The old-api model._all_columns contains information about model._columns and
inherited columns. This dictionary is missing new-api computed non-stored
fields, and the new field objects provide a more readable api...
This commit contains the following changes:
- adapt several methods of BaseModel to use fields instead of columns and
_all_columns
- copy all semantic-free attributes of related fields from their source
- add attribute 'group_operator' on integer and float fields
- base, base_action_rule, crm, edi, hr, mail, mass_mailing, pad,
payment_acquirer, share, website, website_crm, website_mail: simply use
_fields instead of _all_columns
- base, decimal_precision, website: adapt qweb rendering methods to use fields
instead of columns
Clarify the semantics of field attributes:
- field.store is True when the field is actually stored in the database;
- field.column is the column corresponding to field or None.
The various field definitions correspond to:
- new-style stored field: field.store and field.column
- new-style non-stored field: not field.store and not field.column
- old-style regular field: field.store and field.column
- old-style function field: not field.store and field.column
Because some parameters of a field may be determined during its setup, we have
to update the corresponding column after the setup, and recompute _all_columns
to make it consistent.
The setup of relational fields may be problematic, as they may refer to unknown
models via custom relational fields. In a partial setup, do not try to skip
the field setup, but let it go and silently catch any exception if it crashes.
In the case of custom fields, the field's parameters were set up without the
field being present in the class hierarchy. Because of this, the parameter
inheritance mechanism was missing the field itself. As a consequence, custom
selection fields ended up without selection, for instance :-/
The ISO week-year notation can produce confusing values
when the first week of the year is so short that it
becomes week 0 and is considered the last week of the
previous year, depending on the locale.
For instance, using ISO notation:
'W53 2015' == dates.format_date(
date(2015,1,1), format="'W'w YYYY", locale='en_GB')
'W53 2005' == dates.format_date(
date(2006,1,1), format="'W'w YYYY", locale='de_DE')
This is surprising but actually valid.
However it definitely yields wrong output when combined with
months formats:
'January 2014' == dates.format_date(
date(2015,1,1), format="MMMM YYYY", locale='en_GB')
As a result we must always use `y` to denote the year in
any date format, *except* when it is combined with the
week number `w`, in which case we must use `Y`.
See the documentation at:
http://babel.pocoo.org/docs/dates/#date-fields
Compute methods could give results that should not be considered as default
values. For instance, a related field usually defaults to a null value, which
is then set to the field with its inverse method by create(). This may violate
a non-null constraint if the original field is required. Therefore, compute
methods are no longer used to determine default values.
The method _prefetch_field() was accidentally prefetching fields to recompute;
which was skipping the actual recomputation, since a value was put in cache.
But sometimes the field's value was fixed by an extra recomputation of the
field. Here we remove the extra recomputation and fix the cache corruption.
An issue occurs when a constraint is checked before computed fields are marked
for recomputation: the constraint will read the field's current value, which
may be wrong. If the field is marked soon enough, the constraint will trigger
the recomputation and use a correct value.
Because of the parameter overriding mechanism implemented by fields, it is no
longer necessary to copy field objects. It is even better to no copy them in
the case of related fields.
This solves a subtle issue: in the following case, the class Bar should
override the default value set by Foo. But in practice it was not working,
because _defaults is looked up before field.default.
class Foo(models.Model):
_name = 'foo'
_columns = {
'foo': fields.char('Foo'),
}
_defaults = {
'foo': "Foo",
}
class Bar(models.Model):
_inherit = 'foo'
foo = fields.Char(default="Bar")
The change makes field.default and the model's _defaults consistent with each
other.
Consider the following example:
class Foo(models.Model):
_name = 'foo'
_columns = {
'state': fields.selection([('a', 'A')]),
}
class Bar(models.Model):
_inherit = 'foo'
state = fields.Selection(selection_add=[('b', 'B')])
The attribute 'column' of the field does not have the full selection list,
therefore the column object cannot not be reused, even a copy of it. The
solution is to systematically recreate the column from the field's final
specification, except for function fields that have no sensible way for being
recreated.
When processing data files during a module installation/upgrade, not all fields
are set up yet, in particular relational custom fields. Make fields_get()
ignore those fields, so that views can be created/updated and validated,
provided they do not refer to those fields...
Replace the query "SELECT min(id) FROM xxx" by "SELECT 1 FROM xxx LIMIT 1".
Both requests are as efficient, and the second one does not crash if column
'id' is missing.
The method was expecting that name_get() returns complete and in-order values.
Because of this, some records in the recordset could end up without a value.
The method onchange() executes onchange methods in cascade. Suppose onchange()
is called and a field F=1 in the form. If an onchange method set F=2, that
value is put in the result variable. If another onchange method set it back to
F=1, the binding F=2 must be removed from the result variable.
Fixes#2309
Cascading onchanges can be caused by a related field computed in cache. This
causes a bug in sale order lines, were setting the uom field forces reading
product fields, which are inherited from product templates. The inherited
fields are computed as related fields, which marks the product record as dirty.
This subsequently triggers an onchange on the product field, which resets the
uom field!
This fixes issue #2146. The inverse of a one2many field can be an inherited
field (_inherits). In that case, we cannot read its value with a simple
database query. Instead, we let the related field read it, but for performance
considerations we disable the prefetching of other fields.
Add an attribute 'related_sudo' (True by default) for related fields.
A related field is computed as superuser if related_sudo is True.
Add explicit related fields 'name' and 'email' on 'res.users', as these should
be readable by the public user with module website_forum.
This fixes a bug which is usually triggered in module account_followup, but
does not occur deterministically. Some recomputations of computed fields are
apparently missing. Environment objects containing recomputations todos and
kept alive by a WeakSet, are removed by the Python garbage collector before
recomputation takes place. We fix the bug by moving the recomputation todos in
a non-weakref'ed object.
The selection of records in cache for prefetching was moved to method
_read_from_database() by xmo at rev 785018cc in order to fix an access right
bug. But this introduced an issue: to explicitly avoid prefetching, you should
use read() instead of browsing records. We revert the change by xmo, without
reintroducing the bug (which apparently was fixed by another way).
When the context contains 'recompute': False, the recomputation was not even
prepared. Now both create() and write() prepare the recomputation by invoking
method modified(). The flag only controls whether method recompute() is invoked.
In addintion, the former flag 'no_store_function' was converted to the flag
'recompute', so that both create() and write() use the same flag.
Fixes#1456
At the end of _prefetch_field(), a check is made to ensure that the cache
contains something for the field to prefetch. The check was incorrect because
the cache was checked for a regular value only.
The result of _convert_to_write() is intended to be pass directly to
`write()` or returned to the client (`onchange()` and `default_get()`.
`NewId` is as special value that must not be stored into the database
or exposed to the client.
On one2many fields writing in an existing record (not when creating new record), the computed stored fields of the one2many were not re-computed correctly
Computed stored fields were marked as modified only if no_store_function was not set to True in the context. no_store_function is set when writing one2many records on an existing record.
Now, these computed stored fields are marked as to be recomputed, but are recomputed later, at the end of the existing record write