from django.test import TestCase from models import RelatedModel, RestrictedModel, OneToOneRestrictedModel class CustomManagersRegressTestCase(TestCase): def test_filtered_default_manager(self): """Even though the default manager filters out some records, we must still be able to save (particularly, save by updating existing records) those filtered instances. This is a regression test for #8990, #9527""" related = RelatedModel.objects.create(name="xyzzy") obj = RestrictedModel.objects.create(name="hidden", related=related) obj.name = "still hidden" obj.save() # If the hidden object wasn't seen during the save process, # there would now be two objects in the database. self.assertEqual(RestrictedModel.plain_manager.count(), 1) def test_delete_related_on_filtered_manager(self): """Deleting related objects should also not be distracted by a restricted manager on the related object. This is a regression test for #2698.""" related = RelatedModel.objects.create(name="xyzzy") for name, public in (('one', True), ('two', False), ('three', False)): RestrictedModel.objects.create(name=name, is_public=public, related=related) obj = RelatedModel.objects.get(name="xyzzy") obj.delete() # All of the RestrictedModel instances should have been # deleted, since they *all* pointed to the RelatedModel. If # the default manager is used, only the public one will be # deleted. self.assertEqual(len(RestrictedModel.plain_manager.all()), 0) def test_delete_one_to_one_manager(self): # The same test case as the last one, but for one-to-one # models, which are implemented slightly different internally, # so it's a different code path. obj = RelatedModel.objects.create(name="xyzzy") OneToOneRestrictedModel.objects.create(name="foo", is_public=False, related=obj) obj = RelatedModel.objects.get(name="xyzzy") obj.delete() self.assertEqual(len(OneToOneRestrictedModel.plain_manager.all()), 0)