psycopg2.extensions
– Extensions to the DB API¶
The module contains a few objects and function extending the minimum set of functionalities defined by the DB API 2.0.
Classes definitions¶
Instances of these classes are usually returned by factory functions or attributes. Their definitions are exposed here to allow subclassing, introspection etc.
- class psycopg2.extensions.connection(dsn, async=False)¶
Is the class usually returned by the
connect()
function. It is exposed by theextensions
module in order to allow subclassing to extend its behaviour: the subclass should be passed to theconnect()
function using theconnection_factory
parameter. See also Connection and cursor factories.For a complete description of the class, see
connection
.Changed in version 2.7: async_ can be used as alias for async.
- class psycopg2.extensions.cursor(conn, name=None)¶
It is the class usually returned by the
connection.cursor()
method. It is exposed by theextensions
module in order to allow subclassing to extend its behaviour: the subclass should be passed to thecursor()
method using thecursor_factory
parameter. See also Connection and cursor factories.For a complete description of the class, see
cursor
.
- class psycopg2.extensions.lobject(conn[, oid[, mode[, new_oid[, new_file]]]])¶
Wrapper for a PostgreSQL large object. See Access to PostgreSQL large objects for an overview.
The class can be subclassed: see the
connection.lobject()
to know how to specify alobject
subclass.New in version 2.0.8.
- oid¶
Database OID of the object.
- mode¶
The mode the database was open. See
connection.lobject()
for a description of the available modes.
- read(bytes=-1)¶
Read a chunk of data from the current file position. If -1 (default) read all the remaining data.
The result is an Unicode string (decoded according to
connection.encoding
) if the file was open int
mode, a bytes string forb
mode.Changed in version 2.4: added Unicode support.
- write(str)¶
Write a string to the large object. Return the number of bytes written. Unicode strings are encoded in the
connection.encoding
before writing.Changed in version 2.4: added Unicode support.
- export(file_name)¶
Export the large object content to the file system.
The method uses the efficient
lo_export()
libpq function.
- seek(offset, whence=0)¶
Set the lobject current position.
Changed in version 2.6: added support for offset > 2GB.
- tell()¶
Return the lobject current position.
New in version 2.2.
Changed in version 2.6: added support for return value > 2GB.
- truncate(len=0)¶
Truncate the lobject to the given size.
The method will only be available if Psycopg has been built against libpq from PostgreSQL 8.3 or later and can only be used with PostgreSQL servers running these versions. It uses the
lo_truncate()
libpq function.New in version 2.2.
Changed in version 2.6: added support for len > 2GB.
Warning
If Psycopg is built with
lo_truncate()
support or with the 64 bits API support (resp. from PostgreSQL versions 8.3 and 9.3) but at runtime an older version of the dynamic library is found, thepsycopg2
module will fail to import. See the lo_truncate FAQ about the problem.- close()¶
Close the object.
- closed¶
Boolean attribute specifying if the object is closed.
- unlink()¶
Close the object and remove it from the database.
- class psycopg2.extensions.ConnectionInfo(connection)¶
Details about the native PostgreSQL database connection.
This class exposes several informative functions about the status of the libpq connection.
Objects of this class are exposed as the
connection.info
attribute.New in version 2.8.
- host¶
The server host name of the connection.
This can be a host name, an IP address, or a directory path if the connection is via Unix socket. (The path case can be distinguished because it will always be an absolute path, beginning with
/
.)See also
libpq docs for PQhost() for details.
- options¶
The command-line options passed in the connection request.
See also
libpq docs for PQoptions() for details.
- dsn_parameters¶
The effective connection parameters.
- Type:
dict
The results include values which weren’t explicitly set by the connection string, such as defaults, environment variables, etc. The password parameter is removed from the results.
See also
libpq docs for PQconninfo() for details.
Example:
>>> conn.info.dsn_parameters {'dbname': 'test', 'user': 'postgres', 'port': '5432', 'sslmode': 'prefer'}
Requires libpq >= 9.3.
- status¶
The status of the connection.
- Type:
int
See also
libpq docs for PQstatus() for details.
- transaction_status¶
The current in-transaction status of the connection.
Symbolic constants for the values are defined in the module
psycopg2.extensions
: see Transaction status constants for the available values.- Type:
int
See also
libpq docs for PQtransactionStatus() for details.
- parameter_status(name)¶
Looks up a current parameter setting of the server.
