Was this page helpful?
ScyllaDB Python Driver is available under the Apache v2 License. ScyllaDB Python Driver is a fork of DataStax Python Driver. See Copyright here.
Caution
You're viewing documentation for a deprecated version of Scylla Python Driver. Switch to the latest stable version.
Lightweight Transactions (LWTs) are mostly pass-through CQL for the driver. However, the server returns some specialized results indicating the outcome and optional state preceding the transaction.
For pertinent execution parameters, see Statement.serial_consistency_level
.
This section discusses working with specialized result sets returned by the server for LWTs, and how to work with them using the driver.
The result returned from a LWT request is always a single row result. It will always have
prepended a special column named [applied]
. How this value appears in your results depends
on the row factory in use. See below for examples.
The value of this [applied]
column is boolean value indicating whether or not the transaction was applied.
If True
, it is the only column in the result. If False
, the additional columns depend on the LWT operation being
executed:
When using a UPDATE ... IF "col" = ...
clause, the result will contain the [applied]
column, plus the existing columns
and values for any columns in the IF
clause (and thus the value that caused the transaction to fail).
When using INSERT ... IF NOT EXISTS
, the result will contain the [applied]
column, plus all columns and values
of the existing row that rejected the transaction.
UPDATE .. IF EXISTS
never has additional columns, regardless of [applied]
status.
How the [applied]
column manifests depends on the row factory in use. Considering the following (initially empty) table:
CREATE TABLE test.t (
k int PRIMARY KEY,
v int,
x int
)
… the following sections show the expected result for a number of example statements, using the three base row factories.
The name [applied]
is not a valid Python identifier, so the square brackets are actually removed
from the attribute for the resulting namedtuple
. The row always has a boolean column applied
in position 0:
>>> session.execute("INSERT INTO t (k,v) VALUES (0,0) IF NOT EXISTS")
Row(applied=True)
>>> session.execute("INSERT INTO t (k,v) VALUES (0,0) IF NOT EXISTS")
Row(applied=False, k=0, v=0, x=None)
>>> session.execute("UPDATE t SET v = 1, x = 2 WHERE k = 0 IF v =0")
Row(applied=True)
>>> session.execute("UPDATE t SET v = 1, x = 2 WHERE k = 0 IF v =0 AND x = 1")
Row(applied=False, v=1, x=2)
This return type does not refer to names, but the boolean value applied
is always present in position 0:
>>> session.execute("INSERT INTO t (k,v) VALUES (0,0) IF NOT EXISTS")
(True,)
>>> session.execute("INSERT INTO t (k,v) VALUES (0,0) IF NOT EXISTS")
(False, 0, 0, None)
>>> session.execute("UPDATE t SET v = 1, x = 2 WHERE k = 0 IF v =0")
(True,)
>>> session.execute("UPDATE t SET v = 1, x = 2 WHERE k = 0 IF v =0 AND x = 1")
(False, 1, 2)
The retuned dict
contains the [applied]
key:
>>> session.execute("INSERT INTO t (k,v) VALUES (0,0) IF NOT EXISTS")
{u'[applied]': True}
>>> session.execute("INSERT INTO t (k,v) VALUES (0,0) IF NOT EXISTS")
{u'x': 2, u'[applied]': False, u'v': 1}
>>> session.execute("UPDATE t SET v = 1, x = 2 WHERE k = 0 IF v =0")
{u'x': None, u'[applied]': False, u'k': 0, u'v': 0}
>>> session.execute("UPDATE t SET v = 1, x = 2 WHERE k = 0 IF v =0 AND x = 1")
{u'[applied]': True}
Was this page helpful?
ScyllaDB Python Driver is available under the Apache v2 License. ScyllaDB Python Driver is a fork of DataStax Python Driver. See Copyright here.
cassandra
- Exceptions and Enumscassandra.cluster
- Clusters and Sessionscassandra.policies
- Load balancing and Failure Handling Policiescassandra.auth
- Authenticationcassandra.graph
- Graph Statements, Options, and Row Factoriescassandra.metadata
- Schema and Ring Topologycassandra.metrics
- Performance Metricscassandra.query
- Prepared Statements, Batch Statements, Tracing, and Row Factoriescassandra.pool
- Hosts and Connection Poolscassandra.protocol
- Protocol Featurescassandra.encoder
- Encoders for non-prepared Statementscassandra.decoder
- Data Return Formatscassandra.concurrent
- Utilities for Concurrent Statement Executioncassandra.connection
- Low Level Connection Infocassandra.util
- Utilitiescassandra.timestamps
- Timestamp Generationcassandra.io.asyncioreactor
- asyncio
Event Loopcassandra.io.asyncorereactor
- asyncore
Event Loopcassandra.io.eventletreactor
- eventlet
-compatible Connectioncassandra.io.libevreactor
- libev
Event Loopcassandra.io.geventreactor
- gevent
-compatible Event Loopcassandra.io.twistedreactor
- Twisted Event Loopcassandra.cqlengine.models
- Table models for object mappingcassandra.cqlengine.columns
- Column types for object mapping modelscassandra.cqlengine.query
- Query and filter model objectscassandra.cqlengine.connection
- Connection management for cqlenginecassandra.cqlengine.management
- Schema management for cqlenginecassandra.cqlengine.usertype
- Model classes for User Defined Typescassandra.datastax.graph
- Graph Statements, Options, and Row Factoriescassandra.datastax.graph.fluent
cassandra.datastax.graph.fluent.query
cassandra.datastax.graph.fluent.predicates