changed the temp table style used by the
"suite" tests to be the double-pound-sign, i.e. global,
variety, which is much easier to test generically.  There
are already reflection tests that are more finely tuned
to both styles of temp table within the mssql test
suite.  Additionally, added an extra step to the
"dropfirst" mechanism for SQL Server that will remove
all foreign key constraints first as some issues were
observed when using this flag when multiple schemas
had not been torn down.

Identified and fixed two subtle failure modes in the
engine, when commit/rollback fails in a begin()
context manager, the connection is explicitly closed,
and when "initialize()" fails on the first new connection
of a dialect, the transactional state on that connection
is still rolled back.

Fixes: #5826
Fixes: #5827
Change-Id: Ib1d05cb8c7cf84f9a4bfd23df397dc23c9329bfe
</pre>
</div>
</content>
</entry>
<entry>
<title>ensure utf-8 used for opening tutorial files</title>
<updated>2020-11-24T00:09:48+00:00</updated>
<author>
<name>Mike Bayer</name>
<email>mike_mp@zzzcomputing.com</email>
</author>
<published>2020-11-24T00:09:48+00:00</published>
<link rel='alternate' type='text/html' href='http://91.123.203.49/cgit/delta/python-packages/sqlalchemy.git/commit/?id=b4e40b35627f1c26b84234d16a36ce2850a798b9'/>
<id>b4e40b35627f1c26b84234d16a36ce2850a798b9</id>
<content type='text'>
python 3.6 on CI seems to be using ascii encoding for some reason.

Change-Id: Ic6881f28201eb2c186a0119dcd843a76f486971d
</content>
<content type='xhtml'>
<div xmlns='http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml'>
<pre>
python 3.6 on CI seems to be using ascii encoding for some reason.

Change-Id: Ic6881f28201eb2c186a0119dcd843a76f486971d
</pre>
</div>
</content>
</entry>
<entry>
<title>tutorial 2.0 WIP</title>
<updated>2020-10-31T17:44:53+00:00</updated>
<author>
<name>Mike Bayer</name>
<email>mike_mp@zzzcomputing.com</email>
</author>
<published>2020-09-26T02:31:16+00:00</published>
<link rel='alternate' type='text/html' href='http://91.123.203.49/cgit/delta/python-packages/sqlalchemy.git/commit/?id=654b462d668a2ced4e87077b9babb2590acbf983'/>
<id>654b462d668a2ced4e87077b9babb2590acbf983</id>
<content type='text'>
Add SelectBase.exists() method as it seems strange this is
not available already.  The Exists construct itself does
not provide full SELECT-building capabilities so it makes
sense this should be used more like a scalar_subquery.

Make sure stream_results is getting set up when yield_per
is used, for 2.0 style statements as well.  this was
hardcoded inside of Query.yield_per() and is now moved
to take place within QueryContext.

Change-Id: Icafcd4fd9b708772343d56edf40995c9e8f835d6
</content>
<content type='xhtml'>
<div xmlns='http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml'>
<pre>
Add SelectBase.exists() method as it seems strange this is
not available already.  The Exists construct itself does
not provide full SELECT-building capabilities so it makes
sense this should be used more like a scalar_subquery.

Make sure stream_results is getting set up when yield_per
is used, for 2.0 style statements as well.  this was
hardcoded inside of Query.yield_per() and is now moved
to take place within QueryContext.

Change-Id: Icafcd4fd9b708772343d56edf40995c9e8f835d6
</pre>
</div>
</content>
</entry>
<entry>
<title>Emit v2.0 deprecation warning for "implicit autocommit"</title>
<updated>2020-08-28T20:32:05+00:00</updated>
<author>
<name>Gord Thompson</name>
<email>gord@gordthompson.com</email>
</author>
<published>2020-08-21T16:29:29+00:00</published>
<link rel='alternate' type='text/html' href='http://91.123.203.49/cgit/delta/python-packages/sqlalchemy.git/commit/?id=dc91c7db7ff32243cd2f6fc04f4e3a6d62f7b11b'/>
<id>dc91c7db7ff32243cd2f6fc04f4e3a6d62f7b11b</id>
<content type='text'>
"Implicit autocommit", which is the COMMIT that occurs when a DML or DDL
statement is emitted on a connection, is deprecated and won't be part of
SQLAlchemy 2.0.   A 2.0-style warning is emitted when autocommit takes
effect, so that the calling code may be adjusted to use an explicit
transaction.

