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multi-db.txt 28 KB

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  1. ==================
  2. Multiple databases
  3. ==================
  4. This topic guide describes Django's support for interacting with
  5. multiple databases. Most of the rest of Django's documentation assumes
  6. you are interacting with a single database. If you want to interact
  7. with multiple databases, you'll need to take some additional steps.
  8. Defining your databases
  9. =======================
  10. The first step to using more than one database with Django is to tell
  11. Django about the database servers you'll be using. This is done using
  12. the :setting:`DATABASES` setting. This setting maps database aliases,
  13. which are a way to refer to a specific database throughout Django, to
  14. a dictionary of settings for that specific connection. The settings in
  15. the inner dictionaries are described fully in the :setting:`DATABASES`
  16. documentation.
  17. Databases can have any alias you choose. However, the alias
  18. ``default`` has special significance. Django uses the database with
  19. the alias of ``default`` when no other database has been selected.
  20. The following is an example ``settings.py`` snippet defining two
  21. databases -- a default PostgreSQL database and a MySQL database called
  22. ``users``::
  23. DATABASES = {
  24. 'default': {
  25. 'NAME': 'app_data',
  26. 'ENGINE': 'django.db.backends.postgresql_psycopg2',
  27. 'USER': 'postgres_user',
  28. 'PASSWORD': 's3krit'
  29. },
  30. 'users': {
  31. 'NAME': 'user_data',
  32. 'ENGINE': 'django.db.backends.mysql',
  33. 'USER': 'mysql_user',
  34. 'PASSWORD': 'priv4te'
  35. }
  36. }
  37. If the concept of a ``default`` database doesn't make sense in the context
  38. of your project, you need to be careful to always specify the database
  39. that you want to use. Django requires that a ``default`` database entry
  40. be defined, but the parameters dictionary can be left blank if it will not be
  41. used. You must setup :setting:`DATABASE_ROUTERS` for all of your apps' models,
  42. including those in any contrib and third-party apps you are using, so that no
  43. queries are routed to the default database in order to do this. The following
  44. is an example ``settings.py`` snippet defining two non-default databases, with
  45. the ``default`` entry intentionally left empty::
  46. DATABASES = {
  47. 'default': {},
  48. 'users': {
  49. 'NAME': 'user_data',
  50. 'ENGINE': 'django.db.backends.mysql',
  51. 'USER': 'mysql_user',
  52. 'PASSWORD': 'superS3cret'
  53. },
  54. 'customers': {
  55. 'NAME': 'customer_data',
  56. 'ENGINE': 'django.db.backends.mysql',
  57. 'USER': 'mysql_cust',
  58. 'PASSWORD': 'veryPriv@ate'
  59. }
  60. }
  61. If you attempt to access a database that you haven't defined in your
  62. :setting:`DATABASES` setting, Django will raise a
  63. ``django.db.utils.ConnectionDoesNotExist`` exception.
  64. Synchronizing your databases
  65. ============================
  66. The :djadmin:`migrate` management command operates on one database at a
  67. time. By default, it operates on the ``default`` database, but by
  68. providing a :djadminopt:`--database` argument, you can tell :djadmin:`migrate`
  69. to synchronize a different database. So, to synchronize all models onto
  70. all databases in our example, you would need to call::
  71. $ ./manage.py migrate
  72. $ ./manage.py migrate --database=users
  73. If you don't want every application to be synchronized onto a
  74. particular database, you can define a :ref:`database
  75. router<topics-db-multi-db-routing>` that implements a policy
  76. constraining the availability of particular models.
  77. Using other management commands
  78. -------------------------------
  79. The other ``django-admin`` commands that interact with the database
  80. operate in the same way as :djadmin:`migrate` -- they only ever operate
  81. on one database at a time, using :djadminopt:`--database` to control
  82. the database used.
