SQLAlchemy 1.3 Documentation
SQLAlchemy Core
- SQL Expression Language Tutorial
- SQL Statements and Expressions API
- Schema Definition Language
- Column and Data Types
- Engine and Connection Use- Engine Configuration
- Working with Engines and Connections¶- Basic Usage
- Using Transactions
- Library Level (e.g. emulated) Autocommit
- Setting Transaction Isolation Levels including DBAPI Autocommit
- Connectionless Execution, Implicit Execution
- Translation of Schema Names
- Engine Disposal
- Using the Threadlocal Execution Strategy
- Working with Raw DBAPI Connections
- Registering New Dialects
- Connection / Engine API- Connection- Connection.__init__()
- Connection.begin()
- Connection.begin_nested()
- Connection.begin_twophase()
- Connection.close()
- Connection.closed
- Connection.connect()
- Connection.connection
- Connection.default_isolation_level
- Connection.detach()
- Connection.execute()
- Connection.execution_options()
- Connection.get_execution_options()
- Connection.get_isolation_level()
- Connection.in_transaction()
- Connection.info
- Connection.invalidate()
- Connection.invalidated
- Connection.run_callable()
- Connection.scalar()
- Connection.schema_for_object
- Connection.transaction()
 
- Connectable
- CreateEnginePlugin
- Engine- Engine.begin()
- Engine.connect()
- Engine.contextual_connect()
- Engine.dispose()
- Engine.driver
- Engine.engine
- Engine.execute()
- Engine.execution_options()
- Engine.get_execution_options()
- Engine.has_table()
- Engine.name
- Engine.raw_connection()
- Engine.run_callable()
- Engine.scalar()
- Engine.schema_for_object
- Engine.table_names()
- Engine.transaction()
- Engine.update_execution_options()
 
- ExceptionContext- ExceptionContext.chained_exception
- ExceptionContext.connection
- ExceptionContext.cursor
- ExceptionContext.engine
- ExceptionContext.execution_context
- ExceptionContext.invalidate_pool_on_disconnect
- ExceptionContext.is_disconnect
- ExceptionContext.original_exception
- ExceptionContext.parameters
- ExceptionContext.sqlalchemy_exception
- ExceptionContext.statement
 
- NestedTransaction
- ResultProxy- ResultProxy.close()
- ResultProxy.fetchall()
- ResultProxy.fetchmany()
- ResultProxy.fetchone()
- ResultProxy.first()
- ResultProxy.inserted_primary_key
- ResultProxy.is_insert
- ResultProxy.keys()
- ResultProxy.last_inserted_params()
- ResultProxy.last_updated_params()
- ResultProxy.lastrow_has_defaults()
- ResultProxy.lastrowid
- ResultProxy.next()
- ResultProxy.postfetch_cols()
- ResultProxy.prefetch_cols()
- ResultProxy.returned_defaults
- ResultProxy.returns_rows
- ResultProxy.rowcount
- ResultProxy.scalar()
- ResultProxy.supports_sane_multi_rowcount()
- ResultProxy.supports_sane_rowcount()
 
- RowProxy
- Transaction
- TwoPhaseTransaction
 
 
- Connection Pooling
- Core Events
 
- Core API Basics
Project Versions
- Previous: Engine Configuration
- Next: Connection Pooling
- Up: Home
- On this page:
- Working with Engines and Connections- Basic Usage
- Using Transactions
- Library Level (e.g. emulated) Autocommit
- Setting Transaction Isolation Levels including DBAPI Autocommit
- Connectionless Execution, Implicit Execution
- Translation of Schema Names
- Engine Disposal
- Using the Threadlocal Execution Strategy
- Working with Raw DBAPI Connections
- Registering New Dialects
- Connection / Engine API- Connection- Connection.__init__()
- Connection.begin()
- Connection.begin_nested()
- Connection.begin_twophase()
- Connection.close()
- Connection.closed
- Connection.connect()
- Connection.connection
- Connection.default_isolation_level
- Connection.detach()
- Connection.execute()
- Connection.execution_options()
- Connection.get_execution_options()
- Connection.get_isolation_level()
- Connection.in_transaction()
- Connection.info
- Connection.invalidate()
- Connection.invalidated
- Connection.run_callable()
- Connection.scalar()
- Connection.schema_for_object
- Connection.transaction()
 
- Connectable
- CreateEnginePlugin
- Engine- Engine.begin()
- Engine.connect()
- Engine.contextual_connect()
- Engine.dispose()
- Engine.driver
- Engine.engine
- Engine.execute()
- Engine.execution_options()
- Engine.get_execution_options()
- Engine.has_table()
- Engine.name
- Engine.raw_connection()
- Engine.run_callable()
- Engine.scalar()
- Engine.schema_for_object
- Engine.table_names()
- Engine.transaction()
- Engine.update_execution_options()
 
- ExceptionContext- ExceptionContext.chained_exception
- ExceptionContext.connection
- ExceptionContext.cursor
- ExceptionContext.engine
- ExceptionContext.execution_context
- ExceptionContext.invalidate_pool_on_disconnect
- ExceptionContext.is_disconnect
- ExceptionContext.original_exception
- ExceptionContext.parameters
- ExceptionContext.sqlalchemy_exception
- ExceptionContext.statement
 
- NestedTransaction
- ResultProxy- ResultProxy.close()
- ResultProxy.fetchall()
- ResultProxy.fetchmany()
- ResultProxy.fetchone()
- ResultProxy.first()
- ResultProxy.inserted_primary_key
- ResultProxy.is_insert
- ResultProxy.keys()
- ResultProxy.last_inserted_params()
- ResultProxy.last_updated_params()
- ResultProxy.lastrow_has_defaults()
- ResultProxy.lastrowid
- ResultProxy.next()
- ResultProxy.postfetch_cols()
- ResultProxy.prefetch_cols()
- ResultProxy.returned_defaults
- ResultProxy.returns_rows
- ResultProxy.rowcount
- ResultProxy.scalar()
- ResultProxy.supports_sane_multi_rowcount()
- ResultProxy.supports_sane_rowcount()
 
