Opened 14 years ago
Closed 9 years ago
#14518 closed Bug (worksforme)
Field.to_python not called on foreign key IDs
Reported by: | David Wolever | Owned by: | nobody |
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Component: | Database layer (models, ORM) | Version: | dev |
Severity: | Normal | Keywords: | |
Cc: | David Wolever, kitsunde@…, info@…, anubhav9042@… | Triage Stage: | Accepted |
Has patch: | no | Needs documentation: | no |
Needs tests: | no | Patch needs improvement: | no |
Easy pickings: | no | UI/UX: | no |
Description
Given a subclass of Field like this:
class MyIDField(Field): ... def to_python(self, value): return to_base_36(value)
Used like this:
class Foo(m.Model): id = MyIDField(primary_key=True) class Bar(m.Model): foo = m.ForeignKey(Foo)
Then the MyIDField.to_python
function isn't called when Bar.foo_id
is accessed:
>>> b = Bar.objects.all()[0] >>> b.foo_id 1234 >>> b.foo.id 'ya' >>>
This is annoying for a few reasons, but most significantly because it breaks dropdown menus in admin: even if a value is set for a foreign key, the menu selects the default item (usually ------
). This is because the menu items *have* been to_python
'd, but the default value has *not* been to_python
'd).
I'm seeing this in Django 1.2.1.
If this is confirmed as a bug, I can submit test cases.
Attachments (1)
Change History (17)
comment:1 by , 14 years ago
Component: | Uncategorized → Database layer (models, ORM) |
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Triage Stage: | Unreviewed → Accepted |
comment:2 by , 14 years ago
Cc: | added |
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It may also be worth noting: I have a StackOverflow question asking the same thing here: http://stackoverflow.com/questions/3983510
comment:3 by , 14 years ago
Severity: | → Normal |
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Type: | → Bug |
comment:4 by , 13 years ago
Easy pickings: | unset |
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UI/UX: | unset |
I am also facing same problem. We have changed the default behavior of having primary keys. Throughout our code it has been replaced with custom UUIDFiled(given below). Till django 1.1 we were not facing any problem but while migrating to django1.3, I started facing problem during syncdb(duplicate key error while inserting in auth_permissions).
Since there is change in "django/contrib/auth/management/init.py" create_permission code. Now it is referring to "content_type" which is a Foreign key. In my case its value is not being to_python'd. Thus it fails in comparison with a uuid.UUID type value (returned when referred as pk which is always to_python'd).
Please update by when this bug will be solved?
class UUIDField(models.Field): __metaclass__ = models.SubfieldBase empty_strings_allowed = False def __init__(self, *args, **kwargs): if kwargs.get('primary_key', False): kwargs['editable'] = False kwargs['db_index'] = True super(UUIDField, self).__init__(*args, **kwargs) def db_type(self, connection): return 'uuid' def get_internal_type(self): return 'UUIDField' def to_python(self, value): if (value is None) or isinstance(value, uuid.UUID): return value try: return uuid.UUID(value) except (AttributeError, TypeError, ValueError): return value def pre_save(self, obj, add): old_val = getattr(obj, self.attname) if (self.primary_key and add) and (old_val is None): value = uuid.uuid4() setattr(obj, self.attname, value) return value else: return old_val def get_db_prep_lookup(self, lookup_type, value,connection=None, prepared=False): if lookup_type == 'exact': return [self.get_db_prep_value(value,connection=None, prepared=False)] elif lookup_type == 'in': return [self.get_db_prep_value(v,connection=None, prepared=False) for v in value] elif lookup_type == 'isnull': return [] raise TypeError(u"Field has invalid lookup type: %s" % lookup_type) def value_to_string(self, obj): value = getattr(obj, self.attname) if value is None: return value else: return unicode(value) def formfield(self, **kwargs): defaults = { 'form_class': forms.RegexField, 'regex': UUID_REGEX, 'max_length': 47, 'error_messages': {'invalid': u"Enter only valid UUID."} } defaults.update(kwargs) return super(UUIDField, self).formfield(**defaults)
comment:5 by , 13 years ago
Cc: | added |
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comment:6 by , 11 years ago
Cc: | added |
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comment:7 by , 11 years ago
Well there have been some changes in the code and some things have changed.
Here is my models.py
from django.db import models class MyField(models.CharField): __metaclass__ = models.SubfieldBase def __init__(self, *args, **kwargs): super(MyField, self).__init__(*args, **kwargs) def to_python(self, value): return "Value: %s" % value class Foo(models.Model): field = MyField(max_length=30, primary_key=True) class Bar(models.Model): foo = models.ForeignKey(Foo)
In shell, I get correct values here:
>>> m1 = Foo.objects.create(field="anubhavjoshi") >>> m2 = Bar.objects.create(foo=m1) >>> m2.foo_id u'Value: Value: anubhavjoshi' >>> m2.foo.field u'Value: Value: anubhavjoshi'
But if I do:
>>> m1 = Foo.objects.create(field="anubhavjoshi") >>> m2 = Bar.objects.create(foo=m1) >>> m2 = Bar.objects.all()[0] >>> m2.foo_id u'Value: Value: anubhavjoshi' >>> m2.foo.field DoesNotExist: Foo matching query does not exist. >>> m2.foo DoesNotExist: Foo matching query does not exist.