  83. .. _topics-db-multi-db-routing:
  84. Automatic database routing
  85. ==========================
  86. The easiest way to use multiple databases is to set up a database
  87. routing scheme. The default routing scheme ensures that objects remain
  88. 'sticky' to their original database (i.e., an object retrieved from
  89. the ``foo`` database will be saved on the same database). The default
  90. routing scheme ensures that if a database isn't specified, all queries
  91. fall back to the ``default`` database.
  92. You don't have to do anything to activate the default routing scheme
  93. -- it is provided 'out of the box' on every Django project. However,
  94. if you want to implement more interesting database allocation
  95. behaviors, you can define and install your own database routers.
  96. Database routers
  97. ----------------
  98. A database Router is a class that provides up to four methods:
  99. .. method:: db_for_read(model, **hints)
  100. Suggest the database that should be used for read operations for
  101. objects of type ``model``.
  102. If a database operation is able to provide any additional
  103. information that might assist in selecting a database, it will be
  104. provided in the ``hints`` dictionary. Details on valid hints are
  105. provided :ref:`below <topics-db-multi-db-hints>`.
  106. Returns ``None`` if there is no suggestion.
  107. .. method:: db_for_write(model, **hints)
  108. Suggest the database that should be used for writes of objects of
  109. type Model.
  110. If a database operation is able to provide any additional
  111. information that might assist in selecting a database, it will be
  112. provided in the ``hints`` dictionary. Details on valid hints are
  113. provided :ref:`below <topics-db-multi-db-hints>`.
  114. Returns ``None`` if there is no suggestion.
  115. .. method:: allow_relation(obj1, obj2, **hints)
  116. Return ``True`` if a relation between ``obj1`` and ``obj2`` should be
  117. allowed, ``False`` if the relation should be prevented, or ``None`` if
  118. the router has no opinion. This is purely a validation operation,
  119. used by foreign key and many to many operations to determine if a
  120. relation should be allowed between two objects.
  121. .. method:: allow_migrate(db, app_label, model_name=None, **hints)
  122. Determine if the migration operation is allowed to run on the database with
  123. alias ``db``. Return ``True`` if the operation should run, ``False`` if it
  124. shouldn't run, or ``None`` if the router has no opinion.
  125. The ``app_label`` positional argument is the label of the application
  126. being migrated.
  127. ``model_name`` is set by most migration operations to the value of
  128. ``model._meta.model_name`` (the lowercased version of the model
  129. ``__name__``) of the model being migrated. Its value is ``None`` for the
  130. :class:`~django.db.migrations.operations.RunPython` and
  131. :class:`~django.db.migrations.operations.RunSQL` operations unless they
  132. provide it using hints.
  133. ``hints`` are used by certain operations to communicate additional
  134. information to the router.
  135. When ``model_name`` is set, ``hints`` normally contains the model class
  136. under the key ``'model'``. Note that it may be a :ref:`historical model
  137. <historical-models>`, and thus not have any custom attributes, methods, or
  138. managers. You should only rely on ``_meta``.
  139. This method can also be used to determine the availability of a model on a
  140. given database.
  141. Note that migrations will just silently not perform any operations on a
  142. model for which this returns ``False``. This may result in broken foreign
  143. keys, extra tables, or missing tables if you change it once you have
  144. applied some migrations.
  145. .. versionchanged:: 1.8
  146. The signature of ``allow_migrate`` has changed significantly from previous
  147. versions. See the :ref:`deprecation notes
  148. <deprecated-signature-of-allow-migrate>` for more details.
  149. A router doesn't have to provide *all* these methods -- it may omit one
  150. or more of them. If one of the methods is omitted, Django will skip
  151. that router when performing the relevant check.
  152. .. _topics-db-multi-db-hints:
  153. Hints
  154. ~~~~~
  155. The hints received by the database router can be used to decide which
  156. database should receive a given request.
