0

How do you get the key string of a reference property without using the datastore to get the object?

I have 2 datastore objects linked by db.ReferenceProperty:

 class Track(db.Model):
   name   = db.StringProperty()
 class Video(db.Model):
   name  = db.StringProperty()
   track = db.ReferenceProperty(Track, collection_name='video-track')

This makes it easy get the linked track from a given video:

 video = Video.get(a_video_key_string)
 track = video.track

And I can store these into memcache for quick access later:

 memcache.add(str(video.key()), video)
 memcache.add(str(track.key()), track)

Now I can get a video or track from memcache:

 video = memcache.get(a_video_key_string)
 track = memcache.get(str(video.track.key()))

However, this generates a datastore request for the track, even though I dont want it to. Specifically, the video.track request automatically calls the datastore to get the Track object and then calls key() to determine the key string.

I want to get the key value from the linked ReferenceProperty without actually instantiating a Track object. Do you know how I can do this?

1
  • You can use KeyProperty instead of ReferenceProperty. That way you get only the Key of the entity. If you need to load the entity, you get it by the key directly. Dec 30, 2012 at 10:51

1 Answer 1

0

As someone mentioned you could change the property to be a KeyProperty, alternately you could use property.get_value_for_datastore(obj) method of a property to get the key without resolving the object.

See docs https://developers.google.com/appengine/docs/python/datastore/propertyclass#Property_get_value_for_datastore

Normally you would use it to get the key using something like

key = myclass.some_property.get_value_for_datastore(some_obj)

So in your case from your examples

track_key = Video.track.get_value_for_datastore(video)

Cheers

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.