- Parameters:
name (
str
) – The name of the parameter to return.- Returns:
The parameter value,
None
if the parameter is unknown.- Return type:
str
See also
libpq docs for PQparameterStatus() for details.
- protocol_version¶
The frontend/backend protocol being used.
- Type:
int
See also
libpq docs for PQprotocolVersion() for details.
Currently Psycopg supports only protocol 3, which allows connection to PostgreSQL server from version 7.4. Psycopg versions previous than 2.3 support both protocols 2 and 3.
- server_version¶
Returns an integer representing the server version.
- Type:
int
See also
libpq docs for PQserverVersion() for details.
The number is formed by converting the major, minor, and revision numbers into two-decimal-digit numbers and appending them together. After PostgreSQL 10 the minor version was dropped, so the second group of digits is always
00
. For example, version 9.3.5 will be returned as90305
, version 10.2 as100002
.
- error_message¶
The error message most recently generated by an operation on the connection.
None
if there is no current message.See also
libpq docs for PQerrorMessage() for details.
- socket¶
The file descriptor number of the connection socket to the server.
- Type:
int
See also
libpq docs for PQsocket() for details.
- backend_pid¶
The process ID (PID) of the backend process you connected to.
- Type:
int
See also
libpq docs for PQbackendPID() for details.
- needs_password¶
The connection authentication method required a password, but none was available.
- Type:
bool
See also
libpq docs for PQconnectionNeedsPassword() for details.
- used_password¶
The connection authentication method used a password.
- Type:
bool
See also
libpq docs for PQconnectionUsedPassword() for details.
- ssl_in_use¶
True
if the connection uses SSL,False
if not.Only available if psycopg was built with libpq >= 9.5; raise
NotSupportedError
otherwise.- Type:
bool
See also
libpq docs for PQsslInUse() for details.
- ssl_attribute(name)¶
Returns SSL-related information about the connection.
- Parameters:
name (
str
) – The name of the attribute to return.- Returns:
The attribute value,
None
if unknown.- Return type:
str
Only available if psycopg was built with libpq >= 9.5; raise
NotSupportedError
otherwise.Valid names are available in
ssl_attribute_names
.See also
libpq docs for PQsslAttribute() for details.
- ssl_attribute_names¶
The list of the SSL attribute names available.
- Type:
list
ofstr
Only available if psycopg was built with libpq >= 9.5; raise
NotSupportedError
otherwise.See also
libpq docs for PQsslAttributeNames() for details.
- class psycopg2.extensions.Column(\*args, \*\*kwargs)¶
Description of one result column, exposed as items of the
cursor.description
sequence.New in version 2.8: in previous version the
description
attribute was a sequence of simple tuples or namedtuples.- name¶
The name of the column returned.
- type_code¶
The PostgreSQL OID of the column. You can use the
pg_type
system table to get more informations about the type. This is the value used by Psycopg to decide what Python type use to represent the value. See also Type casting of SQL types into Python objects.
- display_size¶
Supposed to be the actual length of the column in bytes. Obtaining this value is computationally intensive, so it is always
None
.Changed in version 2.8: It was previously possible to obtain this value using a compiler flag at builtin.
- internal_size¶
The size in bytes of the column associated to this column on the server. Set to a negative value for variable-size types See also PQfsize.
- scale¶
Count of decimal digits in the fractional part in columns of type
NUMERIC
.None
for other types.
- null_ok¶
Always
None
as not easy to retrieve from the libpq.
- table_oid¶
The oid of the table from which the column was fetched (matching
pg_class.oid
).None
if the column is not a simple reference to a table column. See also PQftable.New in version 2.8.
- table_column¶
The number of the column (within its table) making up the result (matching
pg_attribute.attnum
, so it will start from 1).None
if the column is not a simple reference to a table column. See also PQftablecol.New in version 2.8.
- class psycopg2.extensions.Notify(pid, channel, payload='')¶
A notification received from the backend.
Notify
instances are made available upon reception on thenotifies
member of the listening connection. The object can be also accessed as a 2 items tuple returning the members(pid,channel)
for backward compatibility.See Asynchronous notifications for details.
New in version 2.3.
- channel¶
The name of the channel to which the notification was sent.
- payload¶
The payload message of the notification.
Attaching a payload to a notification is only available since PostgreSQL 9.0: for notifications received from previous versions of the server this member is always the empty string.
- pid¶
The ID of the backend process that sent the notification.
