File: test_executor.py

package info (click to toggle)
python-django 1.7.1-1~bpo70%2B1
  • links: PTS, VCS
  • area: main
  • in suites: wheezy-backports
  • size: 44,904 kB
  • sloc: python: 168,907; xml: 713; makefile: 195; sh: 170; sql: 11
file content (233 lines) | stat: -rw-r--r-- 10,265 bytes parent folder | download
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
90
91
92
93
94
95
96
97
98
99
100
101
102
103
104
105
106
107
108
109
110
111
112
113
114
115
116
117
118
119
120
121
122
123
124
125
126
127
128
129
130
131
132
133
134
135
136
137
138
139
140
141
142
143
144
145
146
147
148
149
150
151
152
153
154
155
156
157
158
159
160
161
162
163
164
165
166
167
168
169
170
171
172
173
174
175
176
177
178
179
180
181
182
183
184
185
186
187
188
189
190
191
192
193
194
195
196
197
198
199
200
201
202
203
204
205
206
207
208
209
210
211
212
213
214
215
216
217
218
219
220
221
222
223
224
225
226
227
228
229
230
231
232
233
from django.db import connection
from django.db.migrations.executor import MigrationExecutor
from django.test import modify_settings, override_settings
from django.apps.registry import apps as global_apps

from .test_base import MigrationTestBase


@modify_settings(INSTALLED_APPS={'append': 'migrations2'})
class ExecutorTests(MigrationTestBase):
    """
    Tests the migration executor (full end-to-end running).

    Bear in mind that if these are failing you should fix the other
    test failures first, as they may be propagating into here.
    """

    available_apps = ["migrations", "migrations2", "django.contrib.auth", "django.contrib.contenttypes"]

    @override_settings(MIGRATION_MODULES={"migrations": "migrations.test_migrations"})
    def test_run(self):
        """
        Tests running a simple set of migrations.
        """
        executor = MigrationExecutor(connection)
        # Let's look at the plan first and make sure it's up to scratch
        plan = executor.migration_plan([("migrations", "0002_second")])
        self.assertEqual(
            plan,
            [
                (executor.loader.graph.nodes["migrations", "0001_initial"], False),
                (executor.loader.graph.nodes["migrations", "0002_second"], False),
            ],
        )
        # Were the tables there before?
        self.assertTableNotExists("migrations_author")
        self.assertTableNotExists("migrations_book")
        # Alright, let's try running it
        executor.migrate([("migrations", "0002_second")])
        # Are the tables there now?
        self.assertTableExists("migrations_author")
        self.assertTableExists("migrations_book")
        # Rebuild the graph to reflect the new DB state
        executor.loader.build_graph()
        # Alright, let's undo what we did
        plan = executor.migration_plan([("migrations", None)])
        self.assertEqual(
            plan,
            [
                (executor.loader.graph.nodes["migrations", "0002_second"], True),
                (executor.loader.graph.nodes["migrations", "0001_initial"], True),
            ],
        )
        executor.migrate([("migrations", None)])
        # Are the tables gone?
        self.assertTableNotExists("migrations_author")
        self.assertTableNotExists("migrations_book")

    @override_settings(MIGRATION_MODULES={"migrations": "migrations.test_migrations_squashed"})
    def test_run_with_squashed(self):
        """
        Tests running a squashed migration from zero (should ignore what it replaces)
        """
        executor = MigrationExecutor(connection)
        # Check our leaf node is the squashed one
        leaves = [key for key in executor.loader.graph.leaf_nodes() if key[0] == "migrations"]
        self.assertEqual(leaves, [("migrations", "0001_squashed_0002")])
        # Check the plan
        plan = executor.migration_plan([("migrations", "0001_squashed_0002")])
        self.assertEqual(
            plan,
            [
                (executor.loader.graph.nodes["migrations", "0001_squashed_0002"], False),
            ],
        )
        # Were the tables there before?
        self.assertTableNotExists("migrations_author")
        self.assertTableNotExists("migrations_book")
        # Alright, let's try running it
        executor.migrate([("migrations", "0001_squashed_0002")])
        # Are the tables there now?
        self.assertTableExists("migrations_author")
        self.assertTableExists("migrations_book")
        # Rebuild the graph to reflect the new DB state
        executor.loader.build_graph()
        # Alright, let's undo what we did. Should also just use squashed.
        plan = executor.migration_plan([("migrations", None)])
        self.assertEqual(
            plan,
            [
                (executor.loader.graph.nodes["migrations", "0001_squashed_0002"], True),
            ],
        )
        executor.migrate([("migrations", None)])
        # Are the tables gone?
        self.assertTableNotExists("migrations_author")
        self.assertTableNotExists("migrations_book")

    @override_settings(MIGRATION_MODULES={
        "migrations": "migrations.test_migrations",
        "migrations2": "migrations2.test_migrations_2",
    })
    def test_empty_plan(self):
        """
        Tests that re-planning a full migration of a fully-migrated set doesn't
        perform spurious unmigrations and remigrations.

