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Joshua
zodb
Commits
4cb5568b
Commit
4cb5568b
authored
Mar 07, 2005
by
Tim Peters
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Merge rev 29407 from 3.3 branch.
Add more words about __del__ methods.
parent
7c665d9a
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doc/guide/prog-zodb.tex
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4cb5568b
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@@ -300,11 +300,11 @@ methods. (Older versions didn't support this at all.) If you write
such a
\method
{__
setattr
__}
or
\method
{__
delattr
__}
method, its code
has to set the dirty bit manually.
\item
A persistent class should not have a
n
\method
{__
del
__}
method.
\item
A persistent class should not have a
\method
{__
del
__}
method.
The database moves objects freely between memory and storage. If an
object has not been used in a while, it may be released and its
contents loaded from storage the next time it is used. Since the
Python interpreter is unaware of persistence, it would call
the
Python interpreter is unaware of persistence, it would call
\method
{__
del
__}
each time the object was freed.
\end{itemize}
...
...
@@ -407,6 +407,39 @@ the name of the attribute as an argument. If the call returns True,
\class
{
Persistent
}
handled the attribute; if not, the user code can
run.
\subsubsection
{
\method
{__
del
__}
methods
}
A
\method
{__
del
__}
method is invoked just before the memory occupied by an
unreferenced Python object is freed. Because ZODB may materialize, and
dematerialize, a given persistent object in memory any number of times,
there isn't a meaningful relationship between when a persistent object's
\method
{__
del
__}
method gets invoked and any natural aspect of a
persistent object's life cycle. For example, it is emphatically not the
case that a persistent object's
\method
{__
del
__}
method gets invoked only
when the object is no longer referenced by other objects in the database.
\method
{__
del
__}
is only concerned with reachability from objects in
memory.
Worse, a
\method
{__
del
__}
method can interfere with the persistence
machinery's goals. For example, some number of persistent objects reside
in a
\class
{
Connection
}
's memory cache. At various times, to reduce memory
burden, objects that haven't been referenced recently are removed from the
cache. If a persistent object with a
\method
{__
del
___}
method is so
removed, and the cache was holding the last memory reference to the object,
the object's
\method
{__
del
__}
method will be invoked. If the
\method
{__
del
__}
method then references any attribute of the object, ZODB
needs to load the object from the database again, in order to satisfy the
attribute reference. This puts the object back into the cache again: such
an object is effectively immortal, occupying space in the memory cache
forever, as every attempt to remove it from cache puts it back into the
cache. In ZODB versions prior to 3.2.2, this could even cause the cache
reduction code to fall into an infinite loop. The infinite loop no longer
occurs, but such objects continue to live in the memory cache forever.
Because
\method
{__
del
__}
methods don't make good sense for persistent
objects, and can create problems, persistent classes should not define
\method
{__
del
__}
methods.
\subsection
{
Writing Persistent Classes
}
Now that we've looked at the basics of programming using the ZODB,
...
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