Query Inspector is a Django application providing middleware for inspecting and reporting SQL queries executed for each web request.
Works with Django (1.11 and later) and Python (2.7, 3.5 and later).
Example log output:
[SQL] 17 queries (4 duplicates), 34 ms SQL time, 243 ms total request time
The statistics can also be added to response headers, for easier debugging without looking into the server logs:
X-QueryInspect-Num-SQL-Queries: 17
X-QueryInspect-Duplicate-SQL-Queries: 4
X-QueryInspect-Total-SQL-Time: 34 ms
X-QueryInspect-Total-Request-Time: 243 ms
The duplicate queries can also be shown in the log:
[SQL] repeated query (6x): SELECT "customer_role"."id",
"customer_role"."contact_id", "customer_role"."name"
FROM "customer_role" WHERE "customer_role"."contact_id" = ?
The duplicate queries are detected by ignoring any integer values in the SQL statement. The reasoning is that most of the duplicate queries in Django are due to results not being cached or pre-fetched properly, so Django needs to look up related fields afterwards. This lookup is done by the object ID, which is in most cases an integer.
The heuristic is not 100% precise so it may have some false positives or negatives, but is a very good starting point for most Django projects.
For each duplicate query, the Python traceback can also be shown, which may help with identifying why the query has been executed:
File "/vagrant/api/views.py", line 178, in get
return self.serialize(self.object_qs)
File "/vagrant/customer/views.py", line 131, in serialize
return serialize(objs, include=includes)
File "/vagrant/customer/serializers.py", line 258, in serialize_contact
lambda obj: [r.name for r in obj.roles.all()]),
File "/vagrant/customer/serializers.py", line 258, in <lambda>
lambda obj: [r.name for r in obj.roles.all()]),
Install from the Python Package Index:
pip install django-queryinspect
Add the middleware to your Django settings:
MIDDLEWARE += (
'qinspect.middleware.QueryInspectMiddleware',
)
(If you're using Django 1.x, the setting name is MIDDLEWARE_CLASSES
).
Enable Django's DEBUG
setting (the SQL query logging doesn't work without
it):
DEBUG = True
Update your logging configuration so the output from the queryinspect app shows up:
LOGGING = {
...
'handlers': {
...
'console': {
'level': 'DEBUG',
'class': 'logging.StreamHandler',
},
...
},
'loggers': {
...
'qinspect': {
'handlers': ['console'],
'level': 'DEBUG',
'propagate': True,
},
},
...
}
By default, Query Inspector will log stats for each request via Django logging mechanism and via HTTP headers in the response. This default behaviour can be modified by specifying several settigns values in your Django settings file (see next section)
The behaviour of Query Inspector can be fine-tuned via the following settings variables:
# Whether the Query Inspector should do anything (default: False)
QUERY_INSPECT_ENABLED = True
# Whether to log the stats via Django logging (default: True)
QUERY_INSPECT_LOG_STATS = True
# Whether to add stats headers (default: True)
QUERY_INSPECT_HEADER_STATS = True
# Whether to log duplicate queries (default: False)
QUERY_INSPECT_LOG_QUERIES = True
# Whether to log queries that are above an absolute limit (default: None - disabled)
QUERY_INSPECT_ABSOLUTE_LIMIT = 100 # in milliseconds
# Whether to log queries that are more than X standard deviations above the mean query time (default: None - disabled)
QUERY_INSPECT_STANDARD_DEVIATION_LIMIT = 2
# Whether to include tracebacks in the logs (default: False)
QUERY_INSPECT_LOG_TRACEBACKS = True
# Project root (a list of directories, see below - default empty)
QUERY_INSPECT_TRACEBACK_ROOTS = ['/path/to/my/django/project/']
# Minimum number of duplicates needed to log the query (default: 2)
QUERY_INSPECT_DUPLICATE_MIN = 1 # to force logging of all queries
# Whether to truncate SQL queries in logs to specified size, for readability purposes (default: None - full SQL query is included)
QUERY_INSPECT_SQL_LOG_LIMIT = 120 # limit to 120 chars
Complete tracebacks of an entire request are usually huge, but only a few
entries in the traceback are of the interest (usually only the few that
represent the code you're working on). To include only these entries of
interest in the traceback, you can set QUERY_INSPECT_TRACEBACK_ROOTS
to a
list of paths. If the path for a code file in the traceback begins with any of
the paths in QUERY_INSPECT_TRACEBACK_ROOTS
, it will be included in the
traceback.
Since Django apps need not be under the same directory, the setting also accepts colon-separated list of directories - traceback entry referencing any file under any of these directories will be included.
To run tests just use tox
command (https://pypi.python.org/pypi/tox)
tox # for all supported python and django versions
If you need you can run tox just for single environment, for instance:
tox -e py36-django111
For available test environments refer to tox.ini
file.
Copyright (C) 2014.-2017. Good Code and Django Query Inspector contributors
Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:
The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software.
THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.