49

I am trying out SQLAlchemy and I am using this connection string:

engine = create_engine('sqlite:///C:\\sqlitedbs\\database.db')

Does SQLAlchemy create an SQLite database if one is not already present in a directory it was supposed to fetch the database file?

5 Answers 5

49

Yes,sqlalchemy does create a database for you.I confirmed it on windows using this code

from sqlalchemy import create_engine, ForeignKey
from sqlalchemy import Column, Date, Integer, String
from sqlalchemy.ext.declarative import declarative_base

engine = create_engine('sqlite:///C:\\sqlitedbs\\school.db', echo=True)
Base = declarative_base()


class School(Base):

    __tablename__ = "woot"

    id = Column(Integer, primary_key=True)
    name = Column(String)  


    def __init__(self, name):

        self.name = name    


Base.metadata.create_all(engine)
3
  • 2
    so if the sqlite database is an existing file in that directory that you are pointing at, it will call it up instead? Ie: if it exist, connect to it, else, create it. Am I right to say that?
    – jake wong
    Commented Mar 29, 2016 at 15:17
  • 3
    Absolutely,i found that to be the case.
    – Gandalf
    Commented May 4, 2016 at 18:16
  • 12
    In case others are confused: the file is created during the create_all(engine) statement, not during the create_engine(...) statement.
    – dthor
    Commented Aug 21, 2018 at 21:45
18

As others have posted, SQLAlchemy will do this automatically. I encountered this error, however, when I didn't use enough slashes!

I used SQLALCHEMY_DATABASE_URI="sqlite:///path/to/file.db" when I should have used four slashes: SQLALCHEMY_DATABASE_URI="sqlite:////path/to/file.db"

0
13

Linux stored SQLite3 database

database will be create in the same folder as the .py file:

engine = create_engine('sqlite:///school.db', echo=True)

will instantiate the school.db file in the same folder as the .py file.

1
  • 1
    I need to call engine.connect() to get the db file actually created
    – Alan
    Commented Feb 11, 2022 at 17:07
8

I found (using sqlite+pysqlite) that if the directory exists, it will create it, but if the directory does not exist it throws an exception:

OperationalError: (sqlite3.OperationalError) unable to open database file

My workaround is to do this, although it feels nasty:

    if connection_string.startswith('sqlite'):
        db_file = re.sub("sqlite.*:///", "", connection_string)
        os.makedirs(os.path.dirname(db_file), exist_ok=True)
    self.engine = sqlalchemy.create_engine(connection_string)
4
  • Right, in this case I would probably just print a message to the user that says, "Sorry, I can't create database FOO because directory BAR does not exist." Then, if the user wants to create it and proceed, they can.
    – Tom Barron
    Commented Jul 2, 2016 at 18:46
  • For an interactive app that's fine, but I also want this to work in a continuous integration context
    – danio
    Commented Sep 23, 2016 at 9:23
  • 1
    Once the directories exist, it will work in continuous integration. You have to decide whether the missing directory is an error and requires user intervention (in which case you generate a error message and give up) or whether a missing directory is just a warning or minor exception in which case you create (possibly a whole chain of) directories and carry on, which, as you say, is 'nasty'. Or you make it configurable...
    – Tom Barron
    Commented Sep 26, 2016 at 18:18
  • by "make it configurable", I mean provide a config setting where the user can say 'create any missing directories without bothering me about it' or 'let me know if directories are missing and I'll create them for you.'
    – Tom Barron
    Commented Sep 26, 2016 at 18:19
4

@Gandolf's answer was good.

The database is created it when you make any connection with your engine.

Here's an example of doing nothing with a database besides connecting to it, and this will create the database.

from sqlalchemy import create_engine

engine = create_engine('sqlite:///database.db')

with engine.connect() as conn:
    pass

Without the engine.connect() or some form of metadata.create_all() the database will not be created.

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