Initial commit. Basic models mostly done.

This commit is contained in:
tcaxle
2020-04-11 13:03:48 +01:00
commit 840e3c86f9
5761 changed files with 650959 additions and 0 deletions

File diff suppressed because it is too large Load Diff

View File

@@ -0,0 +1,466 @@
import datetime
import posixpath
from django import forms
from django.core import checks
from django.core.files.base import File
from django.core.files.images import ImageFile
from django.core.files.storage import default_storage
from django.db.models import signals
from django.db.models.fields import Field
from django.utils.translation import gettext_lazy as _
class FieldFile(File):
def __init__(self, instance, field, name):
super().__init__(None, name)
self.instance = instance
self.field = field
self.storage = field.storage
self._committed = True
def __eq__(self, other):
# Older code may be expecting FileField values to be simple strings.
# By overriding the == operator, it can remain backwards compatibility.
if hasattr(other, 'name'):
return self.name == other.name
return self.name == other
def __hash__(self):
return hash(self.name)
# The standard File contains most of the necessary properties, but
# FieldFiles can be instantiated without a name, so that needs to
# be checked for here.
def _require_file(self):
if not self:
raise ValueError("The '%s' attribute has no file associated with it." % self.field.name)
def _get_file(self):
self._require_file()
if getattr(self, '_file', None) is None:
self._file = self.storage.open(self.name, 'rb')
return self._file
def _set_file(self, file):
self._file = file
def _del_file(self):
del self._file
file = property(_get_file, _set_file, _del_file)
@property
def path(self):
self._require_file()
return self.storage.path(self.name)
@property
def url(self):
self._require_file()
return self.storage.url(self.name)
@property
def size(self):
self._require_file()
if not self._committed:
return self.file.size
return self.storage.size(self.name)
def open(self, mode='rb'):
self._require_file()
if getattr(self, '_file', None) is None:
self.file = self.storage.open(self.name, mode)
else:
self.file.open(mode)
return self
# open() doesn't alter the file's contents, but it does reset the pointer
open.alters_data = True
# In addition to the standard File API, FieldFiles have extra methods
# to further manipulate the underlying file, as well as update the
# associated model instance.
def save(self, name, content, save=True):
name = self.field.generate_filename(self.instance, name)
self.name = self.storage.save(name, content, max_length=self.field.max_length)
setattr(self.instance, self.field.name, self.name)
self._committed = True
# Save the object because it has changed, unless save is False
if save:
self.instance.save()
save.alters_data = True
def delete(self, save=True):
if not self:
return
# Only close the file if it's already open, which we know by the
# presence of self._file
if hasattr(self, '_file'):
self.close()
del self.file
self.storage.delete(self.name)
self.name = None
setattr(self.instance, self.field.name, self.name)
self._committed = False
if save:
self.instance.save()
delete.alters_data = True
@property
def closed(self):
file = getattr(self, '_file', None)
return file is None or file.closed
def close(self):
file = getattr(self, '_file', None)
if file is not None:
file.close()
def __getstate__(self):
# FieldFile needs access to its associated model field and an instance
# it's attached to in order to work properly, but the only necessary
# data to be pickled is the file's name itself. Everything else will
# be restored later, by FileDescriptor below.
return {'name': self.name, 'closed': False, '_committed': True, '_file': None}
class FileDescriptor:
"""
The descriptor for the file attribute on the model instance. Return a
FieldFile when accessed so you can write code like::
>>> from myapp.models import MyModel
>>> instance = MyModel.objects.get(pk=1)
>>> instance.file.size
Assign a file object on assignment so you can do::
>>> with open('/path/to/hello.world') as f:
... instance.file = File(f)
"""
def __init__(self, field):
self.field = field
def __get__(self, instance, cls=None):
if instance is None:
return self
# This is slightly complicated, so worth an explanation.
# instance.file`needs to ultimately return some instance of `File`,
# probably a subclass. Additionally, this returned object needs to have
# the FieldFile API so that users can easily do things like
# instance.file.path and have that delegated to the file storage engine.
# Easy enough if we're strict about assignment in __set__, but if you
# peek below you can see that we're not. So depending on the current
# value of the field we have to dynamically construct some sort of
# "thing" to return.
# The instance dict contains whatever was originally assigned
# in __set__.
if self.field.name in instance.__dict__:
file = instance.__dict__[self.field.name]
else:
instance.refresh_from_db(fields=[self.field.name])
file = getattr(instance, self.field.name)
# If this value is a string (instance.file = "path/to/file") or None
# then we simply wrap it with the appropriate attribute class according
# to the file field. [This is FieldFile for FileFields and
# ImageFieldFile for ImageFields; it's also conceivable that user
# subclasses might also want to subclass the attribute class]. This
# object understands how to convert a path to a file, and also how to
# handle None.
if isinstance(file, str) or file is None:
attr = self.field.attr_class(instance, self.field, file)
instance.__dict__[self.field.name] = attr
# Other types of files may be assigned as well, but they need to have
# the FieldFile interface added to them. Thus, we wrap any other type of
# File inside a FieldFile (well, the field's attr_class, which is
# usually FieldFile).
elif isinstance(file, File) and not isinstance(file, FieldFile):
file_copy = self.field.attr_class(instance, self.field, file.name)
file_copy.file = file
file_copy._committed = False
instance.__dict__[self.field.name] = file_copy
# Finally, because of the (some would say boneheaded) way pickle works,
# the underlying FieldFile might not actually itself have an associated
# file. So we need to reset the details of the FieldFile in those cases.
elif isinstance(file, FieldFile) and not hasattr(file, 'field'):
file.instance = instance
file.field = self.field
file.storage = self.field.storage
# Make sure that the instance is correct.
elif isinstance(file, FieldFile) and instance is not file.instance:
file.instance = instance
# That was fun, wasn't it?
return instance.__dict__[self.field.name]
def __set__(self, instance, value):
instance.__dict__[self.field.name] = value
class FileField(Field):
# The class to wrap instance attributes in. Accessing the file object off
# the instance will always return an instance of attr_class.
attr_class = FieldFile
# The descriptor to use for accessing the attribute off of the class.
descriptor_class = FileDescriptor
description = _("File")
def __init__(self, verbose_name=None, name=None, upload_to='', storage=None, **kwargs):
self._primary_key_set_explicitly = 'primary_key' in kwargs
self.storage = storage or default_storage
self.upload_to = upload_to
kwargs.setdefault('max_length', 100)
super().__init__(verbose_name, name, **kwargs)
def check(self, **kwargs):
return [
*super().check(**kwargs),
*self._check_primary_key(),
*self._check_upload_to(),
]
def _check_primary_key(self):
if self._primary_key_set_explicitly:
return [
checks.Error(
"'primary_key' is not a valid argument for a %s." % self.__class__.__name__,
obj=self,
id='fields.E201',
)
]
else:
return []
def _check_upload_to(self):
if isinstance(self.upload_to, str) and self.upload_to.startswith('/'):
return [
checks.Error(
"%s's 'upload_to' argument must be a relative path, not an "
"absolute path." % self.__class__.__name__,
obj=self,
id='fields.E202',
hint='Remove the leading slash.',
)
]
else:
return []
def deconstruct(self):
name, path, args, kwargs = super().deconstruct()
if kwargs.get("max_length") == 100:
del kwargs["max_length"]
kwargs['upload_to'] = self.upload_to
if self.storage is not default_storage:
kwargs['storage'] = self.storage
return name, path, args, kwargs
def get_internal_type(self):
return "FileField"
def get_prep_value(self, value):
value = super().get_prep_value(value)
# Need to convert File objects provided via a form to string for database insertion
if value is None:
return None
return str(value)
def pre_save(self, model_instance, add):
file = super().pre_save(model_instance, add)
if file and not file._committed:
# Commit the file to storage prior to saving the model
file.save(file.name, file.file, save=False)
return file
def contribute_to_class(self, cls, name, **kwargs):
super().contribute_to_class(cls, name, **kwargs)
setattr(cls, self.name, self.descriptor_class(self))
def generate_filename(self, instance, filename):
"""
Apply (if callable) or prepend (if a string) upload_to to the filename,
then delegate further processing of the name to the storage backend.
Until the storage layer, all file paths are expected to be Unix style
(with forward slashes).
"""
if callable(self.upload_to):
filename = self.upload_to(instance, filename)
else:
dirname = datetime.datetime.now().strftime(str(self.upload_to))
filename = posixpath.join(dirname, filename)
return self.storage.generate_filename(filename)
def save_form_data(self, instance, data):
# Important: None means "no change", other false value means "clear"
# This subtle distinction (rather than a more explicit marker) is
# needed because we need to consume values that are also sane for a
# regular (non Model-) Form to find in its cleaned_data dictionary.
if data is not None:
# This value will be converted to str and stored in the
# database, so leaving False as-is is not acceptable.
setattr(instance, self.name, data or '')