As part of this change, DDL methods such as
:meth:`_schema.MetaData.create_all` when used against a
:class:`_engine.Engine` or :class:`_engine.Connection` will run the
operation in a BEGIN block if one is not started already.

The MySQL and MariaDB dialects now query from the information_schema.tables
system view in order to determine if a particular table exists or not.
Previously, the "DESCRIBE" command was used with an exception catch to
detect non-existent,  which would have the undesirable effect of emitting a
ROLLBACK on the connection. There appeared to be legacy encoding issues
which prevented the use of "SHOW TABLES", for this, but as MySQL support is
now at 5.0.2  or above due to :ticket:`4189`, the information_schema tables
are now available in all cases.

Fixes: #4846
Change-Id: I733a7e0e17477a63607fb9931c87c393bbd7ac57
</content>
<content type='xhtml'>
<div xmlns='http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml'>
<pre>
"Implicit autocommit", which is the COMMIT that occurs when a DML or DDL
statement is emitted on a connection, is deprecated and won't be part of
SQLAlchemy 2.0.   A 2.0-style warning is emitted when autocommit takes
effect, so that the calling code may be adjusted to use an explicit
transaction.

As part of this change, DDL methods such as
:meth:`_schema.MetaData.create_all` when used against a
:class:`_engine.Engine` or :class:`_engine.Connection` will run the
operation in a BEGIN block if one is not started already.

The MySQL and MariaDB dialects now query from the information_schema.tables
system view in order to determine if a particular table exists or not.
Previously, the "DESCRIBE" command was used with an exception catch to
detect non-existent,  which would have the undesirable effect of emitting a
ROLLBACK on the connection. There appeared to be legacy encoding issues
which prevented the use of "SHOW TABLES", for this, but as MySQL support is
now at 5.0.2  or above due to :ticket:`4189`, the information_schema tables
are now available in all cases.

Fixes: #4846
Change-Id: I733a7e0e17477a63607fb9931c87c393bbd7ac57
</pre>
</div>
</content>
</entry>
<entry>
<title>Disable "check unicode returns" under Python 3</title>
<updated>2020-05-19T17:53:39+00:00</updated>
<author>
<name>Mike Bayer</name>
<email>mike_mp@zzzcomputing.com</email>
</author>
<published>2020-05-07T14:53:15+00:00</published>
<link rel='alternate' type='text/html' href='http://91.123.203.49/cgit/delta/python-packages/sqlalchemy.git/commit/?id=af0e59ff16a2a02ec5dc1195212236e63fd941a7'/>
<id>af0e59ff16a2a02ec5dc1195212236e63fd941a7</id>
<content type='text'>
Disabled the "unicode returns" check that runs on dialect startup when
running under Python 3, which for many years has occurred in order to test
the current DBAPI's behavior for whether or not it returns Python Unicode
or Py2K strings for the VARCHAR and NVARCHAR datatypes.  The check still
occurs by default under Python 2, however the mechanism to test the
behavior will be removed in SQLAlchemy 2.0 when Python 2 support is also
removed.

This logic was very effective when it was needed, however now that Python 3
is standard, all DBAPIs are expected to return Python 3 strings for
character datatypes.  In the unlikely case that a third party DBAPI does
not support this, the conversion logic within :class:`.String` is still
available and the third party dialect may specify this in its upfront
dialect flags by setting the dialect level flag ``returns_unicode_strings``
to one of :attr:`.String.RETURNS_CONDITIONAL` or
:attr:`.String.RETURNS_BYTES`, both of which will enable Unicode conversion
even under Python 3.

As part of this change, disabling testing of the doctest tutorials under
Python 2.

Fixes: #5315
Change-Id: I1260e894611409d3b7fe1a92bd90c52043bbcf19
</content>
<content type='xhtml'>
<div xmlns='http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml'>
<pre>
Disabled the "unicode returns" check that runs on dialect startup when
running under Python 3, which for many years has occurred in order to test
the current DBAPI's behavior for whether or not it returns Python Unicode
or Py2K strings for the VARCHAR and NVARCHAR datatypes.  The check still
occurs by default under Python 2, however the mechanism to test the
behavior will be removed in SQLAlchemy 2.0 when Python 2 support is also
removed.