- RowProxy
- Transaction
- TwoPhaseTransaction
 
 
Working with Engines and Connections¶
This section details direct usage of the Engine,
Connection, and related objects. Its important to note that when
using the SQLAlchemy ORM, these objects are not generally accessed; instead,
the Session object is used as the interface to the database.
However, for applications that are built around direct usage of textual SQL
statements and/or SQL expression constructs without involvement by the ORM’s
higher level management services, the Engine and
Connection are king (and queen?) - read on.
Basic Usage¶
Recall from Engine Configuration that an Engine is created via
the create_engine() call:
engine = create_engine('mysql://scott:tiger@localhost/test')The typical usage of create_engine() is once per particular database
URL, held globally for the lifetime of a single application process. A single
Engine manages many individual DBAPI connections on behalf of
the process and is intended to be called upon in a concurrent fashion. The
Engine is not synonymous to the DBAPI connect function, which
represents just one connection resource - the Engine is most
efficient when created just once at the module level of an application, not
per-object or per-function call.
The most basic function of the Engine is to provide access to a
Connection, which can then invoke SQL statements.   To emit
a textual statement to the database looks like:
with engine.connect() as connection:
    result = connection.execute("select username from users")
    for row in result:
        print("username:", row['username'])Above, the Engine.connect() method returns a Connection
object, and by using it in a Python context manager (e.g. the with:
statement) the Connection.close() method is automatically invoked at the
end of the block.  The Connection, is a proxy object for an
actual DBAPI connection. The DBAPI connection is retrieved from the connection
pool at the point at which Connection is created.
The object returned is known as ResultProxy, which
references a DBAPI cursor and provides methods for fetching rows
similar to that of the DBAPI cursor.   The DBAPI cursor will be closed
by the ResultProxy when all of its result rows (if any) are
exhausted.  A ResultProxy that returns no rows, such as that of
an UPDATE statement (without any returned rows),
releases cursor resources immediately upon construction.
When the Connection is closed at the end of the with: block, the
referenced DBAPI connection is released to the connection pool.   From
the perspective of the database itself, the connection pool will not actually
“close” the connection assuming the pool has room to store this connection  for
the next use.  When the connection is returned to the pool for re-use, the
pooling mechanism issues a rollback() call on the DBAPI connection so that
any transactional state or locks are removed, and the connection is ready for
its next use.
Our example above illustrated the execution of a textual SQL string.
The Connection.execute() method can of course accommodate more than
that, including the variety of SQL expression constructs described
in SQL Expression Language Tutorial.
Using Transactions¶
Note
This section describes how to use transactions when working directly
with Engine and Connection objects. When using the
SQLAlchemy ORM, the public API for transaction control is via the
Session object, which makes usage of the Transaction
object internally. See Managing Transactions for further
information.
The Connection object provides a Connection.begin()
method which returns a Transaction object.  Like the Connection
itself, this object is usually used within a Python with: block so
that its scope is managed:
with engine.connect() as connection:
    with connection.begin():
        r1 = connection.execute(table1.select())
        connection.execute(table1.insert(), {"col1": 7, "col2": "this is some data"})The above block can be stated more simply by using the Engine.begin()
method of Engine:
# runs a transaction
with engine.begin() as connection:
    r1 = connection.execute(table1.select())
    connection.execute(table1.insert(), {"col1": 7, "col2": "this is some data"})The block managed by each .begin() method has the behavior such that
the transaction is committed when the block completes.   If an exception is
raised, the transaction is instead rolled back, and the exception propagated
outwards.
The underlying object used to represent the transaction is the
Transaction object.  This object is returned by the
Connection.begin() method and includes the methods
Transaction.commit() and Transaction.rollback().   The context
manager calling form, which invokes these methods automatically, is recommended
as a best practice.
Nesting of Transaction Blocks¶
Deprecated since version 1.4: The “transaction nesting” feature of SQLAlchemy is a legacy feature that will be deprecated in the 1.4 release and no longer part of the 2.0 series of SQLAlchemy. The pattern has proven to be a little too awkward and complicated, unless an application makes more of a first-class framework around the behavior. See the following subsection Arbitrary Transaction Nesting as an Antipattern.
The Transaction object also handles “nested” behavior by keeping
track of the outermost begin/commit pair. In this example, two functions both
issue a transaction on a Connection, but only the outermost
Transaction object actually takes effect when it is committed.
# method_a starts a transaction and calls method_b
def method_a(connection):
    with connection.begin():  # open a transaction
        method_b(connection)
# method_b also starts a transaction
def method_b(connection):
    with connection.begin(): # open a transaction - this runs in the
                             # context of method_a's transaction
        connection.execute("insert into mytable values ('bat', 'lala')")
        connection.execute(mytable.insert(), {"col1": "bat", "col2": "lala"})
# open a Connection and call method_a
with engine.connect() as conn:
    method_a(conn)Above, method_a is called first, which calls connection.begin(). Then
it calls method_b. When method_b calls connection.begin(), it just
increments a counter that is decremented when it calls commit(). If either
method_a or method_b calls rollback(), the whole transaction is
rolled back. The transaction is not committed until method_a calls the
commit() method. This “nesting” behavior allows the creation of functions
which “guarantee” that a transaction will be used if one was not already
available, but will automatically participate in an enclosing transaction if
one exists.
Arbitrary Transaction Nesting as an Antipattern¶
With many years of experience, the above “nesting” pattern has not proven to be very popular, and where it has been observed in large projects such as Openstack, it tends to be complicated.
The most ideal way to organize an application would have a single, or at least very few, points at which the “beginning” and “commit” of all database transactions is demarcated. This is also the general idea discussed in terms of the ORM at When do I construct a Session, when do I commit it, and when do I close it?. To adapt the example from the previous section to this practice looks like:
# method_a calls method_b
def method_a(connection):
    method_b(connection)
# method_b uses the connection and assumes the transaction
# is external
def method_b(connection):
    connection.execute(text("insert into mytable values ('bat', 'lala')"))
    connection.execute(mytable.insert(), {"col1": "bat", "col2": "lala"})
# open a Connection inside of a transaction and call method_a
with engine.begin() as conn:
    method_a(conn)That is, method_a() and method_b() do not deal with the details
of the transaction at all; the transactional scope of the connection is
defined externally to the functions that have a SQL dialogue with the
connection.
It may be observed that the above code has fewer lines, and less indentation
which tends to correlate with lower cyclomatic complexity.   The
above code is organized such that method_a() and method_b() are always
invoked from a point at which a transaction is begun.  The previous
version of the example features a method_a() and a method_b() that are
trying to be agnostic of this fact, which suggests they are prepared for
at least twice as many potential codepaths through them.
Migrating from the “nesting” pattern¶
As SQLAlchemy’s intrinsic-nested pattern is considered legacy, an application that for either legacy or novel reasons still seeks to have a context that automatically frames transactions should seek to maintain this functionality through the use of a custom Python context manager. A similar example is also provided in terms of the ORM in the “seealso” section below.
To provide backwards compatibility for applications that make use of this pattern, the following context manager or a similar implementation based on a decorator may be used:
import contextlib
@contextlib.contextmanager
def transaction(connection):
    if not connection.in_transaction():
        with connection.begin():
            yield connection
    else:
        yield connectionThe above contextmanager would be used as:
# method_a starts a transaction and calls method_b
def method_a(connection):
    with transaction(connection):  # open a transaction
        method_b(connection)
# method_b either starts a transaction, or uses the one already
# present
def method_b(connection):
    with transaction(connection):  # open a transaction
        connection.execute(text("insert into mytable values ('bat', 'lala')"))
        connection.execute(mytable.insert(), {"col1": "bat", "col2": "lala"})
# open a Connection and call method_a
with engine.connect() as conn:
    method_a(conn)A similar approach may be taken such that connectivity is established on demand as well; the below approach features a single-use context manager that accesses an enclosing state in order to test if connectivity is already present:
import contextlib
def connectivity(engine):
    connection = None
    @contextlib.contextmanager
    def connect():
        nonlocal connection
        if connection is None:
            connection = engine.connect()
            with connection:
                with connection.begin():
                    yield connection
        else:
            yield connection
    return connectUsing the above would look like:
# method_a passes along connectivity context, at the same time
# it chooses to establish a connection by calling "with"
def method_a(connectivity):
    with connectivity():
        method_b(connectivity)
# method_b also wants to use a connection from the context, so it
# also calls "with:", but also it actually uses the connection.
def method_b(connectivity):
    with connectivity() as connection:
        connection.execute(text("insert into mytable values ('bat', 'lala')"))
        connection.execute(mytable.insert(), {"col1": "bat", "col2": "lala"})
# create a new connection/transaction context object and call
# method_a
method_a(connectivity(engine))The above context manager acts not only as a “transaction” context but also
as a context that manages having an open connection against a particular
Engine.   When using the ORM Session, this
connectivty management is provided by the Session itself.
An overview of ORM connectivity patterns is at Managing Transactions.
See also
Migrating from the “subtransaction” pattern - ORM version
Library Level (e.g. emulated) Autocommit¶
Note
The “autocommit” feature of SQLAlchemy is a legacy feature that will be deprecated in an upcoming release. New usage paradigms will eliminate the need for it to be present.
Note
This section discusses the feature within SQLAlchemy that automatically
invokes the .commit() method on a DBAPI connection, however this is against
a DBAPI connection that is itself transactional.  For true AUTOCOMMIT,
see the next section Setting Transaction Isolation Levels including DBAPI Autocommit.
The previous transaction example illustrates how to use Transaction
so that several executions can take part in the same transaction. What happens
when we issue an INSERT, UPDATE or DELETE call without using
Transaction?  While some DBAPI
implementations provide various special “non-transactional” modes, the core
behavior of DBAPI per PEP-0249 is that a transaction is always in progress,
providing only rollback() and commit() methods but no begin().
SQLAlchemy assumes this is the case for any given DBAPI.
Given this requirement, SQLAlchemy implements its own “autocommit” feature which
works completely consistently across all backends. This is achieved by
detecting statements which represent data-changing operations, i.e. INSERT,
UPDATE, DELETE, as well as data definition language (DDL) statements such as
CREATE TABLE, ALTER TABLE, and then issuing a COMMIT automatically if no
transaction is in progress. The detection is based on the presence of the
autocommit=True execution option on the statement.   If the statement
is a text-only statement and the flag is not set, a regular expression is used
to detect INSERT, UPDATE, DELETE, as well as a variety of other commands
for a particular backend:
conn = engine.connect()
conn.execute("INSERT INTO users VALUES (1, 'john')")  # autocommitsThe “autocommit” feature is only in effect when no Transaction has
otherwise been declared.   This means the feature is not generally used with
the ORM, as the Session object by default always maintains an
ongoing Transaction.
Full control of the “autocommit” behavior is available using the generative
Connection.execution_options() method provided on Connection
and Engine, using the “autocommit” flag which will
turn on or off the autocommit for the selected scope. For example, a
text() construct representing a stored procedure that commits might use
it so that a SELECT statement will issue a COMMIT:
with engine.connect().execution_options(autocommit=True) as conn:
    conn.execute(text("SELECT my_mutating_procedure()"))Setting Transaction Isolation Levels including DBAPI Autocommit¶
Most DBAPIs support the concept of configurable transaction isolation levels. These are traditionally the four levels “READ UNCOMMITTED”, “READ COMMITTED”, “REPEATABLE READ” and “SERIALIZABLE”. These are usually applied to a DBAPI connection before it begins a new transaction, noting that most DBAPIs will begin this transaction implicitly when SQL statements are first emitted.
DBAPIs that support isolation levels also usually support the concept of true
“autocommit”, which means that the DBAPI connection itself will be placed into
a non-transactional autocommit mode.   This usually means that the typical
DBAPI behavior of emitting “BEGIN” to the database automatically no longer
occurs, but it may also include other directives.   When using this mode,
the DBAPI does not use a transaction under any circumstances.  SQLAlchemy
methods like .begin(), .commit() and .rollback() pass silently
and have no effect.
Instead, each statement invoked upon the connection will commit any changes automatically; it sometimes also means that the connection itself will use fewer server-side database resources. For this reason and others, “autocommit” mode is often desirable for non-transactional applications that need to read individual tables or rows outside the scope of a true ACID transaction.
SQLAlchemy dialects should support these isolation levels as well as autocommit
to as great a degree as possible.   The levels are set via family of
“execution_options” parameters and methods that are throughout the Core, such
as the Connection.execution_options() method.   The parameter is
known as Connection.execution_options.isolation_level and
the values are strings which are typically a subset of the following names:
# possible values for Connection.execution_options(isolation_level="<value>")
"AUTOCOMMIT"
"READ COMMITTED"
"READ UNCOMMITTED"
"REPEATABLE READ"
"SERIALIZABLE"Not every DBAPI supports every value; if an unsupported value is used for a certain backend, an error is raised.
For example, to force REPEATABLE READ on a specific connection, then begin a transaction:
with engine.connect().execution_options(isolation_level="REPEATABLE READ") as connection:
    with connection.begin():
        connection.execute(<statement>)The Connection.execution_options.isolation_level option may
also be set engine wide, as is often preferable.  This is achieved by
passing it within the create_engine.execution_options
parameter to create_engine():
from sqlalchemy import create_engine
eng = create_engine(
    "postgresql://scott:tiger@localhost/test",
    execution_options={
        "isolation_level": "REPEATABLE READ"
    }
)With the above setting, the DBAPI connection will be set to use a
"REPEATABLE READ" isolation level setting for each new transaction
begun.
An application that frequently chooses to run operations within different
isolation levels may wish to create multiple “sub-engines” of a lead
Engine, each of which will be configured to a different
isolation level.  One such use case is an application that has operations
that break into “transactional” and “read-only” operations, a separate
Engine that makes use of "AUTOCOMMIT" may be
separated off from the main engine:
from sqlalchemy import create_engine
eng = create_engine("postgresql://scott:tiger@localhost/test")
autocommit_engine = eng.execution_options(isolation_level="AUTOCOMMIT")Above, the Engine.execution_options() method creates a shallow
copy of the original Engine.  Both eng and
autocommit_engine share the same dialect and connection pool.  However, the
“AUTOCOMMIT” mode will be set upon connections when they are acquired from the
autocommit_engine.
The isolation level setting, regardless of which one it is, is unconditionally reverted when a connection is returned to the connection pool.
Note
The Connection.execution_options.isolation_level
parameter necessarily does not apply to statement level options, such as
that of Executable.execution_options().  This because the option
must be set on a DBAPI connection on a per-transaction basis.
Connectionless Execution, Implicit Execution¶
Note
“Connectionless” and “implicit” execution are legacy SQLAlchemy features that will be deprecated in an upcoming release.
Recall from the first section we mentioned executing with and without explicit
usage of Connection. “Connectionless” execution
refers to the usage of the execute() method on an object which is not a
Connection.  This was illustrated using the
Engine.execute() method of Engine:
result = engine.execute("select username from users")
for row in result:
    print("username:", row['username'])In addition to “connectionless” execution, it is also possible
to use the Executable.execute() method of
any Executable construct, which is a marker for SQL expression objects
that support execution.   The SQL expression object itself references an
Engine or Connection known as the bind, which it uses
in order to provide so-called “implicit” execution services.
Given a table as below:
from sqlalchemy import MetaData, Table, Column, Integer
meta = MetaData()
users_table = Table('users', meta,
    Column('id', Integer, primary_key=True),
    Column('name', String(50))
)Explicit execution delivers the SQL text or constructed SQL expression to the
Connection.execute() method of Connection:
engine = create_engine('sqlite:///file.db')
with engine.connect() as connection:
    result = connection.execute(users_table.select())
    for row in result:
        # ....Explicit, connectionless execution delivers the expression to the
Engine.execute() method of Engine:
engine = create_engine('sqlite:///file.db')
result = engine.execute(users_table.select())
for row in result:
    # ....
result.close()Implicit execution is also connectionless, and makes usage of the Executable.execute() method
on the expression itself.   This method is provided as part of the
Executable class, which refers to a SQL statement that is sufficient
for being invoked against the database.    The method makes usage of
the assumption that either an
Engine or
Connection has been bound to the expression
object.   By “bound” we mean that the special attribute MetaData.bind
has been used to associate a series of
Table objects and all SQL constructs derived from them with a specific
engine:
engine = create_engine('sqlite:///file.db')
meta.bind = engine
result = users_table.select().execute()
for row in result:
    # ....
result.close()Above, we associate an Engine with a MetaData object using
the special attribute MetaData.bind.  The select() construct produced
from the Table object has a method Executable.execute(), which will
search for an Engine that’s “bound” to the Table.
Overall, the usage of “bound metadata” has three general effects:
- SQL statement objects gain an - Executable.execute()method which automatically locates a “bind” with which to execute themselves.
- The ORM - Sessionobject supports using “bound metadata” in order to establish which- Engineshould be used to invoke SQL statements on behalf of a particular mapped class, though the- Sessionalso features its own explicit system of establishing complex- Engine/ mapped class configurations.
- The - MetaData.create_all(),- MetaData.drop_all(),- Table.create(),- Table.drop(), and “autoload” features all make usage of the bound- Engineautomatically without the need to pass it explicitly.
Note
The concepts of “bound metadata” and “implicit execution” are not emphasized in modern SQLAlchemy. While they offer some convenience, they are no longer required by any API and are never necessary.
In applications where multiple Engine objects are present, each one logically associated
with a certain set of tables (i.e. vertical sharding), the “bound metadata” technique can be used
so that individual Table can refer to the appropriate Engine automatically;
in particular this is supported within the ORM via the Session object
as a means to associate Table objects with an appropriate Engine,
as an alternative to using the bind arguments accepted directly by the Session.
However, the “implicit execution” technique is not at all appropriate for use with the
ORM, as it bypasses the transactional context maintained by the Session.
Overall, in the vast majority of cases, “bound metadata” and “implicit execution” are not useful. While “bound metadata” has a marginal level of usefulness with regards to ORM configuration, “implicit execution” is a very old usage pattern that in most cases is more confusing than it is helpful, and its usage is discouraged. Both patterns seem to encourage the overuse of expedient “short cuts” in application design which lead to problems later on.
Modern SQLAlchemy usage, especially the ORM, places a heavy stress on working within the context
of a transaction at all times; the “implicit execution” concept makes the job of
associating statement execution with a particular transaction much more difficult.
The Executable.execute() method on a particular SQL statement
usually implies that the execution is not part of any particular transaction, which is
usually not the desired effect.
In both “connectionless” examples, the
Connection is created behind the scenes; the
ResultProxy returned by the execute()
call references the Connection used to issue
the SQL statement. When the ResultProxy is closed, the underlying
Connection is closed for us, resulting in the
DBAPI connection being returned to the pool with transactional resources removed.
Translation of Schema Names¶
To support multi-tenancy applications that distribute common sets of tables
into multiple schemas, the
Connection.execution_options.schema_translate_map
execution option may be used to repurpose a set of Table objects
to render under different schema names without any changes.
Given a table:
user_table = Table(
    'user', metadata,
    Column('id', Integer, primary_key=True),
    Column('name', String(50))
)The “schema” of this Table as defined by the
Table.schema attribute is None.  The
Connection.execution_options.schema_translate_map can specify
that all Table objects with a schema of None would instead
render the schema as user_schema_one:
connection = engine.connect().execution_options(
    schema_translate_map={None: "user_schema_one"})
result = connection.execute(user_table.select())The above code will invoke SQL on the database of the form:
SELECT user_schema_one.user.id, user_schema_one.user.name FROM
user_schema_one.userThat is, the schema name is substituted with our translated name. The map can specify any number of target->destination schemas:
connection = engine.connect().execution_options(
    schema_translate_map={
        None: "user_schema_one",     # no schema name -> "user_schema_one"
        "special": "special_schema", # schema="special" becomes "special_schema"
        "public": None               # Table objects with schema="public" will render with no schema
    })The Connection.execution_options.schema_translate_map parameter
affects all DDL and SQL constructs generated from the SQL expression language,
as derived from the Table or Sequence objects.
It does not impact literal string SQL used via the text()
construct nor via plain strings passed to Connection.execute().
The feature takes effect only in those cases where the name of the
schema is derived directly from that of a Table or Sequence;
it does not impact methods where a string schema name is passed directly.
By this pattern, it takes effect within the “can create” / “can drop” checks
performed by methods such as MetaData.create_all() or
MetaData.drop_all() are called, and it takes effect when
using table reflection given a Table object.  However it does
not affect the operations present on the Inspector object,
as the schema name is passed to these methods explicitly.
Tip
To use the schema translation feature with the ORM Session,
set this option at the level of the Engine, then pass that engine
to the Session.  The Session uses a new
Connection for each transaction:
schema_engine = engine.execution_options(schema_translate_map = { ... } )
session = Session(schema_engine)
...Added in version 1.1.
Engine Disposal¶
The Engine refers to a connection pool, which means under normal
circumstances, there are open database connections present while the
Engine object is still resident in memory.   When an Engine
is garbage collected, its connection pool is no longer referred to by
that Engine, and assuming none of its connections are still checked
out, the pool and its connections will also be garbage collected, which has the
effect of closing out the actual database connections as well.   But otherwise,
the Engine will hold onto open database connections assuming
it uses the normally default pool implementation of QueuePool.
The Engine is intended to normally be a permanent
fixture established up-front and maintained throughout the lifespan of an
application.  It is not intended to be created and disposed on a
per-connection basis; it is instead a registry that maintains both a pool
of connections as well as configurational information about the database
and DBAPI in use, as well as some degree of internal caching of per-database
resources.
However, there are many cases where it is desirable that all connection resources
referred to by the Engine be completely closed out.  It’s
generally not a good idea to rely on Python garbage collection for this
to occur for these cases; instead, the Engine can be explicitly disposed using
the Engine.dispose() method.   This disposes of the engine’s
underlying connection pool and replaces it with a new one that’s empty.
Provided that the Engine
is discarded at this point and no longer used, all checked-in connections
which it refers to will also be fully closed.
Valid use cases for calling Engine.dispose() include:
- When a program wants to release any remaining checked-in connections held by the connection pool and expects to no longer be connected to that database at all for any future operations. 
- When a program uses multiprocessing or - fork(), and an- Engineobject is copied to the child process,- Engine.dispose()should be called so that the engine creates brand new database connections local to that fork. Database connections generally do not travel across process boundaries.
- Within test suites or multitenancy scenarios where many ad-hoc, short-lived - Engineobjects may be created and disposed.
Connections that are checked out are not discarded when the
engine is disposed or garbage collected, as these connections are still
strongly referenced elsewhere by the application.
However, after Engine.dispose() is called, those
connections are no longer associated with that Engine; when they
are closed, they will be returned to their now-orphaned connection pool
which will ultimately be garbage collected, once all connections which refer
to it are also no longer referenced anywhere.
Since this process is not easy to control, it is strongly recommended that
Engine.dispose() is called only after all checked out connections
are checked in or otherwise de-associated from their pool.
An alternative for applications that are negatively impacted by the
Engine object’s use of connection pooling is to disable pooling
entirely.  This typically incurs only a modest performance impact upon the
use of new connections, and means that when a connection is checked in,
it is entirely closed out and is not held in memory.  See Switching Pool Implementations
for guidelines on how to disable pooling.
Using the Threadlocal Execution Strategy¶
The “threadlocal” engine strategy is an optional feature which
can be used by non-ORM applications to associate transactions
with the current thread, such that all parts of the
application can participate in that transaction implicitly without the need to
explicitly reference a Connection.
Deprecated since version 1.3: The “threadlocal” engine strategy is deprecated, and will be removed in a future release.
This strategy is designed for a particular pattern of usage which is
generally considered as a legacy pattern.  It has no impact on the
“thread safety” of SQLAlchemy components or one’s application. It also
should not be used when using an ORM
Session object, as the
Session itself represents an ongoing
transaction and itself handles the job of maintaining connection and
transactional resources.
Enabling threadlocal is achieved as follows:
db = create_engine('mysql://localhost/test', strategy='threadlocal')The above Engine will now acquire a Connection using
connection resources derived from a thread-local variable whenever
Engine.execute() or Engine.contextual_connect() is called. This
connection resource is maintained as long as it is referenced, which allows
multiple points of an application to share a transaction while using
connectionless execution:
def call_operation1():
    engine.execute("insert into users values (?, ?)", 1, "john")
def call_operation2():
    users.update(users.c.user_id==5).execute(name='ed')
db.begin()
try:
    call_operation1()
    call_operation2()
    db.commit()
except:
    db.rollback()Explicit execution can be mixed with connectionless execution by
using the Engine.connect() method to acquire a Connection
that is not part of the threadlocal scope:
db.begin()
conn = db.connect()
try:
    conn.execute(log_table.insert(), message="Operation started")
    call_operation1()
    call_operation2()
    db.commit()
    conn.execute(log_table.insert(), message="Operation succeeded")
except:
    db.rollback()
    conn.execute(log_table.insert(), message="Operation failed")
finally:
    conn.close()To access the Connection that is bound to the threadlocal scope,
call Engine.contextual_connect():
conn = db.contextual_connect()
call_operation3(conn)
conn.close()Calling Connection.close() on the “contextual” connection does not release
its resources until all other usages of that resource are closed as well, including
that any ongoing transactions are rolled back or committed.
Working with Raw DBAPI Connections¶
There are some cases where SQLAlchemy does not provide a genericized way at accessing some DBAPI functions, such as calling stored procedures as well as dealing with multiple result sets. In these cases, it’s just as expedient to deal with the raw DBAPI connection directly.
The most common way to access the raw DBAPI connection is to get it
from an already present Connection object directly.  It is
present using the Connection.connection attribute:
connection = engine.connect()
dbapi_conn = connection.connectionThe DBAPI connection here is actually a “proxied” in terms of the
originating connection pool, however this is an implementation detail
that in most cases can be ignored.    As this DBAPI connection is still
contained within the scope of an owning Connection object, it is
best to make use of the Connection object for most features such
as transaction control as well as calling the Connection.close()
method; if these operations are performed on the DBAPI connection directly,
the owning Connection will not be aware of these changes in state.
To overcome the limitations imposed by the DBAPI connection that is
maintained by an owning Connection, a DBAPI connection is also
available without the need to procure a
Connection first, using the Engine.raw_connection() method
of Engine:
dbapi_conn = engine.raw_connection()This DBAPI connection is again a “proxied” form as was the case before.
The purpose of this proxying is now apparent, as when we call the .close()
method of this connection, the DBAPI connection is typically not actually
closed, but instead released back to the
engine’s connection pool:
dbapi_conn.close()While SQLAlchemy may in the future add built-in patterns for more DBAPI use cases, there are diminishing returns as these cases tend to be rarely needed and they also vary highly dependent on the type of DBAPI in use, so in any case the direct DBAPI calling pattern is always there for those cases where it is needed.
Some recipes for DBAPI connection use follow.
Calling Stored Procedures¶
For stored procedures with special syntactical or parameter concerns, DBAPI-level callproc may be used:
connection = engine.raw_connection()
try:
    cursor = connection.cursor()
    cursor.callproc("my_procedure", ['x', 'y', 'z'])
    results = list(cursor.fetchall())
    cursor.close()
    connection.commit()
finally:
    connection.close()Multiple Result Sets¶
Multiple result set support is available from a raw DBAPI cursor using the nextset method:
connection = engine.raw_connection()
try:
    cursor = connection.cursor()
    cursor.execute("select * from table1; select * from table2")
    results_one = cursor.fetchall()
    cursor.nextset()
    results_two = cursor.fetchall()
    cursor.close()
finally:
    connection.close()Registering New Dialects¶
The create_engine() function call locates the given dialect
using setuptools entrypoints.   These entry points can be established
for third party dialects within the setup.py script.  For example,
to create a new dialect “foodialect://”, the steps are as follows:
- Create a package called - foodialect.
- The package should have a module containing the dialect class, which is typically a subclass of - sqlalchemy.engine.default.DefaultDialect. In this example let’s say it’s called- FooDialectand its module is accessed via- foodialect.dialect.
- The entry point can be established in setup.py as follows: - entry_points=""" [sqlalchemy.dialects] foodialect = foodialect.dialect:FooDialect """ 
If the dialect is providing support for a particular DBAPI on top of
an existing SQLAlchemy-supported database, the name can be given
including a database-qualification.  For example, if FooDialect
were in fact a MySQL dialect, the entry point could be established like this:
entry_points="""
[sqlalchemy.dialects]
mysql.foodialect = foodialect.dialect:FooDialect
"""The above entrypoint would then be accessed as create_engine("mysql+foodialect://").
Registering Dialects In-Process¶
SQLAlchemy also allows a dialect to be registered within the current process, bypassing
the need for separate installation.   Use the register() function as follows:
from sqlalchemy.dialects import registry
registry.register("mysql.foodialect", "myapp.dialect", "MyMySQLDialect")The above will respond to create_engine("mysql+foodialect://") and load the
MyMySQLDialect class from the myapp.dialect module.
Connection / Engine API¶
| Object Name | Description | 
|---|---|
| Interface for an object which supports execution of SQL constructs. | |
| Provides high-level functionality for a wrapped DB-API connection. | |
| A set of hooks intended to augment the construction of an
 | |
| Connects a  | |
| Encapsulate information about an error condition in progress. | |
| Represent a ‘nested’, or SAVEPOINT transaction. | |
| A facade around a DBAPI cursor object. | |
| Represent a single result row. | |
| Represent a database transaction in progress. | |
| Represent a two-phase transaction. | 
- class sqlalchemy.engine.Connection(engine, connection=None, close_with_result=False, _branch_from=None, _execution_options=None, _dispatch=None, _has_events=None)¶
- Provides high-level functionality for a wrapped DB-API connection. - Provides execution support for string-based SQL statements as well as - ClauseElement,- Compiledand- DefaultGeneratorobjects. Provides a- begin()method to return- Transactionobjects.- The Connection object is not thread-safe. While a Connection can be shared among threads using properly synchronized access, it is still possible that the underlying DBAPI connection may not support shared access between threads. Check the DBAPI documentation for details. - Members - __init__(), begin(), begin_nested(), begin_twophase(), close(), closed, connect(), connection, default_isolation_level, detach(), execute(), execution_options(), get_execution_options(), get_isolation_level(), in_transaction(), info, invalidate(), invalidated, run_callable(), scalar(), schema_for_object, transaction() - The Connection object represents a single DBAPI connection checked out from the connection pool. In this state, the connection pool has no affect upon the connection, including its expiration or timeout state. For the connection pool to properly manage connections, connections should be returned to the connection pool (i.e. - connection.close()) whenever the connection is not in use.- Class signature - class - sqlalchemy.engine.Connection(- sqlalchemy.engine.Connectable)- 
method sqlalchemy.engine.Connection.__init__(engine, connection=None, close_with_result=False, _branch_from=None, _execution_options=None, _dispatch=None, _has_events=None)¶
- Construct a new Connection. - The constructor here is not public and is only called only by an - Engine. See- Engine.connect()and- Engine.contextual_connect()methods.
 - 
method sqlalchemy.engine.Connection.begin()¶
- Begin a transaction and return a transaction handle. - The returned object is an instance of - Transaction. This object represents the “scope” of the transaction, which completes when either the- Transaction.rollback()or- Transaction.commit()method is called.- Nested calls to - begin()on the same- Connectionwill return new- Transactionobjects that represent an emulated transaction within the scope of the enclosing transaction, that is:- trans = conn.begin() # outermost transaction trans2 = conn.begin() # "nested" trans2.commit() # does nothing trans.commit() # actually commits - Calls to - Transaction.commit()only have an effect when invoked via the outermost- Transactionobject, though the- Transaction.rollback()method of any of the- Transactionobjects will roll back the transaction.- See also - Connection.begin_nested()- use a SAVEPOINT- Connection.begin_twophase()- use a two phase /XID transaction- Engine.begin()- context manager available from- Engine
 - 
method sqlalchemy.engine.Connection.begin_nested()¶
- Begin a nested transaction and return a transaction handle. - The returned object is an instance of - NestedTransaction.- Nested transactions require SAVEPOINT support in the underlying database. Any transaction in the hierarchy may - commitand- rollback, however the outermost transaction still controls the overall- commitor- rollbackof the transaction of a whole.
 - 
method sqlalchemy.engine.Connection.begin_twophase(xid=None)¶
- Begin a two-phase or XA transaction and return a transaction handle. - The returned object is an instance of - TwoPhaseTransaction, which in addition to the methods provided by- Transaction, also provides a- TwoPhaseTransaction.prepare()method.- Parameters:
- xid¶ – the two phase transaction id. If not supplied, a random id will be generated. 
 
