Generate tickets efficiently in a database in Django
Project description
## About
An implementation of a Django model that returns tickets, as described
in the [Flickr blog post][flickr]. Currently, requires MySQL and Django 1.6 or
higher.
## Installation
I uploaded it to [PyPi][pypi], so you can grab it there if you'd like with
```
pip install django-ticketing
```
or install it with pip using the git address:
```
pip install git+git@github.com:streeter/django-ticketing.git
```
Then add `ticketing` to your `INSTALLED\_APPS`.
## Usage
To use this, you can either use the model interface, or just the shortcut
function defined in `ticketing.models`. That usage looks like this:
```python
# Import the function
from ticketing.models import get_ticket
# Go get yourself a ticket
ticket = get_ticket()
# Boom. That just happened
```
This assumes you've had the single table that needs to be created in the DB,
in other words, you have run `syncdb` or migrated with e.g. [South][south].
### Multiple Sequences
`django-ticketing` also supports multiple sequences, which allows to have
sequences of tickets that are independent. This means you could have a sequence
for users, a sequence for posts and a sequence for widgets. This is configured
through your Django settings configuration.
Simply define a setting called `TICKETING\_SEQUENCES` with a tuple of sequence
names that have to be valid table names. This defaults to the tuple `('default',)`.
In addition, you can define the default sequence from which new tickets are
taken from with the setting `TICKETING_DEFAULT_SEQUENCE`, which defaults to
`'default'`.
Note that `TICKETING_DEFAULT_SEQUENCE` has to be a sequence name that is defined
inside of `TICKETING\_SEQUENCES`, otherwise an exception will be raised
during setup.
So to have sequences for the above example, put the following lines in your
`settings.py`:
``` python
TICKETING_DEFAULT_SEQUENCE = 'users'
TICKETING_SEQUENCES = ('users', 'posts', 'widgets', )
```
Then, to get a ticket from a specific sequence, pass in the sequence name to
`get_ticket()`:
``` python
# Get yourself a user ticket
user_ticket = get_ticket('users')
# Get yourself another user ticket
user_ticket = get_ticket()
# Get yourself a posts ticket
post_ticket = get_ticket('posts')
```
Notice that the default sequence for `get_ticket()` is the value of the
`TICKETING_DEFAULT_SEQUENCE` configuration variable.
Also, after you change the value of `TICKETING_SEQUENCES`, be sure to re-run
`syncdb` to make sure the new tables are created (or whatever DB table creation
you have in your environment).
### Other Configuration Options
`TICKETING_APP_LABEL`: This is used to specify the prefix for all the DB
tablenames. The default value is `'ticketing'`. Be sure you know what you are
doing when you change this.
## Testing
There are some tests included. To run those tests, simply execute `runtests.py`:
``` bash
[streeter] $ python runtests.py
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Ran 6 tests in 0.213s
OK
[streeter] $
```
The test suite can run on all DB backends supported by Django. By default
it runs using sqlite3.
To run on MySQL, uncomment the marked section in `runtests.py`, create a
DB that Django can connect to and give the Django user permissions to
create a new testing DB, e.g. by running the following commands:
``` bash
mysql -u root -e "DROP DATABASE ticketing_test";
mysql -u root -e "CREATE DATABASE ticketing_test";
mysql -u root -e "GRANT ALL ON ticketing_test.* TO 'ticketing_test'@'localhost' IDENTIFIED BY ''"
```
Of course, you may need to change the host of the DB and user that connects, but
you should get the idea.
## License
Uses the [MIT][mit] license.
[flickr]: http://code.flickr.com/blog/2010/02/08/ticket-servers-distributed-unique-primary-keys-on-the-cheap/
[pypi]: http://pypi.python.org/pypi/django-ticketing/
[south]: http://south.aeracode.org/
[mit]: http://opensource.org/licenses/MIT
An implementation of a Django model that returns tickets, as described
in the [Flickr blog post][flickr]. Currently, requires MySQL and Django 1.6 or
higher.
## Installation
I uploaded it to [PyPi][pypi], so you can grab it there if you'd like with
```
pip install django-ticketing
```
or install it with pip using the git address:
```
pip install git+git@github.com:streeter/django-ticketing.git
```
Then add `ticketing` to your `INSTALLED\_APPS`.
## Usage
To use this, you can either use the model interface, or just the shortcut
function defined in `ticketing.models`. That usage looks like this:
```python
# Import the function
from ticketing.models import get_ticket
# Go get yourself a ticket
ticket = get_ticket()
# Boom. That just happened
```
This assumes you've had the single table that needs to be created in the DB,
in other words, you have run `syncdb` or migrated with e.g. [South][south].
### Multiple Sequences
`django-ticketing` also supports multiple sequences, which allows to have
sequences of tickets that are independent. This means you could have a sequence
for users, a sequence for posts and a sequence for widgets. This is configured
through your Django settings configuration.
Simply define a setting called `TICKETING\_SEQUENCES` with a tuple of sequence
names that have to be valid table names. This defaults to the tuple `('default',)`.
In addition, you can define the default sequence from which new tickets are
taken from with the setting `TICKETING_DEFAULT_SEQUENCE`, which defaults to
`'default'`.
Note that `TICKETING_DEFAULT_SEQUENCE` has to be a sequence name that is defined
inside of `TICKETING\_SEQUENCES`, otherwise an exception will be raised
during setup.
So to have sequences for the above example, put the following lines in your
`settings.py`:
``` python
TICKETING_DEFAULT_SEQUENCE = 'users'
TICKETING_SEQUENCES = ('users', 'posts', 'widgets', )
```
Then, to get a ticket from a specific sequence, pass in the sequence name to
`get_ticket()`:
``` python
# Get yourself a user ticket
user_ticket = get_ticket('users')
# Get yourself another user ticket
user_ticket = get_ticket()
# Get yourself a posts ticket
post_ticket = get_ticket('posts')
```
Notice that the default sequence for `get_ticket()` is the value of the
`TICKETING_DEFAULT_SEQUENCE` configuration variable.
Also, after you change the value of `TICKETING_SEQUENCES`, be sure to re-run
`syncdb` to make sure the new tables are created (or whatever DB table creation
you have in your environment).
### Other Configuration Options
`TICKETING_APP_LABEL`: This is used to specify the prefix for all the DB
tablenames. The default value is `'ticketing'`. Be sure you know what you are
doing when you change this.
## Testing
There are some tests included. To run those tests, simply execute `runtests.py`:
``` bash
[streeter] $ python runtests.py
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Ran 6 tests in 0.213s
OK
[streeter] $
```
The test suite can run on all DB backends supported by Django. By default
it runs using sqlite3.
To run on MySQL, uncomment the marked section in `runtests.py`, create a
DB that Django can connect to and give the Django user permissions to
create a new testing DB, e.g. by running the following commands:
``` bash
mysql -u root -e "DROP DATABASE ticketing_test";
mysql -u root -e "CREATE DATABASE ticketing_test";
mysql -u root -e "GRANT ALL ON ticketing_test.* TO 'ticketing_test'@'localhost' IDENTIFIED BY ''"
```
Of course, you may need to change the host of the DB and user that connects, but
you should get the idea.
## License
Uses the [MIT][mit] license.
[flickr]: http://code.flickr.com/blog/2010/02/08/ticket-servers-distributed-unique-primary-keys-on-the-cheap/
[pypi]: http://pypi.python.org/pypi/django-ticketing/
[south]: http://south.aeracode.org/
[mit]: http://opensource.org/licenses/MIT
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