Following traceback:
--------------------------------------------------------------------------- DoesNotExist Traceback (most recent call last) C:\Users\Anubhav\DjangoDev\apps\<ipython-input-7-3a4a21c18010> in <module>() ----> 1 m2.foo c:\users\anubhav\django\django\db\models\fields\related.pyc in __get__(self, instance, instance_type) 562 qs = qs.filter(extra_filter, **params) 563 # Assuming the database enforces foreign keys, this won't fail. --> 564 rel_obj = qs.get() 565 if not self.field.rel.multiple: 566 setattr(rel_obj, self.field.related.get_cache_name(), instance) c:\users\anubhav\django\django\db\models\query.pyc in get(self, *args, **kwargs) 374 raise self.model.DoesNotExist( 375 "%s matching query does not exist." % --> 376 self.model._meta.object_name) 377 raise self.model.MultipleObjectsReturned( 378 "get() returned more than one %s -- it returned %s!" % (
comment:8 by , 11 years ago
Cc: | added |
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Version: | 1.2 → master |
by , 11 years ago
Attachment: | 14518.diff added |
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comment:10 by , 11 years ago
This might cause other tests to fail but might give some insight as to why this problem occured.
As queryset gets the correct value earlier on and is changed to empty qs after that condition.
comment:11 by , 11 years ago
The reason the first example works is because in Bar.objects.create(foo=m1) the m1 Foo instance is cached on the Bar instance, so m2.foo.field does not perform a database query.
The second example fails because m2 has to perform a database lookup, and that's where things get fun.
Your MyField.to_python is called multiple times so the value stored in the database is actually "Value: Value: anubhavjoshi".
When you access bar.foo the primary key value "Value: Value: anubhavjoshi" is passed through to_python again and becomes "Value: Value: Value: anubhavjoshi" and that primary key does not exist.
The reason your patch works is because you only had one Foo record in your dataset.
If you had multiple Foo records your test would raise MultipleObjectsReturned.
The only thing the patch does is disable related lookup filters which is not what you want ;)
It may be an idea to add a note to the documentation about custom field classes.
comment:12 by , 11 years ago
Thanks for your explanation. As I said my patch wasn't correct, it only was to tell which line caused errors.
Now that I tried the following:
def to_python(self, value): return ".".join(value)
So the lookup which failed earlier passes, but as explained by Harm above,
>>> m2.foo_id u'a...n...u...b...h...a...v' >>> m2.foo.field u'a.......n.......u.......b.......h.......a.......v'
But it should have been: u'a.n.u.b.h.a.v'
It seems that to_python
is called too many times and that might be wrong when it is defined in a way like in my examples..
Also if we remove __metaclass__ = models.SubfieldBase
from our custom field then to_python
does gets called but something strange happens as it appears it does not serves the purpose as always u'anubhav'
is returned by m1.field
or m2.foo_id
.
There might be problem in that metaclass implementation, but thats just a wild guess.
comment:13 by , 10 years ago
@anubhav9042: looks like this is a problem with the way you're subclassing the CharField
. When to_python
is called, it could well already be in the right format, or it might be unset. to_python
gets called every time the field is assigned a value and you are responsible for ensuring it is in the right format (https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/1.6/howto/custom-model-fields/#django.db.models.Field.to_python). Notice the two lines at the beginning of that example code. You will need to do something similar.
comment:14 by , 10 years ago
Is there any chance this might be fixed in some way at some point?
Like others, we've been using UUIDs as primary keys on a PostgreSQL database, and this bug is completely breaking prefetch_related
. The way prefetching is implemented (at least in 1.7), instances are collected into a dictionary with their to_python
'd primary keys as the keys, and then it tries to access them using the non-to_python
'd foreign key ID field. Needless to say, this results in a KeyError if to_python
changes the representation of the field at all (in our case, to strip PostgreSQL's native hyphens).
comment:16 by , 9 years ago
Resolution: | → worksforme |
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Status: | new → closed |
I can't reproduce the behavior described in the ticket as far back as Django 1.2. b.foo_id
and b.foo.id
both return an integer. A look of the follow up comments use SubfieldBase
which is deprecated in favor of Field.from_db_value()
. If problems remain in newer versions of Django, please open a new ticket with details.
Accepting, because it's clearly an inconsistency.
However, I have a sneaking suspicion that this won't be easy to fix without breaking backwards compatibility. For historical reasons, it's possible to instantiate an object with string values, and those values aren't converted into field-appropriate values (integers, etc) until the object is saved to the database. This is an artefact of early-days Django form processing.