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SQLAlchemy Determina se esiste un vincolo univoco

Puoi usare API di riflessione SQLalchemy .

Per ottenere i vincoli univoci, emetti un get_unique_constraints .

Le chiavi primarie sono univoche, quindi devi emettere un get_pk_constraint anche.

tabella creata con:

CREATE TABLE user (
    id INTEGER NOT NULL, 
    name VARCHAR(255), 
    email VARCHAR(255), 
    login VARCHAR(255), 
    PRIMARY KEY (id), 
    UNIQUE (email), 
    UNIQUE (login)
)

esempio:

from sqlalchemy import create_engine
from sqlalchemy.engine.reflection import Inspector

# engine = create_engine(...)

insp = Inspector.from_engine(engine)

print "PK: %r" % insp.get_pk_constraint("user")
print "UNIQUE: %r" % insp.get_unique_constraints("user")

uscita:

PK: {'name': None, 'constrained_columns': [u'login']}
UNIQUE: [{'column_names': [u'email'], 'name': None}, {'column_names': [u'login'], 'name': None}]

Puoi verificare i vincoli univoci:

pk = insp.get_pk_constraint("user")['constrained_columns']
unique = map(lambda x: x['column_names'], insp.get_unique_constraints("user"))

for column in ['name', 'id', 'email', 'login']:
    print "Column %r has an unique constraint: %s" %(column, [column] in [pk]+unique)

uscita:

Column 'name' has an unique constraint: False
Column 'id' has an unique constraint: True
Column 'email' has an unique constraint: True
Column 'login' has an unique constraint: True

Aggiornamento 01

Il codice sopra controlla solo il vincolo per le colonne di una tabella già creata, se vuoi ispezionare le colonne prima della creazione è più semplice:

from sqlalchemy import create_engine, Column, types
from sqlalchemy.ext.declarative import declarative_base
from sqlalchemy.orm import sessionmaker, scoped_session

Base = declarative_base()

class User(Base):
    __tablename__ = "user"
    id = Column(types.Integer, primary_key=True)
    name = Column(types.String(255))
    email = Column(types.String(255), unique=True)
    login = Column(types.String(255), unique=True)

# do not create any table
#engine = create_engine('sqlite:///:memory:', echo=True)
#session = scoped_session(sessionmaker(bind=engine))
#Base.metadata.create_all(engine)

# check if column is (any) a primary_key or has unique constraint
# Note1: You can use User.__table__.c too, it is a alias to columns
# Note2: If you don't want to use __table__, you could use the reflection API like:
#        >>> from sqlalchemy.inspection import inspect
#        >>> columns = inspect(User).columns
result = dict([(c.name, any([c.primary_key, c.unique])) for c in User.__table__.columns])

print(result)

uscita:

{'email': True, 'login': True, 'id': True, 'name': False}

Se vuoi controllare solo alcune colonne, puoi fare solo:

for column_name in ['name', 'id', 'email', 'login']:
    c = User.__table__.columns.get(column_name)
    print("Column %r has an unique constraint: %s" %(column_name, any([c.primary_key, c.unique])))

uscita:

Column 'name' has an unique constraint: False
Column 'id' has an unique constraint: True
Column 'email' has an unique constraint: True
Column 'login' has an unique constraint: True