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Hand Coded Applications with SQLAlchemy

Hand Coded Applications with SQLAlchemy

This talk describes why SQLAlchemy has always been called a "toolkit", detailing the software construction mindset for which SQLAlchemy was designed to be used with. The talk refers to this as the "Hand Coded" approach, and has an emphasis on user-created patterns and conventions, along with explicit exposure of relational structures.

mike bayer

March 20, 2012
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  1. What's a Database? • We can put data in, get

    it back out. • Data is stored as records/rows/documents/ etc. • Records/rows are composed of sets of attributes. • Queries allow us to find records that have specific attributes.
  2. What's a Relational Database? • Fundamental storage unit is the

    column, composed into rows, composed into tables. • Rows across multiple tables can be transformed into new rows at query time using joins. • Rows can be formed into "derived tables" using subqueries. • Set operations, aggregates, grouping, recursive queries, window functions, triggers, functions/ SPs, etc. • Transactional guarantees (i.e. the ACID model)
  3. How do we talk to relational databases? • Database APIs,

    i.e. DBAPI in Python • Abstraction layers • Object relational mappers
  4. How do we talk to databases? Abstraction Layers Low Level

    APIs, DBAPI, etc. Object Relational Mappers Less Abstraction More Abstraction
  5. What's an ORM? • Automates persistence of domain models into

    relational schemas • Provide querying and SQL generation in terms of a domain model • Translates relational result sets back into domain model state • Mediates between object-oriented and relational geometries (relationships, inheritance)
  6. How much "abstraction" should an ORM provide? • Conceal details

    of how data is stored and queried? • Conceal that the database itself is relational? • Should it talk to nonrelational sources (MongoDB, DBM) just like a SQL database? • These questions ask to what degree we should be "hiding" things.
  7. Problems with ORM Abstraction Considered as "Hiding" • SQL language

    is relational - joins, set operations, derived tables, aggregates, grouping, etc. • Ability to organize and query for data in a relational way is the primary feature of relational databases. • Hiding it means you no longer have first- class access to those features. • Relational database is under-used, mis-used • "Object Relational Impedance Mismatch"
  8. We don't want "hiding". We want "automation". • We are

    best off when we design and control the schema/query side as well as how our object model interacts with it. • We still need tools to automate this process. • Explicit decisions + automation via tools = "Hand Coded".
  9. Not All Apps are Hand Coded! Call the Wizard... Cut

    and Paste your data... Formus Creare! It's Web Scale!
  10. But Zeek, those are corporate GUI wizards, that's not what

    we do in Python ! • But, when we use tools that: • Make schema design decisions for us • Conceal the database, relational geometry • Give us a "pass" on having to obey ACID • It's a step in that direction; we give up control of architecture to a third party.
  11. Hand Coded Means: • We make decisions. • We implement

    and automate those decisions with tools. • We retain control over the architecture.
  12. Hand Coded is the Opposite of: • Apps written by

    "wizards" - Obvious • Apps that rely very heavily on "plugins", third party apps - Less Obvious • Using APIs that make implementation decisions - Subtle
  13. Hand Coded does not mean: • We don't use any

    libraries. • Definitely use these as much as possible! • We don't use frameworks. • Frameworks are great if they don't make things harder! • We don't use defaults. • We make our own "defaults" using self- established conventions.
  14. What are some examples of "implementation decisions" and "hiding"? •

    Example 1: the "polymorphic association" pattern • Example 2: querying approaches that oversimplify relational geometry
  15. Define a simple model representing accounts, assets. Example 1 -

    Polymorphic Association class BankAccount(BaseEntity): owner = String identifier = String class PortfolioAsset(BaseEntity): owner = String symbol = String
  16. Table definitions for these are: Example 1 - Polymorphic Association

    VARCHAR identifier VARCHAR owner INTEGER (PK) id bank_account VARCHAR symbol VARCHAR owner INTEGER (PK) id portfolio_asset
  17. Now add a collection of "financial transactions" to each: Example

