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In Django, How do I deal with concurrent changes to the Images associated with a Post object?

This is a flavour of question that has been asked before, but not quite covering the same issues. I've read through these (question, question, question, and question) but the issue is slightly different.

I have a blog post model (pseudocode for speed), which contains title, abstract and body, and associated Images.

class Post(models.Model):
    title = CharField
    abstract = TextField
    body = TextField

class Image(models.Model):
    post = ForeignKey(Post)
    imagefile = ImageField

Now, what I want to add is the ability to store histories of the changes to this Post model. I've thought of two possibilities for this:

Possibility 1

class PostHistory(models.Model):
    post = ForeignKey(Post)
    title_delta = TextField
    abstract_delta = TextField
    body_delta = TextField

However this has the issue that it is storing deltas for no changes (for example when title does not change and there is only a delta for the body field. That said, when more than one field changes, it fits that '1 revision == 1 complete revision'.

Possibility 2

class PostRevision(models.Model):
    post = ForeignKey(Post)
    field = CharField #Field name
    delta = TextField

Through two different approaches, this successfully gives me a history of diffs for the field, which I would generate using diff-match-patch (slightly more performant than the inbuilt difflib). The two issues I now have are related to the generation of master objects (i.e. the top revision in the chain).

The question being asked is: How do I deal with concurrent changes to the Images associated with a Post object? These would be changed via references within the body field of the Post model (this is a Markdown formatted text field which is then edited on POST of the form to add in the URL references for the image field). Is the best way to deal with this to use an M2M field on the revision, and on the Post object, allowing the images to be always stored with the PostRevision object?

È stato utile?

Soluzione

I agree with @rickard-zachrisson that you should stick to approach #1. I'd make a few subtle changes though (pseudo code btw):

class AbstractPost(models.Model):
    title = CharField
    abstract = TextField
    body = TextField

    class Meta:
        abstract = True


class Post(AbstractPost):
    def save(self):
        post = super(Post, self).save()

        PostHistory.objects.create(
            post=post,
            title=post.title,
            abstract=post.abstract,
            body=post.body,
        )


class PostHistory(AbstractPost):
    post = ForeignKey(Post)

    class Meta:
        ordering = ['-pk']


class Image(models.Model):
    post = ForeignKey(Post)
    imagefile = ImageField

Your latest version will always be in Post and your change history is in pk order in PostHistory which is easy to diff against for changes. I'd duplicate the data because storage is cheap and storing deltas is a pita. If you have multiple edits or want to compare the current version to the original version then deltas are basically useless. Any model changes in AbstractPost are reflected in both Post and PostHistory.

Image is keyed to Post so things stay tidy. You can optionally clean up images in your Post.save() function but I'd probably opt for a post_save signal to keep the code cleaner.

Altri suggerimenti

I think you should stick with option 1.

An idea would be to have an automated revision system. Here is how I would do and mind some syntax errors, im typing out of my head

class A(models.Model):
    field1 = ...
    field2 = ...

    def save():
        if bla_bla_updated:
            A_revisions.objects.create(
                         field1=self.fields1, field2=self.fields2,
                         a=self)
        super(A, self).save()

class A_revision(models.Model):
    field1 = ...
    field2 = ...
    a = models.ForeignKey(A)
    revision = models.IntegerField()

    def save():
        self.revision = (A_revision.objects.get(a=self.a)
                                    .order_by('id').revision) + 1
        super(A_revision, self).save()
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