openmedialibrary_platform/Shared/lib/python3.4/site-packages/sqlitedict-1.4.0.dist-info/METADATA

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Metadata-Version: 2.0
Name: sqlitedict
Version: 1.4.0
Summary: Persistent dict in Python, backed up by sqlite3 and pickle, multithread-safe.
Home-page: https://github.com/piskvorky/sqlitedict
Author: Radim Rehurek
Author-email: me@radimrehurek.com
License: Apache 2.0
Download-URL: http://pypi.python.org/pypi/sqlitedict
Keywords: sqlite,persistent dict,multithreaded
Platform: any
Classifier: Development Status :: 5 - Production/Stable
Classifier: Environment :: Console
Classifier: Intended Audience :: Developers
Classifier: License :: OSI Approved :: Apache Software License
Classifier: Operating System :: OS Independent
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 2.5
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 2.6
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 2.7
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.3
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.4
Classifier: Topic :: Database :: Front-Ends
=================================================================
sqlitedict -- persistent ``dict``, backed-up by SQLite and pickle
=================================================================
|Travis|_
|Downloads|_
|License|_
.. |Travis| image:: https://img.shields.io/travis/piskvorky/sqlitedict.svg
.. |Downloads| image:: https://img.shields.io/pypi/dm/sqlitedict.svg
.. |License| image:: https://img.shields.io/pypi/l/sqlitedict.svg
.. _Travis: https://travis-ci.org/piskvorky/sqlitedict
.. _Downloads: https://pypi.python.org/pypi/sqlitedict
.. _License: https://pypi.python.org/pypi/sqlitedict
A lightweight wrapper around Python's sqlite3 database with a simple, Pythonic
dict-like interface and support for multi-thread access:
.. code-block:: python
>>> from sqlitedict import SqliteDict
>>> mydict = SqliteDict('./my_db.sqlite', autocommit=True)
>>> mydict['some_key'] = any_picklable_object
>>> print mydict['some_key'] # prints the new value
>>> for key, value in mydict.iteritems():
>>> print key, value
>>> print len(mydict) # etc... all dict functions work
>>> mydict.close()
Pickle is used internally to (de)serialize the values. Keys are arbitrary strings,
values arbitrary pickle-able objects.
If you don't use autocommit (default is no autocommit for performance), then
don't forget to call ``mydict.commit()`` when done with a transaction:
.. code-block:: python
>>> # using SqliteDict as context manager works too (RECOMMENDED)
>>> with SqliteDict('./my_db.sqlite') as mydict: # note no autocommit=True
... mydict['some_key'] = u"first value"
... mydict['another_key'] = range(10)
... mydict.commit()
... mydict['some_key'] = u"new value"
... # no explicit commit here
>>> with SqliteDict('./my_db.sqlite') as mydict: # re-open the same DB
... print mydict['some_key'] # outputs 'first value', not 'new value'
Features
--------
* Values can be **any picklable objects** (uses ``cPickle`` with the highest protocol).
* Support for **multiple tables** (=dicts) living in the same database file.
* Support for **access from multiple threads** to the same connection (needed by e.g. Pyro).
Vanilla sqlite3 gives you ``ProgrammingError: SQLite objects created in a thread can
only be used in that same thread.``
Concurrent requests are still serialized internally, so this "multithreaded support"
**doesn't** give you any performance benefits. It is a work-around for sqlite limitations in Python.
Installation
------------
The module has no dependencies beyond Python itself. The minimum Python version is 2.5, continuously tested on Python 2.6, 2.7, 3.3 and 3.4 `on Travis <https://travis-ci.org/piskvorky/sqlitedict>`_.
Install or upgrade with::
easy_install -U sqlitedict
or from the `source tar.gz <http://pypi.python.org/pypi/sqlitedict>`_::
python setup.py install
Documentation
-------------
Standard Python document strings are inside the module:
.. code-block:: python
>>> import sqlitedict
>>> help(sqlitedict)
(but it's just ``dict`` with a commit, really).
**Beware**: because of Python semantics, ``sqlitedict`` cannot know when a mutable
SqliteDict-backed entry was modified in RAM. For example, ``mydict.setdefault('new_key', []).append(1)``
will leave ``mydict['new_key']`` equal to empty list, not ``[1]``. You'll need to
explicitly assign the mutated object back to SqliteDict to achieve the same effect:
.. code-block:: python
>>> val = mydict.get('new_key', [])
>>> val.append(1) # sqlite DB not updated here!
>>> mydict['new_key'] = val # now updated
For developers
--------------
Install::
# pip install nose
# pip install coverage
To perform all tests::
# make test-all
To perform all tests with coverage::
# make test-all-with-coverage
Comments, bug reports
---------------------
``sqlitedict`` resides on `github <https://github.com/piskvorky/sqlitedict>`_. You can file
issues or pull requests there.
History
-------
**1.4.0**: fix regression where iterating over keys/values/items returned a full list instead of iterator
**1.3.0**: improve error handling in multithreading (`PR #28 <https://github.com/piskvorky/sqlitedict/pull/28>`_); 100% test coverage.
**1.2.0**: full python 3 support, continuous testing via `Travis CI <https://travis-ci.org/piskvorky/sqlitedict>`_.
----
``sqlitedict`` is open source software released under the `Apache 2.0 license <http://opensource.org/licenses/apache2.0.php>`_.
Copyright (c) 2011-now `Radim Řehůřek <http://radimrehurek.com>`_ and contributors.