Opened 7 years ago
Last modified 7 years ago
#28368 new Bug
Model Inheritance Primary Key Issue — at Initial Version
Reported by: | Lawrence Elitzer | Owned by: | nobody |
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Component: | Database layer (models, ORM) | Version: | 1.11 |
Severity: | Normal | Keywords: | |
Cc: | Triage Stage: | Accepted | |
Has patch: | no | Needs documentation: | no |
Needs tests: | no | Patch needs improvement: | no |
Easy pickings: | no | UI/UX: | no |
Description
I am using model inheritance and when I set my own primary_key in the parent class as one of the fields I define, when I try to create child objects with the same primary key I am NOT getting a duplicate error. Instead, it is overwriting the parent class fields. In the two child tables in the example code below, both parent pointers in the two child object tables point to the same parent record.
# models.py from django.db import models class CommonImportedFile(models.Model): sha = models.CharField(max_length=40, primary_key=True) name = models.CharField(max_length=200) class FT1(CommonImportedFile): pass class FT4(CommonImportedFile): pass
And here are the commands I am using:
from myapp.models import * FT1.objects.create(name='ft1', sha='1234') FT4.objects.create(name='ft4', sha='1234') cf = CommonImportedFile.objects.get(sha='1234') cf.name
cf.name is 'ft4' here indicating to me that the second object creation is overwriting the parent record entry since the primary_key 'sha' field is the same for both object creations. If you get rid of the primary_key attribute in the 'sha' field and instead put 'unique=True' then this works as I think it should. Seems like a bug to me, or am I using inheritance incorrectly here?