Reputation: 11477
I am having trouble loading Django fixtures into my MySQL database because of contenttypes conflicts. First I tried dumping the data from only my app like this:
./manage.py dumpdata escola > fixture.json
but I kept getting missing foreign key problems, because my app "escola" uses tables from other applications. I kept adding additional apps until I got to this:
./manage.py dumpdata contenttypes auth escola > fixture.json
Now the problem is the following constraint violation when I try to load the data as a test fixture:
IntegrityError: (1062, "Duplicate entry 'escola-t23aluno' for key 2")
It seems the problem is that Django is trying to dynamically recreate contenttypes with different primary key values that conflict with the primary key values from the fixture. This appears to be the same as bug documented here: http://code.djangoproject.com/ticket/7052
The problem is that the recommended workaround is to dump the contenttypes app which I'm already doing!? What gives? If it makes any difference I do have some custom model permissions as documented here: http://docs.djangoproject.com/en/dev/ref/models/options/#permissions
Upvotes: 126
Views: 57862
Reputation: 692
You can try to exclude some types of data in the database when dumping data.
First, dump data:
python manage.py dumpdata --indent 4 > datadump.json
A few lines from this file for example:
[
{ "model": "admin.logentry", "pk": 1, "fields": { "action_time": "2023-09-28T08:33:24.827Z", "user": 1, "content_type": 3, "object_id": "1", "object_repr": "user", "action_flag": 1, "change_message": "[{"added": {}}]" } },
...
{ "model": "auth.permission", "pk": 1, "fields": { "name": "Can add log entry", "content_type": 1, "codename": "add_logentry" } },
...
{ "model": "auth.group", "pk": 1, "fields": { "name": "user", "permissions": [ 25, 26, 27 ] } },
...
]
Try to search and see the text like this "model"
in the json dump file.
You can also find all types of content in the contenttype
model, a table for the this model is django_content_type
:
SELECT * FROM django_content_type ORDER BY id;
An example of data from this table:
+----+--------------+----------------+
| id | app_label | model |
+----+--------------+----------------+
| 1 | admin | logentry |
| 2 | auth | permission |
| 3 | auth | group |
| 4 | contenttypes | contenttype |
| 5 | sessions | session |
| 6 | user | user |
| 7 | user | historicaluser |
| 8 | constance | constance |
| 9 | tracking | pageview |
| 10 | tracking | visitor |
+----+--------------+----------------+
After you can exclude this type of data by adding several --exclude
to the manage.py dumpdata
For example:
--exclude auth.permission
. Using this option --exclude auth
you can exclude all models for application auth
, if there are such models, in this case these will be the permission
and the group
models.--exclude contenttypes.contenttype
.--exclude user.historicaluser
.--exclude sessions.session
or --exclude sessions
.--exclude tracking.pageview
. If you use --exclude tracking
, both models tracking.pageview
and tracking.visitor
will be excluded.The final code for 5 lines above:
python manage.py dumpdata --exclude auth.permission --exclude contenttypes --exclude user.historicaluser --exclude sessions.session --exclude tracking --indent 4 > dumpdata.json
You can also combine the dump script with --natural-foreign
and --natural-primary
options, read more here: https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/5.0/topics/serialization/#natural-keys.
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 13
I used pgloader, just take a few seconds to migrate successfully:
$ pgloader project.load
project.load file with:
load database
from sqlite:////path/to/dev.db
into postgresql://user:pwd@localhost/db_name
with include drop, create tables, create indexes, reset sequences
set work_mem to '16MB', maintenance_work_mem to '512 MB';
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 75
I've fixed this by adding in my tests setUp and tearDown
from django.core import management
=====
def setUp(self):
management.call_command("loaddata", "all-data.yaml", verbosity=0)
super(login_page_test, self).setUp()
def tearDown(self):
management.call_command("flush", verbosity=0, interactive=False)
super(login_page_test, self).setUp()
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 157
I tried every method from above, Nothing worked for me. I have to exclude the complete auth model and works fine.
python manage.py dumpdata --natural-primary --exclude=contenttypes --exclude=auth --exclude=admin.logentry --exclude=sessions.session --indent 4 > live.json
Upvotes: 2
Reputation: 147
In my case I had dumped the data from auth
(./manage.py dumpddata auth > fixtures/auth.json
) to use the fixture for testing purposes.
The development continued and I removed most of the models I had defined in models.py
and this is when I started to see this annoying problem.
My solution was regenerating the auth.json fixture again. This one had removed lots of entries in auth.permission
related to the old models I had.
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 631
Django 2.2.5
python manage.py dumpdata --exclude=contenttypes > datadump.json
it helped me
Upvotes: 3
Reputation: 69805
You need to use natural keys to represent any foreign key and many-to-many relationships. Moreover, it might be a good idea to exclude the session
table in the sessions
app, and the logentry
table in the admin
app.
