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synapse/synapse/storage/types.py
David Robertson 1fe202a1a3
Tidy up and type-hint the database engine modules (#12734)
Co-authored-by: Sean Quah <8349537+squahtx@users.noreply.github.com>
2022-05-17 00:34:38 +01:00

167 lines
5.3 KiB
Python

# Copyright 2020 The Matrix.org Foundation C.I.C.
#
# Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
# you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
# You may obtain a copy of the License at
#
# http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
#
# Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
# distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
# WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
# See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
# limitations under the License.
from types import TracebackType
from typing import Any, Iterator, List, Mapping, Optional, Sequence, Tuple, Type, Union
from typing_extensions import Protocol
"""
Some very basic protocol definitions for the DB-API2 classes specified in PEP-249
"""
_Parameters = Union[Sequence[Any], Mapping[str, Any]]
class Cursor(Protocol):
def execute(self, sql: str, parameters: _Parameters = ...) -> Any:
...
def executemany(self, sql: str, parameters: Sequence[_Parameters]) -> Any:
...
def fetchone(self) -> Optional[Tuple]:
...
def fetchmany(self, size: Optional[int] = ...) -> List[Tuple]:
...
def fetchall(self) -> List[Tuple]:
...
@property
def description(
self,
) -> Optional[
Sequence[
# Note that this is an approximate typing based on sqlite3 and other
# drivers, and may not be entirely accurate.
# FWIW, the DBAPI 2 spec is: https://peps.python.org/pep-0249/#description
Tuple[
str,
Optional[Any],
Optional[int],
Optional[int],
Optional[int],
Optional[int],
Optional[int],
]
]
]:
...
@property
def rowcount(self) -> int:
return 0
def __iter__(self) -> Iterator[Tuple]:
...
def close(self) -> None:
...
class Connection(Protocol):
def cursor(self) -> Cursor:
...
def close(self) -> None:
...
def commit(self) -> None:
...
def rollback(self) -> None:
...
def __enter__(self) -> "Connection":
...
def __exit__(
self,
exc_type: Optional[Type[BaseException]],
exc_value: Optional[BaseException],
traceback: Optional[TracebackType],
) -> Optional[bool]:
...
class DBAPI2Module(Protocol):
"""The module-level attributes that we use from PEP 249.
This is NOT a comprehensive stub for the entire DBAPI2."""
__name__: str
# Exceptions. See https://peps.python.org/pep-0249/#exceptions
# For our specific drivers:
# - Python's sqlite3 module doesn't contains the same descriptions as the
# DBAPI2 spec, see https://docs.python.org/3/library/sqlite3.html#exceptions
# - Psycopg2 maps every Postgres error code onto a unique exception class which
# extends from this hierarchy. See
# https://docs.python.org/3/library/sqlite3.html?highlight=sqlite3#exceptions
# https://www.postgresql.org/docs/current/errcodes-appendix.html#ERRCODES-TABLE
Warning: Type[Exception]
Error: Type[Exception]
# Errors are divided into `InterfaceError`s (something went wrong in the database
# driver) and `DatabaseError`s (something went wrong in the database). These are
# both subclasses of `Error`, but we can't currently express this in type
# annotations due to https://github.com/python/mypy/issues/8397
InterfaceError: Type[Exception]
DatabaseError: Type[Exception]
# Everything below is a subclass of `DatabaseError`.
# Roughly: the database rejected a nonsensical value. Examples:
# - An integer was too big for its data type.
# - An invalid date time was provided.
# - A string contained a null code point.
DataError: Type[Exception]
# Roughly: something went wrong in the database, but it's not within the application
# programmer's control. Examples:
# - We failed to establish a connection to the database.
# - The connection to the database was lost.
# - A deadlock was detected.
# - A serialisation failure occurred.
# - The database ran out of resources, such as storage, memory, connections, etc.
# - The database encountered an error from the operating system.
OperationalError: Type[Exception]
# Roughly: we've given the database data which breaks a rule we asked it to enforce.
# Examples:
# - Stop, criminal scum! You violated the foreign key constraint
# - Also check constraints, non-null constraints, etc.
IntegrityError: Type[Exception]
# Roughly: something went wrong within the database server itself.
InternalError: Type[Exception]
# Roughly: the application did something silly that needs to be fixed. Examples:
# - We don't have permissions to do something.
# - We tried to create a table with duplicate column names.
# - We tried to use a reserved name.
# - We referred to a column that doesn't exist.
ProgrammingError: Type[Exception]
# Roughly: we've tried to do something that this database doesn't support.
NotSupportedError: Type[Exception]
def connect(self, **parameters: object) -> Connection:
...
__all__ = ["Cursor", "Connection", "DBAPI2Module"]