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I'm running into an issue accessing a changed model field, traversing relationships in a Django 1.3 app. Changes committed to the database are not being reflected by in-memory objects. I'm using the User() object from Auth Middleware, linking it to a custom Profile() object:

User() <---one-to-one---> Profile()

The issue comes up when accessing the email field for a User():

$ python manage.py shell
>>> from django.contrib.auth.models import User
>>> from myproject.myapp.models import Profile
>>>
>>> user = User.objects.get(pk=1)
>>> profile = user.profile
>>> user.email
u'[email protected]'                  # OK.
>>> profile.user.email
u'[email protected]'                  # OK.
>>> 
>>> user.email = '[email protected]'  # 1) Changes email address.
>>> user.save()                     # 2) Commits to database.
>>> user.email
'[email protected]'                   # 3) Changes reflected in user.email. Good.
>>> profile.user.email
u'[email protected]'                  # 4) Wrong. This is the old incorrect email.
>>> user.profile.user.email
u'[email protected]'                  # 5) Also wrong.
>>> 
>>> profile = Profile.objects.get(user=user)
>>> profile.user.email
u'[email protected]'                  # 6) If we re-query the DB, things are OK.

Why do things get out of sync in steps #4 and #5? I'm baffled by #5, going from the saved user object, to the profile, and back to the same saved user object.

Obviously there is some sort of caching going on, but I'm not sure of the logic/algorithm behind it. Anyone have an idea of what's happening, and the best way to approach this in code? Thanks for any insight you can offer! :)

2 Answers 2

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The SingleRelatedObjectDescriptor descriptor responsible for transparently looking up the related object checks for a cached version of the related object in _<fieldname>_cache in the Model instance, caching it the first time it is retrieved.

Django's ORM doesn't use an identity map, so changes to one Model instance aren't automatically reflected in other instances which existing references are held to.

3
  • Ah, interesting. Is there a way to force it to use an uncached version? Or must I get it from a new QuerySet (#6 in my example)?
    – Dave
    Apr 25, 2011 at 23:42
  • Same question here... it's simple enough to requery, but if there's some sort of refresh() method, that would be nice too
    – acjay
    Mar 5, 2013 at 17:32
  • Agreed, a method like that would be handy however easy it is to requery. FYI, here is the corresponding feature request. Sep 16, 2014 at 5:10
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profile.user is not user. What you are looking at is another cached copy of the model that Django's ORM had previously pulled from the database. If you absolutely must have the latest value then you will need to requery each time.

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