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#
# Copyright (c) 2001, 2002 Zope Foundation and Contributors.
# All Rights Reserved.
#
# This software is subject to the provisions of the Zope Public License,
# Version 2.1 (ZPL). A copy of the ZPL should accompany this distribution.
# THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS" AND ANY AND ALL EXPRESS OR IMPLIED
# WARRANTIES ARE DISCLAIMED, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED
# WARRANTIES OF TITLE, MERCHANTABILITY, AGAINST INFRINGEMENT, AND FITNESS
# FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
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##############################################################################
from zope.interface import Attribute
from zope.interface import Interface
[docs]class ITransactionManager(Interface):
"""An object that manages a sequence of transactions.
Applications use transaction managers to establish transaction boundaries.
"""
explicit = Attribute(
"""Explicit mode indicator.
This is true if the transaction manager is in explicit mode.
In explicit mode, transactions must be begun explicitly, by
calling ``begin()`` and ended explicitly by calling
``commit()`` or ``abort()``.
""")
def begin():
"""Explicitly begin and return a new transaction.
If an existing transaction is in progress and the transaction
manager not in explicit mode, the previous transaction will be
aborted. If an existing transaction is in progress and the
transaction manager is in explicit mode, an
``AlreadyInTransaction`` exception will be raised..
The ``newTransaction`` method of registered synchronizers is called,
passing the new transaction object.
Note that when not in explicit mode, transactions may be
started implicitly without calling ``begin``. In that case,
``newTransaction`` isn't called because the transaction
manager doesn't know when to call it. The transaction is
likely to have begun long before the transaction manager is
involved. (Conceivably the ``commit`` and ``abort`` methods
could call ``begin``, but they don't.)
"""
def get():
"""Get the current transaction.
In explicit mode, if a transaction hasn't begun, a
``NoTransaction`` exception will be raised.
"""
def commit():
"""Commit the current transaction.
In explicit mode, if a transaction hasn't begun, a
``NoTransaction`` exception will be raised.
"""
def abort():
"""Abort the current transaction.
In explicit mode, if a transaction hasn't begun, a
``NoTransaction`` exception will be raised.
"""
def doom():
"""Doom the current transaction.
In explicit mode, if a transaction hasn't begun, a
``NoTransaction`` exception will be raised.
"""
def isDoomed():
"""Returns True if the current transaction is doomed, otherwise False.
In explicit mode, if a transaction hasn't begun, a
``NoTransaction`` exception will be raised.
"""
def savepoint(optimistic=False):
"""Create a savepoint from the current transaction.
If the optimistic argument is true, then data managers that
don't support savepoints can be used, but an error will be
raised if the savepoint is rolled back.
An ISavepoint object is returned.
In explicit mode, if a transaction hasn't begun, a
``NoTransaction`` exception will be raised.
"""
def registerSynch(synch):
"""Register an ISynchronizer.
Synchronizers are notified about some major events in a transaction's
life. See ISynchronizer for details.
If a synchronizer registers while there is an active
transaction, its newTransaction method will be called with the
active transaction.
"""
def unregisterSynch(synch):
"""Unregister an ISynchronizer.
Synchronizers are notified about some major events in a transaction's
life. See ISynchronizer for details.
"""
def clearSynchs():
"""Unregister all registered ISynchronizers.
This exists to support test cleanup/initialization
"""
def registeredSynchs():
"""Determine if any ISynchronizers are registered.
Return true if any are registered, and return False otherwise.
This exists to support test cleanup/initialization
"""
[docs]class ITransaction(Interface):
"""Object representing a running transaction.
Objects with this interface may represent different transactions
during their lifetime (.begin() can be called to start a new
transaction using the same instance, although that example is
deprecated and will go away in ZODB 3.6).
"""
user = Attribute(
"""A user name associated with the transaction.
The format of the user name is defined by the application. The value
is text (unicode). Storages record the user value, as meta-data,
when a transaction commits.
