SQLAlchemy - performing a bulk upsert (if exists, update, else insert) in postgresql
Solution 1:
There is an upsert-esque operation in SQLAlchemy:
db.session.merge()
After I found this command, I was able to perform upserts, but it is worth mentioning that this operation is slow for a bulk "upsert".
The alternative is to get a list of the primary keys you would like to upsert, and query the database for any matching ids:
# Imagine that post1, post5, and post1000 are posts objects with ids 1, 5 and 1000 respectively
# The goal is to "upsert" these posts.
# we initialize a dict which maps id to the post object
my_new_posts = {1: post1, 5: post5, 1000: post1000}
for each in posts.query.filter(posts.id.in_(my_new_posts.keys())).all():
# Only merge those posts which already exist in the database
db.session.merge(my_new_posts.pop(each.id))
# Only add those posts which did not exist in the database
db.session.add_all(my_new_posts.values())
# Now we commit our modifications (merges) and inserts (adds) to the database!
db.session.commit()
Solution 2:
You can leverage the on_conflict_do_update
variant. A simple example would be the following:
from sqlalchemy.dialects.postgresql import insert
class Post(Base):
"""
A simple class for demonstration
"""
id = Column(Integer, primary_key=True)
title = Column(Unicode)
# Prepare all the values that should be "upserted" to the DB
values = [
{"id": 1, "title": "mytitle 1"},
{"id": 2, "title": "mytitle 2"},
{"id": 3, "title": "mytitle 3"},
{"id": 4, "title": "mytitle 4"},
]
stmt = insert(Post).values(values)
stmt = stmt.on_conflict_do_update(
# Let's use the constraint name which was visible in the original posts error msg
constraint="post_pkey",
# The columns that should be updated on conflict
set_={
"title": stmt.excluded.title
}
)
session.execute(stmt)
See the Postgres docs for more details about ON CONFLICT DO UPDATE
.
See the SQLAlchemy docs for more details about on_conflict_do_update
.
Side-Note on duplicated column names
The above code uses the column names as dict keys both in the values
list and the argument to set_
. If the column-name is changed in the class-definition this needs to be changed everywhere or it will break. This can be avoided by accessing the column definitions, making the code a bit uglier, but more robust:
coldefs = Post.__table__.c
values = [
{coldefs.id.name: 1, coldefs.title.name: "mytitlte 1"},
...
]
stmt = stmt.on_conflict_do_update(
...
set_={
coldefs.title.name: stmt.excluded.title
...
}
)
Solution 3:
An alternative approach using compilation extension (https://docs.sqlalchemy.org/en/13/core/compiler.html):
from sqlalchemy.ext.compiler import compiles
from sqlalchemy.sql.expression import Insert
@compiles(Insert)
def compile_upsert(insert_stmt, compiler, **kwargs):
"""
converts every SQL insert to an upsert i.e;
INSERT INTO test (foo, bar) VALUES (1, 'a')
becomes:
INSERT INTO test (foo, bar) VALUES (1, 'a') ON CONFLICT(foo) DO UPDATE SET (bar = EXCLUDED.bar)
(assuming foo is a primary key)
:param insert_stmt: Original insert statement
:param compiler: SQL Compiler
:param kwargs: optional arguments
:return: upsert statement
"""
pk = insert_stmt.table.primary_key
insert = compiler.visit_insert(insert_stmt, **kwargs)
ondup = f'ON CONFLICT ({",".join(c.name for c in pk)}) DO UPDATE SET'
updates = ', '.join(f"{c.name}=EXCLUDED.{c.name}" for c in insert_stmt.table.columns)
upsert = ' '.join((insert, ondup, updates))
return upsert
This should ensure that all insert statements behave as upserts. This implementation is in Postgres dialect, but it should be fairly easy to modify for MySQL dialect.