 - 
method sqlalchemy.engine.Connection.close()¶
- Close this - Connection.- This results in a release of the underlying database resources, that is, the DBAPI connection referenced internally. The DBAPI connection is typically restored back to the connection-holding - Poolreferenced by the- Enginethat produced this- Connection. Any transactional state present on the DBAPI connection is also unconditionally released via the DBAPI connection’s- rollback()method, regardless of any- Transactionobject that may be outstanding with regards to this- Connection.- After - Connection.close()is called, the- Connectionis permanently in a closed state, and will allow no further operations.
 - 
attribute sqlalchemy.engine.Connection.closed¶
- Return True if this connection is closed. 
 - 
method sqlalchemy.engine.Connection.connect()¶
- Returns a branched version of this - Connection.- The - Connection.close()method on the returned- Connectioncan be called and this- Connectionwill remain open.- This method provides usage symmetry with - Engine.connect(), including for usage with context managers.
 - 
attribute sqlalchemy.engine.Connection.connection¶
- The underlying DB-API connection managed by this Connection. - See also 
 - 
attribute sqlalchemy.engine.Connection.default_isolation_level¶
- The default isolation level assigned to this - Connection.- This is the isolation level setting that the - Connectionhas when first procured via the- Engine.connect()method. This level stays in place until the- Connection.execution_options.isolation_levelis used to change the setting on a per-- Connectionbasis.- Unlike - Connection.get_isolation_level(), this attribute is set ahead of time from the first connection procured by the dialect, so SQL query is not invoked when this accessor is called.- Added in version 0.9.9. - See also - Connection.get_isolation_level()- view current level- create_engine.isolation_level- set per- Engineisolation level- Connection.execution_options.isolation_level- set per- Connectionisolation level
 - 
method sqlalchemy.engine.Connection.detach()¶
- Detach the underlying DB-API connection from its connection pool. - E.g.: - with engine.connect() as conn: conn.detach() conn.execute("SET search_path TO schema1, schema2") # work with connection # connection is fully closed (since we used "with:", can # also call .close()) - This - Connectioninstance will remain usable. When closed (or exited from a context manager context as above), the DB-API connection will be literally closed and not returned to its originating pool.- This method can be used to insulate the rest of an application from a modified state on a connection (such as a transaction isolation level or similar). 
 - 
method sqlalchemy.engine.Connection.execute(object_, *multiparams, **params)¶
- Executes a SQL statement construct and returns a - ResultProxy.- Parameters:
- object¶ – - The statement to be executed. May be one of: - a plain string 
- any - ClauseElementconstruct that is also a subclass of- Executable, such as a- select()construct
- a - FunctionElement, such as that generated by- func, will be automatically wrapped in a SELECT statement, which is then executed.
- a - DDLElementobject
- a - DefaultGeneratorobject
- a - Compiledobject
 
- *multiparams/**params¶ – - represent bound parameter values to be used in the execution. Typically, the format is either a collection of one or more dictionaries passed to *multiparams: - conn.execute( table.insert(), {"id":1, "value":"v1"}, {"id":2, "value":"v2"} ) - …or individual key/values interpreted by **params: - conn.execute( table.insert(), id=1, value="v1" ) - In the case that a plain SQL string is passed, and the underlying DBAPI accepts positional bind parameters, a collection of tuples or individual values in *multiparams may be passed: - conn.execute( "INSERT INTO table (id, value) VALUES (?, ?)", (1, "v1"), (2, "v2") ) conn.execute( "INSERT INTO table (id, value) VALUES (?, ?)", 1, "v1" ) - Note above, the usage of a question mark “?” or other symbol is contingent upon the “paramstyle” accepted by the DBAPI in use, which may be any of “qmark”, “named”, “pyformat”, “format”, “numeric”. See pep-249 for details on paramstyle. - To execute a textual SQL statement which uses bound parameters in a DBAPI-agnostic way, use the - text()construct.
 