A storage may impose a limit on the size of the value; behavior is
undefined if such a limit is exceeded (for example, a storage may
raise an exception, or truncate the value).
""")
description = Attribute(
"""A textual description of the transaction.
The value is text (unicode). Method note() is the intended
way to set the value. Storages record the description, as meta-data,
when a transaction commits.
A storage may impose a limit on the size of the description; behavior
is undefined if such a limit is exceeded (for example, a storage may
raise an exception, or truncate the value).
""")
extension = Attribute(
"A dictionary containing application-defined metadata.")
def commit():
"""Finalize the transaction.
This executes the two-phase commit algorithm for all
IDataManager objects associated with the transaction.
"""
def abort():
"""Abort the transaction.
This is called from the application. This can only be called
before the two-phase commit protocol has been started.
"""
def doom():
"""Doom the transaction.
Dooms the current transaction. This will cause
DoomedTransactionException to be raised on any attempt to commit the
transaction.
Otherwise the transaction will behave as if it was active.
"""
def savepoint(optimistic=False):
"""Create a savepoint.
If the optimistic argument is true, then data managers that don't
support savepoints can be used, but an error will be raised if the
savepoint is rolled back.
An ISavepoint object is returned.
"""
def join(datamanager):
"""Add a data manager to the transaction.
`datamanager` must provide the transactions.interfaces.IDataManager
interface.
"""
def note(text):
"""Add text (unicode) to the transaction description.
This modifies the `.description` attribute; see its docs for more
detail. First surrounding whitespace is stripped from `text`. If
`.description` is currently an empty string, then the stripped text
becomes its value, else two newlines and the stripped text are
appended to `.description`.
"""
def setExtendedInfo(name, value):
"""Add extension data to the transaction.
name
is the text (unicode) name of the extension property to set
value
must be picklable and json serializable (not an instance).
Multiple calls may be made to set multiple extension
properties, provided the names are distinct.
Storages record the extension data, as meta-data, when a transaction
commits.
A storage may impose a limit on the size of extension data; behavior
is undefined if such a limit is exceeded (for example, a storage may
raise an exception, or remove `<name, value>` pairs).
"""
def addBeforeCommitHook(hook, args=(), kws=None):
"""Register a hook to call before the transaction is committed.
The specified hook function will be called after the transaction's
commit method has been called, but before the commit process has been
started. The hook will be passed the specified positional (`args`)
and keyword (`kws`) arguments. `args` is a sequence of positional
arguments to be passed, defaulting to an empty tuple (no positional
arguments are passed). `kws` is a dictionary of keyword argument
names and values to be passed, or the default None (no keyword
arguments are passed).
Multiple hooks can be registered and will be called in the order they
were registered (first registered, first called). This method can
also be called from a hook: an executing hook can register more
hooks. Applications should take care to avoid creating infinite loops
by recursively registering hooks.
Hooks are called only for a top-level commit. A
savepoint creation does not call any hooks. If the
transaction is aborted, hooks are not called, and are discarded.
Calling a hook "consumes" its registration too: hook registrations
do not persist across transactions. If it's desired to call the same
hook on every transaction commit, then addBeforeCommitHook() must be
called with that hook during every transaction; in such a case
consider registering a synchronizer object via a TransactionManager's
registerSynch() method instead.
"""
def getBeforeCommitHooks():
"""Return iterable producing the registered addBeforeCommit hooks.
A triple (hook, args, kws) is produced for each registered hook.
The hooks are produced in the order in which they would be invoked
by a top-level transaction commit.
"""
def addAfterCommitHook(hook, args=(), kws=None):
"""Register a hook to call after a transaction commit attempt.
The specified hook function will be called after the transaction
commit succeeds or aborts. The first argument passed to the hook
is a Boolean value, true if the commit succeeded, or false if the
commit aborted. `args` specifies additional positional, and `kws`
keyword, arguments to pass to the hook. `args` is a sequence of
positional arguments to be passed, defaulting to an empty tuple
(only the true/false success argument is passed). `kws` is a
dictionary of keyword argument names and values to be passed, or
the default None (no keyword arguments are passed).