def formfield(self, **kwargs):
return super().formfield(**{
'form_class': forms.FileField,
'max_length': self.max_length,
**kwargs,
})
class ImageFileDescriptor(FileDescriptor):
"""
Just like the FileDescriptor, but for ImageFields. The only difference is
assigning the width/height to the width_field/height_field, if appropriate.
"""
def __set__(self, instance, value):
previous_file = instance.__dict__.get(self.field.name)
super().__set__(instance, value)
# To prevent recalculating image dimensions when we are instantiating
# an object from the database (bug #11084), only update dimensions if
# the field had a value before this assignment. Since the default
# value for FileField subclasses is an instance of field.attr_class,
# previous_file will only be None when we are called from
# Model.__init__(). The ImageField.update_dimension_fields method
# hooked up to the post_init signal handles the Model.__init__() cases.
# Assignment happening outside of Model.__init__() will trigger the
# update right here.
if previous_file is not None:
self.field.update_dimension_fields(instance, force=True)
class ImageFieldFile(ImageFile, FieldFile):
def delete(self, save=True):
# Clear the image dimensions cache
if hasattr(self, '_dimensions_cache'):
del self._dimensions_cache
super().delete(save)
class ImageField(FileField):
attr_class = ImageFieldFile
descriptor_class = ImageFileDescriptor
description = _("Image")
def __init__(self, verbose_name=None, name=None, width_field=None, height_field=None, **kwargs):
self.width_field, self.height_field = width_field, height_field
super().__init__(verbose_name, name, **kwargs)
def check(self, **kwargs):
return [
*super().check(**kwargs),
*self._check_image_library_installed(),
]
def _check_image_library_installed(self):
try:
from PIL import Image # NOQA
except ImportError:
return [
checks.Error(
'Cannot use ImageField because Pillow is not installed.',
hint=('Get Pillow at https://pypi.org/project/Pillow/ '
'or run command "python -m pip install Pillow".'),
obj=self,
id='fields.E210',
)
]
else:
return []
def deconstruct(self):
name, path, args, kwargs = super().deconstruct()
if self.width_field:
kwargs['width_field'] = self.width_field
if self.height_field:
kwargs['height_field'] = self.height_field
return name, path, args, kwargs
def contribute_to_class(self, cls, name, **kwargs):
super().contribute_to_class(cls, name, **kwargs)
# Attach update_dimension_fields so that dimension fields declared
# after their corresponding image field don't stay cleared by
# Model.__init__, see bug #11196.
# Only run post-initialization dimension update on non-abstract models
if not cls._meta.abstract:
signals.post_init.connect(self.update_dimension_fields, sender=cls)
def update_dimension_fields(self, instance, force=False, *args, **kwargs):
"""
Update field's width and height fields, if defined.
This method is hooked up to model's post_init signal to update
dimensions after instantiating a model instance. However, dimensions
won't be updated if the dimensions fields are already populated. This
avoids unnecessary recalculation when loading an object from the
database.
Dimensions can be forced to update with force=True, which is how
ImageFileDescriptor.__set__ calls this method.
"""
# Nothing to update if the field doesn't have dimension fields or if
# the field is deferred.
has_dimension_fields = self.width_field or self.height_field
if not has_dimension_fields or self.attname not in instance.__dict__:
return
# getattr will call the ImageFileDescriptor's __get__ method, which
# coerces the assigned value into an instance of self.attr_class
# (ImageFieldFile in this case).
file = getattr(instance, self.attname)
# Nothing to update if we have no file and not being forced to update.
if not file and not force:
return
dimension_fields_filled = not(
(self.width_field and not getattr(instance, self.width_field)) or
(self.height_field and not getattr(instance, self.height_field))
)
# When both dimension fields have values, we are most likely loading
# data from the database or updating an image field that already had
# an image stored. In the first case, we don't want to update the
# dimension fields because we are already getting their values from the
# database. In the second case, we do want to update the dimensions
# fields and will skip this return because force will be True since we
# were called from ImageFileDescriptor.__set__.
if dimension_fields_filled and not force:
return
# file should be an instance of ImageFieldFile or should be None.
if file:
width = file.width
height = file.height
else:
# No file, so clear dimensions fields.
width = None
height = None
# Update the width and height fields.
if self.width_field:
setattr(instance, self.width_field, width)
if self.height_field:
setattr(instance, self.height_field, height)
def formfield(self, **kwargs):
return super().formfield(**{
'form_class': forms.ImageField,
**kwargs,
})

