.. index:: pair: psycopg2; Differences .. currentmodule:: psycopg .. _from-psycopg2: Differences from `!psycopg2` ============================ Psycopg 3 uses the common DBAPI structure of many other database adapters and tries to behave as close as possible to `!psycopg2`. There are however a few differences to be aware of. .. tip:: Most of the times, the workarounds suggested here will work with both Psycopg 2 and 3, which could be useful if you are porting a program or writing a program that should work with both Psycopg 2 and 3. .. _server-side-binding: Server-side binding ------------------- Psycopg 3 sends the query and the parameters to the server separately, instead of merging them on the client side. Server-side binding works for normal :sql:`SELECT` and data manipulation statements (:sql:`INSERT`, :sql:`UPDATE`, :sql:`DELETE`), but it doesn't work with many other statements. For instance, it doesn't work with :sql:`SET` or with :sql:`NOTIFY`:: >>> conn.execute("SET TimeZone TO %s", ["UTC"]) Traceback (most recent call last): ... psycopg.errors.SyntaxError: syntax error at or near "$1" LINE 1: SET TimeZone TO $1 ^ >>> conn.execute("NOTIFY %s, %s", ["chan", 42]) Traceback (most recent call last): ... psycopg.errors.SyntaxError: syntax error at or near "$1" LINE 1: NOTIFY $1, $2 ^ and with any data definition statement:: >>> conn.execute("CREATE TABLE foo (id int DEFAULT %s)", [42]) Traceback (most recent call last): ... psycopg.errors.UndefinedParameter: there is no parameter $1 LINE 1: CREATE TABLE foo (id int DEFAULT $1) ^ Sometimes, PostgreSQL offers an alternative: for instance the `set_config()`__ function can be used instead of the :sql:`SET` statement, the `pg_notify()`__ function can be used instead of :sql:`NOTIFY`:: >>> conn.execute("SELECT set_config('TimeZone', %s, false)", ["UTC"]) >>> conn.execute("SELECT pg_notify(%s, %s)", ["chan", "42"]) .. __: https://www.postgresql.org/docs/current/functions-admin.html #FUNCTIONS-ADMIN-SET .. __: https://www.postgresql.org/docs/current/sql-notify.html #id-1.9.3.157.7.5 If this is not possible, you must merge the query and the parameter on the client side. You can do so using the `psycopg.sql` objects:: >>> from psycopg import sql >>> cur.execute(sql.SQL("CREATE TABLE foo (id int DEFAULT {})").format(42)) or creating a :ref:`client-side binding cursor ` such as `ClientCursor`:: >>> cur = ClientCursor(conn) >>> cur.execute("CREATE TABLE foo (id int DEFAULT %s)", [42]) If you need `!ClientCursor` often, you can set the `Connection.cursor_factory` to have them created by default by `Connection.cursor()`. This way, Psycopg 3 will behave largely the same way of Psycopg 2. Note that, both server-side and client-side, you can only specify **values** as parameters (i.e. *the strings that go in single quotes*). If you need to parametrize different parts of a statement (such as a table name), you must use the `psycopg.sql` module:: >>> from psycopg import sql # This will quote the user and the password using the right quotes # e.g.: ALTER USER "foo" SET PASSWORD 'bar' >>> conn.execute( ... sql.SQL("ALTER USER {} SET PASSWORD {}") ... .format(sql.Identifier(username), password)) .. _multi-statements: Multiple statements in the same query ------------------------------------- As a consequence of using :ref:`server-side bindings `, when parameters are used, it is not possible to execute several statements in the same `!execute()` call, separating them by semicolon:: >>> conn.execute( ... "INSERT INTO foo VALUES (%s); INSERT INTO foo VALUES (%s)", ... (10, 20)) Traceback (most recent call last): ... psycopg.errors.SyntaxError: cannot insert multiple commands into a prepared statement One obvious way to work around the problem is to use several `!execute()` calls. **There is no such limitation if no parameters are used**. As a consequence, you can compose a multiple query on the client side and run them all in the same `!execute()` call, using the `psycopg.sql` objects:: >>> from psycopg import sql >>> conn.execute( ... sql.SQL("INSERT INTO foo VALUES ({}); INSERT INTO foo values ({})" ... .format(10, 20)) or a :ref:`client-side binding cursor `:: >>> cur = psycopg.ClientCursor(conn) >>> cur.execute( ... "INSERT INTO foo VALUES (%s); INSERT INTO foo VALUES (%s)", ... (10, 20)) .. warning:: If a statements must be executed outside a transaction (such as :sql:`CREATE DATABASE`), it cannot be executed in batch with other statements, even if the connection is in autocommit mode:: >>> conn.autocommit = True >>> conn.execute("CREATE DATABASE foo; SELECT 1") Traceback (most recent call last): ... psycopg.errors.ActiveSqlTransaction: CREATE DATABASE cannot run inside a transaction block This happens because PostgreSQL itself will wrap multiple statements in a transaction. Note that your will experience a different behaviour in :program:`psql` (:program:`psql` will split the queries on semicolons and send them to the server separately). This is not new in Psycopg 3: the same limitation is present in `!psycopg2` too. .. _multi-results: Multiple results returned from multiple statements -------------------------------------------------- If more than one statement returning results is executed in psycopg2, only the result of the last statement is returned:: >>> cur_pg2.execute("SELECT 1; SELECT 2") >>> cur_pg2.fetchone() (2,) In Psycopg 3 instead, all the results are available. After running the query, the first result will be readily available in the cursor and can be consumed using the usual `!fetch*()` methods. In order to access the following results, you can use the `Cursor.nextset()` method:: >>> cur_pg3.execute("SELECT 1; SELECT 2") >>> cur_pg3.fetchone() (1,) >>> cur_pg3.nextset() True >>> cur_pg3.fetchone() (2,) >>> cur_pg3.nextset() None # no more