Common Issues¶
Bulk Creating and Queryset Updating¶
Django Simple History functions by saving history using a post_save
signal
every time that an object with history is saved. However, for certain bulk
operations, such as bulk_create and queryset updates,
signals are not sent, and the history is not saved automatically. However,
Django Simple History provides utility functions to work around this.
Bulk Creating a Model with History¶
As of Django Simple History 2.2.0, we can use the utility function
bulk_create_with_history
in order to bulk create objects while saving their
history:
>>> from simple_history.utils import bulk_create_with_history
>>> from simple_history.tests.models import Poll
>>> from django.utils.timezone import now
>>>
>>> data = [Poll(id=x, question='Question ' + str(x), pub_date=now()) for x in range(1000)]
>>> objs = bulk_create_with_history(data, Poll, batch_size=500)
>>> Poll.objects.count()
1000
>>> Poll.history.count()
1000
If you want to specify a change reason for each record in the bulk create, you can add changeReason on each instance:
>>> for poll in data:
poll.changeReason = 'reason'
>>> objs = bulk_create_with_history(data, Poll, batch_size=500)
>>> Poll.history.get(id=data[0].id).history_change_reason
'reason'
QuerySet Updates with History¶
Unlike with bulk_create
, queryset updates perform an SQL update query on
the queryset, and never return the actual updated objects (which would be
necessary for the inserts into the historical table). Thus, we tell you that
queryset updates will not save history (since no post_save
signal is sent).
As the Django documentation says:
If you want to update a bunch of records for a model that has a custom
``save()`` method, loop over them and call ``save()``, like this:
for e in Entry.objects.filter(pub_date__year=2010):
e.comments_on = False
e.save()
Tracking Custom Users¶
fields.E300
:ERRORS: custom_user.HistoricalCustomUser.history_user: (fields.E300) Field defines a relation with model 'custom_user.CustomUser', which is either not installed, or is abstract.
Use
register()
to track changes to the custom user model instead of settingHistoricalRecords
on the model directly. See History for a Third-Party Model.The reason for this, is that unfortunately
HistoricalRecords
cannot be set directly on a swapped user model because of the user foreign key to track the user making changes.
Using django-webtest with Middleware¶
When using django-webtest to test your Django project with the django-simple-history middleware, you may run into an error similar to the following:
django.db.utils.IntegrityError: (1452, 'Cannot add or update a child row: a foreign key constraint fails (`test_env`.`core_historicaladdress`, CONSTRAINT `core_historicaladdress_history_user_id_0f2bed02_fk_user_user_id` FOREIGN KEY (`history_user_id`) REFERENCES `user_user` (`id`))')
This error occurs because django-webtest
sets
DEBUG_PROPAGATE_EXCEPTIONS
to true preventing the middleware from cleaning
up the request. To solve this issue, add the following code to any
clean_environment
or tearDown
method that
you use:
from simple_history.middleware import HistoricalRecords
if hasattr(HistoricalRecords.thread, 'request'):
del HistoricalRecords.thread.request
Using F() expressions¶
F()
expressions, as described here, do not work on models that have
history. Simple history inserts a new record in the historical table for any
model being updated. However, F()
expressions are only functional on updates.
Thus, when an F()
expression is used on a model with a history table, the
historical model tries to insert using the F()
expression, and raises a
ValueError
.