View File

@@ -0,0 +1,26 @@
NOT_PROVIDED = object()
class FieldCacheMixin:
"""Provide an API for working with the model's fields value cache."""
def get_cache_name(self):
raise NotImplementedError
def get_cached_value(self, instance, default=NOT_PROVIDED):
cache_name = self.get_cache_name()
try:
return instance._state.fields_cache[cache_name]
except KeyError:
if default is NOT_PROVIDED:
raise
return default
def is_cached(self, instance):
return self.get_cache_name() in instance._state.fields_cache
def set_cached_value(self, instance, value):
instance._state.fields_cache[self.get_cache_name()] = value
def delete_cached_value(self, instance):
del instance._state.fields_cache[self.get_cache_name()]

View File

@@ -0,0 +1,18 @@
"""
Field-like classes that aren't really fields. It's easier to use objects that
have the same attributes as fields sometimes (avoids a lot of special casing).
"""
from django.db.models import fields
class OrderWrt(fields.IntegerField):
"""
A proxy for the _order database field that is used when
Meta.order_with_respect_to is specified.
"""
def __init__(self, *args, **kwargs):
kwargs['name'] = '_order'
kwargs['editable'] = False
super().__init__(*args, **kwargs)

File diff suppressed because it is too large Load Diff

File diff suppressed because it is too large Load Diff

View File

@@ -0,0 +1,154 @@
from django.db.models.lookups import (
Exact, GreaterThan, GreaterThanOrEqual, In, IsNull, LessThan,
LessThanOrEqual,
)
class MultiColSource:
contains_aggregate = False
def __init__(self, alias, targets, sources, field):
self.targets, self.sources, self.field, self.alias = targets, sources, field, alias
self.output_field = self.field
def __repr__(self):
return "{}({}, {})".format(
self.__class__.__name__, self.alias, self.field)
def relabeled_clone(self, relabels):
return self.__class__(relabels.get(self.alias, self.alias),
self.targets, self.sources, self.field)
def get_lookup(self, lookup):
return self.output_field.get_lookup(lookup)
def get_normalized_value(value, lhs):
from django.db.models import Model
if isinstance(value, Model):
value_list = []
sources = lhs.output_field.get_path_info()[-1].target_fields
for source in sources:
while not isinstance(value, source.model) and source.remote_field:
source = source.remote_field.model._meta.get_field(source.remote_field.field_name)
try:
value_list.append(getattr(value, source.attname))
except AttributeError:
# A case like Restaurant.objects.filter(place=restaurant_instance),
# where place is a OneToOneField and the primary key of Restaurant.
return (value.pk,)
return tuple(value_list)
if not isinstance(value, tuple):
return (value,)
return value
class RelatedIn(In):
def get_prep_lookup(self):
if not isinstance(self.lhs, MultiColSource) and self.rhs_is_direct_value():
# If we get here, we are dealing with single-column relations.
self.rhs = [get_normalized_value(val, self.lhs)[0] for val in self.rhs]
# We need to run the related field's get_prep_value(). Consider case
# ForeignKey to IntegerField given value 'abc'. The ForeignKey itself
# doesn't have validation for non-integers, so we must run validation
# using the target field.
if hasattr(self.lhs.output_field, 'get_path_info'):
# Run the target field's get_prep_value. We can safely assume there is
# only one as we don't get to the direct value branch otherwise.
target_field = self.lhs.output_field.get_path_info()[-1].target_fields[-1]
self.rhs = [target_field.get_prep_value(v) for v in self.rhs]