Note: if the sending session was handled by Psycopg, you can use
backend_pid
to know its PID.
- class psycopg2.extensions.Xid(format_id, gtrid, bqual)¶
A transaction identifier used for two-phase commit.
Usually returned by the connection methods
xid()
andtpc_recover()
.Xid
instances can be unpacked as a 3-item tuples containing the items(format_id,gtrid,bqual)
. Thestr()
of the object returns the transaction ID used in the commands sent to the server.See Two-Phase Commit protocol support for an introduction.
New in version 2.3.
- static from_string(s)¶
Create a
Xid
object from a string representation. Static method.If s is a PostgreSQL transaction ID produced by a XA transaction, the returned object will have
format_id
,gtrid
,bqual
set to the values of the preparing XA id. Otherwise only thegtrid
is populated with the unparsed string. The operation is the inverse of the one performed bystr(xid)
.
- bqual¶
Branch qualifier of the transaction.
In a XA transaction every resource participating to a transaction receives a distinct branch qualifier.
None
if the transaction doesn’t follow the XA standard.
- database¶
Database the recovered transaction belongs to.
- format_id¶
Format ID in a XA transaction.
A non-negative 32 bit integer.
None
if the transaction doesn’t follow the XA standard.
- gtrid¶
Global transaction ID in a XA transaction.
If the transaction doesn’t follow the XA standard, it is the plain transaction ID used in the server commands.
- owner¶
Name of the user who prepared a recovered transaction.
- prepared¶
Timestamp (with timezone) in which a recovered transaction was prepared.
- class psycopg2.extensions.Diagnostics(exception)¶
Details from a database error report.
The object is returned by the
diag
attribute of theError
object. All the information available from thePQresultErrorField()
function are exposed as attributes by the object, e.g. theseverity
attribute returns thePG_DIAG_SEVERITY
code. Please refer to the PostgreSQL documentation for the meaning of all the attributes.New in version 2.5.
The attributes currently available are:
- column_name¶
- constraint_name¶
- context¶
- datatype_name¶
- internal_position¶
- internal_query¶
- message_detail¶
- message_hint¶
- message_primary¶
- schema_name¶
- severity¶
- severity_nonlocalized¶
- source_file¶
- source_function¶
- source_line¶
- sqlstate¶
- statement_position¶
- table_name¶
A string with the error field if available;
None
if not available. The attribute value is available only if the error sent by the server: not all the fields are available for all the errors and for all the server versions.New in version 2.8: The
severity_nonlocalized
attribute.
SQL adaptation protocol objects¶
Psycopg provides a flexible system to adapt Python objects to the SQL syntax (inspired to the PEP 246), allowing serialization in PostgreSQL. See Adapting new Python types to SQL syntax for a detailed description. The following objects deal with Python objects adaptation:
- psycopg2.extensions.adapt(obj)¶
Return the SQL representation of obj as an
ISQLQuote
. Raise aProgrammingError
if how to adapt the object is unknown. In order to allow new objects to be adapted, register a new adapter for it using theregister_adapter()
function.The function is the entry point of the adaptation mechanism: it can be used to write adapters for complex objects by recursively calling
adapt()
on its components.
- psycopg2.extensions.register_adapter(class, adapter)¶
Register a new adapter for the objects of class class.
adapter should be a function taking a single argument (the object to adapt) and returning an object conforming to the
ISQLQuote
protocol (e.g. exposing agetquoted()
method). TheAsIs
is often useful for this task.Once an object is registered, it can be safely used in SQL queries and by the
adapt()
function.
- class psycopg2.extensions.ISQLQuote(wrapped_object)¶
Represents the SQL adaptation protocol. Objects conforming this protocol should implement a
getquoted()
and optionally aprepare()
method.Adapters may subclass
ISQLQuote
, but is not necessary: it is enough to expose agetquoted()
method to be conforming.- _wrapped¶
The wrapped object passes to the constructor
- getquoted()¶
Subclasses or other conforming objects should return a valid SQL string representing the wrapped object. In Python 3 the SQL must be returned in a
bytes
object. TheISQLQuote
implementation does nothing.
- prepare(conn)¶
Prepare the adapter for a connection. The method is optional: if implemented, it will be invoked before
getquoted()
with the connection to adapt for as argument.A conform object can implement this method if the SQL representation depends on any server parameter, such as the server version or the
standard_conforming_string
setting. Container objects may store the connection and use it to recursively prepare contained objects: see the implementation forpsycopg2.extensions.SQL_IN
for a simple example.
