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MySQL & Oracle & PostgreSQL & JDBC connection pool backends of Django, Be based on SQLAlchemy. Work fine in multiprocessing and multithreading django project.
Install with pip
with all engines:
$ pip install django-db-connection-pool[all]
or select specific engines:
$ pip install django-db-connection-pool[mysql,oracle,postgresql,jdbc]
or one of mysql,oracle,postgresql,jdbc
$ pip install django-db-connection-pool[oracle]
change django.db.backends.mysql
to dj_db_conn_pool.backends.mysql
:
DATABASES = {
'default': {
'ENGINE': 'dj_db_conn_pool.backends.mysql'
}
}
change django.db.backends.oracle
to dj_db_conn_pool.backends.oracle
:
DATABASES = {
'default': {
'ENGINE': 'dj_db_conn_pool.backends.oracle'
}
}
change django.db.backends.postgresql
to dj_db_conn_pool.backends.postgresql
:
DATABASES = {
'default': {
'ENGINE': 'dj_db_conn_pool.backends.postgresql'
}
}
you can provide additional options to pass to SQLAlchemy's pool creation, key's name is POOL_OPTIONS
:
DATABASES = {
'default': {
'POOL_OPTIONS' : {
'POOL_SIZE': 10,
'MAX_OVERFLOW': 10,
'RECYCLE': 24 * 60 * 60
}
}
}
django-db-connection-pool
has more configuration options here: PoolContainer.pool_default_params
Here's an explanation of these options(from SQLAlchemy's Doc):
-
pool_size: The size of the pool to be maintained, defaults to 5. This is the largest number of connections that will be kept persistently in the pool. Note that the pool begins with no connections; once this number of connections is requested, that number of connections will remain.
pool_size
can be set to 0 to indicate no size limit; to disable pooling, use a :class:~sqlalchemy.pool.NullPool
instead. -
max_overflow: The maximum overflow size of the pool. When the number of checked-out connections reaches the size set in pool_size, additional connections will be returned up to this limit. When those additional connections are returned to the pool, they are disconnected and discarded. It follows then that the total number of simultaneous connections the pool will allow is pool_size +
max_overflow
, and the total number of "sleeping" connections the pool will allow is pool_size.max_overflow
can be set to -1 to indicate no overflow limit; no limit will be placed on the total number of concurrent connections. Defaults to 10. -
recycle: If set to a value other than -1, number of seconds between connection recycling, which means upon checkout, if this timeout is surpassed the connection will be closed and replaced with a newly opened connection. Defaults to -1.
Or, you can use dj_db_conn_pool.setup to change default arguments(for each pool's creation), before using database pool:
import dj_db_conn_pool
dj_db_conn_pool.setup(pool_size=100, max_overflow=50)
Thanks to JPype、JayDeBeApi, django-db-connection-pool can connect to database in jdbc way
export JAVA_HOME=$PATH_TO_JRE;
export CLASSPATH=$PATH_RO_JDBC_DRIVER_JAR
Start JVM before Django's app initialization
import jpype
jvm_path = jpype.getDefaultJVMPath()
jpype.startJVM(jvm_path)
change django.db.backends.oracle
to dj_db_conn_pool.backends.oracle
:
DATABASES = {
'default': {
'ENGINE': 'dj_db_conn_pool.backends.jdbc.oracle'
}
}
already in todo list...