0

With sqlalchemy, if one has an object with a orm relation attribute, and you create an instance of the object, and set the relation attribute, then your new object gets added to the session of the set relation. e.g.:

from sqlalchemy import create_engine, Column, Integer, String, ForeignKey
from sqlalchemy.orm import relationship, Session
from sqlalchemy.ext.declarative import declarative_base

Base = declarative_base()
class User(Base):
    __tablename__ = 'users'

    user_id = Column(Integer, primary_key=True)
    name = Column(String)

class Address(Base):
    __tablename__ = 'addresses'

    address_id = Column(Integer, primary_key=True)
    user_id = Column(Integer, ForeignKey(User.user_id),)
    address = Column(String)

    user = relationship(User, backref='addresses')


engine = create_engine('sqlite:///:memory:')
Base.metadata.create_all(engine)
session = Session(bind=engine)

bob = User()
bob.name = 'Bob'
session.add(bob)
session.commit()

bobs_addr = Address()
bobs_addr.user = bob
bobs_addr.address = "23 Bob's st."

# bobs_addr not added to the session

engine.echo = True
session.commit()

Output of running the above:

2011-05-23 12:07:23,461 INFO sqlalchemy.engine.base.Engine.0x...9a10 BEGIN (implicit)
2011-05-23 12:07:23,463 INFO sqlalchemy.engine.base.Engine.0x...9a10 SELECT users.user_id AS users_user_id, users.name AS users_name 
FROM users 
WHERE users.user_id = ?
2011-05-23 12:07:23,463 INFO sqlalchemy.engine.base.Engine.0x...9a10 (1,)
2011-05-23 12:07:23,466 INFO sqlalchemy.engine.base.Engine.0x...9a10 INSERT INTO addresses (user_id, address) VALUES (?, ?)
2011-05-23 12:07:23,466 INFO sqlalchemy.engine.base.Engine.0x...9a10 (1, "23 Bob's st.")
2011-05-23 12:07:23,467 INFO sqlalchemy.engine.base.Engine.0x...9a10 COMMIT

bobs_addr was not added to the session, so I would expect that it would not be committed to the db, however setting bobs_addr.user = bob caused bobs_addr to be added to the session. How do I stop this from happening?

There is a workaround that I am aware of, and that is to set bobs_addr.user_id = bob.user_id, but I would prefer to use the relation attr.

1 Answer 1

0

I think this can achieve what you want, but I have always found the default cascade='save-update, merge' to work best.

user = relationship(User, backref=backref('addresses', cascade=''))
1

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.