This will automate a lot of conversion that happens
around the codebase in terms of status_code.
As of this commit, we should improve usage and remove
int(status_code) casts wherever we can.
Signed-off-by: Kevin Morris <kevr@0cost.org>
With the addition of these two, some code has been swapped
to use these in some of the other db wrappers with an additional
autocommit kwarg in create and delete, to control batch
transactions.
Signed-off-by: Kevin Morris <kevr@0cost.org>
Two utility functions for all of our ORM models that will
allow us to easily convert them to Python structures and
JSON data.
Signed-off-by: Kevin Morris <kevr@0cost.org>
SQLite does not support native DECIMAL columns, and for that
reason, we had to switch to using Strings that can hold the data
in the case we are using sqlite.
This commit sets the TUVoteInfo model up in a generic way, that
it always converts to string when setting Quorum (OK for DECIMAL)
and always converts to float when getting Quorum.
This way, we can treat TUVoteInfo.Quorum as the same thing
everywhere.
Signed-off-by: Kevin Morris <kevr@0cost.org>
Django uses a reference graph to determine the order
in table deletions that occur. Do the same here.
This commit also adds in the `REGEXP` sqlite function,
exactly how Django uses it in its reference graphing.
Signed-off-by: Kevin Morris <kevr@0cost.org>
This rewrites the entire model base as declarative models.
This allows us to more easily customize overlay fields
in tables and is more common.
This effort also brought some DB violations to light which
this commit addresses.
Signed-off-by: Kevin Morris <kevr@0cost.org>
As per our regex and policies, usernames should consist of
ascii alphanumeric characters and possibly (-, _ or .).
gendummydata.py was creating unicode versions of some
usernames and adding them into the DB. With our newfound
collations, this becomes a problem as it treats them as
the same.
This should have never been the case here, and so,
gendummydata.py has been patched to normalize all of its
usernames and package names.
Signed-off-by: Kevin Morris <kevr@0cost.org>
`ci` in this context means "Case Insensitive".
`cs` in this context means "Case Sensitive".
New models created:
- OfficialProvider
This was required to write a test for checking that
OfficialProviders behaves as we expect, which was the starter
for the original aurblup bug.
New tests created:
- test_official_provider
Modified tests:
- test_package_base: add ci test
- test_package: add ci test
- test_session: add cs test
- test_ssh_pub_key: add cs test
Signed-off-by: Kevin Morris <kevr@0cost.org>
First off: This commit changes the default development database
backend to mysql. sqlite, however, is still completely supported
with the caveat that a user must now modify config.dev to use
the sqlite backend.
While looking into this, it was discovered that our SQLAlchemy
backend for mysql (mysql-connector) completely broke model
attributes when we switched to utf8mb4_bin (binary) -- it does
not correct the correct conversion to and from binary utf8mb4.
The new, replacement dependency mysqlclient does. mysqlclient
is also recommended in SQLAlchemy documentation as the "best"
one available.
The mysqlclient backend uses a different exception flow then
sqlite, and so tests expecting IntegrityError has to be modified
to expect OperationalError from sqlalchemy.exc.
So, for each model that we define, check keys that can't be
NULL and raise sqlalchemy.exc.IntegrityError if we have to.
This way we keep our exceptions uniform.
Signed-off-by: Kevin Morris <kevr@0cost.org>
This fixes SQLAlchemy warnings related to primary keys not
having an auto_increment or nullable.
We've done this by making all foreign primary keys nullable.
In ApiRateLimit's case, we can set a default str to act as
a null, which seems a bit more sensible.
Signed-off-by: Kevin Morris <kevr@0cost.org>
This solves an issue where DECIMAL is not native
to sqlite by using a string to store values and
converting them to float in user code.
Signed-off-by: Kevin Morris <kevr@0cost.org>