psycopg2/lib/__init__.py
Jon Dufresne 048f1bb95a Remove workaround for decimal module
The decimal module is available on all Python versions supported by
psycopg2. It has been available since Python 2.4. No need to catch an
ImportError.

https://docs.python.org/2/library/decimal.html
2017-11-26 17:55:24 -08:00

131 lines
4.7 KiB
Python

"""A Python driver for PostgreSQL
psycopg is a PostgreSQL_ database adapter for the Python_ programming
language. This is version 2, a complete rewrite of the original code to
provide new-style classes for connection and cursor objects and other sweet
candies. Like the original, psycopg 2 was written with the aim of being very
small and fast, and stable as a rock.
Homepage: http://initd.org/projects/psycopg2
.. _PostgreSQL: http://www.postgresql.org/
.. _Python: http://www.python.org/
:Groups:
* `Connections creation`: connect
* `Value objects constructors`: Binary, Date, DateFromTicks, Time,
TimeFromTicks, Timestamp, TimestampFromTicks
"""
# psycopg/__init__.py - initialization of the psycopg module
#
# Copyright (C) 2003-2010 Federico Di Gregorio <fog@debian.org>
#
# psycopg2 is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify it
# under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public License as published
# by the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or
# (at your option) any later version.
#
# In addition, as a special exception, the copyright holders give
# permission to link this program with the OpenSSL library (or with
# modified versions of OpenSSL that use the same license as OpenSSL),
# and distribute linked combinations including the two.
#
# You must obey the GNU Lesser General Public License in all respects for
# all of the code used other than OpenSSL.
#
# psycopg2 is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT
# ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or
# FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU Lesser General Public
# License for more details.
# Import modules needed by _psycopg to allow tools like py2exe to do
# their work without bothering about the module dependencies.
# Note: the first internal import should be _psycopg, otherwise the real cause
# of a failed loading of the C module may get hidden, see
# http://archives.postgresql.org/psycopg/2011-02/msg00044.php
# Import the DBAPI-2.0 stuff into top-level module.
from psycopg2._psycopg import ( # noqa
BINARY, NUMBER, STRING, DATETIME, ROWID,
Binary, Date, Time, Timestamp,
DateFromTicks, TimeFromTicks, TimestampFromTicks,
Error, Warning, DataError, DatabaseError, ProgrammingError, IntegrityError,
InterfaceError, InternalError, NotSupportedError, OperationalError,
_connect, apilevel, threadsafety, paramstyle,
__version__, __libpq_version__,
)
from psycopg2 import tz # noqa
# Register default adapters.
from psycopg2 import extensions as _ext
_ext.register_adapter(tuple, _ext.SQL_IN)
_ext.register_adapter(type(None), _ext.NoneAdapter)
# Register the Decimal adapter here instead of in the C layer.
# This way a new class is registered for each sub-interpreter.
# See ticket #52
from decimal import Decimal
from psycopg2._psycopg import Decimal as Adapter
_ext.register_adapter(Decimal, Adapter)
del Decimal, Adapter
def connect(dsn=None, connection_factory=None, cursor_factory=None, **kwargs):
"""
Create a new database connection.
The connection parameters can be specified as a string:
conn = psycopg2.connect("dbname=test user=postgres password=secret")
or using a set of keyword arguments:
conn = psycopg2.connect(database="test", user="postgres", password="secret")
Or as a mix of both. The basic connection parameters are:
- *dbname*: the database name
- *database*: the database name (only as keyword argument)
- *user*: user name used to authenticate
- *password*: password used to authenticate
- *host*: database host address (defaults to UNIX socket if not provided)
- *port*: connection port number (defaults to 5432 if not provided)
Using the *connection_factory* parameter a different class or connections
factory can be specified. It should be a callable object taking a dsn
argument.
Using the *cursor_factory* parameter, a new default cursor factory will be
used by cursor().
Using *async*=True an asynchronous connection will be created. *async_* is
a valid alias (for Python versions where ``async`` is a keyword).
Any other keyword parameter will be passed to the underlying client
library: the list of supported parameters depends on the library version.
"""
kwasync = {}
if 'async' in kwargs:
kwasync['async'] = kwargs.pop('async')
if 'async_' in kwargs:
kwasync['async_'] = kwargs.pop('async_')
if dsn is None and not kwargs:
raise TypeError('missing dsn and no parameters')
dsn = _ext.make_dsn(dsn, **kwargs)
conn = _connect(dsn, connection_factory=connection_factory, **kwasync)
if cursor_factory is not None:
conn.cursor_factory = cursor_factory
return conn