t.e.a.ConnectionPool : class documentation

Part of twisted.enterprise.adbapi View Source View In Hierarchy

I represent a pool of connections to a DB-API 2.0 compliant database.
Method __init__ Create a new ConnectionPool.
Method start Start the connection pool.
Method runWithConnection Undocumented
Method runInteraction Interact with the database and return the result.
Method runQuery Execute an SQL query and return the result.
Method runOperation Execute an SQL query and return None.
Method close Close all pool connections and shutdown the pool.
Method finalClose This should only be called by the shutdown trigger.
Method connect Return a database connection when one becomes available.
Method disconnect Disconnect a database connection associated with this pool.
Method __getstate__ Undocumented
Method __setstate__ Undocumented
Method _start Undocumented
Method _runWithConnection Undocumented
Method _close Undocumented
Method _runInteraction Undocumented
Method _runQuery Undocumented
Method _runOperation Undocumented
Method _deferToThread Internal function.
def __init__(self, dbapiName, *connargs, **connkw): (source)

Create a new ConnectionPool.

Any positional or keyword arguments other than those documented here are passed to the DB-API object when connecting. Use these arguments to pass database names, usernames, passwords, etc.
ParametersdbapiNamean import string to use to obtain a DB-API compatible module (e.g. 'pyPgSQL.PgSQL')
cp_minthe minimum number of connections in pool (default 3)
cp_maxthe maximum number of connections in pool (default 5)
cp_noisygenerate informational log messages during operation (default False)
cp_openfuna callback invoked after every connect() on the underlying DB-API object. The callback is passed a new DB-API connection object. This callback can setup per-connection state such as charset, timezone, etc.
cp_reconnectdetect connections which have failed and reconnect (default False). Failed connections may result in ConnectionLost exceptions, which indicate the query may need to be re-sent.
cp_good_sqlan sql query which should always succeed and change no state (default 'select 1')
def _start(self): (source)
Undocumented
def start(self): (source)

Start the connection pool.

If you are using the reactor normally, this function does *not* need to be called.
def runWithConnection(self, func, *args, **kw): (source)
Undocumented
def _runWithConnection(self, func, *args, **kw): (source)
Undocumented
def runInteraction(self, interaction, *args, **kw): (source)

Interact with the database and return the result.

The 'interaction' is a callable object which will be executed in a thread using a pooled connection. It will be passed an Transaction object as an argument (whose interface is identical to that of the database cursor for your DB-API module of choice), and its results will be returned as a Deferred. If running the method raises an exception, the transaction will be rolled back. If the method returns a value, the transaction will be committed.

NOTE that the function you pass is *not* run in the main thread: you may have to worry about thread-safety in the function you pass to this if it tries to use non-local objects.
Parametersinteractiona callable object whose first argument is adbapi.Transaction. *args,**kw will be passed as additional arguments.
Returnsa Deferred which will fire the return value of 'interaction(Transaction(...))', or a Failure.
def runQuery(self, *args, **kw): (source)

Execute an SQL query and return the result.

A DB-API cursor will will be invoked with cursor.execute(*args, **kw). The exact nature of the arguments will depend on the specific flavor of DB-API being used, but the first argument in *args be an SQL statement. The result of a subsequent cursor.fetchall() will be fired to the Deferred which is returned. If either the 'execute' or 'fetchall' methods raise an exception, the transaction will be rolled back and a Failure returned.

The *args and **kw arguments will be passed to the DB-API cursor's 'execute' method.
Returnsa Deferred which will fire the return value of a DB-API cursor's 'fetchall' method, or a Failure.
def runOperation(self, *args, **kw): (source)

Execute an SQL query and return None.

A DB-API cursor will will be invoked with cursor.execute(*args, **kw). The exact nature of the arguments will depend on the specific flavor of DB-API being used, but the first argument in *args will be an SQL statement. This method will not attempt to fetch any results from the query and is thus suitable for INSERT, DELETE, and other SQL statements which do not return values. If the 'execute' method raises an exception, the transaction will be rolled back and a Failure returned.

The args and kw arguments will be passed to the DB-API cursor's 'execute' method.

return: a Deferred which will fire None or a Failure.
def close(self): (source)
Close all pool connections and shutdown the pool.
def finalClose(self): (source)
This should only be called by the shutdown trigger.
def connect(self): (source)

Return a database connection when one becomes available.

This method blocks and should be run in a thread from the internal threadpool. Don't call this method directly from non-threaded code. Using this method outside the external threadpool may exceed the maximum number of connections in the pool.
Returnsa database connection from the pool.
def disconnect(self, conn): (source)

Disconnect a database connection associated with this pool.

Note: This function should only be used by the same thread which called connect(). As with connect(), this function is not used in normal non-threaded twisted code.
def _close(self, conn): (source)
Undocumented
def _runInteraction(self, interaction, *args, **kw): (source)
Undocumented
def _runQuery(self, trans, *args, **kw): (source)
Undocumented
def _runOperation(self, trans, *args, **kw): (source)
Undocumented
def __getstate__(self): (source)
Undocumented
def __setstate__(self, state): (source)
Undocumented
def _deferToThread(self, f, *args, **kwargs): (source)

Internal function.

Call f in one of the connection pool's threads.
API Documentation for Twisted, generated by pydoctor at 2011-10-27 15:57:47.