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Python

# mysql/pyodbc.py
# Copyright (C) 2005-2022 the SQLAlchemy authors and contributors
# <see AUTHORS file>
#
# This module is part of SQLAlchemy and is released under
# the MIT License: https://www.opensource.org/licenses/mit-license.php
r"""
.. dialect:: mysql+pyodbc
:name: PyODBC
:dbapi: pyodbc
:connectstring: mysql+pyodbc://<username>:<password>@<dsnname>
:url: https://pypi.org/project/pyodbc/
.. note::
The PyODBC for MySQL dialect is **not tested as part of
SQLAlchemy's continuous integration**.
The recommended MySQL dialects are mysqlclient and PyMySQL.
However, if you want to use the mysql+pyodbc dialect and require
full support for ``utf8mb4`` characters (including supplementary
characters like emoji) be sure to use a current release of
MySQL Connector/ODBC and specify the "ANSI" (**not** "Unicode")
version of the driver in your DSN or connection string.
Pass through exact pyodbc connection string::
import urllib
connection_string = (
'DRIVER=MySQL ODBC 8.0 ANSI Driver;'
'SERVER=localhost;'
'PORT=3307;'
'DATABASE=mydb;'
'UID=root;'
'PWD=(whatever);'
'charset=utf8mb4;'
)
params = urllib.parse.quote_plus(connection_string)
connection_uri = "mysql+pyodbc:///?odbc_connect=%s" % params
""" # noqa
import re
from .base import MySQLDialect
from .base import MySQLExecutionContext
from .types import TIME
from ... import exc
from ... import util
from ...connectors.pyodbc import PyODBCConnector
from ...sql.sqltypes import Time
class _pyodbcTIME(TIME):
def result_processor(self, dialect, coltype):
def process(value):
# pyodbc returns a datetime.time object; no need to convert
return value
return process
class MySQLExecutionContext_pyodbc(MySQLExecutionContext):
def get_lastrowid(self):
cursor = self.create_cursor()
cursor.execute("SELECT LAST_INSERT_ID()")
lastrowid = cursor.fetchone()[0]
cursor.close()
return lastrowid
class MySQLDialect_pyodbc(PyODBCConnector, MySQLDialect):
supports_statement_cache = True
colspecs = util.update_copy(MySQLDialect.colspecs, {Time: _pyodbcTIME})
supports_unicode_statements = True
execution_ctx_cls = MySQLExecutionContext_pyodbc
pyodbc_driver_name = "MySQL"
def _detect_charset(self, connection):
"""Sniff out the character set in use for connection results."""
# Prefer 'character_set_results' for the current connection over the
# value in the driver. SET NAMES or individual variable SETs will
# change the charset without updating the driver's view of the world.
#
# If it's decided that issuing that sort of SQL leaves you SOL, then
# this can prefer the driver value.
# set this to None as _fetch_setting attempts to use it (None is OK)
self._connection_charset = None
try:
value = self._fetch_setting(connection, "character_set_client")
if value:
return value
except exc.DBAPIError:
pass
util.warn(
"Could not detect the connection character set. "
"Assuming latin1."
)
return "latin1"
def _get_server_version_info(self, connection):
return MySQLDialect._get_server_version_info(self, connection)
def _extract_error_code(self, exception):
m = re.compile(r"\((\d+)\)").search(str(exception.args))
c = m.group(1)
if c:
return int(c)
else:
return None
def on_connect(self):
super_ = super(MySQLDialect_pyodbc, self).on_connect()
def on_connect(conn):
if super_ is not None:
super_(conn)
# declare Unicode encoding for pyodbc as per
# https://github.com/mkleehammer/pyodbc/wiki/Unicode
pyodbc_SQL_CHAR = 1 # pyodbc.SQL_CHAR
pyodbc_SQL_WCHAR = -8 # pyodbc.SQL_WCHAR
conn.setdecoding(pyodbc_SQL_CHAR, encoding="utf-8")
conn.setdecoding(pyodbc_SQL_WCHAR, encoding="utf-8")
conn.setencoding(encoding="utf-8")
return on_connect
dialect = MySQLDialect_pyodbc