Opened 7 weeks ago
Last modified 3 days ago
#35793 assigned New feature
Add support for atomic upserts
Reported by: | Storm Heg | Owned by: | YashRaj1506 |
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Component: | Database layer (models, ORM) | Version: | |
Severity: | Normal | Keywords: | |
Cc: | Storm Heg, Lily Foote, Simon Charette, John Speno | Triage Stage: | Accepted |
Has patch: | no | Needs documentation: | no |
Needs tests: | no | Patch needs improvement: | no |
Easy pickings: | no | UI/UX: | no |
Description
Hello,
I took over maintenance of a package called wagtail-ab-testing which performs a raw SQL query to insert or update (UPSERT) a model atomically (link to relevant source code)
This raw sql query confused me, but as it turns out it is there because this the Django ORM does not appear support atomic upserts without taking a lock on the row, which hurts performance
Specifically, the (performant) raw SQL for PostgreSQL looks like this:
INSERT INTO %s (ab_test_id, version, date, hour, participants, conversions) VALUES (%ss, %ss, %%s, %%s, %%s, %%s) ON CONFLICT (ab_test_id, version, date, hour) DO UPDATE SET participants = %s.participants + %%s, conversions = %s.conversions + %%s;
There are a few things to note here:
- There is an unique constraint on combination of
ab_test_id
,version
,date
, andhour
columns that prevents duplicate objects from being created. - The
participants
andconversions
columns are updated atomically; That is: these columns are incremented by the given values, not set directly. This is important for atomicity. We don't want multiple concurrent database calls to overwrite each other.
The more common way to do this would be to use the `update_or_create` method, but this internally takes a lock on the row in case of updates, which is not acceptable because this is a hot code path with a lot of concurrent requests. We can’t afford to take a lock on the row.
I think it would be great if Django ORM supported atomic upserts without taking a lock on the row. I’m not sure what the api for that would look like, suggestions are welcome.
As for database support, PostgreSQL and SQLite support this syntax since PostgreSQL 9.5 and SQLite 3.24.0 respectively. MySQL and MariaDB do not support this natively, but it can be emulated using INSERT ... ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE
syntax and creating a unique index on the columns.
Oracle apparently supports something similar using the vastly different MERGE
statement syntax. That might be a bit of a challenge.
Looking for feedback on this idea. Is this something that would be worth supporting in Django? I’ll admit it’s a bit of a niche feature, but it’s a very useful one in certain cases. I would love to get rid of the raw SQL query in wagtail-ab-testing
and have something that works across all supported databases.
- Storm
Change History (8)
comment:1 by , 7 weeks ago
Resolution: | → wontfix |
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Status: | new → closed |
comment:2 by , 4 weeks ago
Thanks for the reply Sarah – and again, great meeting you at DjangoCon US 2024!
I wasn't aware that feature requests usually go through the forum. I've moved my request over there: https://forum.djangoproject.com/t/add-support-for-atomic-upserts/35813
comment:3 by , 3 weeks ago
Cc: | added |
---|---|
Resolution: | wontfix |
Status: | closed → new |
Triage Stage: | Unreviewed → Accepted |
As discussed in the forum post, the most likely way forward with this is to update bulk_create
to support general expressions in update_fields
.
comment:4 by , 3 weeks ago
As a clarification the ORM already supports "atomic upsert" through bulk_create
(as defined by INSERT ON CONFLICT DO UPDATE
) but lacks a way to set the update value to anything but the value provided by the excluded row on conflict.
One thing that we'll need to figure out though is what field references (e.g. F
or any str
passed to expressions) should resolve to. Should it be the excluded row (the value specified for associated field of the instance passed to bulk_create
), should it be the value of conflicting row, or should we allow both by requiring F('excluded__field')
and F('conflicting__field')
to be specified?
In other words what should the following resolve to
PostView.objects.bulk_create( [PostView(post_id=post_id, user_id=user_id, count=0)], unique_fields=["post_id", "user_id"], unique_updates={ "count": F("count") + 1 } )
INSERT INTO postview(post_id, user_id, count) VALUES(:post_id, :user_id, :count) ON CONFLICT (post_id, user_id) DO UPDATE SET count = postview.update + 1
Stormheg's report requested that it defaults to the conflicting row (not the excluded
one) and I think it makes the most sense but I'm unsure if all backends support that. Another argument for this using the conflicting row value over the excluded one is that the latter can be emulated with a Case(When(...))
if necessary (return distinct value based on unique key match) while the other way around is not possible. It's also easier to implement resolving to the INSERT
table alias (while disallowing JOINs) as no alias re-pointing needs to take place and if a need eventually arise to support excluded references it would be straightforward to implement a ExcludedF(F)
class that always resolve to the backend specific equivalent of Postgres's excluded
.
comment:5 by , 3 weeks ago
Cc: | added |
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comment:6 by , 3 weeks ago
Cc: | added |
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comment:7 by , 11 days ago
Owner: | set to |
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Status: | new → assigned |
comment:8 by , 3 days ago
One thing i have realised that the bulk_create
doesn't supports F
expressions directly, so a part of this feature would also include how to incorporate the value for the current conflicting_row
to the value of the dictionaries which we will be passing, cause the bulk_create
will throw the errors at the tests. There can be two ways either get the values from the db in the current dictionary of update_fields
, and when operations are done on the python side, the batched_insert will send the data to db or After the the bulk insert has been done , a separate code shall run to update those field values which raised conflicts...... but i dont think using update
in a bulk_create
is a nice approach? I need some opinions and advices on this..
Hi Storm!
I think it might be worth asking on the Django forum for help/input and then confirming if something new would need adding to Django (and what that would look like).
We also ask contributors to get feedback from the community through a forum discussion first, so we can confirm there is community consensus that we should add this feature
If you get positive feedback from the forum, can you link it back here and reopen the ticket?
It feels like what you need might be possible using a combination of
force_insert
and F expressions, but I'm not sure if I followed completely and I could be wrong