Opened 9 years ago

Closed 9 years ago

#24614 closed Uncategorized (needsinfo)

Symmetry for select_related/prefetch_related for handling non-related fields

Reported by: Richard Eames Owned by: nobody
Component: Database layer (models, ORM) Version: dev
Severity: Normal Keywords:
Cc: Triage Stage: Unreviewed
Has patch: no Needs documentation: no
Needs tests: no Patch needs improvement: no
Easy pickings: no UI/UX: no

Description

I've been looking at the generated queries from some of our code and noticed a few things about select_related and prefetch_related. To start with, I want to provide some code examples for reference:

from django.db import models

class City(models.Model):
    name = models.CharField(max_length = 50)
    population = models.PositiveIntegerField()
    mayor = models.ForeignKey('Person', null=True, default=None)

class Person(models.Model):
    name = models.CharField(max_length = 50)
    hometown = models.ForeignKey(City)

def initial_data():
    c1 = City(name='City1', population=2)
    c1.save()
    p1 = Person(name='Citizen One', hometown=c1)
    p1.save()
    p2 = Person(name='Mayor', hometown=c1)
    p2.save()
    c1.mayor = p2
    c1.save(update_fields=['mayor'])
# ==== Current behaviour (with abbreviated sql) ====

# --- Select related at depth=1 ---
>>> p = Person.objects.select_related('hometown').get(id=1)
# SELECT p.*,  c.* FROM app_person p INNER JOIN app_city c ON p.hometown_id = c.id WHERE p.id=1;
>>> print(p.hometown.name) # No query
City1
>>> print(p.hometown.population) # No query
2
>>> print(p.hometown.mayor)
# SELECT p.* FROM app_person p WHERE p.id = 2
Person(Mayor)

# --- Select related on a non-rel field ---
p = Person.objects.select_related('hometown__name').get(id=1)
# SELECT p.*,  c.* FROM app_person p INNER JOIN app_city c ON p.hometown_id = c.id WHERE p.id=1;
>>> print(p.hometown.name) # No query
City1
>>> print(p.hometown.population) # No query
2
>>> print(p.hometown.mayor)
# SELECT p.* FROM app_person p WHERE p.id = 2
Person(Mayor)

# --- Select related on a rel-rel field ---
p = Person.objects.select_related('hometown__mayor').get(id=1)
# SELECT p1.*,  c.*,  p2.* FROM app_person p1 INNER JOIN app_city c ON p1.hometown_id = c.id LEFT OUTER JOIN app_person p2 ON c.mayor_id = p2.id WHERE p1.id = 1
>>> print(p.hometown.name) # No query
City1
>>> print(p.hometown.population) # No query
2
>>> print(p.hometown.mayor) # No query
Person(Mayor)

# --- Prefetch related on a related field ---
>>> p = Person.objects.prefetch_related('hometown').get(id=1)
# SELECT p.* FROM app_person p WHERE p.id = 1
# SELECT c.* FROM app_city c WHERE c.id IN (...)
>>> print(p.hometown.name) # No query
City1
>>> print(p.hometown.population) # No query
2
>>> print(p.hometown.mayor)
# SELECT p.* FROM app_person p WHERE p.id = 2
Person(Mayor)

# --- Prefetch related on a non-rel field ---
>>> p = Person.objects.prefetch_related('hometown__name').get(id=1)
# SELECT p.* FROM app_person p WHERE p.id = 1
# SELECT c.* FROM app_city c WHERE c.id IN (...)
ValueError: 'hometown__name' does not resolve to an item that supports prefetching - this is an invalid parameter to prefetch_related().

# --- Prefetch related on a rel-rel field ---
>>> p = Person.objects.prefetch_related('hometown__name').get(id=1)
# SELECT p.* FROM app_person p WHERE p.id = 1
# SELECT c.* FROM app_city c WHERE c.id IN (...)
# SELECT p.* FROM app_person p WHERE p.id = 2
>>> print(p.hometown.name) # No query
City1
>>> print(p.hometown.population) # No query
2
>>> print(p.hometown.mayor) # No query
Person(Mayor)

There are two things in the example I want to bring up:

The first is that select_related and prefetch_related differ in how they handle their arguments if they're invalid (ie, when they are pointing to non-related fields), select_related will happily accept the argument and just fetch the table parts, whereas prefetch_related will throw a ValueError. I think both methods should either throw the ValueError, or both sanitize the input :- by the same reason given in

django/db/models/query.py line ~1508
Last one, this *must* resolve to something that supports prefetching, otherwise there is no point adding it and the developer asking for it has made a mistake."