  157. At present, the only hint that will be provided is ``instance``, an
  158. object instance that is related to the read or write operation that is
  159. underway. This might be the instance that is being saved, or it might
  160. be an instance that is being added in a many-to-many relation. In some
  161. cases, no instance hint will be provided at all. The router checks for
  162. the existence of an instance hint, and determine if that hint should be
  163. used to alter routing behavior.
  164. Using routers
  165. -------------
  166. Database routers are installed using the :setting:`DATABASE_ROUTERS`
  167. setting. This setting defines a list of class names, each specifying a
  168. router that should be used by the master router
  169. (``django.db.router``).
  170. The master router is used by Django's database operations to allocate
  171. database usage. Whenever a query needs to know which database to use,
  172. it calls the master router, providing a model and a hint (if
  173. available). Django then tries each router in turn until a database
  174. suggestion can be found. If no suggestion can be found, it tries the
  175. current ``_state.db`` of the hint instance. If a hint instance wasn't
  176. provided, or the instance doesn't currently have database state, the
  177. master router will allocate the ``default`` database.
  178. An example
  179. ----------
  180. .. admonition:: Example purposes only!
  181. This example is intended as a demonstration of how the router
  182. infrastructure can be used to alter database usage. It
  183. intentionally ignores some complex issues in order to
  184. demonstrate how routers are used.
  185. This example won't work if any of the models in ``myapp`` contain
  186. relationships to models outside of the ``other`` database.
  187. :ref:`Cross-database relationships <no_cross_database_relations>`
  188. introduce referential integrity problems that Django can't
  189. currently handle.
  190. The primary/replica (referred to as master/slave by some databases)
  191. configuration described is also flawed -- it
  192. doesn't provide any solution for handling replication lag (i.e.,
  193. query inconsistencies introduced because of the time taken for a
  194. write to propagate to the replicas). It also doesn't consider the
  195. interaction of transactions with the database utilization strategy.
  196. So - what does this mean in practice? Let's consider another sample
  197. configuration. This one will have several databases: one for the
  198. ``auth`` application, and all other apps using a primary/replica setup
  199. with two read replicas. Here are the settings specifying these
  200. databases::
  201. DATABASES = {
  202. 'auth_db': {
  203. 'NAME': 'auth_db',
  204. 'ENGINE': 'django.db.backends.mysql',
  205. 'USER': 'mysql_user',
  206. 'PASSWORD': 'swordfish',
  207. },
  208. 'primary': {
  209. 'NAME': 'primary',
  210. 'ENGINE': 'django.db.backends.mysql',
  211. 'USER': 'mysql_user',
  212. 'PASSWORD': 'spam',
  213. },
  214. 'replica1': {
  215. 'NAME': 'replica1',
  216. 'ENGINE': 'django.db.backends.mysql',
  217. 'USER': 'mysql_user',
  218. 'PASSWORD': 'eggs',
  219. },
  220. 'replica2': {
  221. 'NAME': 'replica2',
  222. 'ENGINE': 'django.db.backends.mysql',
  223. 'USER': 'mysql_user',
  224. 'PASSWORD': 'bacon',
  225. },
  226. }
  227. Now we'll need to handle routing. First we want a router that knows to
  228. send queries for the ``auth`` app to ``auth_db``::
  229. class AuthRouter(object):
  230. """
  231. A router to control all database operations on models in the
  232. auth application.
  233. """
  234. def db_for_read(self, model, **hints):
  235. """
  236. Attempts to read auth models go to auth_db.
  237. """
  238. if model._meta.app_label == 'auth':
  239. return 'auth_db'
  240. return None
  241. def db_for_write(self, model, **hints):
  242. """
  243. Attempts to write auth models go to auth_db.
  244. """
  245. if model._meta.app_label == 'auth':
  246. return 'auth_db'
  247. return None
  248. def allow_relation(self, obj1, obj2, **hints):
  249. """
  250. Allow relations if a model in the auth app is involved.
  251. """
  252. if obj1._meta.app_label == 'auth' or \
  253. obj2._meta.app_label == 'auth':
  254. return True
  255. return None
  256. def allow_migrate(self, db, app_label, model=None, **hints):
  257. """
  258. Make sure the auth app only appears in the 'auth_db'
  259. database.