    1 - Polymorphic Association from magic_library import GenericReference class FinancialTransaction(BaseEntity): amount = Numeric timestamp = DateTime class BankAccount(BaseEntity): owner = String identifier = String transactions = GenericReference(FinancialTransaction) class PortfolioAsset(BaseEntity): owner = String symbol = String transactions = GenericReference(FinancialTransaction)
  18. Usage might look like: Example 1 - Polymorphic Association some_bank_account.transactions

    = [ FinancialTransaction(100, datetime(2011, 10, 15, 12, 57, 7)), FinancialTransaction(-50, datetime(2011, 11, 2, 8, 0, 0)) ] some_portfolio_asset.transactions = [ FinancialTransaction(525, datetime(2011, 9, 18, 17, 52 5)), FinancialTransaction(54.12, datetime(2011, 9, 29, 15, 8, 7)), FinancialTransaction(-10.04, datetime(2011, 10, 2, 5, 30, 17)) ]
  19. What did GenericReference just build for us? Example 1 -

    Polymorphic Association VARCHAR identifier VARCHAR owner INTEGER (PK) id bank_account INTEGER ("FK") object_id INTEGER (FK) content_type_id DATETIME timestamp NUMERIC amount INTEGER (PK) id financial_transaction VARCHAR class_name VARCHAR module_name INTEGER (PK) id magic_content_type VARCHAR symbol VARCHAR owner INTEGER (PK) id portfolio_asset foreign key "foreign key" "foreign key"
  20. What did GenericReference just build for us? Example 1 -

    Polymorphic Association INSERT INTO magic_content_type (id, module_name, class_name) VALUES ( (1, "someapp.account", "BankAccount"), (2, "someapp.asset", "PortfolioAsset"), ) INSERT INTO financial_transaction (id, amount, timestamp, object_id, content_type_id) VALUES ( (1, 100, '2011-10-15 12:57:07', 1, 1), (2, -50, '2011-11-02 08:00:00', 1, 1), (3, 525, '2011-09-18 17:52:05', 2, 2), (4, 54.12, '2011-09-29 15:08:07', 2, 2), (5, -10.04, '2011-10-02 05:30:17', 2, 2) )
  21. Implicit Design Decisions • Added "magic_" tables to our schema.

    • Python source code (module and class names) stored as data, hardwired to app structure. • Storage of transaction records are in one monolithic table, as opposed to table-per- class, other schemes. • Schema design is not constrainable. The application layer, not the database, is responsible for maintaining consistency.
  22. Polymorphic Association - SQLAlchemy's Approach • SQLAlchemy's approach encourages us

    to specify how tables are designed and mapped to classes explicitly. • We use regular Python programming techniques to establish composable patterns. • This approach expresses our exact design fully and eliminates boilerplate at the same time.
  23. Start with a typical SQLAlchemy model: Composable Patterns from sqlalchemy.ext.declarative

    import declarative_base Base = declarative_base() class BankAccount(Base): __tablename__ = 'bank_account' id = Column(Integer, primary_key=True) identifier = Column(String(38), nullable=False, unique=True) owner = Column(String(30), nullable=False) class PortfolioAsset(Base): __tablename__ = 'portfolio_asset' id = Column(Integer, primary_key=True) symbol = Column(String(30), nullable=False, unique=True) owner = Column(String(30), nullable=False)
  24. Use Base classes to establish conventions common to all/most mapped

    classes. Composable Patterns import re from sqlalchemy.ext.declarative import declared_attr class Base(object): @declared_attr def __tablename__(cls): # convert from CamelCase to words_with_underscores name = cls.__name__ return ( name[0].lower() + re.sub(r'([A-Z])', lambda m:"_" + m.group(0).lower(), name[1:]) ) # provide an "id" column to all tables id = Column(Integer, primary_key=True) Base = declarative_base(cls=Base)
  25. Use mixins and functions to define common patterns Composable Patterns

    class HasOwner(object): owner = Column(String(30), nullable=False) def unique_id(length): return Column(String(length), nullable=False, unique=True)
  26. Now the same model becomes succinct Composable Patterns class BankAccount(HasOwner,

