django-optimistic-lock
======================
.. image:: https://secure.travis-ci.org/gavinwahl/django-optimistic-lock.png?branch=master
:target: https://travis-ci.org/gavinwahl/django-optimistic-lock
Implements an offline optimistic lock [1]_ for Django models.
Usage
-----
Add a ``VersionField`` and inherit from ``VersionedMixin``.
.. code-block:: python
from ool import VersionField, VersionedMixin
class MyModel(VersionedMixin, models.Model):
version = VersionField()
Whenever ``MyModel`` is saved, the version will be checked to ensure
the instance has not changed since it was last fetched. If there is a
conflict, a ``ConcurrentUpdate`` exception will be raised.
Implementation
--------------
A ``VersionField`` is just an integer that increments itself every
time its model is saved. ``VersionedMixin`` overrides ``_do_update``
(which is called by ``save`` to actually do the update) to add an extra
condition to the update query -- that the version in the database is
the same as the model's version. If they match, there have been no
concurrent modifications. If they don't match, the UPDATE statement will
not update any rows, and we know that someone else saved first.
This produces SQL that looks something like::
UPDATE mymodel SET version = version + 1, ... WHERE id = %s AND version = %s
When no rows were updated, we know someone else won and we need to raise
a ``ConcurrentUpdate``.
Comparison to ``django-concurrency``
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
`django-concurrency <https://github.com/saxix/django-concurrency>`_ before
version 0.7 used ``SELECT FOR UPDATE`` to implement the version checking. I
wanted to avoid database-level locking, so ``django-optimistic-lock`` adds a
version filter to the update statement, as described by Martin Fowler [1]_.
Additionally, ool takes a more minimalistic approach than
django-concurrency by only doing one thing -- optimistic locking --
without any monkey-patching, middleware, settings variables, admin
classes, or form fields. django-concurrency would probably make more sense
if you're looking for something that will attempt to accommodate every
situation out of the box. Use ool if you just want a straightforward model
implementation and need to handle the UI and surrounding architecture
yourself.
Running the tests
-----------------
::
make test
.. [1] http://martinfowler.com/eaaCatalog/optimisticOfflineLock.html
.. [2] https://code.djangoproject.com/ticket/16649