 
 - 
method sqlalchemy.engine.Connection.execution_options(**opt)¶
- Set non-SQL options for the connection which take effect during execution. - The method returns a copy of this - Connectionwhich references the same underlying DBAPI connection, but also defines the given execution options which will take effect for a call to- execute(). As the new- Connectionreferences the same underlying resource, it’s usually a good idea to ensure that the copies will be discarded immediately, which is implicit if used as in:- result = connection.execution_options(stream_results=True).\ execute(stmt) - Note that any key/value can be passed to - Connection.execution_options(), and it will be stored in the- _execution_optionsdictionary of the- Connection. It is suitable for usage by end-user schemes to communicate with event listeners, for example.- The keywords that are currently recognized by SQLAlchemy itself include all those listed under - Executable.execution_options(), as well as others that are specific to- Connection.- Parameters:
- autocommit¶ – - Available on: Connection, statement. When True, a COMMIT will be invoked after execution when executed in ‘autocommit’ mode, i.e. when an explicit transaction is not begun on the connection. Note that this is library level, not DBAPI level autocommit. The DBAPI connection will remain in a real transaction unless the “AUTOCOMMIT” isolation level is used. - Deprecated since version 1.4: The library-level “autocommit” feature is being removed in favor of database driver “autocommit” which is now widely available. See the section Setting Transaction Isolation Levels including DBAPI Autocommit. 
- compiled_cache¶ – - Available on: Connection. A dictionary where - Compiledobjects will be cached when the- Connectioncompiles a clause expression into a- Compiledobject. It is the user’s responsibility to manage the size of this dictionary, which will have keys corresponding to the dialect, clause element, the column names within the VALUES or SET clause of an INSERT or UPDATE, as well as the “batch” mode for an INSERT or UPDATE statement. The format of this dictionary is not guaranteed to stay the same in future releases.- Note that the ORM makes use of its own “compiled” caches for some operations, including flush operations. The caching used by the ORM internally supersedes a cache dictionary specified here. 
- isolation_level¶ – - Available on: - Connection.- Set the transaction isolation level for the lifespan of this - Connectionobject. Valid values include those string values accepted by the- create_engine.isolation_levelparameter passed to- create_engine(). These levels are semi-database specific; see individual dialect documentation for valid levels.- The isolation level option applies the isolation level by emitting statements on the DBAPI connection, and necessarily affects the original Connection object overall, not just the copy that is returned by the call to - Connection.execution_options()method. The isolation level will remain at the given setting until the DBAPI connection itself is returned to the connection pool, i.e. the- Connection.close()method on the original- Connectionis called, where an event handler will emit additional statements on the DBAPI connection in order to revert the isolation level change.- Warning - The - isolation_levelexecution option should not be used when a transaction is already established, that is, the- Connection.begin()method or similar has been called. A database cannot change the isolation level on a transaction in progress, and different DBAPIs and/or SQLAlchemy dialects may implicitly roll back or commit the transaction, or not affect the connection at all.- Note - The - isolation_levelexecution option is implicitly reset if the- Connectionis invalidated, e.g. via the- Connection.invalidate()method, or if a disconnection error occurs. The new connection produced after the invalidation will not have the isolation level re-applied to it automatically.- See also - create_engine.isolation_level- set per- Engineisolation level- Connection.get_isolation_level()- view current level- PostgreSQL Transaction Isolation - SQL Server Transaction Isolation - Setting Transaction Isolation Levels / DBAPI AUTOCOMMIT - for the ORM 
- no_parameters¶ – When - True, if the final parameter list or dictionary is totally empty, will invoke the statement on the cursor as- cursor.execute(statement), not passing the parameter collection at all. Some DBAPIs such as psycopg2 and mysql-python consider percent signs as significant only when parameters are present; this option allows code to generate SQL containing percent signs (and possibly other characters) that is neutral regarding whether it’s executed by the DBAPI or piped into a script that’s later invoked by command line tools.
- stream_results¶ – Available on: Connection, statement. Indicate to the dialect that results should be “streamed” and not pre-buffered, if possible. This is a limitation of many DBAPIs. The flag is currently understood only by the psycopg2, mysqldb and pymysql dialects. 
- schema_translate_map¶ – - Available on: Connection, Engine. A dictionary mapping schema names to schema names, that will be applied to the - Table.schemaelement of each- Tableencountered when SQL or DDL expression elements are compiled into strings; the resulting schema name will be converted based on presence in the map of the original name.- Added in version 1.1. - See also 
 
 
 - 
method sqlalchemy.engine.Connection.get_execution_options()¶
- Get the non-SQL options which will take effect during execution. - Added in version 1.3. - See also 
 - 
method sqlalchemy.engine.Connection.get_isolation_level()¶
- Return the current isolation level assigned to this - Connection.- This will typically be the default isolation level as determined by the dialect, unless if the - Connection.execution_options.isolation_levelfeature has been used to alter the isolation level on a per-- Connectionbasis.- This attribute will typically perform a live SQL operation in order to procure the current isolation level, so the value returned is the actual level on the underlying DBAPI connection regardless of how this state was set. Compare to the - Connection.default_isolation_levelaccessor which returns the dialect-level setting without performing a SQL query.- Added in version 0.9.9. - See also - Connection.default_isolation_level- view default level- create_engine.isolation_level- set per- Engineisolation level- Connection.execution_options.isolation_level- set per- Connectionisolation level
 - 
method sqlalchemy.engine.Connection.in_transaction()¶
- Return True if a transaction is in progress. 
 - 
attribute sqlalchemy.engine.Connection.info¶
- Info dictionary associated with the underlying DBAPI connection referred to by this - Connection, allowing user-defined data to be associated with the connection.- The data here will follow along with the DBAPI connection including after it is returned to the connection pool and used again in subsequent instances of - Connection.
 - 
method sqlalchemy.engine.Connection.invalidate(exception=None)¶
- Invalidate the underlying DBAPI connection associated with this - Connection.- The underlying DBAPI connection is literally closed (if possible), and is discarded. Its source connection pool will typically lazily create a new connection to replace it. - Upon the next use (where “use” typically means using the - Connection.execute()method or similar), this- Connectionwill attempt to procure a new DBAPI connection using the services of the- Poolas a source of connectivity (e.g. a “reconnection”).- If a transaction was in progress (e.g. the - Connection.begin()method has been called) when- Connection.invalidate()method is called, at the DBAPI level all state associated with this transaction is lost, as the DBAPI connection is closed. The- Connectionwill not allow a reconnection to proceed until the- Transactionobject is ended, by calling the- Transaction.rollback()method; until that point, any attempt at continuing to use the- Connectionwill raise an- InvalidRequestError. This is to prevent applications from accidentally continuing an ongoing transactional operations despite the fact that the transaction has been lost due to an invalidation.- The - Connection.invalidate()method, just like auto-invalidation, will at the connection pool level invoke the- PoolEvents.invalidate()event.- See also 
 - 
attribute sqlalchemy.engine.Connection.invalidated¶
- Return True if this connection was invalidated. 
 - 
method sqlalchemy.engine.Connection.run_callable(callable_, *args, **kwargs)¶
- Given a callable object or function, execute it, passing a - Connectionas the first argument.- The given *args and **kwargs are passed subsequent to the - Connectionargument.- This function, along with - Engine.run_callable(), allows a function to be run with a- Connectionor- Engineobject without the need to know which one is being dealt with.
 - 
method sqlalchemy.engine.Connection.scalar(object_, *multiparams, **params)¶
- Executes and returns the first column of the first row. - The underlying result/cursor is closed after execution. 
 - 
attribute sqlalchemy.engine.Connection.schema_for_object = <sqlalchemy.sql.schema._SchemaTranslateMap object>¶
- Return the “.schema” attribute for an object. - Used for - Table,- Sequenceand similar objects, and takes into account the- Connection.execution_options.schema_translate_mapparameter.- Added in version 1.1. - See also 
 - 
method sqlalchemy.engine.Connection.transaction(callable_, *args, **kwargs)¶
- Execute the given function within a transaction boundary. - The function is passed this - Connectionas the first argument, followed by the given *args and **kwargs, e.g.:- def do_something(conn, x, y): conn.execute("some statement", {'x':x, 'y':y}) conn.transaction(do_something, 5, 10) - The operations inside the function are all invoked within the context of a single - Transaction. Upon success, the transaction is committed. If an exception is raised, the transaction is rolled back before propagating the exception.- Note - The - transaction()method is superseded by the usage of the Python- with:statement, which can be used with- Connection.begin():- with conn.begin(): conn.execute("some statement", {'x':5, 'y':10}) - As well as with - Engine.begin():- with engine.begin() as conn: conn.execute("some statement", {'x':5, 'y':10}) - See also - Engine.begin()- engine-level transactional context- Engine.transaction()- engine-level version of- Connection.transaction()
 
- 
method 
- class sqlalchemy.engine.Connectable¶
- Interface for an object which supports execution of SQL constructs. - The two implementations of - Connectableare- Connectionand- Engine.- Connectable must also implement the ‘dialect’ member which references a - Dialectinstance.- 
method sqlalchemy.engine.Connectable.connect(**kwargs)¶
- Return a - Connectionobject.- Depending on context, this may be - selfif this object is already an instance of- Connection, or a newly procured- Connectionif this object is an instance of- Engine.
 - 
method sqlalchemy.engine.Connectable.contextual_connect(*arg, **kw)¶
- Return a - Connectionobject which may be part of an ongoing context.- Deprecated since version 1.3: The - Engine.contextual_connect()and- Connection.contextual_connect()methods are deprecated. This method is an artifact of the threadlocal engine strategy which is also to be deprecated. For explicit connections from an- Engine, use the- Engine.connect()method.- Depending on context, this may be - selfif this object is already an instance of- Connection, or a newly procured- Connectionif this object is an instance of- Engine.
 - 
method sqlalchemy.engine.Connectable.create(entity, **kwargs)¶
- Emit CREATE statements for the given schema entity. - Deprecated since version 0.7: The - Connectable.create()method is deprecated and will be removed in a future release. Please use the- .create()method on specific schema objects to emit DDL sequences, including- Table.create(),- Index.create(), and- MetaData.create_all().
 - 
method sqlalchemy.engine.Connectable.drop(entity, **kwargs)¶
- Emit DROP statements for the given schema entity. - Deprecated since version 0.7: The - Connectable.drop()method is deprecated and will be removed in a future release. Please use the- .drop()method on specific schema objects to emit DDL sequences, including- Table.drop(),- Index.drop(), and- MetaData.drop_all().
 - 
attribute sqlalchemy.engine.Connectable.engine = None¶
- The - Engineinstance referred to by this- Connectable.- May be - selfif this is already an- Engine.
 - 
method sqlalchemy.engine.Connectable.execute(object_, *multiparams, **params)¶
- Executes the given construct and returns a 
 - 
method sqlalchemy.engine.Connectable.scalar(object_, *multiparams, **params)¶
- Executes and returns the first column of the first row. - The underlying cursor is closed after execution. 
 
