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I use Postgres for production and development, but I'd like to use sqlite to run some tests. I don't see an easy way to configure one engine for tests and another for dev / production. Am I missing something?

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5 Answers 5

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Append the following lines in your settings:

import sys
if 'test' in sys.argv or 'test_coverage' in sys.argv: #Covers regular testing and django-coverage
    DATABASES['default']['ENGINE'] = 'django.db.backends.sqlite3'

Make sure your actual database setting comes before them.

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    As I said in the comment, this is essentially what I'm doing now. But don't you think this solution has a bit of the suck?
    – jMyles
    Jun 16, 2011 at 13:19
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    I saw your comment just after adding this post :) Nevertheless, this solution is perfectly fine for testing purposes: You run manage.py with a 'test' argument, Python passes it to the code via sys.argv, and the code behaves accordingly. I see nothing unpythonic here, do you?
    – shanyu
    Jun 16, 2011 at 15:44
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    This solution will behave well as long as it receives 'test' as an argument from the command line. OTOH you're right, it would be nice if django provided a way to differentiate test settings. There we have issues more troubling than database settings, for example if your tests manipulate dirs or files under MEDIA_ROOT that's where you'll need hacky stuff.
    – shanyu
    Jun 18, 2011 at 4:22
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    Set ENGINE to 'django.db.backends.sqlite3' to avoid a deprecation warning with recent versions of Django.
    – tobych
    Sep 22, 2011 at 4:11
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    ^^ And make sure engine is in capitals: 'ENGINE'
    – funkotron
    Jul 16, 2013 at 15:49
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This is not a direct answer, but yes, you are missing one big problem - testing a Postgres app on SQLite is tricky - they are so different. I suggest you rather create a ram-disk (e.g. using tmpfs) and create your Postgres test database there. It won't be as fast as SQLite, but possibly an order of magnitude faster than regular Postgres database stored on HDD.

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  • Well, most tests don't do anything that differs from one engine to another. In my experience, 9/10 (or more) tests use only the most straightforward manager methods. So, to address your concern, I'd be fine with specifying for particular tests that I want to use postgres. But if I just want to run the test suite in the field (and not be connected to the DB), I really need to be able to do that. That's pretty basic.
    – jMyles
    Jun 15, 2011 at 20:04
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    I don't get this answer. In what ways are Postgres and Sqlite so different that a typical Django application (I assume it is using ORM) can't be reliably tested on Sqlite, or another database? Aren't we talking about a database-agnostic application here?
    – shanyu
    Jun 16, 2011 at 12:06
  • @shanyu: Noone forces you to belive me, if you have different experience then I'm perfectly fine with this. Jun 16, 2011 at 14:46
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    Ok, let me reconsider and change the word "worthless" - which fits projects I've been working on - to word "tricky". Jun 16, 2011 at 16:11
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    @shanyu and what if the app has a JsonField in one of the models? This is an excellent answer as it highlights a flaw in the OP's plan, and provides a solution the problem the OP was presumably trying to solve through their plan (i.e. performance)
    – andyhasit
    Apr 7, 2019 at 17:13
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You could try a setup similar to what is suggested here by Zachary Voase: http://blog.zacharyvoase.com/2010/02/03/django-project-conventions/

(The entire post is useful, but scroll down to the section on "Settings" for the part most relevant here.)

Zach's strategy is to create a settings folder and marks it as a python package using a __init__.py file. You can then have a separate sub-module for each of your deployment types, structured as follows:

settings/
|-- __init__.py     # Empty; makes this a Python package
|-- common.py       # All the common settings are defined here
|-- development.py  # Settings for development
|-- production.py   # Settings for production
|-- staging.py      # Settings for staging

Following this concept, you could set up a deployment for postgres and a separate deployment for sqlite, and separate the configurations for each as needed.

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I think modifying the settings.py with if 'test' in sys.argv as suggested is a hack and doesn't work for example when you want multi-threaded test execution in pytest. I think a better way would be to create a separate settings_test.py and adding DATABASES['default']['ENGINE'] = 'django.db.backends.sqlite3' to it.

When using Django's testframework, execute your tests with python manage.py test --settings=myapp.settings_test

When using pytest, create a pytest.ini and insert

[pytest]
 DJANGO_SETTINGS_MODULE = myapp.settings_test
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I've end up by adding the following in my settings.py. The --keepdb will setup the Sqlite DB in RAM.

if 'test' in sys.argv:
    for db_test in ['default']: # Add other DBs if needed
        DATABASES[db_test]['ENGINE'] = 'django.db.backends.sqlite3'
        if '--keepdb' in sys.argv:
            DATABASES[db_test]['TEST']['NAME'] = '/dev/shm/' + db_test + '.test.db.sqlite3'

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