0
0
Fork 1
mirror of https://mau.dev/maunium/synapse.git synced 2024-12-15 01:03:50 +01:00

Notes on boolean columns in database schemas (#10164)

This commit is contained in:
Richard van der Hoff 2021-06-11 17:13:56 +01:00 committed by GitHub
parent 29966a285d
commit 13577aa55e
No known key found for this signature in database
GPG key ID: 4AEE18F83AFDEB23
2 changed files with 43 additions and 0 deletions

1
changelog.d/10164.misc Normal file
View file

@ -0,0 +1 @@
Add some developer documentation about boolean columns in database schemas.

View file

@ -93,3 +93,45 @@ Ensure postgres is installed, then run:
NB at the time of writing, this script predates the split into separate `state`/`main`
databases so will require updates to handle that correctly.
## Boolean columns
Boolean columns require special treatment, since SQLite treats booleans the
same as integers.
There are three separate aspects to this:
* Any new boolean column must be added to the `BOOLEAN_COLUMNS` list in
`scripts/synapse_port_db`. This tells the port script to cast the integer
value from SQLite to a boolean before writing the value to the postgres
database.
* Before SQLite 3.23, `TRUE` and `FALSE` were not recognised as constants by
SQLite, and the `IS [NOT] TRUE`/`IS [NOT] FALSE` operators were not
supported. This makes it necessary to avoid using `TRUE` and `FALSE`
constants in SQL commands.
For example, to insert a `TRUE` value into the database, write:
```python
txn.execute("INSERT INTO tbl(col) VALUES (?)", (True, ))
```
* Default values for new boolean columns present a particular
difficulty. Generally it is best to create separate schema files for
Postgres and SQLite. For example:
```sql
# in 00delta.sql.postgres:
ALTER TABLE tbl ADD COLUMN col BOOLEAN DEFAULT FALSE;
```
```sql
# in 00delta.sql.sqlite:
ALTER TABLE tbl ADD COLUMN col BOOLEAN DEFAULT 0;
```
Note that there is a particularly insidious failure mode here: the Postgres
flavour will be accepted by SQLite 3.22, but will give a column whose
default value is the **string** `"FALSE"` - which, when cast back to a boolean
in Python, evaluates to `True`.