- 
method 
- class sqlalchemy.engine.CreateEnginePlugin(url, kwargs)¶
- A set of hooks intended to augment the construction of an - Engineobject based on entrypoint names in a URL.- The purpose of - CreateEnginePluginis to allow third-party systems to apply engine, pool and dialect level event listeners without the need for the target application to be modified; instead, the plugin names can be added to the database URL. Target applications for- CreateEnginePlugininclude:- connection and SQL performance tools, e.g. which use events to track number of checkouts and/or time spent with statements 
- connectivity plugins such as proxies 
 - Plugins are registered using entry points in a similar way as that of dialects: - entry_points={ 'sqlalchemy.plugins': [ 'myplugin = myapp.plugins:MyPlugin' ] - A plugin that uses the above names would be invoked from a database URL as in: - from sqlalchemy import create_engine engine = create_engine( "mysql+pymysql://scott:tiger@localhost/test?plugin=myplugin") - Alternatively, the - plugins" argument may be passed as a list to :func:`_sa.create_engine:- engine = create_engine( "mysql+pymysql://scott:tiger@localhost/test", plugins=["myplugin"]) - Added in version 1.2.3: plugin names can also be specified to - create_engine()as a list- The - pluginargument supports multiple instances, so that a URL may specify multiple plugins; they are loaded in the order stated in the URL:- engine = create_engine( "mysql+pymysql://scott:tiger@localhost/" "test?plugin=plugin_one&plugin=plugin_twp&plugin=plugin_three") - A plugin can receive additional arguments from the URL string as well as from the keyword arguments passed to - create_engine(). The- URLobject and the keyword dictionary are passed to the constructor so that these arguments can be extracted from the url’s- URL.querycollection as well as from the dictionary:- class MyPlugin(CreateEnginePlugin): def __init__(self, url, kwargs): self.my_argument_one = url.query.pop('my_argument_one') self.my_argument_two = url.query.pop('my_argument_two') self.my_argument_three = kwargs.pop('my_argument_three', None) - Arguments like those illustrated above would be consumed from the following: - from sqlalchemy import create_engine engine = create_engine( "mysql+pymysql://scott:tiger@localhost/" "test?plugin=myplugin&my_argument_one=foo&my_argument_two=bar", my_argument_three='bat') - The URL and dictionary are used for subsequent setup of the engine as they are, so the plugin can modify their arguments in-place. Arguments that are only understood by the plugin should be popped or otherwise removed so that they aren’t interpreted as erroneous arguments afterwards. - When the engine creation process completes and produces the - Engineobject, it is again passed to the plugin via the- CreateEnginePlugin.engine_created()hook. In this hook, additional changes can be made to the engine, most typically involving setup of events (e.g. those defined in Core Events).- Added in version 1.1. - 
method sqlalchemy.engine.CreateEnginePlugin.__init__(url, kwargs)¶
- Construct a new - CreateEnginePlugin.- The plugin object is instantiated individually for each call to - create_engine(). A single- Enginewill be passed to the- CreateEnginePlugin.engine_created()method corresponding to this URL.- Parameters:
- url¶ – the - URLobject. The plugin should inspect what it needs here as well as remove its custom arguments from the- URL.querycollection. The URL can be modified in-place in any other way as well.
- kwargs¶ – The keyword arguments passed to - create_engine(). The plugin can read and modify this dictionary in-place, to affect the ultimate arguments used to create the engine. It should remove its custom arguments from the dictionary as well.
 
 
 - 
method sqlalchemy.engine.CreateEnginePlugin.engine_created(engine)¶
- Receive the - Engineobject when it is fully constructed.- The plugin may make additional changes to the engine, such as registering engine or connection pool events. 
 - 
method sqlalchemy.engine.CreateEnginePlugin.handle_dialect_kwargs(dialect_cls, dialect_args)¶
- parse and modify dialect kwargs 
 - 
method sqlalchemy.engine.CreateEnginePlugin.handle_pool_kwargs(pool_cls, pool_args)¶
- parse and modify pool kwargs 
 
- class sqlalchemy.engine.Engine(pool, dialect, url, logging_name=None, echo=None, proxy=None, execution_options=None, hide_parameters=False)¶
- Connects a - Pooland- Dialecttogether to provide a source of database connectivity and behavior.- An - Engineobject is instantiated publicly using the- create_engine()function.- Members - begin(), connect(), contextual_connect(), dispose(), driver, engine, execute(), execution_options(), get_execution_options(), has_table(), name, raw_connection(), run_callable(), scalar(), schema_for_object, table_names(), transaction(), update_execution_options() - Class signature - class - sqlalchemy.engine.Engine(- sqlalchemy.engine.Connectable,- sqlalchemy.log.Identified)- 
method sqlalchemy.engine.Engine.begin(close_with_result=False)¶
- Return a context manager delivering a - Connectionwith a- Transactionestablished.- E.g.: - with engine.begin() as conn: conn.execute("insert into table (x, y, z) values (1, 2, 3)") conn.execute("my_special_procedure(5)") - Upon successful operation, the - Transactionis committed. If an error is raised, the- Transactionis rolled back.- The - close_with_resultflag is normally- False, and indicates that the- Connectionwill be closed when the operation is complete. When set to- True, it indicates the- Connectionis in “single use” mode, where the- ResultProxyreturned by the first call to- Connection.execute()will close the- Connectionwhen that- ResultProxyhas exhausted all result rows.- See also - Engine.connect()- procure a- Connectionfrom an- Engine.- Connection.begin()- start a- Transactionfor a particular- Connection.
 - 
method sqlalchemy.engine.Engine.connect(**kwargs)¶
- Return a new - Connectionobject.- The - Connectionobject is a facade that uses a DBAPI connection internally in order to communicate with the database. This connection is procured from the connection-holding- Poolreferenced by this- Engine. When the- Connection.close()method of the- Connectionobject is called, the underlying DBAPI connection is then returned to the connection pool, where it may be used again in a subsequent call to- Engine.connect().
 - 
method sqlalchemy.engine.Engine.contextual_connect(close_with_result=False, **kwargs)¶
- Return a - Connectionobject which may be part of some ongoing context.- Deprecated since version 1.3: The - Engine.contextual_connect()method is deprecated. This method is an artifact of the threadlocal engine strategy which is also to be deprecated. For explicit connections from an- Engine, use the- Engine.connect()method.- By default, this method does the same thing as - Engine.connect(). Subclasses of- Enginemay override this method to provide contextual behavior.- Parameters:
- close_with_result¶ – When True, the first - ResultProxycreated by the- Connectionwill call the- Connection.close()method of that connection as soon as any pending result rows are exhausted. This is used to supply the “connectionless execution” behavior provided by the- Engine.execute()method.
 