    Base): identifier = unique_id(38) class PortfolioAsset(HasOwner, Base): symbol = unique_id(30)
  27. Define a convention for the polymorphic association, using table-per-class. HasTransactions

    Convention class TransactionBase(object): amount = Column(Numeric(9, 2)) timestamp = Column(DateTime) def __init__(self, amount, timestamp): self.amount = amount self.timestamp = timestamp
  28. Define a convention for the polymorphic association, using table-per-class. HasTransactions

    Convention class HasTransactions(object): @declared_attr def transactions(cls): cls.Transaction = type( # create a new class, i.e. BankAccountTransaction "%sTransaction" % cls.__name__, (TransactionBase, Base,), dict( # table name: "bank_account_transaction" __tablename__ = '%s_transaction' % cls.__tablename__, # "bank_account_id REFERENCES (bank_account.id)" parent_id = Column('%s_id' % cls.__tablename__, ForeignKey("%s.id" % cls.__tablename__), nullable=False) ) ) # relate HasTransactions -> Transaction return relationship(cls.Transaction)
  29. Apply HasTransactions to the Model HasTransactions Convention class BankAccount(HasTransactions, HasOwner,

    Base): identifier = unique_id(38) class PortfolioAsset(HasTransactions, HasOwner, Base): symbol = unique_id(30)
  30. Rudimental usage is similar. HasTransactions Convention some_bank_account = BankAccount(identifier="1234", owner="zzzeek")

    some_bank_account.transactions = [ BankAccount.Transaction(100, datetime(2011, 10, 15, 12, 57, 7)), BankAccount.Transaction(-50, datetime(2011, 11, 2, 8, 0, 0)) ] some_portfolio_asset = PortfolioAsset( identifier="AAPL", owner="zzzeek") some_portfolio_asset.transactions = [ PortfolioAsset.Transaction(525, datetime(2011, 9, 18, 17, 52 5)), PortfolioAsset.Transaction(54.12, datetime(2011, 9, 29, 15, 8, 7)), PortfolioAsset.Transaction(-10.04, datetime(2011, 10, 2, 5, 30, 17)) ]
  31. What's the schema? HasTransactions Convention INTEGER (FK) bank_account_id DATETIME timestamp

    NUMERIC amount INTEGER (PK) id bank_account_transaction VARCHAR identifier VARCHAR owner INTEGER (PK) id bank_account VARCHAR symbol VARCHAR owner INTEGER (PK) id portfolio_asset INTEGER (FK) portfolio_asset_id DATETIME timestamp NUMERIC amount INTEGER (PK) id portfolio_asset_transaction
  32. Polymorphic Association - Summary • Composed HasTransactions using a well-

    understood recipe. • Used our preferred naming/structural conventions. • Uses constraints and traditional normalized design properly. • Data in separate tables-per-parent (other schemes possible too). • Data not hardcoded to application structure or source code
  33. Why not improve GenericReference to support these practices? • GenericReference

    would need to present various modes of behavior in the form of more options and flags, leading to a complex configuration story. • Once we know the polymorphic association recipe, it becomes trivial and self documenting. It's too simple to warrant introducing configurational complexity from outside.
  34. Query for the balance of an account, as of a

    certain date. Example 2 - Exposing Relational Geometry # A "hide the SQL" system might query like this: some_bank_account.transactions.sum("amount"). filter(lessthan("timestamp", somedate)) # Obvious SQL: SELECT SUM(amount) FROM bank_account_transactions WHERE bank_account_id=2 AND timestamp <= '2010-09-26 12:00:00'
  35. Example 2 - Exposing Relational Geometry • The "hide the

