# encoding: utf8 import sys import sqlalchemy.types from .db import connect, metadata, tables as tables_module def main(): if len(sys.argv) <= 1: help() command = sys.argv[1] args = sys.argv[2:] # Find the command as a function in this file func = globals().get(command, None) if func and callable(func) and command != 'main': func(*args) else: help() def csvimport(engine_uri, directory='.'): import csv from sqlalchemy.orm.attributes import instrumentation_registry session = connect(engine_uri) metadata.create_all() # Oh, mysql-chan. # TODO try to insert data in preorder so we don't need this hack and won't # break similarly on other engines if 'mysql' in engine_uri: session.execute('SET FOREIGN_KEY_CHECKS = 0') # SQLAlchemy is retarded and there is no way for me to get a list of ORM # classes besides to inspect the module they all happen to live in for # things that look right. table_base = tables_module.TableBase orm_classes = {} for name in dir(tables_module): # dir() returns strings! How /convenient/. thingy = getattr(tables_module, name) if not isinstance(thingy, type): # Not a class; bail continue elif not issubclass(thingy, table_base): # Not a declarative table; bail continue elif thingy == table_base: # Declarative table base, so not a real table; bail continue # thingy is definitely a table class! Hallelujah. orm_classes[thingy.__table__.name] = thingy # Okay, run through the tables and actually load the data now for table_name, table in sorted(orm_classes.items()): # Print the table name but leave the cursor in a fixed column print table_name + '...', ' ' * (40 - len(table_name)), try: csvfile = open("%s/%s.csv" % (directory, table_name), 'rb') except IOError: # File doesn't exist; don't load anything! print 'no data!' continue reader = csv.reader(csvfile, lineterminator='\n') column_names = [unicode(column) for column in reader.next()] for csvs in reader: row = table() for column_name, value in zip(column_names, csvs): column = table.__table__.c[column_name] if column.nullable and value == '': # Empty string in a nullable column really means NULL value = None elif isinstance(column.type, sqlalchemy.types.Boolean): # Boolean values are stored as string values 0/1, but both # of those evaluate as true; SQLA wants True/False if value == '0': value = False else: value = True else: # Otherwise, unflatten from bytes value = value.decode('utf-8') setattr(row, column_name, value) session.add(row) session.commit() print 'loaded' # Shouldn't matter since this is usually the end of the program and thus # the connection too, but let's change this back just in case if 'mysql' in engine_uri: session.execute('SET FOREIGN_KEY_CHECKS = 1') def csvexport(engine_uri, directory='.'): import csv session = connect(engine_uri) for table_name in sorted(metadata.tables.keys()): print table_name table = metadata.tables[table_name] writer = csv.writer(open("%s/%s.csv" % (directory, table_name), 'wb'), lineterminator='\n') columns = [col.name for col in table.columns] writer.writerow(columns) for row in session.query(table).all(): csvs = [] for col in columns: # Convert Pythony values to something more universal val = getattr(row, col) if val == None: val = '' elif val == True: val = '1' elif val == False: val = '0' else: val = unicode(val).encode('utf-8') csvs.append(val) writer.writerow(csvs) def help(): print u"""pokedex -- a command-line Pokédex interface help Displays this message. These commands are only useful for developers: csvimport {uri} [dir] Import data from a set of CSVs to the database given by the URI. csvexport {uri} [dir] Export data from the database given by the URI to a set of CSVs. Directory defaults to cwd. """ sys.exit(0)