  260. """
  261. if app_label == 'auth':
  262. return db == 'auth_db'
  263. return None
  264. And we also want a router that sends all other apps to the
  265. primary/replica configuration, and randomly chooses a replica to read
  266. from::
  267. import random
  268. class PrimaryReplicaRouter(object):
  269. def db_for_read(self, model, **hints):
  270. """
  271. Reads go to a randomly-chosen replica.
  272. """
  273. return random.choice(['replica1', 'replica2'])
  274. def db_for_write(self, model, **hints):
  275. """
  276. Writes always go to primary.
  277. """
  278. return 'primary'
  279. def allow_relation(self, obj1, obj2, **hints):
  280. """
  281. Relations between objects are allowed if both objects are
  282. in the primary/replica pool.
  283. """
  284. db_list = ('primary', 'replica1', 'replica2')
  285. if obj1._state.db in db_list and obj2._state.db in db_list:
  286. return True
  287. return None
  288. def allow_migrate(self, db, app_label, model=None, **hints):
  289. """
  290. All non-auth models end up in this pool.
  291. """
  292. return True
  293. Finally, in the settings file, we add the following (substituting
  294. ``path.to.`` with the actual python path to the module(s) where the
  295. routers are defined)::
  296. DATABASE_ROUTERS = ['path.to.AuthRouter', 'path.to.PrimaryReplicaRouter']
  297. The order in which routers are processed is significant. Routers will
  298. be queried in the order the are listed in the
  299. :setting:`DATABASE_ROUTERS` setting . In this example, the
  300. ``AuthRouter`` is processed before the ``PrimaryReplicaRouter``, and as a
  301. result, decisions concerning the models in ``auth`` are processed
  302. before any other decision is made. If the :setting:`DATABASE_ROUTERS`
  303. setting listed the two routers in the other order,
  304. ``PrimaryReplicaRouter.allow_migrate()`` would be processed first. The
  305. catch-all nature of the PrimaryReplicaRouter implementation would mean
  306. that all models would be available on all databases.
  307. With this setup installed, lets run some Django code::
  308. >>> # This retrieval will be performed on the 'auth_db' database
  309. >>> fred = User.objects.get(username='fred')
  310. >>> fred.first_name = 'Frederick'
  311. >>> # This save will also be directed to 'auth_db'
  312. >>> fred.save()
  313. >>> # These retrieval will be randomly allocated to a replica database
  314. >>> dna = Person.objects.get(name='Douglas Adams')
  315. >>> # A new object has no database allocation when created
  316. >>> mh = Book(title='Mostly Harmless')
  317. >>> # This assignment will consult the router, and set mh onto
  318. >>> # the same database as the author object
  319. >>> mh.author = dna
  320. >>> # This save will force the 'mh' instance onto the primary database...
  321. >>> mh.save()
  322. >>> # ... but if we re-retrieve the object, it will come back on a replica
  323. >>> mh = Book.objects.get(title='Mostly Harmless')
  324. Manually selecting a database
  325. =============================
  326. Django also provides an API that allows you to maintain complete control
  327. over database usage in your code. A manually specified database allocation
  328. will take priority over a database allocated by a router.
  329. Manually selecting a database for a ``QuerySet``
  330. ------------------------------------------------
  331. You can select the database for a ``QuerySet`` at any point in the
  332. ``QuerySet`` "chain." Just call ``using()`` on the ``QuerySet`` to get
  333. another ``QuerySet`` that uses the specified database.
  334. ``using()`` takes a single argument: the alias of the database on
  335. which you want to run the query. For example::
  336. >>> # This will run on the 'default' database.