        There was previously a bug where the executor just always performed the
        backwards plan for applied migrations - which even for the most recent
        migration in an app, might include other, dependent apps, and these
        were being unmigrated.
        """
        # Make the initial plan, check it
        executor = MigrationExecutor(connection)
        plan = executor.migration_plan([
            ("migrations", "0002_second"),
            ("migrations2", "0001_initial"),
        ])
        self.assertEqual(
            plan,
            [
                (executor.loader.graph.nodes["migrations", "0001_initial"], False),
                (executor.loader.graph.nodes["migrations", "0002_second"], False),
                (executor.loader.graph.nodes["migrations2", "0001_initial"], False),
            ],
        )
        # Fake-apply all migrations
        executor.migrate([
            ("migrations", "0002_second"),
            ("migrations2", "0001_initial")
        ], fake=True)
        # Rebuild the graph to reflect the new DB state
        executor.loader.build_graph()
        # Now plan a second time and make sure it's empty
        plan = executor.migration_plan([
            ("migrations", "0002_second"),
            ("migrations2", "0001_initial"),
        ])
        self.assertEqual(plan, [])
        # Erase all the fake records
        executor.recorder.record_unapplied("migrations2", "0001_initial")
        executor.recorder.record_unapplied("migrations", "0002_second")
        executor.recorder.record_unapplied("migrations", "0001_initial")

    @override_settings(MIGRATION_MODULES={"migrations": "migrations.test_migrations"})
    def test_soft_apply(self):
        """
        Tests detection of initial migrations already having been applied.
        """
        state = {"faked": None}

        def fake_storer(phase, migration, fake):
            state["faked"] = fake
        executor = MigrationExecutor(connection, progress_callback=fake_storer)
        # Were the tables there before?
        self.assertTableNotExists("migrations_author")
        self.assertTableNotExists("migrations_tribble")
        # Run it normally
        self.assertEqual(
            executor.migration_plan([("migrations", "0001_initial")]),
            [
                (executor.loader.graph.nodes["migrations", "0001_initial"], False),
            ],
        )
        executor.migrate([("migrations", "0001_initial")])
        # Are the tables there now?
        self.assertTableExists("migrations_author")
        self.assertTableExists("migrations_tribble")
        # We shouldn't have faked that one
        self.assertEqual(state["faked"], False)
        # Rebuild the graph to reflect the new DB state
        executor.loader.build_graph()
        # Fake-reverse that
        executor.migrate([("migrations", None)], fake=True)
        # Are the tables still there?
        self.assertTableExists("migrations_author")
        self.assertTableExists("migrations_tribble")
        # Make sure that was faked
        self.assertEqual(state["faked"], True)
        # Finally, migrate forwards; this should fake-apply our initial migration
        executor.loader.build_graph()
        self.assertEqual(
            executor.migration_plan([("migrations", "0001_initial")]),
            [
                (executor.loader.graph.nodes["migrations", "0001_initial"], False),
            ],
        )
        executor.migrate([("migrations", "0001_initial")])
        self.assertEqual(state["faked"], True)
        # And migrate back to clean up the database
        executor.loader.build_graph()
        executor.migrate([("migrations", None)])
        self.assertTableNotExists("migrations_author")
        self.assertTableNotExists("migrations_tribble")

    @override_settings(
        MIGRATION_MODULES={
            "migrations": "migrations.test_migrations_custom_user",
            "django.contrib.auth": "django.contrib.auth.migrations",
        },
        AUTH_USER_MODEL="migrations.Author",
    )
    def test_custom_user(self):
        """
        Regression test for #22325 - references to a custom user model defined in the
        same app are not resolved correctly.
        """
        executor = MigrationExecutor(connection)
        self.assertTableNotExists("migrations_author")
        self.assertTableNotExists("migrations_tribble")
        # Migrate forwards
        executor.migrate([("migrations", "0001_initial")])
        self.assertTableExists("migrations_author")
        self.assertTableExists("migrations_tribble")
        # Make sure the soft-application detection works (#23093)
        # Change get_table_list to not return auth_user during this as
        # it wouldn't be there in a normal run, and ensure migrations.Author
        # exists in the global app registry temporarily.
        old_get_table_list = connection.introspection.get_table_list
        connection.introspection.get_table_list = lambda c: [x for x in old_get_table_list(c) if x != "auth_user"]
        migrations_apps = executor.loader.project_state(("migrations", "0001_initial")).render()
        global_apps.get_app_config("migrations").models["author"] = migrations_apps.get_model("migrations", "author")
        try:
            migration = executor.loader.get_migration("auth", "0001_initial")
            self.assertEqual(executor.detect_soft_applied(migration), True)
        finally:
            connection.introspection.get_table_list = old_get_table_list
            del global_apps.get_app_config("migrations").models["author"]
        # And migrate back to clean up the database
        executor.loader.build_graph()
        executor.migrate([("migrations", None)])
        self.assertTableNotExists("migrations_author")
        self.assertTableNotExists("migrations_tribble")