results Remember though that you cannot use server-side bindings to :ref:`execute more than one statement in the same query `. .. _difference-cast-rules: Different cast rules -------------------- In rare cases, especially around variadic functions, PostgreSQL might fail to find a function candidate for the given data types:: >>> conn.execute("SELECT json_build_array(%s, %s)", ["foo", "bar"]) Traceback (most recent call last): ... psycopg.errors.IndeterminateDatatype: could not determine data type of parameter $1 This can be worked around specifying the argument types explicitly via a cast:: >>> conn.execute("SELECT json_build_array(%s::text, %s::text)", ["foo", "bar"]) .. _in-and-tuple: You cannot use ``IN %s`` with a tuple ------------------------------------- ``IN`` cannot be used with a tuple as single parameter, as was possible with ``psycopg2``:: >>> conn.execute("SELECT * FROM foo WHERE id IN %s", [(10,20,30)]) Traceback (most recent call last): ... psycopg.errors.SyntaxError: syntax error at or near "$1" LINE 1: SELECT * FROM foo WHERE id IN $1 ^ What you can do is to use the `= ANY()`__ construct and pass the candidate values as a list instead of a tuple, which will be adapted to a PostgreSQL array:: >>> conn.execute("SELECT * FROM foo WHERE id = ANY(%s)", [[10,20,30]]) Note that `ANY()` can be used with `!psycopg2` too, and has the advantage of accepting an empty list of values too as argument, which is not supported by the :sql:`IN` operator instead. .. __: https://www.postgresql.org/docs/current/functions-comparisons.html #id-1.5.8.30.16 .. _diff-adapt: Different adaptation system --------------------------- The adaptation system has been completely rewritten, in order to address server-side parameters adaptation, but also to consider performance, flexibility, ease of customization. The default behaviour with builtin data should be :ref:`what you would expect `. If you have customised the way to adapt data, or if you are managing your own extension types, you should look at the :ref:`new adaptation system `. .. seealso:: - :ref:`types-adaptation` for the basic behaviour. - :ref:`adaptation` for more advanced use. .. _diff-copy: Copy is no longer file-based ---------------------------- `!psycopg2` exposes :ref:`a few copy methods ` to interact with PostgreSQL :sql:`COPY`. Their file-based interface doesn't make it easy to load dynamically-generated data into a database. There is now a single `~Cursor.copy()` method, which is similar to `!psycopg2` `!copy_expert()` in accepting a free-form :sql:`COPY` command and returns an object to read/write data, block-wise or record-wise. The different usage pattern also enables :sql:`COPY` to be used in async interactions. .. seealso:: See :ref:`copy` for the details. .. _diff-with: `!with` connection ------------------ In `!psycopg2`, using the syntax :ref:`with connection `, only the transaction is closed, not the connection. This behaviour is surprising for people used to several other Python classes wrapping resources, such as files. In Psycopg 3, using :ref:`with connection ` will close the connection at the end of the `!with` block, making handling the connection resources more familiar. In order to manage transactions as blocks you can use the `Connection.transaction()` method, which allows for finer control, for instance to use nested transactions. .. seealso:: See :ref:`transaction-context` for details. .. _diff-callproc: `!callproc()` is gone --------------------- `cursor.callproc()` is not implemented. The method has a simplistic semantic which doesn't account for PostgreSQL positional parameters, procedures, set-returning functions... Use a normal `~Cursor.execute()` with :sql:`SELECT function_name(...)` or :sql:`CALL procedure_name(...)` instead. .. _diff-client-encoding: `!client_encoding` is gone -------------------------- Psycopg automatically uses the database client encoding to decode data to Unicode strings. Use `ConnectionInfo.encoding` if you need to read the encoding. You can select an encoding at connection time using the `!client_encoding` connection parameter and you can change the encoding of a connection by running a :sql:`SET client_encoding` statement... But why would you? .. _infinity-datetime: No default infinity dates handling ---------------------------------- PostgreSQL can represent a much wider range of dates and timestamps than Python. While Python dates are limited to the years between 1 and 9999 (represented by constants such as `datetime.date.min` and `~datetime.date.max`), PostgreSQL dates extend to BC dates and past the year 10K. Furthermore PostgreSQL can also represent symbolic dates "infinity", in both directions. In psycopg2, by default, `infinity dates and timestamps map to 'date.max'`__ and similar constants. This has the problem of creating a non-bijective mapping (two Postgres dates, infinity and 9999-12-31, both map to the same Python date). There is also the perversity that valid Postgres dates, greater than Python `!date.max` but arguably lesser than infinity, will still overflow. In Psycopg 3, every date greater than year 9999 will overflow, including infinity. If you would like to customize this mapping (for instance flattening every date past Y10K on `!date.max`) you can subclass and adapt the appropriate loaders: take a look at :ref:`this example ` to see how. .. __: https://www.psycopg.org/docs/usage.html#infinite-dates-handling .. _whats-new: What's new in Psycopg 3 ----------------------- - :ref:`Asynchronous support ` - :ref:`Server-side parameters binding ` - :ref:`Prepared statements ` - :ref:`Binary communication ` - :ref:`Python-based COPY support ` - :ref:`Support for static typing ` - :ref:`A redesigned connection pool ` - :ref:`Direct access to the libpq functionalities `