This logic was very effective when it was needed, however now that Python 3
is standard, all DBAPIs are expected to return Python 3 strings for
character datatypes.  In the unlikely case that a third party DBAPI does
not support this, the conversion logic within :class:`.String` is still
available and the third party dialect may specify this in its upfront
dialect flags by setting the dialect level flag ``returns_unicode_strings``
to one of :attr:`.String.RETURNS_CONDITIONAL` or
:attr:`.String.RETURNS_BYTES`, both of which will enable Unicode conversion
even under Python 3.

As part of this change, disabling testing of the doctest tutorials under
Python 2.

Fixes: #5315
Change-Id: I1260e894611409d3b7fe1a92bd90c52043bbcf19
</pre>
</div>
</content>
</entry>
<entry>
<title>Ensure order in doctest of core/tutorial.rst</title>
<updated>2020-05-11T19:47:08+00:00</updated>
<author>
<name>Federico Caselli</name>
<email>cfederico87@gmail.com</email>
</author>
<published>2020-05-10T12:37:21+00:00</published>
<link rel='alternate' type='text/html' href='http://91.123.203.49/cgit/delta/python-packages/sqlalchemy.git/commit/?id=447f16bc7fd5afa1e0b1ca8a558354915ead239f'/>
<id>447f16bc7fd5afa1e0b1ca8a558354915ead239f</id>
<content type='text'>
Fix doctest error caused by the missing order by clause in the
tests introduced in Ia1bbe3248b4f7c74fbee06fedf76a6ce94cd28a6

Change-Id: I55b45690879ebbaa57bc62765fcdab06f5e9c6f3
</content>
<content type='xhtml'>
<div xmlns='http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml'>
<pre>
Fix doctest error caused by the missing order by clause in the
tests introduced in Ia1bbe3248b4f7c74fbee06fedf76a6ce94cd28a6

Change-Id: I55b45690879ebbaa57bc62765fcdab06f5e9c6f3
</pre>
</div>
</content>
</entry>
<entry>
<title>Rename py.test to pytest</title>
<updated>2020-04-16T22:06:36+00:00</updated>
<author>
<name>Gord Thompson</name>
<email>gord@gordthompson.com</email>
</author>
<published>2020-04-16T22:06:36+00:00</published>
<link rel='alternate' type='text/html' href='http://91.123.203.49/cgit/delta/python-packages/sqlalchemy.git/commit/?id=405fc9717048b0adc852a72da540048df7a8142a'/>
<id>405fc9717048b0adc852a72da540048df7a8142a</id>
<content type='text'>
Change-Id: I431e1ef41e26d490343204a75a5c097768749768
</content>
<content type='xhtml'>
<div xmlns='http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml'>
<pre>
Change-Id: I431e1ef41e26d490343204a75a5c097768749768
</pre>
</div>
</content>
</entry>
<entry>
<title>Create initial 2.0 engine implementation</title>
<updated>2020-04-16T17:35:55+00:00</updated>
<author>
<name>Mike Bayer</name>
<email>mike_mp@zzzcomputing.com</email>
</author>
<published>2020-04-07T18:15:43+00:00</published>
<link rel='alternate' type='text/html' href='http://91.123.203.49/cgit/delta/python-packages/sqlalchemy.git/commit/?id=2f617f56f2acdce00b88f746c403cf5ed66d4d27'/>
<id>2f617f56f2acdce00b88f746c403cf5ed66d4d27</id>
<content type='text'>
Implemented the SQLAlchemy 2 :func:`.future.create_engine` function which
is used for forwards compatibility with SQLAlchemy 2.   This engine
features always-transactional behavior with autobegin.

Allow execution options per statement execution.  This includes
that the before_execute() and after_execute() events now accept
an additional dictionary with these options, empty if not
passed; a legacy event decorator is added for backwards compatibility
which now also emits a deprecation warning.

Add some basic tests for execution, transactions, and
the new result object.   Build out on a new testing fixture
that swaps in the future engine completely to start with.