  337. >>> Author.objects.all()
  338. >>> # So will this.
  339. >>> Author.objects.using('default').all()
  340. >>> # This will run on the 'other' database.
  341. >>> Author.objects.using('other').all()
  342. Selecting a database for ``save()``
  343. -----------------------------------
  344. Use the ``using`` keyword to ``Model.save()`` to specify to which
  345. database the data should be saved.
  346. For example, to save an object to the ``legacy_users`` database, you'd
  347. use this::
  348. >>> my_object.save(using='legacy_users')
  349. If you don't specify ``using``, the ``save()`` method will save into
  350. the default database allocated by the routers.
  351. Moving an object from one database to another
  352. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  353. If you've saved an instance to one database, it might be tempting to
  354. use ``save(using=...)`` as a way to migrate the instance to a new
  355. database. However, if you don't take appropriate steps, this could
  356. have some unexpected consequences.
  357. Consider the following example::
  358. >>> p = Person(name='Fred')
  359. >>> p.save(using='first') # (statement 1)
  360. >>> p.save(using='second') # (statement 2)
  361. In statement 1, a new ``Person`` object is saved to the ``first``
  362. database. At this time, ``p`` doesn't have a primary key, so Django
  363. issues an SQL ``INSERT`` statement. This creates a primary key, and
  364. Django assigns that primary key to ``p``.
  365. When the save occurs in statement 2, ``p`` already has a primary key
  366. value, and Django will attempt to use that primary key on the new
  367. database. If the primary key value isn't in use in the ``second``
  368. database, then you won't have any problems -- the object will be
  369. copied to the new database.
  370. However, if the primary key of ``p`` is already in use on the
  371. ``second`` database, the existing object in the ``second`` database
  372. will be overridden when ``p`` is saved.
  373. You can avoid this in two ways. First, you can clear the primary key
  374. of the instance. If an object has no primary key, Django will treat it
  375. as a new object, avoiding any loss of data on the ``second``
  376. database::
  377. >>> p = Person(name='Fred')
  378. >>> p.save(using='first')
  379. >>> p.pk = None # Clear the primary key.
  380. >>> p.save(using='second') # Write a completely new object.
  381. The second option is to use the ``force_insert`` option to ``save()``
  382. to ensure that Django does an SQL ``INSERT``::
  383. >>> p = Person(name='Fred')
  384. >>> p.save(using='first')
  385. >>> p.save(using='second', force_insert=True)
  386. This will ensure that the person named ``Fred`` will have the same
  387. primary key on both databases. If that primary key is already in use
  388. when you try to save onto the ``second`` database, an error will be
  389. raised.
  390. Selecting a database to delete from
  391. -----------------------------------
  392. By default, a call to delete an existing object will be executed on
  393. the same database that was used to retrieve the object in the first
  394. place::
  395. >>> u = User.objects.using('legacy_users').get(username='fred')
  396. >>> u.delete() # will delete from the `legacy_users` database
  397. To specify the database from which a model will be deleted, pass a
  398. ``using`` keyword argument to the ``Model.delete()`` method. This
  399. argument works just like the ``using`` keyword argument to ``save()``.
  400. For example, if you're migrating a user from the ``legacy_users``
  401. database to the ``new_users`` database, you might use these commands::
  402. >>> user_obj.save(using='new_users')
  403. >>> user_obj.delete(using='legacy_users')
  404. Using managers with multiple databases
  405. --------------------------------------
  406. Use the ``db_manager()`` method on managers to give managers access to
  407. a non-default database.
  408. For example, say you have a custom manager method that touches the
  409. database -- ``User.objects.create_user()``. Because ``create_user()``
  410. is a manager method, not a ``QuerySet`` method, you can't do
  411. ``User.objects.using('new_users').create_user()``. (The
  412. ``create_user()`` method is only available on ``User.objects``, the
  413. manager, not on ``QuerySet`` objects derived from the manager.) The
  414. solution is to use ``db_manager()``, like this::
  415. User.objects.db_manager('new_users').create_user(...)
  416. ``db_manager()`` returns a copy of the manager bound to the database you specify.