Multiple hooks can be registered and will be called in the order they
were registered (first registered, first called). This method can
also be called from a hook: an executing hook can register more
hooks. Applications should take care to avoid creating infinite loops
by recursively registering hooks.
Hooks are called only for a top-level commit. A
savepoint creation does not call any hooks. Calling a
hook "consumes" its registration: hook registrations do not
persist across transactions. If it's desired to call the same
hook on every transaction commit, then addAfterCommitHook() must be
called with that hook during every transaction; in such a case
consider registering a synchronizer object via a TransactionManager's
registerSynch() method instead.
"""
def getAfterCommitHooks():
"""Return iterable producing the registered addAfterCommit hooks.
A triple (hook, args, kws) is produced for each registered hook.
The hooks are produced in the order in which they would be invoked
by a top-level transaction commit.
"""
def set_data(ob, data):
"""Hold data on behalf of an object
For objects such as data managers or their subobjects that
work with multiple transactions, it's convenient to store
transaction-specific data on the transaction itself. The
transaction knows nothing about the data, but simply holds it
on behalf of the object.
The object passed should be the object that needs the data, as
opposed to simple object like a string. (Internally, the id of
the object is used as the key.)
"""
def data(ob):
"""Retrieve data held on behalf of an object.
See set_data.
"""
def isRetryableError(error):
"""Determine if the error is retryable.
Return true if any joined IRetryDataManager considers the error
transient. Such errors may occur due to concurrency issues in the
underlying storage engine.
"""
class ITransactionDeprecated(Interface):
"""Deprecated parts of the transaction API."""
def begin(info=None):
"""Begin a new transaction.
If the transaction is in progress, it is aborted and a new
transaction is started using the same transaction object.
"""
# TODO: deprecate this for 3.6.
def register(object):
"""Register the given object for transaction control."""
class IDataManager(Interface):
"""Objects that manage transactional storage.
These objects may manage data for other objects, or they may manage
non-object storages, such as relational databases. For example,
a ZODB.Connection.
Note that when some data is modified, that data's data manager should
join a transaction so that data can be committed when the user commits
the transaction.
"""
transaction_manager = Attribute(
"""The transaction manager (TM) used by this data manager.
This is a public attribute, intended for read-only use. The value
is an instance of ITransactionManager, typically set by the data
manager's constructor.
""")
def abort(transaction):
"""Abort a transaction and forget all changes.
Abort must be called outside of a two-phase commit.
Abort is called by the transaction manager to abort
transactions that are not yet in a two-phase commit. It may
also be called when rolling back a savepoint made before the
data manager joined the transaction.
In any case, after abort is called, the data manager is no
longer participating in the transaction. If there are new
changes, the data manager must rejoin the transaction.
"""
# Two-phase commit protocol. These methods are called by the ITransaction
# object associated with the transaction being committed. The sequence
# of calls normally follows this regular expression:
# tpc_begin commit tpc_vote (tpc_finish | tpc_abort)
def tpc_begin(transaction):
"""Begin commit of a transaction, starting the two-phase commit.
transaction is the ITransaction instance associated with the
transaction being committed.
"""
def commit(transaction):
"""Commit modifications to registered objects.
Save changes to be made persistent if the transaction commits (if
tpc_finish is called later). If tpc_abort is called later, changes
must not persist.
This includes conflict detection and handling. If no conflicts or
errors occur, the data manager should be prepared to make the
changes persist when tpc_finish is called.
"""
def tpc_vote(transaction):
"""Verify that a data manager can commit the transaction.
This is the last chance for a data manager to vote 'no'. A
data manager votes 'no' by raising an exception.
transaction is the ITransaction instance associated with the
transaction being committed.
"""
def tpc_finish(transaction):
"""Indicate confirmation that the transaction is done.
Make all changes to objects modified by this transaction persist.
transaction is the ITransaction instance associated with the
transaction being committed.
