265

Let's say that I have a class that represents locations. Locations "belong" to customers. Locations are identified by a unicode 10 character code. The "location code" should be unique among the locations for a specific customer.

The two below fields in combination should be unique
customer_id = Column(Integer,ForeignKey('customers.customer_id')
location_code = Column(Unicode(10))

So if i have two customers, customer "123" and customer "456". They both can have a location called "main" but neither could have two locations called main.

I can handle this in the business logic but I want to make sure there is no way to easily add the requirement in sqlalchemy. The unique=True option seems to only work when applied to a specific field and it would cause the entire table to only have a unique code for all locations.

4 Answers 4

450

Extract from the documentation of the Column:

unique – When True, indicates that this column contains a unique constraint, or if index is True as well, indicates that the Index should be created with the unique flag. To specify multiple columns in the constraint/index or to specify an explicit name, use the UniqueConstraint or Index constructs explicitly.

As these belong to a Table and not to a mapped Class, one declares those in the table definition, or if using declarative as in the __table_args__:

# version1: table definition
mytable = Table('mytable', meta,
    # ...
    Column('customer_id', Integer, ForeignKey('customers.customer_id')),
    Column('location_code', Unicode(10)),

    UniqueConstraint('customer_id', 'location_code', name='uix_1')
    )
# or the index, which will ensure uniqueness as well
Index('myindex', mytable.c.customer_id, mytable.c.location_code, unique=True)


# version2: declarative
class Location(Base):
    __tablename__ = 'locations'
    id = Column(Integer, primary_key = True)
    customer_id = Column(Integer, ForeignKey('customers.customer_id'), nullable=False)
    location_code = Column(Unicode(10), nullable=False)
    __table_args__ = (UniqueConstraint('customer_id', 'location_code', name='_customer_location_uc'),
                     )
11
  • 1
    I face the same problem also, but using UniqueConstraint didn't help me. After I try with Index('...') then I get a unique constraint. Is there any explanation with this behaviour?
    – swdev
    Oct 10, 2013 at 6:51
  • 1
    @swdev: which RDBMS do you use?
    – van
    Oct 11, 2013 at 9:30
  • 3
    Thanks, but my question was: did you use SA (and Flask) to create a DB schema, or did create it separately?
    – van
    Oct 14, 2013 at 17:36
  • 1
    Why is the .c. used?
    – Smiley
    Mar 19, 2020 at 12:36
  • 2
    @Smiley .c. is a shortcut to .columns.
    – van
    Mar 21, 2020 at 6:21
47
from flask_sqlalchemy import SQLAlchemy
db = SQLAlchemy()

class Location(Base):
      __table_args__ = (
        # this can be db.PrimaryKeyConstraint if you want it to be a primary key
        db.UniqueConstraint('customer_id', 'location_code'),
      )
      customer_id = Column(Integer,ForeignKey('customers.customer_id')
      location_code = Column(Unicode(10))
5
  • 27
    Must be __table_args__ = (db.UniqueConstraint('customer_id', 'location_code'),), don't forget the comma at the end.
    – bertdida
    Jul 5, 2020 at 3:14
  • 14
    For anyone wondering why there’s that comma, (42) is the same as 42: parentheses have no effect around a single value. However, (42,) is shorthand for a tuple of a single element: (42,) == tuple([42]).
    – bfontaine
    Jul 19, 2021 at 14:13
  • This doesn't answer the question; the question doesn't mention Flask.
    – Gloweye
    Mar 29, 2023 at 11:40
  • To adapt, I'd need intimate knowledge of Flask. And if I knew how Flask did all that, I'd have no reason to visit this question in the first place. Therefore, this answer is bad. Mostly because it completely bypasses the parts of SQLAlchemy that the actual question is about.
    – Gloweye
    Mar 31, 2023 at 8:31
  • ...what exactly is your problem? There's no need to be a condescending dick. It's absolutely stupid to take a Flask course to learn to use SQL Alchemy, and even stupider to presume that anybody reading the answer on a QA site would need an unrelated course to understand it.
    – Gloweye
    Apr 6, 2023 at 21:58
2