 - 
method sqlalchemy.engine.Engine.dispose()¶
- Dispose of the connection pool used by this - Engine.- This has the effect of fully closing all currently checked in database connections. Connections that are still checked out will not be closed, however they will no longer be associated with this - Engine, so when they are closed individually, eventually the- Poolwhich they are associated with will be garbage collected and they will be closed out fully, if not already closed on checkin.- A new connection pool is created immediately after the old one has been disposed. This new pool, like all SQLAlchemy connection pools, does not make any actual connections to the database until one is first requested, so as long as the - Engineisn’t used again, no new connections will be made.- See also 
 - 
attribute sqlalchemy.engine.Engine.driver¶
 - 
attribute sqlalchemy.engine.Engine.engine¶
- The - Engineinstance referred to by this- Connectable.- May be - selfif this is already an- Engine.
 - 
method sqlalchemy.engine.Engine.execute(statement, *multiparams, **params)¶
- Executes the given construct and returns a - ResultProxy.- The arguments are the same as those used by - Connection.execute().- Here, a - Connectionis acquired using the- Engine.contextual_connect()method, and the statement executed with that connection. The returned- ResultProxyis flagged such that when the- ResultProxyis exhausted and its underlying cursor is closed, the- Connectioncreated here will also be closed, which allows its associated DBAPI connection resource to be returned to the connection pool.
 - 
method sqlalchemy.engine.Engine.execution_options(**opt)¶
- Return a new - Enginethat will provide- Connectionobjects with the given execution options.- The returned - Engineremains related to the original- Enginein that it shares the same connection pool and other state:- The - Poolused by the new- Engineis the same instance. The- Engine.dispose()method will replace the connection pool instance for the parent engine as well as this one.
- Event listeners are “cascaded” - meaning, the new - Engineinherits the events of the parent, and new events can be associated with the new- Engineindividually.
- The logging configuration and logging_name is copied from the parent - Engine.
 - The intent of the - Engine.execution_options()method is to implement “sharding” schemes where multiple- Engineobjects refer to the same connection pool, but are differentiated by options that would be consumed by a custom event:- primary_engine = create_engine("mysql://") shard1 = primary_engine.execution_options(shard_id="shard1") shard2 = primary_engine.execution_options(shard_id="shard2") - Above, the - shard1engine serves as a factory for- Connectionobjects that will contain the execution option- shard_id=shard1, and- shard2will produce- Connectionobjects that contain the execution option- shard_id=shard2.- An event handler can consume the above execution option to perform a schema switch or other operation, given a connection. Below we emit a MySQL - usestatement to switch databases, at the same time keeping track of which database we’ve established using the- Connection.infodictionary, which gives us a persistent storage space that follows the DBAPI connection:- from sqlalchemy import event from sqlalchemy.engine import Engine shards = {"default": "base", shard_1: "db1", "shard_2": "db2"} @event.listens_for(Engine, "before_cursor_execute") def _switch_shard(conn, cursor, stmt, params, context, executemany): shard_id = conn._execution_options.get('shard_id', "default") current_shard = conn.info.get("current_shard", None) if current_shard != shard_id: cursor.execute("use %s" % shards[shard_id]) conn.info["current_shard"] = shard_id - See also - Connection.execution_options()- update execution options on a- Connectionobject.- Engine.update_execution_options()- update the execution options for a given- Enginein place.
 - 
method sqlalchemy.engine.Engine.get_execution_options()¶
- Get the non-SQL options which will take effect during execution. - See also 
 - 
method sqlalchemy.engine.Engine.has_table(table_name, schema=None)¶
- Return True if the given backend has a table of the given name. - See also - Fine Grained Reflection with Inspector - detailed schema inspection using the - Inspectorinterface.- quoted_name- used to pass quoting information along with a schema identifier.
 - 
attribute sqlalchemy.engine.Engine.name¶
 - 
method sqlalchemy.engine.Engine.raw_connection(_connection=None)¶
- Return a “raw” DBAPI connection from the connection pool. - The returned object is a proxied version of the DBAPI connection object used by the underlying driver in use. The object will have all the same behavior as the real DBAPI connection, except that its - close()method will result in the connection being returned to the pool, rather than being closed for real.- This method provides direct DBAPI connection access for special situations when the API provided by - Connectionis not needed. When a- Connectionobject is already present, the DBAPI connection is available using the- Connection.connectionaccessor.- See also 
 - 
method sqlalchemy.engine.Engine.run_callable(callable_, *args, **kwargs)¶
- Given a callable object or function, execute it, passing a - Connectionas the first argument.- The given *args and **kwargs are passed subsequent to the - Connectionargument.- This function, along with - Connection.run_callable(), allows a function to be run with a- Connectionor- Engineobject without the need to know which one is being dealt with.
 - 
method sqlalchemy.engine.Engine.scalar(statement, *multiparams, **params)¶
- Executes and returns the first column of the first row. - The underlying cursor is closed after execution. 
 - 
attribute sqlalchemy.engine.Engine.schema_for_object = <sqlalchemy.sql.schema._SchemaTranslateMap object>¶
- Return the “.schema” attribute for an object. - Used for - Table,- Sequenceand similar objects, and takes into account the- Connection.execution_options.schema_translate_mapparameter.- Added in version 1.1. - See also 
 - 
method sqlalchemy.engine.Engine.table_names(schema=None, connection=None)¶
- Return a list of all table names available in the database. 
 - 
method sqlalchemy.engine.Engine.transaction(callable_, *args, **kwargs)¶
- Execute the given function within a transaction boundary. - The function is passed a - Connectionnewly procured from- Engine.contextual_connect()as the first argument, followed by the given *args and **kwargs.- e.g.: - def do_something(conn, x, y): conn.execute("some statement", {'x':x, 'y':y}) engine.transaction(do_something, 5, 10) - The operations inside the function are all invoked within the context of a single - Transaction. Upon success, the transaction is committed. If an exception is raised, the transaction is rolled back before propagating the exception.- Note - The - transaction()method is superseded by the usage of the Python- with:statement, which can be used with- Engine.begin():- with engine.begin() as conn: conn.execute("some statement", {'x':5, 'y':10}) - See also - Engine.begin()- engine-level transactional context- Connection.transaction()- connection-level version of- Engine.transaction()
 - 
method sqlalchemy.engine.Engine.update_execution_options(**opt)¶
- Update the default execution_options dictionary of this - Engine.- The given keys/values in **opt are added to the default execution options that will be used for all connections. The initial contents of this dictionary can be sent via the - execution_optionsparameter to- create_engine().
 
- 
method 
- class sqlalchemy.engine.ExceptionContext¶
- Encapsulate information about an error condition in progress. - This object exists solely to be passed to the - ConnectionEvents.handle_error()event, supporting an interface that can be extended without backwards-incompatibility.- Members - chained_exception, connection, cursor, engine, execution_context, invalidate_pool_on_disconnect, is_disconnect, original_exception, parameters, sqlalchemy_exception, statement - Added in version 0.9.7. - 
attribute sqlalchemy.engine.ExceptionContext.chained_exception = None¶
- The exception that was returned by the previous handler in the exception chain, if any. - If present, this exception will be the one ultimately raised by SQLAlchemy unless a subsequent handler replaces it. - May be None. 
 - 
attribute sqlalchemy.engine.ExceptionContext.connection = None¶
- The - Connectionin use during the exception.- This member is present, except in the case of a failure when first connecting. - See also 
 - 
attribute sqlalchemy.engine.ExceptionContext.cursor = None¶
- The DBAPI cursor object. - May be None. 
 - 
attribute sqlalchemy.engine.ExceptionContext.engine = None¶
- The - Enginein use during the exception.- This member should always be present, even in the case of a failure when first connecting. - Added in version 1.0.0. 
 - 
attribute sqlalchemy.engine.ExceptionContext.execution_context = None¶
- The - ExecutionContextcorresponding to the execution operation in progress.- This is present for statement execution operations, but not for operations such as transaction begin/end. It also is not present when the exception was raised before the - ExecutionContextcould be constructed.- Note that the - ExceptionContext.statementand- ExceptionContext.parametersmembers may represent a different value than that of the- ExecutionContext, potentially in the case where a- ConnectionEvents.before_cursor_execute()event or similar modified the statement/parameters to be sent.- May be None. 
 - 
attribute sqlalchemy.engine.ExceptionContext.invalidate_pool_on_disconnect = True¶
- Represent whether all connections in the pool should be invalidated when a “disconnect” condition is in effect. - Setting this flag to False within the scope of the - ConnectionEvents.handle_error()event will have the effect such that the full collection of connections in the pool will not be invalidated during a disconnect; only the current connection that is the subject of the error will actually be invalidated.- The purpose of this flag is for custom disconnect-handling schemes where the invalidation of other connections in the pool is to be performed based on other conditions, or even on a per-connection basis. - Added in version 1.0.3. 
 - 
attribute sqlalchemy.engine.ExceptionContext.is_disconnect = None¶
- Represent whether the exception as occurred represents a “disconnect” condition. - This flag will always be True or False within the scope of the - ConnectionEvents.handle_error()handler.- SQLAlchemy will defer to this flag in order to determine whether or not the connection should be invalidated subsequently. That is, by assigning to this flag, a “disconnect” event which then results in a connection and pool invalidation can be invoked or prevented by changing this flag. - Note - The pool “pre_ping” handler enabled using the - create_engine.pool_pre_pingparameter does not consult this event before deciding if the “ping” returned false, as opposed to receiving an unhandled error. For this use case, the legacy recipe based on engine_connect() may be used. A future API allow more comprehensive customization of the “disconnect” detection mechanism across all functions.
 - 
attribute sqlalchemy.engine.ExceptionContext.original_exception = None¶
- The exception object which was caught. - This member is always present. 
 - 
attribute sqlalchemy.engine.ExceptionContext.parameters = None¶
- Parameter collection that was emitted directly to the DBAPI. - May be None. 
 - 
attribute sqlalchemy.engine.ExceptionContext.sqlalchemy_exception = None¶
- The - sqlalchemy.exc.StatementErrorwhich wraps the original, and will be raised if exception handling is not circumvented by the event.- May be None, as not all exception types are wrapped by SQLAlchemy. For DBAPI-level exceptions that subclass the dbapi’s Error class, this field will always be present. 
 - 
attribute sqlalchemy.engine.ExceptionContext.statement = None¶
- String SQL statement that was emitted directly to the DBAPI. - May be None. 
 
- 
attribute 
- class sqlalchemy.engine.NestedTransaction(connection, parent)¶
- Represent a ‘nested’, or SAVEPOINT transaction. - A new - NestedTransactionobject may be procured using the- Connection.begin_nested()method.- The interface is the same as that of - Transaction.- Class signature - class - sqlalchemy.engine.NestedTransaction(- sqlalchemy.engine.Transaction)
- class sqlalchemy.engine.ResultProxy(context)¶
- A facade around a DBAPI cursor object. - Returns database rows via the - RowProxyclass, which provides additional API features and behaviors on top of the raw data returned by the DBAPI.- Members - close(), fetchall(), fetchmany(), fetchone(), first(), inserted_primary_key, is_insert, keys(), last_inserted_params(), last_updated_params(), lastrow_has_defaults(), lastrowid, next(), postfetch_cols(), prefetch_cols(), returned_defaults, returns_rows, rowcount, scalar(), supports_sane_multi_rowcount(), supports_sane_rowcount() - See also - Selecting - introductory material for accessing - ResultProxyand- RowProxyobjects.- 
method sqlalchemy.engine.ResultProxy.close()¶
- Close this ResultProxy. - This closes out the underlying DBAPI cursor corresponding to the statement execution, if one is still present. Note that the DBAPI cursor is automatically released when the - ResultProxyexhausts all available rows.- ResultProxy.close()is generally an optional method except in the case when discarding a- ResultProxythat still has additional rows pending for fetch.- In the case of a result that is the product of connectionless execution, the underlying - Connectionobject is also closed, which releases DBAPI connection resources.- After this method is called, it is no longer valid to call upon the fetch methods, which will raise a - ResourceClosedErroron subsequent use.- Changed in version 1.0.0: - the - ResultProxy.close()method has been separated out from the process that releases the underlying DBAPI cursor resource. The “auto close” feature of the- Connectionnow performs a so-called “soft close”, which releases the underlying DBAPI cursor, but allows the- ResultProxyto still behave as an open-but-exhausted result set; the actual- ResultProxy.close()method is never called. It is still safe to discard a- ResultProxythat has been fully exhausted without calling this method.- See also 
 - 
method sqlalchemy.engine.ResultProxy.fetchall()¶
- Fetch all rows, just like DB-API - cursor.fetchall().- After all rows have been exhausted, the underlying DBAPI cursor resource is released, and the object may be safely discarded. - Subsequent calls to - ResultProxy.fetchall()will return an empty list. After the- ResultProxy.close()method is called, the method will raise- ResourceClosedError.- Returns:
- a list of - RowProxyobjects
 