The second is that I believe there is some semantic overloading going on for the argument format for prefetch_related/select_related/only/defer, I think it's best explained in a table:

"model__attr" prefetch_related select_related only/defer only/defer + select_related
attr is Related field Extra query (expected), selects all fieldsJoins field (expected), selects all fields affects what is in the select clause (expected), but ignores "attr" and only selects "model" affects what is in the select clause (expected), and only selects "attr" from "model" (expected)
attr is non-relational fieldValueError Ignores the field, selects all fields on table affects what is in the select clause (expected), but ignores "attr" and only selects "model" affects what is in the select clause (expected), and only selects "attr" from "model" (expected)

There seems to be a two semantic overlap issues. First is with the name of select_related in that it doesn't really affect which fields are "selected", only really which tables are joined, second is the semantic overlap between the argument formats which selected_related accepts and which formats only/defer accept. The main problem I perceive is that both accept arguments in the format "model__attr" yet treat them differently. On one hand, prefetch_related and select_related are supposed to only deal with arguments where "__attr" is a relational field (prefetch does correctly), on the other hand, only/defer accept arguments where "__attr" is both a relational field, or just a normal attribute field. To me, at least, these are two distinct data types, yet when I'm looking through code they are represented in exactly the same manner. Obviously, there isn't any other practical way to differentiate the two data types, so there should probably be changes made to how they're handled.

Originally, I was going to propose that if a non-relational field was detected in prefetch_related or select_related, then it is passed to an only(), since when I see the name "select_related", I associate it with the fields "SELECT"ed, thus A.objects.select_related('b__attr') would behave the same as A.objects.select_related('b').only('b__attr', 'aAttr1', 'aAttr2').defer('b__otherattr'), however, after trying to reason about it, I'm not sure it's a good idea since it further exacerbates the symmetry issues.
Pros:

  • More succinct code for optimizing which fields are selected
  • select_related accepts the same field types as only/defer
  • Allows more fine grained control to which fields are SELECTed (fields in the select_related will be the ones actually selected for those related tables)

Cons/Concerns:

  • Behaviour is less like prefetch_related
  • Possibly breaking change for select_related on relational fields.
  • Doesn't really make sense for prefetch_related, thus the symmetry issue between prefetch_related and select_related.
  • What is selected for A.objects.select_related('b__c') where c is also a related field? Is it all fields on c or just its id?

Perhaps a better approach, although probably most controversial, would be to rename select_related to join_related and have it throw a ValueError on non-relational fields. This would resolve the semantic overloading of the method name and implications of its implementations, however, it doesn't resolve the second - although admittedly more minor - the previously mentioned argument/data types/semantics issue.

Anyway, I'm hoping a discussion can be started on this, but at very minimum I think select_related should match the behaviour of prefetch_related when it encounters an argument that does not resolve to a relational field. Let me know if a separate issue should be reported.

Change History (5)

comment:1 by Shai Berger, 9 years ago

Hello, and thanks for the long and detailed explanation and discussion. I appreciate that creating this ticket must have taken significant effort. However, I tend to disagree with your conclusions.

For the symmetry in validation of non-related fields, I tend to think that the benefit does not justify breaking backwards-compatibility. If someone select_relatreds an extra field -- either by mistake, or because a field was once a relation and changed -- and their code works to their satisfaction, I see no reason to break it for them on Django upgrade. If select_related were a new feature, you'd be right on. Unfortunately, it isn't.

On the "semantic overload" issue, I am not convinced that is a real problem in common use, and even if it is, I'm not sure if it should be solved by (again, backwards-incompatible) behavior change or by improving documentation.

I am leaving this ticket open, as I consider the work you put into it deserves another eye looking at it, but if you really want to start a discussion, the place for it is not the issue tracker, but the DevelopersMailingList.

comment:2 by Shai Berger, 9 years ago

So... there was a little discussion on IRC about this, and it was pointed out that this was already done. Are you sure you see the behavior you described on master?

Some participants in the IRC discussion favored turning it from error to a deprecation warning -- so it might be changed.

comment:3 by Richard Eames, 9 years ago

Thanks for your responses @shaib, I really do appreciate you taking the time to read it and being open to discussing it, I'll move the discussion and a reply into the mailing list, as you suggest, over the weekend (does the mailing list handle the table and code formatting?).

As for your second response: I've just double checked in dj 1.8, and the validation only occurs if the field is on the immediate model, or if it's invalid:

>>> Person.objects.select_related('foo')
django.core.exceptions.FieldError: Invalid field name(s) given in select_related: 'foo'. Choices are: hometown
>>> Person.objects.select_related('hometown__foo')
django.core.exceptions.FieldError: Invalid field name(s) given in select_related: 'foo'. Choices are: mayor
>>> Person.objects.select_related('hometown__name')
# query = select ... blah
[ Person object ...]
>>> Person.objects.select_related('name')
django.core.exceptions.FieldError: Non-relational field given in select_related: 'name'. Choices are: hometown

Notice how it will happily accept the third one. Would you like me to file a separate bug report for this issue?

comment:4 by Tim Graham, 9 years ago

Yes, a separate bug sounds appropriate.

comment:5 by Tim Graham, 9 years ago

Resolution: needsinfo
Status: newclosed

I created a ticket for the separate issue: #24687.

Closing this issue pending a mailing discussion as discussed above.

Note: See TracTickets for help on using tickets.
Back to Top