tgext.evolve

Manages automatic updates and evolutions which are better suited outside schema migrations


Keywords
turbogears2, extension
License
MIT
Install
pip install tgext.evolve==0.0.5

Documentation

About tgext.evolve

tgext.evolve is a TurboGears2 extension for generic migrations and evolutions.

tgext.evolve is safe to be used in multiprocessing and multithreading environments as it relies on a distributed lock on your database to perform evolutions.

During the evolution period the application will respond with a 503 status code, feel free to configure TurboGears to trap it and use your ErrorController to provide a custom page.

Installing

tgext.evolve can be installed from pypi:

pip install tgext.evolve

should just work for most of the users.

Enabling

To enable tgext.evolve put inside your application config/app_cfg.py the following:

import tgext.evolve
tgext.evolve.plugme(base_config, options={
    'evolutions': [
        # ... Your evolutions ...
    ]
})

or you can use tgext.pluggable when available:

from tgext.pluggable import plug
plug(base_config, 'tgext.evolve', evolutions=[
    # ... Your evolutions ...
])

tgext.evolve can then be disabled using the tgext.evolve.enabled = false option in your configuration files. This is often the case during test suites.

Using Evolutions

Evolutions are a subclass of tgext.evolve.Evolution that must provide an evolution_id property and an evolve() method.

Here is a sample evolution that does not much apart waiting for 10 seconds:

import time
from tgext.evolve import Evolution

class TestEvolution1(Evolution):
    evolution_id = 'test_evolution_1'

    def evolve(self):
        time.sleep(10)

Please note that in case you modify data or touch the database through model.DBSession or other manners you must flush and commit your UnitOfWork and Transaction yourself as evolutions are performed outside the transaction manager in a separated thread.

Then you can register your evolution with something like:

from tgext.pluggable import plug
plug(base_config, 'tgext.evolve', evolutions=[
    TestEvolution1
])

In case your evolution requires parameters you can register an instance of it instead of registering the class.

Note

There is no opposite to the evolve() method as there is no guarantee that evolutions are reversible. In case you need reversible migrations for database schemas please use a schema migration framework.

ChangeLog

0.0.5

  • small bugfix and deprecation gardening

0.0.4

  • small Python3 compatibility fixes

0.0.3

  • Experimental support for SQLAlchemy, tested on SQLite and MySQL.

0.0.2

  • Allow disabling tgext.evolve using tgext.evolve.enabled = False in .ini files.

0.0.1

  • First release with only MongoDB/Ming support.