 - 
method sqlalchemy.engine.ResultProxy.fetchmany(size=None)¶
- Fetch many rows, just like DB-API - cursor.fetchmany(size=cursor.arraysize).- After all rows have been exhausted, the underlying DBAPI cursor resource is released, and the object may be safely discarded. - Calls to - ResultProxy.fetchmany()after all rows have been exhausted will return an empty list. After the- ResultProxy.close()method is called, the method will raise- ResourceClosedError.- Returns:
- a list of - RowProxyobjects
 
 - 
method sqlalchemy.engine.ResultProxy.fetchone()¶
- Fetch one row, just like DB-API - cursor.fetchone().- After all rows have been exhausted, the underlying DBAPI cursor resource is released, and the object may be safely discarded. - Calls to - ResultProxy.fetchone()after all rows have been exhausted will return- None. After the- ResultProxy.close()method is called, the method will raise- ResourceClosedError.- Returns:
- a - RowProxyobject, or None if no rows remain
 
 - 
method sqlalchemy.engine.ResultProxy.first()¶
- Fetch the first row and then close the result set unconditionally. - After calling this method, the object is fully closed, e.g. the - ResultProxy.close()method will have been called.- Returns:
- a - RowProxyobject, or None if no rows remain
 
 - 
attribute sqlalchemy.engine.ResultProxy.inserted_primary_key¶
- Return the primary key for the row just inserted. - The return value is a list of scalar values corresponding to the list of primary key columns in the target table. - This only applies to single row - insert()constructs which did not explicitly specify- Insert.returning().- Note that primary key columns which specify a server_default clause, or otherwise do not qualify as “autoincrement” columns (see the notes at - Column), and were generated using the database-side default, will appear in this list as- Noneunless the backend supports “returning” and the insert statement executed with the “implicit returning” enabled.- Raises - InvalidRequestErrorif the executed statement is not a compiled expression construct or is not an insert() construct.
 - 
attribute sqlalchemy.engine.ResultProxy.is_insert¶
- True if this - ResultProxyis the result of a executing an expression language compiled- insert()construct.- When True, this implies that the - inserted_primary_keyattribute is accessible, assuming the statement did not include a user defined “returning” construct.
 - 
method sqlalchemy.engine.ResultProxy.keys()¶
- Return the list of string keys that would represented by each - RowProxy.
 - 
method sqlalchemy.engine.ResultProxy.last_inserted_params()¶
- Return the collection of inserted parameters from this execution. - Raises - InvalidRequestErrorif the executed statement is not a compiled expression construct or is not an insert() construct.
 - 
method sqlalchemy.engine.ResultProxy.last_updated_params()¶
- Return the collection of updated parameters from this execution. - Raises - InvalidRequestErrorif the executed statement is not a compiled expression construct or is not an update() construct.
 - 
method sqlalchemy.engine.ResultProxy.lastrow_has_defaults()¶
- Return - lastrow_has_defaults()from the underlying- ExecutionContext.- See - ExecutionContextfor details.
 - 
attribute sqlalchemy.engine.ResultProxy.lastrowid¶
- Return the ‘lastrowid’ accessor on the DBAPI cursor. - This is a DBAPI specific method and is only functional for those backends which support it, for statements where it is appropriate. It’s behavior is not consistent across backends. - Usage of this method is normally unnecessary when using insert() expression constructs; the - ResultProxy.inserted_primary_keyattribute provides a tuple of primary key values for a newly inserted row, regardless of database backend.
 - 
method sqlalchemy.engine.ResultProxy.next()¶
- Implement the Python next() protocol. - This method, mirrored as both - .next()and- .__next__(), is part of Python’s API for producing iterator-like behavior.- Added in version 1.2. 
 - 
method sqlalchemy.engine.ResultProxy.postfetch_cols()¶
- Return - postfetch_cols()from the underlying- ExecutionContext.- See - ExecutionContextfor details.- Raises - InvalidRequestErrorif the executed statement is not a compiled expression construct or is not an insert() or update() construct.
 - 
method sqlalchemy.engine.ResultProxy.prefetch_cols()¶
- Return - prefetch_cols()from the underlying- ExecutionContext.- See - ExecutionContextfor details.- Raises - InvalidRequestErrorif the executed statement is not a compiled expression construct or is not an insert() or update() construct.
 - 
attribute sqlalchemy.engine.ResultProxy.returned_defaults¶
- Return the values of default columns that were fetched using the - ValuesBase.return_defaults()feature.- The value is an instance of - RowProxy, or- Noneif- ValuesBase.return_defaults()was not used or if the backend does not support RETURNING.- Added in version 0.9.0. - See also 
 - 
attribute sqlalchemy.engine.ResultProxy.returns_rows¶
- True if this - ResultProxyreturns rows.- I.e. if it is legal to call the methods - ResultProxy.fetchone(),- ResultProxy.fetchmany()- ResultProxy.fetchall().
 - 
attribute sqlalchemy.engine.ResultProxy.rowcount¶
- Return the ‘rowcount’ for this result. - The ‘rowcount’ reports the number of rows matched by the WHERE criterion of an UPDATE or DELETE statement. - Note - Notes regarding - ResultProxy.rowcount:- This attribute returns the number of rows matched, which is not necessarily the same as the number of rows that were actually modified - an UPDATE statement, for example, may have no net change on a given row if the SET values given are the same as those present in the row already. Such a row would be matched but not modified. On backends that feature both styles, such as MySQL, rowcount is configured by default to return the match count in all cases. 
- ResultProxy.rowcountis only useful in conjunction with an UPDATE or DELETE statement. Contrary to what the Python DBAPI says, it does not return the number of rows available from the results of a SELECT statement as DBAPIs cannot support this functionality when rows are unbuffered.
- ResultProxy.rowcountmay not be fully implemented by all dialects. In particular, most DBAPIs do not support an aggregate rowcount result from an executemany call. The- ResultProxy.supports_sane_rowcount()and- ResultProxy.supports_sane_multi_rowcount()methods will report from the dialect if each usage is known to be supported.
- Statements that use RETURNING may not return a correct rowcount. 
 
 - 
method sqlalchemy.engine.ResultProxy.scalar()¶
- Fetch the first column of the first row, and close the result set. - After calling this method, the object is fully closed, e.g. the - ResultProxy.close()method will have been called.- Returns:
- a Python scalar value , or None if no rows remain 
 
 - 
method sqlalchemy.engine.ResultProxy.supports_sane_multi_rowcount()¶
- Return - supports_sane_multi_rowcountfrom the dialect.- See - ResultProxy.rowcountfor background.
 - 
method sqlalchemy.engine.ResultProxy.supports_sane_rowcount()¶
- Return - supports_sane_rowcountfrom the dialect.- See - ResultProxy.rowcountfor background.
 
- 
method 
- class sqlalchemy.engine.RowProxy(parent, row, processors, keymap)¶
- Represent a single result row. - The - RowProxyobject is retrieved from a database result, from the- ResultProxyobject using methods like- ResultProxy.fetchall().- The - RowProxyobject seeks to act mostly like a Python named tuple, but also provides some Python dictionary behaviors at the same time.- See also - Selecting - includes examples of selecting rows from SELECT statements. - Members - has_key(), items(), iterkeys(), itervalues(), keys(), values() - Class signature - class - sqlalchemy.engine.RowProxy(- sqlalchemy.engine.BaseRowProxy)- 
method sqlalchemy.engine.RowProxy.has_key(key)¶
- Return True if this - RowProxycontains the given key.- Through the SQLAlchemy 1.x series, the - __contains__()method of- RowProxyalso links to- RowProxy.has_key(), in that an expression such as- "some_col" in row - Will return True if the row contains a column named - "some_col", in the way that a Python mapping works.- However, it is planned that the 2.0 series of SQLAlchemy will reverse this behavior so that - __contains__()will refer to a value being present in the row, in the way that a Python tuple works.
 - 
method sqlalchemy.engine.RowProxy.items()¶
- Return a list of tuples, each tuple containing a key/value pair. - This method is analogous to the Python dictionary - .items()method, except that it returns a list, not an iterator.
 - 
method sqlalchemy.engine.RowProxy.iterkeys()¶
- Return a an iterator against the - RowProxy.keys()method.- This method is analogous to the Python-2-only dictionary - .iterkeys()method.
 - 
method sqlalchemy.engine.RowProxy.itervalues()¶
- Return a an iterator against the - RowProxy.values()method.- This method is analogous to the Python-2-only dictionary - .itervalues()method.
 - 
method sqlalchemy.engine.RowProxy.keys()¶
- Return the list of keys as strings represented by this - RowProxy.- This method is analogous to the Python dictionary - .keys()method, except that it returns a list, not an iterator.
 - 
method sqlalchemy.engine.RowProxy.values()¶
- Return the values represented by this - RowProxyas a list.- This method is analogous to the Python dictionary - .values()method, except that it returns a list, not an iterator.
 
- 
method 
- class sqlalchemy.engine.Transaction(connection, parent)¶
- Represent a database transaction in progress. - The - Transactionobject is procured by calling the- Connection.begin()method of- Connection:- from sqlalchemy import create_engine engine = create_engine("postgresql://scott:tiger@localhost/test") connection = engine.connect() trans = connection.begin() connection.execute("insert into x (a, b) values (1, 2)") trans.commit() - The object provides - rollback()and- commit()methods in order to control transaction boundaries. It also implements a context manager interface so that the Python- withstatement can be used with the- Connection.begin()method:- with connection.begin(): connection.execute("insert into x (a, b) values (1, 2)") - The Transaction object is not threadsafe. - Members - 
method sqlalchemy.engine.Transaction.close()¶
- Close this - Transaction.- If this transaction is the base transaction in a begin/commit nesting, the transaction will rollback(). Otherwise, the method returns. - This is used to cancel a Transaction without affecting the scope of an enclosing transaction. 
 - 
method sqlalchemy.engine.Transaction.commit()¶
- Commit this - Transaction.
 - 
method sqlalchemy.engine.Transaction.rollback()¶
- Roll back this - Transaction.
 
- 
method 
- class sqlalchemy.engine.TwoPhaseTransaction(connection, xid)¶
- Represent a two-phase transaction. - A new - TwoPhaseTransactionobject may be procured using the- Connection.begin_twophase()method.- The interface is the same as that of - Transactionwith the addition of the- prepare()method.- Members - Class signature - class - sqlalchemy.engine.TwoPhaseTransaction(- sqlalchemy.engine.Transaction)- 
method sqlalchemy.engine.TwoPhaseTransaction.prepare()¶
- Prepare this - TwoPhaseTransaction.- After a PREPARE, the transaction can be committed. 
 
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method 
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