- 3.50.1 (latest)
- 3.50.0
- 3.46.0
- 3.45.0
- 3.44.0
- 3.43.0
- 3.42.0
- 3.41.0
- 3.40.1
- 3.39.0
- 3.38.0
- 3.37.0
- 3.36.0
- 3.35.1
- 3.34.0
- 3.33.0
- 3.32.0
- 3.31.0
- 3.30.0
- 3.29.0
- 3.28.0
- 3.27.1
- 3.26.0
- 3.25.0
- 3.24.0
- 3.23.0
- 3.22.2
- 3.21.0
- 3.20.0
- 3.19.0
- 3.18.0
- 3.17.0
- 3.16.0
- 3.15.1
- 3.14.1
- 3.13.0
- 3.12.1
- 3.11.1
- 3.10.0
- 3.9.0
- 3.8.0
- 3.7.0
- 3.6.0
- 3.5.0
- 3.4.0
- 3.3.0
- 3.2.0
- 3.1.0
- 3.0.0
- 2.1.1
- 2.0.0
- 1.19.3
- 1.18.0
- 1.17.1
- 1.16.0
- 1.15.1
- 1.14.0
- 1.13.0
- 1.12.0
- 1.11.0
- 1.10.0
Read-only Transactions via Snapshots
A Snapshot
represents a read-only
transaction: when multiple read operations are performed via a Snapshot,
the results are consistent as of a particular point in time.
Beginning a Snapshot
To begin using a snapshot using the default “bound” (which is “strong”), meaning all reads are performed at a timestamp where all previously-committed transactions are visible:
with database.snapshot() as snapshot:
...
You can also specify a weaker bound, which can either be to perform all reads as of a given timestamp:
import datetime
from pytz import UTC
TIMESTAMP = datetime.datetime.utcnow().replace(tzinfo=UTC)
with database.snapshot(read_timestamp=TIMESTAMP) as snapshot:
...
or as of a given duration in the past:
import datetime
DURATION = datetime.timedelta(seconds=5)
with database.snapshot(exact_staleness=DURATION) as snapshot:
...
Single Use and Multiple Use Snapshots
In the context of read only transactions, read
and execute_sql
methods can be used multiple times if you specify multi_use=True
in the constructor of the snapshot. However, multi_use=True
is
incompatible with either max_staleness
and/or min_read_timestamp
.
Otherwise multi_use
defaults to False
and the snapshot cannot be
reused.
with database.snapshot(multi_use=True) as snapshot:
...
begin()
can only be used on a
snapshot with multi_use=True
. In which case it is also necessary
to call if you need to have multiple pending operations.
Read Table Data
To read data for selected rows from a table in the database, call
read()
which will return
all rows specified in keyset
, or fail if the result set is too large,
with database.snapshot() as snapshot:
result = snapshot.read(
table='table-name', columns=['first_name', 'last_name', 'age'],
keyset=spanner.KeySet([['phred@example.com'], ['bharney@example.com']]))
for row in result:
print(row)
NOTE: Perform all iterations within the context of the with database.snapshot()
block.
Execute a SQL Select Statement
To read data from tables in the database using a query, call
execute_sql()
which will return all rows matching the query, or fail if the
result set is too large,
with database.snapshot() as snapshot:
QUERY = (
'SELECT e.first_name, e.last_name, p.telephone '
'FROM employees as e, phones as p '
'WHERE p.employee_id == e.employee_id')
result = snapshot.execute_sql(QUERY)
for row in result:
print(row)
NOTE: Perform all iteration within the context of the with database.snapshot()
block.
Next Step
Next, learn about Read-write Transactions.