- class psycopg2.extensions.AsIs(object)¶
Adapter conform to the
ISQLQuote
protocol useful for objects whose string representation is already valid as SQL representation.- getquoted()¶
Return the
str()
conversion of the wrapped object.>>> AsIs(42).getquoted() '42'
- class psycopg2.extensions.QuotedString(str)¶
Adapter conform to the
ISQLQuote
protocol for string-like objects.- getquoted()¶
Return the string enclosed in single quotes. Any single quote appearing in the string is escaped by doubling it according to SQL string constants syntax. Backslashes are escaped too.
>>> QuotedString(r"O'Reilly").getquoted() "'O''Reilly'"
- class psycopg2.extensions.Binary(str)¶
Adapter conform to the
ISQLQuote
protocol for binary objects.- getquoted()¶
Return the string enclosed in single quotes. It performs the same escaping of the
QuotedString
adapter, plus it knows how to escape non-printable chars.>>> Binary("\x00\x08\x0F").getquoted() "'\\\\000\\\\010\\\\017'"
Changed in version 2.0.14: previously the adapter was not exposed by the
extensions
module. In older versions it can be imported from the implementation modulepsycopg2._psycopg
.
- class psycopg2.extensions.Boolean¶
- class psycopg2.extensions.Float¶
- class psycopg2.extensions.SQL_IN¶
Specialized adapters for builtin objects.
- class psycopg2.extensions.DateFromPy¶
- class psycopg2.extensions.TimeFromPy¶
- class psycopg2.extensions.TimestampFromPy¶
- class psycopg2.extensions.IntervalFromPy¶
Specialized adapters for Python datetime objects.
- psycopg2.extensions.adapters¶
Dictionary of the currently registered object adapters. Use
register_adapter()
to add an adapter for a new type.
Database types casting functions¶
These functions are used to manipulate type casters to convert from PostgreSQL types to Python objects. See Type casting of SQL types into Python objects for details.
- psycopg2.extensions.new_type(oids, name, adapter)¶
Create a new type caster to convert from a PostgreSQL type to a Python object. The object created must be registered using
register_type()
to be used.- Parameters:
oids – tuple of OIDs of the PostgreSQL type to convert.
name – the name of the new type adapter.
adapter – the adaptation function.
The object OID can be read from the
cursor.description
attribute or by querying from the PostgreSQL catalog.adapter should have signature
fun(value, cur)
where value is the string representation returned by PostgreSQL and cur is the cursor from which data are read. In case ofNULL
, value will beNone
. The adapter should return the converted object.See Type casting of SQL types into Python objects for an usage example.
- psycopg2.extensions.new_array_type(oids, name, base_caster)¶
Create a new type caster to convert from a PostgreSQL array type to a list of Python object. The object created must be registered using
register_type()
to be used.- Parameters:
oids – tuple of OIDs of the PostgreSQL type to convert. It should probably contain the oid of the array type (e.g. the
typarray
field in thepg_type
table).name – the name of the new type adapter.
base_caster – a Psycopg typecaster, e.g. created using the
new_type()
function. The caster should be able to parse a single item of the desired type.
New in version 2.4.3.
Note
The function can be used to create a generic array typecaster, returning a list of strings: just use
psycopg2.STRING
as base typecaster. For instance, if you want to receive an array ofmacaddr
from the database, each address represented by string, you can use:# select typarray from pg_type where typname = 'macaddr' -> 1040 psycopg2.extensions.register_type( psycopg2.extensions.new_array_type( (1040,), 'MACADDR[]', psycopg2.STRING))
- psycopg2.extensions.register_type(obj[, scope])¶
Register a type caster created using
new_type()
.If scope is specified, it should be a
connection
or acursor
: the type caster will be effective only limited to the specified object. Otherwise it will be globally registered.
- psycopg2.extensions.string_types¶
The global register of type casters.
- psycopg2.extensions.encodings¶
Mapping from PostgreSQL encoding to Python encoding names. Used by Psycopg when adapting or casting unicode strings. See Unicode handling.
Additional exceptions¶
The module exports a few exceptions in addition to the standard ones defined by the DB API 2.0.
Note
From psycopg 2.8 these error classes are also exposed by the
psycopg2.errors
module.
