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183 lines
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183 lines
5.4 KiB
Plaintext
======================
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Testing GeoDjango apps
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======================
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Included in this documentation are some additional notes and settings
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for :ref:`testing-postgis` and :ref:`testing-spatialite` users.
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.. _testing-postgis:
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PostGIS
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=======
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Settings
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--------
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.. note::
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The settings below have sensible defaults, and shouldn't require manual setting.
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.. setting:: POSTGIS_TEMPLATE
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``POSTGIS_TEMPLATE``
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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This setting may be used to customize the name of the PostGIS template
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database to use. It automatically defaults to ``'template_postgis'``
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(the same name used in the
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:ref:`installation documentation <spatialdb_template>`).
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.. setting:: POSTGIS_VERSION
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``POSTGIS_VERSION``
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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When GeoDjango's spatial backend initializes on PostGIS, it has to perform
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an SQL query to determine the version in order to figure out what
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features are available. Advanced users wishing to prevent this additional
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query may set the version manually using a 3-tuple of integers specifying
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the major, minor, and subminor version numbers for PostGIS. For example,
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to configure for PostGIS 1.5.2 you would use::
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POSTGIS_VERSION = (1, 5, 2)
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Obtaining sufficient privileges
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-------------------------------
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Depending on your configuration, this section describes several methods to
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configure a database user with sufficient privileges to run tests for
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GeoDjango applications on PostgreSQL. If your
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:ref:`spatial database template <spatialdb_template>`
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was created like in the instructions, then your testing database user
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only needs to have the ability to create databases. In other configurations,
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you may be required to use a database superuser.
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Create database user
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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To make a database user with the ability to create databases, use the
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following command::
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$ createuser --createdb -R -S <user_name>
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The ``-R -S`` flags indicate that we do not want the user to have the ability
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to create additional users (roles) or to be a superuser, respectively.
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Alternatively, you may alter an existing user's role from the SQL shell
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(assuming this is done from an existing superuser account)::
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postgres# ALTER ROLE <user_name> CREATEDB NOSUPERUSER NOCREATEROLE;
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Create database superuser
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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This may be done at the time the user is created, for example::
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$ createuser --superuser <user_name>
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Or you may alter the user's role from the SQL shell (assuming this
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is done from an existing superuser account)::
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postgres# ALTER ROLE <user_name> SUPERUSER;
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Create local PostgreSQL database
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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1. Initialize database: ``initdb -D /path/to/user/db``
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2. If there's already a Postgres instance on the machine, it will need
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to use a different TCP port than 5432. Edit ``postgresql.conf`` (in
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``/path/to/user/db``) to change the database port (e.g. ``port = 5433``).
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3. Start this database ``pg_ctl -D /path/to/user/db start``
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Create a database using PostGIS version 2
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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When testing projects using :ref:`PostGIS 2 <spatialdb_template91>`,
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the test database is created using the ``CREATE EXTENSION postgis``
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instruction, provided that no template ``template_postgis`` (or named
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accordingly to :setting:`POSTGIS_TEMPLATE`) exists in the current
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database.
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Windows
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-------
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On Windows platforms the pgAdmin III utility may also be used as
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a simple way to add superuser privileges to your database user.
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By default, the PostGIS installer on Windows includes a template
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spatial database entitled ``template_postgis``.
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.. _testing-spatialite:
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SpatiaLite
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==========
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Make sure the necessary spatial tables are created in your test spatial
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database, as described in :ref:`create_spatialite_db`. Then just do this::
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$ python manage.py test
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Settings
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--------
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.. setting:: SPATIALITE_SQL
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``SPATIALITE_SQL``
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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Only relevant when using a SpatiaLite version 2.3.
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By default, the GeoDjango test runner looks for the :ref:`file containing the
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SpatiaLite database-initialization SQL code <create_spatialite_db>` in the
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same directory where it was invoked (by default the same directory where
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``manage.py`` is located). To use a different location, add the following to
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your settings::
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SPATIALITE_SQL='/path/to/init_spatialite-2.3.sql'
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.. _geodjango-tests:
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GeoDjango tests
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===============
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To have the GeoDjango tests executed when :ref:`running the Django test suite
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<running-unit-tests>` with ``runtests.py`` all of the databases in the settings
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file must be using one of the :ref:`spatial database backends
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<spatial-backends>`.
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Example
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-------
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The following is an example bare-bones settings file with spatial backends
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that can be used to run the entire Django test suite, including those
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in :mod:`django.contrib.gis`::
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DATABASES = {
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'default': {
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'ENGINE': 'django.contrib.gis.db.backends.postgis',
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'NAME': 'geodjango',
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'USER': 'geodjango',
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},
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'other': {
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'ENGINE': 'django.contrib.gis.db.backends.postgis',
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'NAME': 'other',
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'USER': 'geodjango',
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}
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}
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SECRET_KEY = 'django_tests_secret_key'
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Assuming the settings above were in a ``postgis.py`` file in the same
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directory as ``runtests.py``, then all Django and GeoDjango tests would
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be performed when executing the command::
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$ ./runtests.py --settings=postgis
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To run only the GeoDjango test suite, specify ``django.contrib.gis``::
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$ ./runtests.py --settings=postgis django.contrib.gis
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