This Python3 answer is completely derivative, it just puts everything from above into a small self-contained working example for MySQL. I needed a uniqueness constraint on the table that implements a many-to-many relationship. Maybe you can run this to debug local environment problems, in my case they were purely between the keyboard and the chair :)

from flask import Flask
from flask_sqlalchemy import SQLAlchemy
from sqlalchemy import Column, ForeignKey, Integer, String, UniqueConstraint
from sqlalchemy.orm import relationship
import logging

logging.basicConfig()
logging.getLogger('sqlalchemy.engine').setLevel(logging.INFO)
app = Flask(__name__)
app.config['SQLALCHEMY_DATABASE_URI'] = 'mysql+mysqlconnector://user:pass@localhost/mydb'
app.config['SQLALCHEMY_TRACK_MODIFICATIONS'] = False
db = SQLAlchemy(app)

user_role = db.Table(
    'user_role',
    Column('uid', String(6), ForeignKey('user.uid')),
    Column('role', String(32), ForeignKey('role.name')),
    UniqueConstraint('uid', 'role', name='idx_uid_role'))

class UserModel(db.Model):
    __tablename__ = 'user'
    uid = Column(String(6), primary_key=True)
    create_time = Column(Integer, nullable=False)
    login_time = Column(Integer, nullable=True)
    roles = relationship('RoleModel', secondary='user_role',
                         backref='user', lazy='joined')

class RoleModel(db.Model):
    __tablename__ = 'role'
    name = Column(String(32), primary_key=True)
    description = Column(String(256), nullable=False)

db.create_all()

After you run this, check the indexes defined for the table like this:

mysql> show index from user_role;

And you should see:

+-----------+------------+--------------+--------------+-------------+-----------+-------------+----------+--------+------+------------+---------+---------------+---------+------------+
| Table     | Non_unique | Key_name     | Seq_in_index | Column_name | Collation | Cardinality | Sub_part | Packed | Null | Index_type | Comment | Index_comment | Visible | Expression |
+-----------+------------+--------------+--------------+-------------+-----------+-------------+----------+--------+------+------------+---------+---------------+---------+------------+
| user_role |          0 | idx_uid_role |            1 | uid         | A         |           0 |     NULL |   NULL | YES  | BTREE      |         |               | YES     | NULL       |
| user_role |          0 | idx_uid_role |            2 | role        | A         |           0 |     NULL |   NULL | YES  | BTREE      |         |               | YES     | NULL       |
| user_role |          1 | role         |            1 | role        | A         |           0 |     NULL |   NULL | YES  | BTREE      |         |               | YES     | NULL       |
+-----------+------------+--------------+--------------+-------------+-----------+-------------+----------+--------+------+------------+---------+---------------+---------+------------+
3 rows in set (0.00 sec)

Create test data:

mysql> insert into user values ('abc123', 1, 2);
mysql> insert into role values ('role1', 'Description');
mysql> insert into user_role (uid, role) values ('abc123', 'role1');

Finally, test the uniqueness constraint by running that last insert a second time, you should see:

mysql> insert into user_role (uid, role) values ('abc123', 'role1');
ERROR 1062 (23000): Duplicate entry 'abc123-role1' for key 'user_role.idx_uid_role'
2
__table_args__ = (
    Index("idx_room_user", room_id, uid, unique=True),
    UniqueConstraint(room_id, uid, name='u_room_user'),
)

It worked under sqlalchemy 2.0

1
  • 2
    Your answer could be improved with additional supporting information. Please edit to add further details, such as citations or documentation, so that others can confirm that your answer is correct. You can find more information on how to write good answers in the help center.
    – xlmaster
    Feb 21, 2023 at 7:34

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