0

I have the following alembic migration:

revision = '535f7a49839'
down_revision = '46c675c68f4'

from alembic import op
import sqlalchemy as sa
from sqlalchemy.ext.declarative import declarative_base
from sqlalchemy.orm import sessionmaker
from datetime import datetime

Session = sessionmaker()
Base = declarative_base()

metadata = sa.MetaData()

# This table definition works
organisations = sa.Table(
    'organisations',
    metadata,
    sa.Column('id', sa.Integer, primary_key=True),
    sa.Column('creator_id', sa.Integer),
    sa.Column('creator_staff_member_id', sa.Integer),
)

"""
# This doesn't...
class organisations(Base):
    __tablename__ = 'organisations'
    id = sa.Column(sa.Integer, primary_key=True)
    creator_id = sa.Column(sa.Integer)
    creator_staff_member_id = sa.Column(sa.Integer)
"""


def upgrade():
    bind = op.get_bind()
    session = Session(bind=bind)
    session._model_changes = {} # if you are using Flask-SQLAlchemy, this works around a bug
    print(session.query(organisations).all())
    raise Exception("don't succeed")


def downgrade():
    pass

Now the query session.query(organisations).all() works when I use the imperatively-defined table (the one not commented out). But if I use the declarative version, which as far as I understand should be equivalent, I get an error:

sqlalchemy.exc.AmbiguousForeignKeysError: Could not determine join condition between parent/child tables on relationship StaffMember.organisation - there are multiple foreign key paths linking the tables. Specify the 'foreign_keys' argument, providing a list of those columns which should be counted as containing a foreign key reference to the parent table.

Now I understand what this error means: I have two foreign keys from organisations to staff_members in my actual models. But why does alembic care about these, and how does it even know they exist? How does this migration know that something called StaffMember exists? As far as I understand, alembic should only know about the models you explicitly tell it about in the migration.

1 Answer 1

0

Turns out the problem was with my Flask-script setup I was using to call alembic. The command I was using to call alembic was importing the code to initialise my Flask app which was itself importing my actual models.

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.