    SQL" system easily applied an aggregate to a single field on a related collection with a simple filter. • But now I want: • A report of average balance per month across all accounts.
  36. Example 2 - Exposing Relational Geometry • Because our model

    stores data as individual transaction amounts, we need to use subqueries and/or window functions to produce balances as a sum of amounts. • In SQL, we build queries like these incrementally, referencing relational structures explicitly and building from the inside out. • If our tools prevent us from doing this, we either need to bypass them, or load the rows into memory (which doesn't scale).
  37. Example 2 - Exposing Relational Geometry • SQLAlchemy's query model

    explicitly exposes the geometry of the underlying relational structures. • Like "power steering" for SQL. Doesn't teach you how to drive! • Developer should be aware of the SQL being emitted. SQLAlchemy makes this easy via logging or "echo" flag. • Just like your car has windows to see where you're going!
  38. Start with a query that extracts all the start/end dates

    of each month in the bank_account_transaction table: Build a Query from the Inside Out SELECT MIN(timestamp) AS min, MAX(timestamp) AS max, EXTRACT (year FROM timestamp) AS year, EXTRACT (month FROM timestamp) AS month FROM bank_account_transaction GROUP BY year, month ORDER BY year, month
  39. Sample month ranges: Build a Query from the Inside Out

    min | max | year | month ---------------------+---------------------+------+------- 2009-03-08 10:31:16 | 2009-03-28 11:03:46 | 2009 | 3 2009-04-05 08:02:30 | 2009-04-30 01:06:23 | 2009 | 4 2009-05-02 22:38:42 | 2009-05-31 16:03:38 | 2009 | 5 2009-06-08 23:17:23 | 2009-06-30 03:24:03 | 2009 | 6 2009-07-04 09:47:18 | 2009-07-31 21:20:08 | 2009 | 7 2009-08-04 22:07:11 | 2009-08-30 12:20:17 | 2009 | 8 2009-09-01 05:44:06 | 2009-09-30 05:18:24 | 2009 | 9 2009-10-01 13:30:27 | 2009-10-29 12:47:23 | 2009 | 10 2009-11-02 08:30:03 | 2009-11-29 13:54:39 | 2009 | 11 2009-12-01 14:25:58 | 2009-12-28 20:01:35 | 2009 | 12 2010-01-01 11:55:21 | 2010-01-30 19:49:28 | 2010 | 1 2010-02-01 12:25:38 | 2010-02-26 14:18:07 | 2010 | 2 ...
  40. The other half of the query will use a "window"

    function - evaluates an aggregate function as rows are processed. Build a Query from the Inside Out SELECT bank_account_id, timestamp, amount, SUM(amount) OVER ( PARTITION BY bank_account_id ORDER BY timestamp ) FROM bank_account_transaction
  41. Sample data from the "window": Build a Query from the

    Inside Out bank_account_id | timestamp | amount | sum -----------------+---------------------+----------+---------- 1 | 2009-05-19 23:28:22 | 7925.00 | 7925.00 1 | 2009-06-17 13:24:52 | 146.00 | 8071.00 1 | 2009-06-18 11:49:32 | 2644.00 | 10715.00 ... 2 | 2009-04-09 14:36:48 | 5894.00 | 5894.00 2 | 2009-04-10 13:20:50 | 1196.00 | 7090.00 2 | 2009-05-06 21:07:26 | -3485.00 | 3605.00 ... 3 | 2009-03-18 21:21:11 | 6648.00 | 6648.00 3 | 2009-04-17 15:43:31 | 711.00 | 7359.00 3 | 2009-04-23 06:41:20 | -1775.00 | 5584.00 ...
  42. Join these two queries together: Build a Query from the

    Inside Out SELECT year, month, avg(balances.balance) FROM (SELECT MIN(timestamp) AS min, MAX(timestamp) AS max, EXTRACT (year FROM timestamp) AS year, EXTRACT (month FROM timestamp) AS month FROM bank_account_transaction GROUP BY year, month) AS month_ranges JOIN (SELECT timestamp, SUM(amount) OVER ( PARTITION BY bank_account_id ORDER BY timestamp ) AS balance FROM bank_account_transaction ) AS balances ON balances.timestamp BETWEEN month_ranges.min AND month_ranges.max GROUP BY year, month ORDER BY year, month
  43. Final Result Build a Query from the Inside Out year