Django 1.7+
python manage.py dumpdata --natural-foreign --exclude contenttypes --exclude auth.permission --exclude admin.logentry --exclude sessions.session --indent 4 > fixture.json
Django <1.7
python manage.py dumpdata --natural --exclude contenttypes --exclude auth.permission --exclude admin.logentry --exclude sessions.session --indent 4 > fixture.json
According to the Django documentation, --natural
has been deprecated in version 1.7, so the option --natural-foreign
should be used instead.
You can also omit the primary key in the serialized data of this object since it can be calculated during deserialization by passing the --natural-primary
flag.
python manage.py dumpdata --natural-foreign --natural-primary --exclude contenttypes --exclude auth.permission --exclude admin.logentry --exclude sessions.session --indent 4 > fixture.json
Upvotes: 9
Reputation: 5181
./manage.py dumpdata app.Model --natural-foreign
will change
"content_type": 123
to
"content_type": [
"app_label",
"model"
],
And fixture works for TestCase
now
Upvotes: 4
Reputation: 2159
python manage.py dumpdata --natural-primary --exclude=contenttypes --exclude=auth.Permission --exclude=admin.logentry --exclude=sessions.session --indent 4 > initial_data.json
This works for me. Here I am excluding everything bubt the actual models.
Upvotes: 7
Reputation: 8126
The answers here all old... As of 2017, the best answer is:
manage.py dumpdata --natural-foreign --natural-primary -e contenttypes -e auth.Permission --indent 4
Upvotes: 53
Reputation: 3183
I was not using MySQL but instead importing some data from a live server into sqlite. Clearing the contenttypes
app data before performing loaddata
did the trick:
from django.contrib.contenttypes.models import ContentType
ContentType.objects.all().delete()
quit()
And then
python manage.py loaddata data.json
Upvotes: 18
Reputation: 31
I had encountered similar error sometimes ago. It turned out that I was trying to load the fixtures before creating the necessary tables. So I did:
$ python manage.py makemigrations
$ python manage.py migrate
$ python manage.py loaddata fixtures/initial_data.json
And it worked like a charm
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 14487
manage.py dumpdata --natural
will use a more durable representation of foreign keys. In django they are called "natural keys". For example:
Permission.codename
is used in favour of Permission.id
User.username
is used in favour of User.id
Read more: natural keys section in "serializing django objects"
Some other useful arguments for dumpdata
:
--indent=4
make it human readable.-e sessions
exclude session data-e admin
exclude history of admin actions on admin site-e contenttypes -e auth.Permission
exclude objects which are recreated automatically from schema every time during syncdb
. Only use it together with --natural
or else you might end up with badly aligned id numbers.Upvotes: 171
Reputation: 126601
Yes, this is really irritating. For a while I worked around it by doing a "manage.py reset" on the contenttypes app prior to loading the fixture (to get rid of the automatically-generated contenttypes data that differed from the dumped version). That worked, but eventually I got sick of the hassles and abandoned fixtures entirely in favor of straight SQL dumps (of course, then you lose DB portability).
update - the best answer is to use the --natural
flag to dumpdata
, as noted in an answer below. That flag did not exist yet when I wrote this answer.
Upvotes: 36
Reputation: 11068
It's really, really annoying .. I get bitten by this every single time.
I tried to dumpdata with --exclude contenttypes and --natural, I always get problems..
What works best for me is simply doing a truncate table django_content_type;
after the syncdb and THEN load the data.
Of course for initial_data.json autoloading you're fallball.
Upvotes: 2
Reputation: 456
I'm going to give another possible answer that I just figured out. Maybe it'll help the OP, maybe it'll help somebody else.
I've got a many-to-many relationship table. It has a primary key and the two foreign keys to the other tables. I found that if I have an entry in the fixture whose two foreign keys are the same as another entry already in the table with a different pk, it will fail. M2M relationship tables have a "unique together" for the two foreign keys.
So, if it's a M2M relationship that is breaking, look at the foreign keys it's adding, look at your database to see if that pair of FKs are already listed under a different PK.
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 878
I have resolved this issue in my test cases by resetting the contenttypes app from the unit test prior to loading my dump file. Carl suggested this already using the manage.py
command and I do the same thing only using the call_command
method:
>>> from django.core import management
>>> management.call_command("flush", verbosity=0, interactive=False)
>>> management.call_command("reset", "contenttypes", verbosity=0, interactive=False)
>>> management.call_command("loaddata", "full_test_data.json", verbosity=0)
My full_test_data.json
fixture contains the contenttypes app dump that corresponds to the rest of the test data. By resetting the app before loading, it prevents the duplicate key IntegrityError
.
Upvotes: 10
Reputation: 10896
Try skipping contenttypes when creating fixture:
./manage.py dumpdata --exclude contenttypes > fixture.json
It worked for me in a similar situation for unit tests, your insight regarding the contenttypes really helped!
Upvotes: 35