return super().get_prep_lookup()
def as_sql(self, compiler, connection):
if isinstance(self.lhs, MultiColSource):
# For multicolumn lookups we need to build a multicolumn where clause.
# This clause is either a SubqueryConstraint (for values that need to be compiled to
# SQL) or an OR-combined list of (col1 = val1 AND col2 = val2 AND ...) clauses.
from django.db.models.sql.where import WhereNode, SubqueryConstraint, AND, OR
root_constraint = WhereNode(connector=OR)
if self.rhs_is_direct_value():
values = [get_normalized_value(value, self.lhs) for value in self.rhs]
for value in values:
value_constraint = WhereNode()
for source, target, val in zip(self.lhs.sources, self.lhs.targets, value):
lookup_class = target.get_lookup('exact')
lookup = lookup_class(target.get_col(self.lhs.alias, source), val)
value_constraint.add(lookup, AND)
root_constraint.add(value_constraint, OR)
else:
root_constraint.add(
SubqueryConstraint(
self.lhs.alias, [target.column for target in self.lhs.targets],
[source.name for source in self.lhs.sources], self.rhs),
AND)
return root_constraint.as_sql(compiler, connection)
else:
if (not getattr(self.rhs, 'has_select_fields', True) and
not getattr(self.lhs.field.target_field, 'primary_key', False)):
self.rhs.clear_select_clause()
if (getattr(self.lhs.output_field, 'primary_key', False) and
self.lhs.output_field.model == self.rhs.model):
# A case like Restaurant.objects.filter(place__in=restaurant_qs),
# where place is a OneToOneField and the primary key of
# Restaurant.
target_field = self.lhs.field.name
else:
target_field = self.lhs.field.target_field.name
self.rhs.add_fields([target_field], True)
return super().as_sql(compiler, connection)
class RelatedLookupMixin:
def get_prep_lookup(self):
if not isinstance(self.lhs, MultiColSource) and not hasattr(self.rhs, 'resolve_expression'):
# If we get here, we are dealing with single-column relations.
self.rhs = get_normalized_value(self.rhs, self.lhs)[0]
# We need to run the related field's get_prep_value(). Consider case
# ForeignKey to IntegerField given value 'abc'. The ForeignKey itself
# doesn't have validation for non-integers, so we must run validation
# using the target field.
if self.prepare_rhs and hasattr(self.lhs.output_field, 'get_path_info'):
# Get the target field. We can safely assume there is only one
# as we don't get to the direct value branch otherwise.
target_field = self.lhs.output_field.get_path_info()[-1].target_fields[-1]
self.rhs = target_field.get_prep_value(self.rhs)
return super().get_prep_lookup()
def as_sql(self, compiler, connection):
if isinstance(self.lhs, MultiColSource):
assert self.rhs_is_direct_value()
self.rhs = get_normalized_value(self.rhs, self.lhs)
from django.db.models.sql.where import WhereNode, AND
root_constraint = WhereNode()
for target, source, val in zip(self.lhs.targets, self.lhs.sources, self.rhs):
lookup_class = target.get_lookup(self.lookup_name)
root_constraint.add(
lookup_class(target.get_col(self.lhs.alias, source), val), AND)
return root_constraint.as_sql(compiler, connection)
return super().as_sql(compiler, connection)
class RelatedExact(RelatedLookupMixin, Exact):
pass
class RelatedLessThan(RelatedLookupMixin, LessThan):
pass
class RelatedGreaterThan(RelatedLookupMixin, GreaterThan):
pass
class RelatedGreaterThanOrEqual(RelatedLookupMixin, GreaterThanOrEqual):
pass
class RelatedLessThanOrEqual(RelatedLookupMixin, LessThanOrEqual):
pass
class RelatedIsNull(RelatedLookupMixin, IsNull):
pass