This should never fail. If this raises an exception, the
database is not expected to maintain consistency; it's a
serious error.
"""
def tpc_abort(transaction):
"""Abort a transaction.
This is called by a transaction manager to end a two-phase commit on
the data manager. Abandon all changes to objects modified by this
transaction.
transaction is the ITransaction instance associated with the
transaction being committed.
This should never fail.
"""
def sortKey():
"""Return a key to use for ordering registered DataManagers.
In order to guarantee a total ordering, keys must be strings.
ZODB uses a global sort order to prevent deadlock when it commits
transactions involving multiple resource managers. The resource
manager must define a sortKey() method that provides a global ordering
for resource managers.
"""
# Alternate version:
#"""Return a consistent sort key for this connection.
#
#This allows ordering multiple connections that use the same storage in
#a consistent manner. This is unique for the lifetime of a connection,
#which is good enough to avoid ZEO deadlocks.
#"""
class ISavepointDataManager(IDataManager):
def savepoint():
"""Return a data-manager savepoint (IDataManagerSavepoint).
"""
class IRetryDataManager(IDataManager):
def should_retry(exception):
"""Return whether a given exception instance should be retried.
A data manager can provide this method to indicate that a a
transaction that raised the given error should be retried.
This method may be called by an ITransactionManager when
considering whether to retry a failed transaction.
"""
class IDataManagerSavepoint(Interface):
"""Savepoint for data-manager changes for use in transaction savepoints.
Datamanager savepoints are used by, and only by, transaction savepoints.
Note that data manager savepoints don't have any notion of, or
responsibility for, validity. It isn't the responsibility of
data-manager savepoints to prevent multiple rollbacks or rollbacks after
transaction termination. Preventing invalid savepoint rollback is the
responsibility of transaction rollbacks. Application code should never
use data-manager savepoints.
"""
def rollback():
"""Rollback any work done since the savepoint.
"""
class ISavepoint(Interface):
"""A transaction savepoint.
"""
def rollback():
"""Rollback any work done since the savepoint.
InvalidSavepointRollbackError is raised if the savepoint isn't valid.
"""
valid = Attribute(
"Boolean indicating whether the savepoint is valid")
class InvalidSavepointRollbackError(Exception):
"""Attempt to rollback an invalid savepoint.
A savepoint may be invalid because:
- The surrounding transaction has committed or aborted.
- An earlier savepoint in the same transaction has been rolled back.
"""
class ISynchronizer(Interface):
"""Objects that participate in the transaction-boundary notification API.
"""
def beforeCompletion(transaction):
"""Hook that is called by the transaction at the start of a commit.
"""
def afterCompletion(transaction):
"""Hook that is called by the transaction after completing a commit.
"""
def newTransaction(transaction):
"""Hook that is called at the start of a transaction.
This hook is called when, and only when, a transaction manager's
begin() method is called explictly.
"""
class TransactionError(Exception):
"""An error occurred due to normal transaction processing."""
class TransactionFailedError(TransactionError):
"""Cannot perform an operation on a transaction that previously failed.
An attempt was made to commit a transaction, or to join a transaction,
but this transaction previously raised an exception during an attempt
to commit it. The transaction must be explicitly aborted, either by
invoking abort() on the transaction, or begin() on its transaction
manager.
"""
class DoomedTransaction(TransactionError):
"""A commit was attempted on a transaction that was doomed."""
class TransientError(TransactionError):
"""An error has occured when performing a transaction.
It's possible that retrying the transaction will succeed.
"""
class NoTransaction(TransactionError):
"""No transaction has been defined
An application called an operation on a transaction manager that
affects an exciting transaction, but no transaction was begun.
The transaction manager was in explicit mode, so a new transaction
was not explicitly created.
"""
class AlreadyInTransaction(TransactionError):
"""Attempt to create a new transaction without ending a preceding one
An application called ``begin()`` on a transaction manager in
explicit mode, without committing or aborting the previous
transaction.
"""