  417. Using ``get_queryset()`` with multiple databases
  418. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  419. If you're overriding ``get_queryset()`` on your manager, be sure to
  420. either call the method on the parent (using ``super()``) or do the
  421. appropriate handling of the ``_db`` attribute on the manager (a string
  422. containing the name of the database to use).
  423. For example, if you want to return a custom ``QuerySet`` class from
  424. the ``get_queryset`` method, you could do this::
  425. class MyManager(models.Manager):
  426. def get_queryset(self):
  427. qs = CustomQuerySet(self.model)
  428. if self._db is not None:
  429. qs = qs.using(self._db)
  430. return qs
  431. Exposing multiple databases in Django's admin interface
  432. =======================================================
  433. Django's admin doesn't have any explicit support for multiple
  434. databases. If you want to provide an admin interface for a model on a
  435. database other than that specified by your router chain, you'll
  436. need to write custom :class:`~django.contrib.admin.ModelAdmin` classes
  437. that will direct the admin to use a specific database for content.
  438. ``ModelAdmin`` objects have five methods that require customization for
  439. multiple-database support::
  440. class MultiDBModelAdmin(admin.ModelAdmin):
  441. # A handy constant for the name of the alternate database.
  442. using = 'other'
  443. def save_model(self, request, obj, form, change):
  444. # Tell Django to save objects to the 'other' database.
  445. obj.save(using=self.using)
  446. def delete_model(self, request, obj):
  447. # Tell Django to delete objects from the 'other' database
  448. obj.delete(using=self.using)
  449. def get_queryset(self, request):
  450. # Tell Django to look for objects on the 'other' database.
  451. return super(MultiDBModelAdmin, self).get_queryset(request).using(self.using)
  452. def formfield_for_foreignkey(self, db_field, request=None, **kwargs):
  453. # Tell Django to populate ForeignKey widgets using a query
  454. # on the 'other' database.
  455. return super(MultiDBModelAdmin, self).formfield_for_foreignkey(db_field, request=request, using=self.using, **kwargs)
  456. def formfield_for_manytomany(self, db_field, request=None, **kwargs):
  457. # Tell Django to populate ManyToMany widgets using a query
  458. # on the 'other' database.
  459. return super(MultiDBModelAdmin, self).formfield_for_manytomany(db_field, request=request, using=self.using, **kwargs)
  460. The implementation provided here implements a multi-database strategy
  461. where all objects of a given type are stored on a specific database
  462. (e.g., all ``User`` objects are in the ``other`` database). If your
  463. usage of multiple databases is more complex, your ``ModelAdmin`` will
  464. need to reflect that strategy.
  465. Inlines can be handled in a similar fashion. They require three customized methods::
  466. class MultiDBTabularInline(admin.TabularInline):
  467. using = 'other'
  468. def get_queryset(self, request):
  469. # Tell Django to look for inline objects on the 'other' database.
  470. return super(MultiDBTabularInline, self).get_queryset(request).using(self.using)
  471. def formfield_for_foreignkey(self, db_field, request=None, **kwargs):
  472. # Tell Django to populate ForeignKey widgets using a query
  473. # on the 'other' database.
  474. return super(MultiDBTabularInline, self).formfield_for_foreignkey(db_field, request=request, using=self.using, **kwargs)
  475. def formfield_for_manytomany(self, db_field, request=None, **kwargs):
  476. # Tell Django to populate ManyToMany widgets using a query
  477. # on the 'other' database.
  478. return super(MultiDBTabularInline, self).formfield_for_manytomany(db_field, request=request, using=self.using, **kwargs)
  479. Once you've written your model admin definitions, they can be
  480. registered with any ``Admin`` instance::
  481. from django.contrib import admin
  482. # Specialize the multi-db admin objects for use with specific models.