View File

@@ -0,0 +1,290 @@
"""
"Rel objects" for related fields.
"Rel objects" (for lack of a better name) carry information about the relation
modeled by a related field and provide some utility functions. They're stored
in the ``remote_field`` attribute of the field.
They also act as reverse fields for the purposes of the Meta API because
they're the closest concept currently available.
"""
from django.core import exceptions
from django.utils.functional import cached_property
from . import BLANK_CHOICE_DASH
from .mixins import FieldCacheMixin
class ForeignObjectRel(FieldCacheMixin):
"""
Used by ForeignObject to store information about the relation.
``_meta.get_fields()`` returns this class to provide access to the field
flags for the reverse relation.
"""
# Field flags
auto_created = True
concrete = False
editable = False
is_relation = True
# Reverse relations are always nullable (Django can't enforce that a
# foreign key on the related model points to this model).
null = True
def __init__(self, field, to, related_name=None, related_query_name=None,
limit_choices_to=None, parent_link=False, on_delete=None):
self.field = field
self.model = to
self.related_name = related_name
self.related_query_name = related_query_name
self.limit_choices_to = {} if limit_choices_to is None else limit_choices_to
self.parent_link = parent_link
self.on_delete = on_delete
self.symmetrical = False
self.multiple = True
# Some of the following cached_properties can't be initialized in
# __init__ as the field doesn't have its model yet. Calling these methods
# before field.contribute_to_class() has been called will result in
# AttributeError
@cached_property
def hidden(self):
return self.is_hidden()
@cached_property
def name(self):
return self.field.related_query_name()
@property
def remote_field(self):
return self.field
@property
def target_field(self):
"""
When filtering against this relation, return the field on the remote
model against which the filtering should happen.
"""
target_fields = self.get_path_info()[-1].target_fields
if len(target_fields) > 1:
raise exceptions.FieldError("Can't use target_field for multicolumn relations.")
return target_fields[0]
@cached_property
def related_model(self):
if not self.field.model:
raise AttributeError(
"This property can't be accessed before self.field.contribute_to_class has been called.")
return self.field.model
@cached_property
def many_to_many(self):
return self.field.many_to_many
@cached_property
def many_to_one(self):
return self.field.one_to_many
@cached_property
def one_to_many(self):
return self.field.many_to_one
@cached_property
def one_to_one(self):
return self.field.one_to_one
def get_lookup(self, lookup_name):
return self.field.get_lookup(lookup_name)
def get_internal_type(self):
return self.field.get_internal_type()
@property
def db_type(self):
return self.field.db_type
def __repr__(self):
return '<%s: %s.%s>' % (
type(self).__name__,
self.related_model._meta.app_label,
self.related_model._meta.model_name,
)
def get_choices(self, include_blank=True, blank_choice=BLANK_CHOICE_DASH, ordering=()):
"""
Return choices with a default blank choices included, for use
as <select> choices for this field.
Analog of django.db.models.fields.Field.get_choices(), provided
initially for utilization by RelatedFieldListFilter.
"""
qs = self.related_model._default_manager.all()
if ordering:
qs = qs.order_by(*ordering)
return (blank_choice if include_blank else []) + [
(x.pk, str(x)) for x in qs
]
def is_hidden(self):
"""Should the related object be hidden?"""
return bool(self.related_name) and self.related_name[-1] == '+'
def get_joining_columns(self):
return self.field.get_reverse_joining_columns()
def get_extra_restriction(self, where_class, alias, related_alias):
return self.field.get_extra_restriction(where_class, related_alias, alias)
def set_field_name(self):
"""
Set the related field's name, this is not available until later stages
of app loading, so set_field_name is called from
set_attributes_from_rel()
"""
# By default foreign object doesn't relate to any remote field (for
# example custom multicolumn joins currently have no remote field).
self.field_name = None
def get_accessor_name(self, model=None):