- exception psycopg2.extensions.QueryCanceledError¶
(subclasses
OperationalError
)Error related to SQL query cancellation. It can be trapped specifically to detect a timeout.
New in version 2.0.7.
- exception psycopg2.extensions.TransactionRollbackError¶
(subclasses
OperationalError
)Error causing transaction rollback (deadlocks, serialization failures, etc). It can be trapped specifically to detect a deadlock.
New in version 2.0.7.
Coroutines support functions¶
These functions are used to set and retrieve the callback function for cooperation with coroutine libraries.
New in version 2.2.
- psycopg2.extensions.set_wait_callback(f)¶
Register a callback function to block waiting for data.
The callback should have signature
fun(conn)
and is called to wait for data available whenever a blocking function from the libpq is called. Useset_wait_callback(None)
to revert to the original behaviour (i.e. using blocking libpq functions).The function is an hook to allow coroutine-based libraries (such as Eventlet or gevent) to switch when Psycopg is blocked, allowing other coroutines to run concurrently.
See
wait_select()
for an example of a wait callback implementation.
- psycopg2.extensions.get_wait_callback()¶
Return the currently registered wait callback.
Return
None
if no callback is currently registered.
Other functions¶
- psycopg2.extensions.libpq_version()¶
Return the version number of the
libpq
dynamic library loaded as an integer, in the same format ofserver_version
.Raise
NotSupportedError
if thepsycopg2
module was compiled with alibpq
version lesser than 9.1 (which can be detected by the__libpq_version__
constant).New in version 2.7.
See also
libpq docs for PQlibVersion().
- psycopg2.extensions.make_dsn(dsn=None, \*\*kwargs)¶
Create a valid connection string from arguments.
Put together the arguments in kwargs into a connection string. If dsn is specified too, merge the arguments coming from both the sources. If the same argument name is specified in both the sources, the kwargs value overrides the dsn value.
The input arguments are validated: the output should always be a valid connection string (as far as
parse_dsn()
is concerned). If not raiseProgrammingError
.Example:
>>> from psycopg2.extensions import make_dsn >>> make_dsn('dbname=foo host=example.com', password="s3cr3t") 'host=example.com password=s3cr3t dbname=foo'
New in version 2.7.
- psycopg2.extensions.parse_dsn(dsn)¶
Parse connection string into a dictionary of keywords and values.
Parsing is delegated to the libpq: different versions of the client library may support different formats or parameters (for example, connection URIs are only supported from libpq 9.2). Raise
ProgrammingError
if the dsn is not valid.Example:
>>> from psycopg2.extensions import parse_dsn >>> parse_dsn('dbname=test user=postgres password=secret') {'password': 'secret', 'user': 'postgres', 'dbname': 'test'} >>> parse_dsn("postgresql://someone@example.com/somedb?connect_timeout=10") {'host': 'example.com', 'user': 'someone', 'dbname': 'somedb', 'connect_timeout': '10'}
New in version 2.7.
See also
libpq docs for PQconninfoParse().
- psycopg2.extensions.quote_ident(str, scope)¶
Return quoted identifier according to PostgreSQL quoting rules.
The scope must be a
connection
or acursor
, the underlying connection encoding is used for any necessary character conversion.New in version 2.7.
See also
libpq docs for PQescapeIdentifier()
- psycopg2.extensions.encrypt_password(password, user, scope=None, algorithm=None)¶
Return the encrypted form of a PostgreSQL password.
- Parameters:
password – the cleartext password to encrypt
user – the name of the user to use the password for
scope (
connection
orcursor
) – the scope to encrypt the password into; if algorithm ismd5
it can beNone
algorithm – the password encryption algorithm to use
The algorithm
md5
is always supported. Other algorithms are only supported if the client libpq version is at least 10 and may require a compatible server version: check the PostgreSQL encryption documentation to know the algorithms supported by your server.Using
None
as algorithm will result in querying the server to know the current server password encryption setting, which is a blocking operation: query the server separately and specify a value for algorithm if you want to maintain a non-blocking behaviour.New in version 2.8.
See also
PostgreSQL docs for the password_encryption setting, libpq PQencryptPasswordConn(), PQencryptPassword() functions.
