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I've got a Django (v 1.3.3) project deployed on Heroku (cedar stack). It uses the recommended dj_database_url for configuring settings.DATABASES. Everything works great (to this point).

However, I want to start using django-hstore for part of the application. According to the docs, you have to change the database engine in settings.py to:

'ENGINE': 'django_hstore.postgresql_psycopg2',

As a result, in my settings.py file, I do the following:

DATABASES = {'default': dj_database_url.config()}
DATABASES['default']['ENGINE'] = 'django_hstore.postgresql_psycopg2'

Everything works fine for me, locally. And my models that have hstore fields work great (values are dictionaries).

However, when I deploy to Heroku, the database engine gets reset/overridden to:

ENGINE: 'django.db.backends.postgresql_psycopg2'

In an attempt at debugging it, I have put a print after setting the engine in my settings file. Then, I run bash:

heroku run bash

and then:

python myapp/manage.py shell

when I run this, my print statement shows me the correct (desired) database settings with the desired engine (django_hstore.postgresql_psycopg2). However, if I then do:

from django.conf import settings
print settings.DATABASES

I can see the database engine is no longer django_hstore, but set back to the normal (non-hstore) value. And if I import one of my models and do a get to load an object, the value in the hstore field is a string, and any attempt to access a key will throw and error:

TypeError: string indices must be integers, not str

Please keep in mind that this works find locally. But, after deploying to heroku, any attempt at accessing values as dictionaries throws the TypeError above.

My questions are:

  • Does anyone know why my engine is getting overridden? And if so, how do I fix this?

or

  • Is there another way to use the hstore field with Django 1.3.3 that might not require having to change the engine (and therefore be a bit more Heroku friendly)
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  • What did you end up working out? I'm looking at using HStore w/ Django & Heroku and am wary of this pitfall before jumping into it.
    – B Robster
    Mar 15, 2013 at 4:26

3 Answers 3

2

SQLAlchemy 0.8 includes utility methods that can be used to create a custom model for handling the conversion between Python dict and Postgres hstore.

from django.db import models
from sqlalchemy.dialects.postgresql.hstore import _parse_hstore, _serialize_hstore

class HStoreField (models.TextField):
    __metaclass__ = models.SubfieldBase

    def __init__(self, *args, **kwargs):
        super(HStoreField, self).__init__(*args, **kwargs)

    def to_python(self, value):
        if value is None:
            return None
        if isinstance(value, dict):
            return value
        return _parse_hstore(value)

    def get_db_prep_save(self, value, connection):
        if value is None:
            return None
        if isinstance(value, str):
            return value
        return _serialize_hstore(value)

    def db_type (self, connection):
         return "hstore"

This model is portable, but if you want to run queries based on hstore keys or values you'll have to write them in raw SQL.

I use an SQLite in-memory database for running tests, which works fine as long as you use the text type for non-PostgreSQL backends:

    def db_type (self, connection):
        from django.db import connection
        if connection.settings_dict['ENGINE'] == \
            'django.db.backends.postgresql_psycopg2':
            return "hstore"
        else:
            return "text"
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  • For what it‘s worth I am using a variation on this in a Django 1.5 and it appears to be working. I had to add an incantation to make it work smoothly with South.
    – pdc
    Mar 13, 2013 at 16:53
1

https://github.com/niwibe/djorm-ext-hstore

Looks like this package was originally a fork of django-hstore and includes the same functionality, but has been updated to no longer require a custom Database backend which would appear to alleviate your problem. (Note that some of the query syntax has changed in it).

As a bonus, the repo is maintained much more recently than the original django-hstore you link to, which hasn't been touched in years... scary.

1
  • That's true. django-hstore doesn't seem to be maintained anymore, while djorm-ext-hstore is active.
    – chhantyal
    Oct 10, 2013 at 10:31
1

happy to tell you the new version 1.2.1 of django_hstore is out

Upgrade via pip and check the new official django-hstore github repository: https://github.com/djangonauts/django-hstore

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