SQLAlchemy 1.4 Documentation
Dialects
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Firebird¶
Support for the Firebird database.
The following table summarizes current support levels for database release versions.
DBAPI Support¶
The following dialect/DBAPI options are available. Please refer to individual DBAPI sections for connect information.
Note
The Firebird dialect within SQLAlchemy is not currently supported. It is not tested within continuous integration and is likely to have many issues and caveats not currently handled. Consider using the external dialect instead.
Deprecated since version 1.4: The internal Firebird dialect is deprecated and will be removed in a future version. Use the external dialect.
Firebird Dialects¶
Firebird offers two distinct dialects (not to be confused with a
SQLAlchemy Dialect
):
- dialect 1
This is the old syntax and behaviour, inherited from Interbase pre-6.0.
- dialect 3
This is the newer and supported syntax, introduced in Interbase 6.0.
The SQLAlchemy Firebird dialect detects these versions and adjusts its representation of SQL accordingly. However, support for dialect 1 is not well tested and probably has incompatibilities.
Locking Behavior¶
Firebird locks tables aggressively. For this reason, a DROP TABLE may hang until other transactions are released. SQLAlchemy does its best to release transactions as quickly as possible. The most common cause of hanging transactions is a non-fully consumed result set, i.e.:
result = engine.execute(text("select * from table"))
row = result.fetchone()
return
Where above, the CursorResult
has not been fully consumed. The
connection will be returned to the pool and the transactional state
rolled back once the Python garbage collector reclaims the objects
which hold onto the connection, which often occurs asynchronously.
The above use case can be alleviated by calling first()
on the
CursorResult
which will fetch the first row and immediately close
all remaining cursor/connection resources.
RETURNING support¶
Firebird 2.0 supports returning a result set from inserts, and 2.1
extends that to deletes and updates. This is generically exposed by
the SQLAlchemy returning()
method, such as:
# INSERT..RETURNING
result = table.insert().returning(table.c.col1, table.c.col2).\
values(name='foo')
print(result.fetchall())
# UPDATE..RETURNING
raises = empl.update().returning(empl.c.id, empl.c.salary).\
where(empl.c.sales>100).\
values(dict(salary=empl.c.salary * 1.1))
print(raises.fetchall())
fdb¶
Support for the Firebird database via the fdb driver.
fdb is a kinterbasdb compatible DBAPI for Firebird.
Changed in version 0.9: - The fdb dialect is now the default dialect
under the firebird://
URL space, as fdb
is now the official
Python driver for Firebird.
DBAPI¶
Documentation and download information (if applicable) for fdb is available at: https://pypi.org/project/fdb/
Connecting¶
Connect String:
firebird+fdb://user:password@host:port/path/to/db[?key=value&key=value...]
Arguments¶
The fdb
dialect is based on the
sqlalchemy.dialects.firebird.kinterbasdb
dialect, however does not
accept every argument that Kinterbasdb does.
enable_rowcount
- True by default, setting this to False disables the usage of “cursor.rowcount” with the Kinterbasdb dialect, which SQLAlchemy ordinarily calls upon automatically after any UPDATE or DELETE statement. When disabled, SQLAlchemy’s CursorResult will return -1 for result.rowcount. The rationale here is that Kinterbasdb requires a second round trip to the database when .rowcount is called - since SQLA’s resultproxy automatically closes the cursor after a non-result-returning statement, rowcount must be called, if at all, before the result object is returned. Additionally, cursor.rowcount may not return correct results with older versions of Firebird, and setting this flag to False will also cause the SQLAlchemy ORM to ignore its usage. The behavior can also be controlled on a per-execution basis using theenable_rowcount
option withConnection.execution_options()
:conn = engine.connect().execution_options(enable_rowcount=True) r = conn.execute(stmt) print(r.rowcount)
retaining
- False by default. Setting this to True will pass theretaining=True
keyword argument to the.commit()
and.rollback()
methods of the DBAPI connection, which can improve performance in some situations, but apparently with significant caveats. Please read the fdb and/or kinterbasdb DBAPI documentation in order to understand the implications of this flag.Changed in version 0.9.0: - the
retaining
flag defaults toFalse
. In 0.8 it defaulted toTrue
.See also
https://pythonhosted.org/fdb/usage-guide.html#retaining-transactions - information on the “retaining” flag.
kinterbasdb¶
Support for the Firebird database via the kinterbasdb driver.
DBAPI¶
Documentation and download information (if applicable) for kinterbasdb is available at: https://firebirdsql.org/index.php?op=devel&sub=python
Connecting¶
Connect String:
firebird+kinterbasdb://user:password@host:port/path/to/db[?key=value&key=value...]
Arguments¶
The Kinterbasdb backend accepts the enable_rowcount
and retaining
arguments accepted by the sqlalchemy.dialects.firebird.fdb
dialect.
In addition, it also accepts the following:
type_conv
- select the kind of mapping done on the types: by default SQLAlchemy uses 200 with Unicode, datetime and decimal support. See the linked documents below for further information.concurrency_level
- set the backend policy with regards to threading issues: by default SQLAlchemy uses policy 1. See the linked documents below for further information.
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