Isolation level constants¶
Psycopg2 connection
objects hold informations about the PostgreSQL
transaction isolation level. By default Psycopg doesn’t change the default
configuration of the server (ISOLATION_LEVEL_DEFAULT
); the default for
PostgreSQL servers is typically READ COMMITTED
, but this may be changed
in the server configuration files. A different isolation level can be set
through the set_isolation_level()
or set_session()
methods. The level can be set to one of the following constants:
- psycopg2.extensions.ISOLATION_LEVEL_AUTOCOMMIT¶
No transaction is started when commands are executed and no
commit()
orrollback()
is required. Some PostgreSQL command such asCREATE DATABASE
orVACUUM
can’t run into a transaction: to run such command use:>>> conn.set_isolation_level(ISOLATION_LEVEL_AUTOCOMMIT)
See also Transactions control.
- psycopg2.extensions.ISOLATION_LEVEL_READ_UNCOMMITTED¶
The
READ UNCOMMITTED
isolation level is defined in the SQL standard but not available in the MVCC model of PostgreSQL: it is replaced by the stricterREAD COMMITTED
.
- psycopg2.extensions.ISOLATION_LEVEL_READ_COMMITTED¶
This is usually the default PostgreSQL value, but a different default may be set in the database configuration.
A new transaction is started at the first
execute()
command on a cursor and at each newexecute()
after acommit()
or arollback()
. The transaction runs in the PostgreSQLREAD COMMITTED
isolation level: aSELECT
query sees only data committed before the query began; it never sees either uncommitted data or changes committed during query execution by concurrent transactions.See also
Read Committed Isolation Level in PostgreSQL documentation.
- psycopg2.extensions.ISOLATION_LEVEL_REPEATABLE_READ¶
As in
ISOLATION_LEVEL_READ_COMMITTED
, a new transaction is started at the firstexecute()
command. Transactions run at aREPEATABLE READ
isolation level: all the queries in a transaction see a snapshot as of the start of the transaction, not as of the start of the current query within the transaction. However applications using this level must be prepared to retry transactions due to serialization failures.While this level provides a guarantee that each transaction sees a completely stable view of the database, this view will not necessarily always be consistent with some serial (one at a time) execution of concurrent transactions of the same level.
Changed in version 2.4.2: The value was an alias for
ISOLATION_LEVEL_SERIALIZABLE
before. The two levels are distinct since PostgreSQL 9.1See also
Repeatable Read Isolation Level in PostgreSQL documentation.
- psycopg2.extensions.ISOLATION_LEVEL_SERIALIZABLE¶
As in
ISOLATION_LEVEL_READ_COMMITTED
, a new transaction is started at the firstexecute()
command. Transactions run at aSERIALIZABLE
isolation level. This is the strictest transactions isolation level, equivalent to having the transactions executed serially rather than concurrently. However applications using this level must be prepared to retry transactions due to serialization failures.Starting from PostgreSQL 9.1, this mode monitors for conditions which could make execution of a concurrent set of serializable transactions behave in a manner inconsistent with all possible serial (one at a time) executions of those transaction. In previous version the behaviour was the same of the
REPEATABLE READ
isolation level.See also
Serializable Isolation Level in PostgreSQL documentation.
- psycopg2.extensions.ISOLATION_LEVEL_DEFAULT¶
A new transaction is started at the first
execute()
command, but the isolation level is not explicitly selected by Psycopg: the server will use whatever level is defined in its configuration or by statements executed within the session outside Pyscopg control. If you want to know what the value is you can use a query such asshow transaction_isolation
.New in version 2.7.
Transaction status constants¶
These values represent the possible status of a transaction: the current value
can be read using the connection.info.transaction_status
property.
- psycopg2.extensions.TRANSACTION_STATUS_IDLE¶
The session is idle and there is no current transaction.
- psycopg2.extensions.TRANSACTION_STATUS_ACTIVE¶
A command is currently in progress.
- psycopg2.extensions.TRANSACTION_STATUS_INTRANS¶
The session is idle in a valid transaction block.
- psycopg2.extensions.TRANSACTION_STATUS_INERROR¶
The session is idle in a failed transaction block.
- psycopg2.extensions.TRANSACTION_STATUS_UNKNOWN¶
Reported if the connection with the server is bad.
Connection status constants¶
These values represent the possible status of a connection: the current value
can be read from the status
attribute.
It is possible to find the connection in other status than the one shown below. Those are the only states in which a working connection is expected to be found during the execution of regular Python client code: other states are for internal usage and Python code should not rely on them.
- psycopg2.extensions.STATUS_READY¶
Connection established. No transaction in progress.