# This method encapsulates the logic that decides what name to give an
# accessor descriptor that retrieves related many-to-one or
# many-to-many objects. It uses the lowercased object_name + "_set",
# but this can be overridden with the "related_name" option. Due to
# backwards compatibility ModelForms need to be able to provide an
# alternate model. See BaseInlineFormSet.get_default_prefix().
opts = model._meta if model else self.related_model._meta
model = model or self.related_model
if self.multiple:
# If this is a symmetrical m2m relation on self, there is no reverse accessor.
if self.symmetrical and model == self.model:
return None
if self.related_name:
return self.related_name
return opts.model_name + ('_set' if self.multiple else '')
def get_path_info(self, filtered_relation=None):
return self.field.get_reverse_path_info(filtered_relation)
def get_cache_name(self):
"""
Return the name of the cache key to use for storing an instance of the
forward model on the reverse model.
"""
return self.get_accessor_name()
class ManyToOneRel(ForeignObjectRel):
"""
Used by the ForeignKey field to store information about the relation.
``_meta.get_fields()`` returns this class to provide access to the field
flags for the reverse relation.
Note: Because we somewhat abuse the Rel objects by using them as reverse
fields we get the funny situation where
``ManyToOneRel.many_to_one == False`` and
``ManyToOneRel.one_to_many == True``. This is unfortunate but the actual
ManyToOneRel class is a private API and there is work underway to turn
reverse relations into actual fields.
"""
def __init__(self, field, to, field_name, related_name=None, related_query_name=None,
limit_choices_to=None, parent_link=False, on_delete=None):
super().__init__(
field, to,
related_name=related_name,
related_query_name=related_query_name,
limit_choices_to=limit_choices_to,
parent_link=parent_link,
on_delete=on_delete,
)
self.field_name = field_name
def __getstate__(self):
state = self.__dict__.copy()
state.pop('related_model', None)
return state
def get_related_field(self):
"""
Return the Field in the 'to' object to which this relationship is tied.
"""
field = self.model._meta.get_field(self.field_name)
if not field.concrete:
raise exceptions.FieldDoesNotExist("No related field named '%s'" % self.field_name)
return field
def set_field_name(self):
self.field_name = self.field_name or self.model._meta.pk.name
class OneToOneRel(ManyToOneRel):
"""
Used by OneToOneField to store information about the relation.
``_meta.get_fields()`` returns this class to provide access to the field
flags for the reverse relation.
"""
def __init__(self, field, to, field_name, related_name=None, related_query_name=None,
limit_choices_to=None, parent_link=False, on_delete=None):
super().__init__(
field, to, field_name,
related_name=related_name,
related_query_name=related_query_name,
limit_choices_to=limit_choices_to,
parent_link=parent_link,
on_delete=on_delete,
)
self.multiple = False
class ManyToManyRel(ForeignObjectRel):
"""
Used by ManyToManyField to store information about the relation.
``_meta.get_fields()`` returns this class to provide access to the field
flags for the reverse relation.
"""
def __init__(self, field, to, related_name=None, related_query_name=None,
limit_choices_to=None, symmetrical=True, through=None,
through_fields=None, db_constraint=True):
super().__init__(
field, to,
related_name=related_name,
related_query_name=related_query_name,
limit_choices_to=limit_choices_to,
)
if through and not db_constraint:
raise ValueError("Can't supply a through model and db_constraint=False")
self.through = through
if through_fields and not through:
raise ValueError("Cannot specify through_fields without a through model")
self.through_fields = through_fields
self.symmetrical = symmetrical
self.db_constraint = db_constraint
def get_related_field(self):
"""
Return the field in the 'to' object to which this relationship is tied.
Provided for symmetry with ManyToOneRel.
"""
opts = self.through._meta
if self.through_fields:
field = opts.get_field(self.through_fields[0])
else:
for field in opts.fields:
rel = getattr(field, 'remote_field', None)
if rel and rel.model == self.model:
break
return field.foreign_related_fields[0]