Change-Id: I70e7338bb3f0ce22d2f702537d94bb249bd9fb0a
Fixes: #4644
</content>
<content type='xhtml'>
<div xmlns='http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml'>
<pre>
Implemented the SQLAlchemy 2 :func:`.future.create_engine` function which
is used for forwards compatibility with SQLAlchemy 2.   This engine
features always-transactional behavior with autobegin.

Allow execution options per statement execution.  This includes
that the before_execute() and after_execute() events now accept
an additional dictionary with these options, empty if not
passed; a legacy event decorator is added for backwards compatibility
which now also emits a deprecation warning.

Add some basic tests for execution, transactions, and
the new result object.   Build out on a new testing fixture
that swaps in the future engine completely to start with.

Change-Id: I70e7338bb3f0ce22d2f702537d94bb249bd9fb0a
Fixes: #4644
</pre>
</div>
</content>
</entry>
<entry>
<title>Query linter option</title>
<updated>2020-01-22T16:31:23+00:00</updated>
<author>
<name>Alessio Bogon</name>
<email>youtux@gmail.com</email>
</author>
<published>2019-09-15T15:12:24+00:00</published>
<link rel='alternate' type='text/html' href='http://91.123.203.49/cgit/delta/python-packages/sqlalchemy.git/commit/?id=3809a5ecfe785cecbc9d91a8e4e4558e3839c694'/>
<id>3809a5ecfe785cecbc9d91a8e4e4558e3839c694</id>
<content type='text'>
Added "from linting" as a built-in feature to the SQL compiler.  This
allows the compiler to maintain graph of all the FROM clauses in a
particular SELECT statement, linked by criteria in either the WHERE
or in JOIN clauses that link these FROM clauses together.  If any two
FROM clauses have no path between them, a warning is emitted that the
query may be producing a cartesian product.   As the Core expression
language as well as the ORM are built on an "implicit FROMs" model where
a particular FROM clause is automatically added if any part of the query
refers to it, it is easy for this to happen inadvertently and it is
hoped that the new feature helps with this issue.

The original recipe is from:
https://github.com/sqlalchemy/sqlalchemy/wiki/FromLinter

The linter is now enabled for all tests in the test suite as well.
This has necessitated that a lot of the queries be adjusted to
not include cartesian products.  Part of the rationale for the
linter to not be enabled for statement compilation only was to reduce
the need for adjustment for the many test case statements throughout
the test suite that are not real-world statements.

This gerrit is adapted from Ib5946e57c9dba6da428c4d1dee6760b3e978dda0.

Fixes: #4737

Change-Id: Ic91fd9774379f895d021c3ad564db6062299211c
Closes: #4830
Pull-request: https://github.com/sqlalchemy/sqlalchemy/pull/4830
Pull-request-sha: f8a21aa6262d1bcc9ff0d11a2616e41fba97a47a
</content>
<content type='xhtml'>
<div xmlns='http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml'>
<pre>
Added "from linting" as a built-in feature to the SQL compiler.  This
allows the compiler to maintain graph of all the FROM clauses in a
particular SELECT statement, linked by criteria in either the WHERE
or in JOIN clauses that link these FROM clauses together.  If any two
FROM clauses have no path between them, a warning is emitted that the
query may be producing a cartesian product.   As the Core expression
language as well as the ORM are built on an "implicit FROMs" model where
a particular FROM clause is automatically added if any part of the query
refers to it, it is easy for this to happen inadvertently and it is
hoped that the new feature helps with this issue.

The original recipe is from:
https://github.com/sqlalchemy/sqlalchemy/wiki/FromLinter

The linter is now enabled for all tests in the test suite as well.
This has necessitated that a lot of the queries be adjusted to
not include cartesian products.  Part of the rationale for the
linter to not be enabled for statement compilation only was to reduce
the need for adjustment for the many test case statements throughout
the test suite that are not real-world statements.

This gerrit is adapted from Ib5946e57c9dba6da428c4d1dee6760b3e978dda0.

Fixes: #4737

Change-Id: Ic91fd9774379f895d021c3ad564db6062299211c
Closes: #4830
Pull-request: https://github.com/sqlalchemy/sqlalchemy/pull/4830
Pull-request-sha: f8a21aa6262d1bcc9ff0d11a2616e41fba97a47a
</pre>
</div>
</content>
</entry>
</feed>
