Django backend for Microsoft SQL Server
Project description
SQL Server backend for Django
Welcome to the MSSQL-Django 3rd party backend project!
mssql-django is a fork of django-mssql-backend. This project provides an enterprise database connectivity option for the Django Web Framework, with support for Microsoft SQL Server and Azure SQL Database.
We'd like to give thanks to the community that made this project possible, with particular recognition of the contributors: OskarPersson, michiya, dlo and the original Google Code django-pyodbc team. Moving forward we encourage partipation in this project from both old and new contributors!
We hope you enjoy using the MSSQL-Django 3rd party backend.
Features
- Supports Django 2.2, 3.0, 3.1, 3.2 and 4.0
- Tested on Microsoft SQL Server 2016, 2017, 2019
- Passes most of the tests of the Django test suite
- Compatible with Micosoft ODBC Driver for SQL Server, SQL Server Native Client, and FreeTDS ODBC drivers
Dependencies
- pyodbc 3.0 or newer
Installation
-
Install pyodbc 3.0 (or newer) and Django
-
Install mssql-django:
pip install mssql-django
-
Set the
ENGINE
setting in thesettings.py
file used by your Django application or project to'mssql'
:'ENGINE': 'mssql'
Configuration
Standard Django settings
The following entries in a database-level settings dictionary in DATABASES control the behavior of the backend:
-
ENGINE
String. It must be
"mssql"
. -
NAME
String. Database name. Required.
-
HOST
String. SQL Server instance in
"server\instance"
format. -
PORT
String. Server instance port. An empty string means the default port.
-
USER
String. Database user name in
"user"
format. If not given then MS Integrated Security will be used. -
PASSWORD
String. Database user password.
-
AUTOCOMMIT
Boolean. Set this to
False
if you want to disable Django's transaction management and implement your own. -
Trusted_Connection
String. Default is
"yes"
. Can be set to"no"
if required.
and the following entries are also available in the TEST
dictionary
for any given database-level settings dictionary:
-
NAME
String. The name of database to use when running the test suite. If the default value (
None
) is used, the test database will use the name"test_" + NAME
. -
COLLATION
String. The collation order to use when creating the test database. If the default value (
None
) is used, the test database is assigned the default collation of the instance of SQL Server. -
DEPENDENCIES
String. The creation-order dependencies of the database. See the official Django documentation for more details.
-
MIRROR
String. The alias of the database that this database should mirror during testing. Default value is
None
. See the official Django documentation for more details.
OPTIONS
Dictionary. Current available keys are:
-
driver
String. ODBC Driver to use (
"ODBC Driver 17 for SQL Server"
,"SQL Server Native Client 11.0"
,"FreeTDS"
etc). Default is"ODBC Driver 17 for SQL Server"
. -
isolation_level
String. Sets transaction isolation level for each database session. Valid values for this entry are
READ UNCOMMITTED
,READ COMMITTED
,REPEATABLE READ
,SNAPSHOT
, andSERIALIZABLE
. Default isNone
which means no isolation levei is set to a database session and SQL Server default will be used. -
dsn
String. A named DSN can be used instead of
HOST
. -
host_is_server
Boolean. Only relevant if using the FreeTDS ODBC driver under Unix/Linux.
By default, when using the FreeTDS ODBC driver the value specified in the
HOST
setting is used in aSERVERNAME
ODBC connection string component instead of being used in aSERVER
component; this means that this value should be the name of a dataserver definition present in thefreetds.conf
FreeTDS configuration file instead of a hostname or an IP address.But if this option is present and its value is
True
, this special behavior is turned off. Instead, connections to the database server will be established usingHOST
andPORT
options, without requiringfreetds.conf
to be configured.See https://www.freetds.org/userguide/dsnless.html for more information.
-
unicode_results
Boolean. If it is set to
True
, pyodbc's unicode_results feature is activated and strings returned from pyodbc are always Unicode. Default value isFalse
. -
extra_params
String. Additional parameters for the ODBC connection. The format is
"param=value;param=value"
, Azure AD Authentication (Service Principal, Interactive, Msi) can be added to this field. -
collation
String. Name of the collation to use when performing text field lookups against the database. Default is
None
; this means no collation specifier is added to your lookup SQL (the default collation of your database will be used). For Chinese language you can set it to"Chinese_PRC_CI_AS"
. -
connection_timeout
Integer. Sets the timeout in seconds for the database connection process. Default value is
0
which disables the timeout. -
connection_retries
Integer. Sets the times to retry the database connection process. Default value is
5
. -
connection_retry_backoff_time
Integer. Sets the back off time in seconds for reries of the database connection process. Default value is
5
. -
query_timeout
Integer. Sets the timeout in seconds for the database query. Default value is
0
which disables the timeout. -
# Example "OPTIONS": { "setdecoding": [ {"sqltype": pyodbc.SQL_CHAR, "encoding": 'utf-8'}, {"sqltype": pyodbc.SQL_WCHAR, "encoding": 'utf-8'}], "setencoding": [ {"encoding": "utf-8"}], ... },
Backend-specific settings
The following project-level settings also control the behavior of the backend:
-
DATABASE_CONNECTION_POOLING
Boolean. If it is set to
False
, pyodbc's connection pooling feature won't be activated.
Example
Here is an example of the database settings:
DATABASES = {
'default': {
'ENGINE': 'mssql',
'NAME': 'mydb',
'USER': 'user@myserver',
'PASSWORD': 'password',
'HOST': 'myserver.database.windows.net',
'PORT': '',
'OPTIONS': {
'driver': 'ODBC Driver 17 for SQL Server',
},
},
}
# set this to False if you want to turn off pyodbc's connection pooling
DATABASE_CONNECTION_POOLING = False
Limitations
The following features are currently not fully supported:
- Altering a model field from or to AutoField at migration
- Django annotate functions have floating point arithmetic problems in some cases
- Annotate function with exists
- Exists function in order_by
- Righthand power and arithmetic with datatimes
- Timezones, timedeltas not fully supported
- Rename field/model with foreign key constraint
- Database level constraints
- Math degrees power or radians
- Bit-shift operators
- Filtered index
- Date extract function
- Hashing functions
JSONField lookups have limitations, more details here.
Contributing
More details on contributing can be found here.
This project welcomes contributions and suggestions. Most contributions require you to agree to a Contributor License Agreement (CLA) declaring that you have the right to, and actually do, grant us the rights to use your contribution. For details, visit https://cla.opensource.microsoft.com.
When you submit a pull request, a CLA bot will automatically determine whether you need to provide a CLA and decorate the PR appropriately (e.g., status check, comment). Simply follow the instructions provided by the bot. You will only need to do this once across all repos using our CLA.
This project has adopted the Microsoft Open Source Code of Conduct. For more information see the Code of Conduct FAQ or contact opencode@microsoft.com with any additional questions or comments.
Security Reporting Instructions
For security reporting instructions please refer to the SECURITY.md
file in this repository.
Trademarks
This project may contain trademarks or logos for projects, products, or services. Authorized use of Microsoft trademarks or logos is subject to and must follow Microsoft's Trademark & Brand Guidelines. Use of Microsoft trademarks or logos in modified versions of this project must not cause confusion or imply Microsoft sponsorship. Any use of third-party trademarks or logos are subject to those third-party's policies.
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