Anthony Tuininga 515bca0f96 All test cases now run correctly in Unicode mode. There are still additional
things that need to be dealt with but the majority of the code has now been
transformed to use either Unicode or encoded strings with Oracle.
2008-10-15 22:45:29 +00:00
2008-06-06 15:31:18 +00:00
2007-06-27 14:00:34 +00:00

Open Source Python/Oracle Utility - cx_Oracle

cx_Oracle is a Python extension module that allows access to Oracle and 
conforms to the Python database API 2.0 specifications with a few exceptions.

See http://www.python.org/topics/database/DatabaseAPI-2.0.html for more
information on the Python database API specification.

For comments, contact Anthony Tuininga at anthony.tuininga@gmail.com or use the
mailing list at http://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/cx-oracle-users

Please note that an Oracle client (or server) installation is required in order
to use cx_Oracle. If you do not require the tools that come with a full client
installation, it is recommended to install the Instant Client which is far
easier to install.


BINARY INSTALL:
Place the file cx_Oracle.pyd or cx_Oracle.so anywhere on your Python path.


SOURCE INSTALL:
This module has been built with Oracle 9.2.0, 10.2.0, 11.1.0 on Linux,
Solaris and Windows. It will likely build on other platforms and other Oracle
versions but I haven't tried them. Use the provided setup.py to build and
install the module which makes use of the distutils module. Note that on
Windows, I have used mingw32 (http://www.mingw.org) and the module will not
build with MSVC without modification. The commands required to build and
install the module are as follows:

	python setup.py build
	python setup.py install


USAGE EXAMPLE:

import cx_Oracle

# connect via SQL*Net string or by each segment in a separate argument
#connection = cx_Oracle.connect("user/password@TNS")
connection = cx_Oracle.connect("user", "password", "TNS")

cursor = connection.cursor()
cursor.arraysize = 50
cursor.execute("""
        select Col1, Col2, Col3
        from SomeTable
        where Col4 = :arg_1
          and Col5 between :arg_2 and :arg_3""",
        arg_1 = "VALUE",
        arg_2 = 5,
        arg_3 = 15)
for column_1, column_2, column_3 in cursor.fetchall():
    print "Values:", column_1, column_2, column_3


For more examples, please see the test suite in the test directory and the
samples in the samples directory. You can also look at the scripts in the
cx_OracleTools (http://cx-oracletools.sourceforge.net) and the modules in the
cx_PyOracleLib (http://cx-pyoraclelib.sourceforge.net) projects.


EXCEPTIONS:
The only exception to the DB API specification is the lack of a nextset()
method which is not supported by Oracle.

Please see the included documentation for additional information.

Description
Obsolete Python interface to Oracle Database, now superseded by python-oracledb
Readme 7.6 MiB
Languages
C 56.4%
Python 39.9%
PLSQL 3.7%