- psycopg2.extensions.STATUS_BEGIN¶
Connection established. A transaction is currently in progress.
- psycopg2.extensions.STATUS_IN_TRANSACTION¶
An alias for
STATUS_BEGIN
- psycopg2.extensions.STATUS_PREPARED¶
The connection has been prepared for the second phase in a two-phase commit transaction. The connection can’t be used to send commands to the database until the transaction is finished with
tpc_commit()
ortpc_rollback()
.New in version 2.3.
Poll constants¶
New in version 2.2.
These values can be returned by connection.poll()
during asynchronous
connection and communication. They match the values in the libpq enum
PostgresPollingStatusType
. See Asynchronous support and
Support for coroutine libraries.
- psycopg2.extensions.POLL_OK¶
The data being read is available, or the file descriptor is ready for writing: reading or writing will not block.
- psycopg2.extensions.POLL_READ¶
Some data is being read from the backend, but it is not available yet on the client and reading would block. Upon receiving this value, the client should wait for the connection file descriptor to be ready for reading. For example:
select.select([conn.fileno()], [], [])
- psycopg2.extensions.POLL_WRITE¶
Some data is being sent to the backend but the connection file descriptor can’t currently accept new data. Upon receiving this value, the client should wait for the connection file descriptor to be ready for writing. For example:
select.select([], [conn.fileno()], [])
- psycopg2.extensions.POLL_ERROR¶
There was a problem during connection polling. This value should actually never be returned: in case of poll error usually an exception containing the relevant details is raised.
Additional database types¶
The extensions
module includes typecasters for many standard
PostgreSQL types. These objects allow the conversion of returned data into
Python objects. All the typecasters are automatically registered, except
UNICODE
and UNICODEARRAY
: you can register them using
register_type()
in order to receive Unicode objects instead of strings
from the database. See Unicode handling for details.
- psycopg2.extensions.BOOLEAN¶
- psycopg2.extensions.BYTES¶
- psycopg2.extensions.DATE¶
- psycopg2.extensions.DECIMAL¶
- psycopg2.extensions.FLOAT¶
- psycopg2.extensions.INTEGER¶
- psycopg2.extensions.INTERVAL¶
- psycopg2.extensions.LONGINTEGER¶
- psycopg2.extensions.TIME¶
- psycopg2.extensions.UNICODE¶
Typecasters for basic types. Note that a few other ones (
BINARY
,DATETIME
,NUMBER
,ROWID
,STRING
) are exposed by thepsycopg2
module for DB API 2.0 compliance.
- psycopg2.extensions.BINARYARRAY¶
- psycopg2.extensions.BOOLEANARRAY¶
- psycopg2.extensions.BYTESARRAY¶
- psycopg2.extensions.DATEARRAY¶
- psycopg2.extensions.DATETIMEARRAY¶
- psycopg2.extensions.DECIMALARRAY¶
- psycopg2.extensions.FLOATARRAY¶
- psycopg2.extensions.INTEGERARRAY¶
- psycopg2.extensions.INTERVALARRAY¶
- psycopg2.extensions.LONGINTEGERARRAY¶
- psycopg2.extensions.ROWIDARRAY¶
- psycopg2.extensions.STRINGARRAY¶
- psycopg2.extensions.TIMEARRAY¶
- psycopg2.extensions.UNICODEARRAY¶
Typecasters to convert arrays of sql types into Python lists.
- psycopg2.extensions.PYDATE¶
- psycopg2.extensions.PYDATETIME¶
- psycopg2.extensions.PYDATETIMETZ¶
- psycopg2.extensions.PYINTERVAL¶
- psycopg2.extensions.PYTIME¶
- psycopg2.extensions.PYDATEARRAY¶
- psycopg2.extensions.PYDATETIMEARRAY¶
- psycopg2.extensions.PYDATETIMETZARRAY¶
- psycopg2.extensions.PYINTERVALARRAY¶
- psycopg2.extensions.PYTIMEARRAY¶
Typecasters to convert time-related data types to Python
datetime
objects.
Changed in version 2.2: previously the DECIMAL
typecaster and the specific time-related
typecasters (PY*
and MX*
) were not exposed by the extensions
module. In older versions they can be imported from the implementation
module psycopg2._psycopg
.
New in version 2.7.2: the *DATETIMETZ*
objects.
New in version 2.8: the BYTES
and BYTESARRAY
objects.