    | month | avg ------+-------+--------- 2009 | 3 | 5180.75 2009 | 4 | 5567.30 2009 | 5 | 9138.33 2009 | 6 | 8216.22 2009 | 7 | 9889.50 2009 | 8 | 10060.92 2009 | 9 | 10139.81 2009 | 10 | 15868.20 2009 | 11 | 16562.52 2009 | 12 | 17302.37 ...
  44. Build a Query from the Inside Out • Now we'll

    build this in SQLAlchemy. • SQLAlchemy provides the same "inside out" paradigm as SQL itself. • You think in terms of SQL relations and joins in the same way as when constructing plain SQL. • SQLAlchemy can then apply automated enhancements such as eager loading, row limiting, further relational transformations.
  45. All the start/end dates of each month in the bank_account_transaction

    table: Build a Query() from the Inside Out from sqlalchemy import func, extract Transaction = BankAccount.Transaction month_ranges = session.query( func.min(Transaction.timestamp).label("min"), func.max(Transaction.timestamp).label("max"), extract("year", Transaction.timestamp).label("year"), extract("month", Transaction.timestamp).label("month") ).group_by( "year","month" ).subquery()
  46. All balances on all days via window function: Build a

    Query() from the Inside Out all_balances_and_timestamps = session.query( Transaction.timestamp, func.sum(Transaction.amount).over( partition_by=Transaction.parent_id, order_by=Transaction.timestamp ).label("balance") ).subquery()
  47. Join the two together: Build a Query() from the Inside

    Out avg_balance_per_month = \ session.query( month_ranges.c.year, month_ranges.c.month, func.avg(all_balances_and_timestamps.c.balance)).\ select_from(month_ranges).\ join(all_balances_and_timestamps, all_balances_and_timestamps.c.timestamp.between( month_ranges.c.min, month_ranges.c.max) ).group_by( "year", "month" ).order_by( "year", "month" )
  48. The Result Build a Query() from the Inside Out for

    year, month, avg in avg_balance_per_month: print year, month, round(avg, 2) 2009! ! 3! ! 5180.75 2009! ! 4! ! 5567.3 2009! ! 5! ! 9138.33 2009! ! 6! ! 8216.22 2009! ! 7! ! 9889.5 2009! ! 8! ! 10060.93 2009! ! 9! ! 10139.82 2009! ! 10! ! 15868.2 2009! ! 11! ! 16562.53 2009! ! 12! ! 17302.38 ...
  49. The SQL Build a Query() from the Inside Out SELECT

    anon_1.year AS anon_1_year, anon_1.month AS anon_1_month, avg(anon_2.balance) AS avg_1 FROM ( SELECT min(bank_account_transaction.timestamp) AS min, max(bank_account_transaction.timestamp) AS max, EXTRACT(year FROM bank_account_transaction.timestamp:: timestamp) AS year, EXTRACT(month FROM bank_account_transaction.timestamp::timestamp) AS month FROM bank_account_transaction GROUP BY year, month ) AS anon_1 JOIN ( SELECT bank_account_transaction.bank_account_id AS bank_account_id, bank_account_transaction.timestamp AS timestamp, sum(bank_account_transaction.amount) OVER ( PARTITION BY bank_account_transaction.bank_account_id ORDER BY bank_account_transaction.timestamp ) AS balance FROM bank_account_transaction ) AS anon_2 ON anon_2.timestamp BETWEEN anon_1.min AND anon_1.max GROUP BY year, month ORDER BY year, month
  50. Hand Coded - Summary • The developer retains control over

    the relational form of the target data. • Schema design decisions are all made by the developer. Tools shouldn't make decisions. • SQLA provides a rich, detailed vocabulary to express and automate these decisions. • Developer creates patterns and conventions based on this vocabulary. • Relational geometry remains an explicit concept complementing the object model.
  51. "Leaky Abstraction" • This term refers to when an abstraction

    layer exposes some detail about what's underneath. • Does SQLAlchemy's schema design paradigm and Query() object exhibit this behavior? • You bet! • All non-trivial abstractions, to some degree, are leaky. - Joel On Software • SQLAlchemy accepts this reality up front to create the best balance possible.
  52. Hand Coded... ...vs. Design by 3rd Party Hand Coded produces

    accurately targeted, long lasting designs that resist technical debt