django-db-views
Django Versions 2.2 to 4.2+
Python Versions 3.9 to 3.11
How to install?
pip install django-db-views
What we offer
- Database views
- Materialized views
- views schema migrations
- indexing for materialized views (future)
- database table function (future)
How to use?
- add
django_db_views
to INSTALLED_APPS
- use
makeviewmigrations
command to create migrations for view models
How to create view in your database?
-
To create your view use DBView class, remember to set view definition attribute.
from django.db import models
from django_db_views.db_view import DBView
class VirtualCard(models.Model):
...
class Balance(DBView):
virtual_card = models.ForeignKey(
VirtualCard,
on_delete=models.DO_NOTHING, related_name='virtual_cards'
)
total_discount = models.DecimalField(max_digits=12, decimal_places=2)
total_returns = models.DecimalField(max_digits=12, decimal_places=2)
balance = models.DecimalField(max_digits=12, decimal_places=2)
view_definition = """
SELECT
row_number() over () as id, # Django requires column called id
virtual_card.id as virtual_card_id,
sum(...) as total_discount,
...
"""
class Meta:
managed = False
db_table = 'virtual_card_balance'
-
The view definition can be: str/dict or a callable which returns str/dict.
Callable view definition examples:
from django_db_views.db_view import DBViewl
class ExampleView(DBView):
@staticmethod
def view_definition():
return str(SomeModel.objects.all().query)
view_definition = lambda: str(SomeModel.objects.all().query)
class Meta:
managed = False
db_table = 'example_view'
using callable allow you to write view definition using ORM.
-
Ensure that you include managed = False
in the DBView model's Meta class to prevent Django creating it's own migration.
How view migrations work?
- DBView working as regular django model. You can use it in any query.
- It's using Django code, view-migrations looks like regular migrations.
- It relies on
db_table
names. makeviewmigrations
command finds previous migration for view.
- if there is no such migration then script create a new migration
- if previous migration exists but no change in
view_definition
is detected nothing is done - if previous migration exists, then script will use previous
view_definition
for backward operation, and creates new migration. - when run it will check if the current default engine definined in django.settings is the same engine the view was defined with
Multidatabase support
Yoy can define view_definition as
a dict for multiple engine types.
If you do not pass in an engine and have a str or callable the
engine will be defaulted to the default database defined in django.
It respects --database flag in the migrate command,
So you are able to define a specific view definitions for specific databases using the engine key.
If the key do not match your current database, view migration will be skipped.
Also, feature becomes useful if you use a different engine for local / dev / staging / production.
Example dict view definition:
view_definition = {
"django.db.backends.sqlite3": """
SELECT
row_number() over () as id,
q.id as question_id,
count(*) as total_choices
FROM question q
JOIN choice c on c.question_id = q.id
GROUP BY q.id
""",
"django.db.backends.postgresql": """
SELECT
row_number() over () as id,
q.id as question_id,
count(*) as total_choices
FROM question q
JOIN choice c on c.question_id = q.id
GROUP BY q.id
""",
}
Materialized Views
Just inherit from DBMaterializedView
instead of regular DBView
Materialzied View provide an extra class method to refresh view called refresh
Notes
Please use the newest version. version 0.1.0 has backward
incompatibility which is solved in version 0.1.1 and higher.