  483. class BookInline(MultiDBTabularInline):
  484. model = Book
  485. class PublisherAdmin(MultiDBModelAdmin):
  486. inlines = [BookInline]
  487. admin.site.register(Author, MultiDBModelAdmin)
  488. admin.site.register(Publisher, PublisherAdmin)
  489. othersite = admin.AdminSite('othersite')
  490. othersite.register(Publisher, MultiDBModelAdmin)
  491. This example sets up two admin sites. On the first site, the
  492. ``Author`` and ``Publisher`` objects are exposed; ``Publisher``
  493. objects have an tabular inline showing books published by that
  494. publisher. The second site exposes just publishers, without the
  495. inlines.
  496. Using raw cursors with multiple databases
  497. =========================================
  498. If you are using more than one database you can use
  499. ``django.db.connections`` to obtain the connection (and cursor) for a
  500. specific database. ``django.db.connections`` is a dictionary-like
  501. object that allows you to retrieve a specific connection using its
  502. alias::
  503. from django.db import connections
  504. cursor = connections['my_db_alias'].cursor()
  505. Limitations of multiple databases
  506. =================================
  507. .. _no_cross_database_relations:
  508. Cross-database relations
  509. ------------------------
  510. Django doesn't currently provide any support for foreign key or
  511. many-to-many relationships spanning multiple databases. If you
  512. have used a router to partition models to different databases,
  513. any foreign key and many-to-many relationships defined by those
  514. models must be internal to a single database.
  515. This is because of referential integrity. In order to maintain a
  516. relationship between two objects, Django needs to know that the
  517. primary key of the related object is valid. If the primary key is
  518. stored on a separate database, it's not possible to easily evaluate
  519. the validity of a primary key.
  520. If you're using Postgres, Oracle, or MySQL with InnoDB, this is
  521. enforced at the database integrity level -- database level key
  522. constraints prevent the creation of relations that can't be validated.
  523. However, if you're using SQLite or MySQL with MyISAM tables, there is
  524. no enforced referential integrity; as a result, you may be able to
  525. 'fake' cross database foreign keys. However, this configuration is not
  526. officially supported by Django.
  527. .. _contrib_app_multiple_databases:
  528. Behavior of contrib apps
  529. ------------------------
  530. Several contrib apps include models, and some apps depend on others. Since
  531. cross-database relationships are impossible, this creates some restrictions on
  532. how you can split these models across databases:
  533. - each one of ``contenttypes.ContentType``, ``sessions.Session`` and
  534. ``sites.Site`` can be stored in any database, given a suitable router.
  535. - ``auth`` models — ``User``, ``Group`` and ``Permission`` — are linked
  536. together and linked to ``ContentType``, so they must be stored in the same
  537. database as ``ContentType``.
  538. - ``admin`` depends on ``auth``, so their models must be in the same database
  539. as ``auth``.
  540. - ``flatpages`` and ``redirects`` depend on ``sites``, so their models must be
  541. in the same database as ``sites``.
  542. In addition, some objects are automatically created just after
  543. :djadmin:`migrate` creates a table to hold them in a database:
  544. - a default ``Site``,
  545. - a ``ContentType`` for each model (including those not stored in that
  546. database),
  547. - three ``Permission`` for each model (including those not stored in that
  548. database).
  549. For common setups with multiple databases, it isn't useful to have these
  550. objects in more than one database. Common setups include primary/replica and
  551. connecting to external databases. Therefore, it's recommended to write a
  552. :ref:`database router<topics-db-multi-db-routing>` that allows synchronizing
  553. these three models to only one database. Use the same approach for contrib
  554. and third-party apps that don't need their tables in multiple databases.
  555. .. warning::
  556. If you're synchronizing content types to more than one database, be aware
  557. that their primary keys may not match across databases. This may result in
  558. data corruption or data loss.