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view website/issues/detectors/statusauditor.py @ 6433:c1d3fbcdbfbd
issue2551142 - Import of retired node ... unique constraint failure.
Title: Import of retired node with username after active node fails
with unique constraint failure.
More fixes needed for mysql and postgresql.
mysql: add unique constraint for (keyvalue, __retired__) when
creating class in the database.
On schema change if class is changed, remove the unique
constraint too.
upgrade version of rdbms database from 5 to 6 to add constraint
to all version 5 databases that were created as version 5
and didn't get the unique constraint. Make no changes
on version 5 databases upgraded from version 4, the upgrade
process to 5 added the constraint. Make no changes
to other databases (sqlite, postgres) during upgrade from
version 5 to 6.
postgres: Handle the exception raised on unique constraint violation.
The exception invalidates the database connection so it
can't be used to recover from the exception.
Added two new database methods:
checkpoint_data - performs a db.commit under postgres
does nothing on other backends
restore_connection_on_error - does a db.rollback on
postgres, does nothing on other
backends
with the rollback() done on the connection I can use the
database connection to fixup the import that failed on the
unique constraint. This makes postgres slower but without the
commit after every imported object, the rollback will delete
all the entries done up to this point.
Trying to figure out how to make the caller do_import batch
and recover from this failure is beyond me.
Also dismissed having to process the export csv file before
importing. Pushing that onto a user just seems wrong. Also
since import/export isn't frequently done the lack of
surprise on having a failing import and reduced
load/frustration for the user seems worth it. Also the import
can be run in verbose mode where it prints out a row as it is
processed, so it may take a while, ut the user can get
feedback.
db_test-base.py: add test for upgrade from 5 to 6.
| author | John Rouillard <rouilj@ieee.org> |
|---|---|
| date | Thu, 10 Jun 2021 12:52:05 -0400 |
| parents | 13e8f188f8dd |
| children |
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def preset_new(db, cl, nodeid, newvalues): """ Make sure the status is set on new issues""" if 'status' in newvalues and newvalues['status']: return new = db.status.lookup('new') newvalues['status'] = new def update_pending(db, cl, nodeid, newvalues): ''' If the issue is currently 'pending' and person other than assigned updates it, then set it to 'open'. ''' # don't fire if there's no new message (ie. update) if 'messages' not in newvalues: return if newvalues['messages'] == cl.get(nodeid, 'messages'): return # get the open state ID try: open_id = db.status.lookup('open') except KeyError: # no open state, ignore all this stuff return # get the current value current_status = cl.get(nodeid, 'status') # see if there's an explicit change in this transaction if 'status' in newvalues: # yep, skip return assignee = cl.get(nodeid, 'assignee') if assignee == db.getuid(): # this change is brought to you by the assignee and number 4 # so don't change status. return # determine the id of 'pending' fromstates = [] for state in 'pending'.split(): try: fromstates.append(db.status.lookup(state)) except KeyError: pass # ok, there's no explicit change, so check if we are in a state that # should be changed if current_status in fromstates + [None]: # yep, we're now open newvalues['status'] = open_id def init(db): # fire before changes are made db.issue.audit('create', preset_new) db.issue.audit('set', update_pending)
