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How can I see the raw SQL queries Django is running?

Is there a way to show the SQL that Django is running while performing a query?


D
DylanYoung

See the docs FAQ: "How can I see the raw SQL queries Django is running?"

django.db.connection.queries contains a list of the SQL queries:

from django.db import connection
print(connection.queries)

Querysets also have a query attribute containing the query to be executed:

print(MyModel.objects.filter(name="my name").query)

Note that the output of the query is not valid SQL, because:

"Django never actually interpolates the parameters: it sends the query and the parameters separately to the database adapter, which performs the appropriate operations."

From Django bug report #17741.

Because of that, you should not send query output directly to a database.

If you need to reset the queries to, for example, see how many queries are running in a given period, you can use reset_queries from django.db:

from django.db import reset_queries

reset_queries()
print(connection.queries)
>>> []

To future proof this answer you should rather link the current version of Django's documentation: docs.djangoproject.com/en/dev/faq/models/…
Great answer. However, it is recommended to use the specified, builtin Pythonian str() function, which invokes the internal __str__() method. e.g. str(MyModel.objects.filter(name="my name").query) I would also recommend using IPython and the Django shell of your project. Tab completion then provides object introspection. As Django is known for its assertive naming schemes, this methodology tends to be very useful.
Note that the output of query is not valid SQL, because "Django never actually interpolates the parameters: it sends the query and the parameters separately to the database adapter, which performs the appropriate operations." Source: code.djangoproject.com/ticket/17741
@AndreMiller You should use stable, not dev, to link to the current version of Django, like this: docs.djangoproject.com/en/stable/faq/models/…
django.db.connection.queries returns empty list
P
Patrick Z

Django-extensions have a command shell_plus with a parameter print-sql

./manage.py shell_plus --print-sql

In django-shell all executed queries will be printed

Ex.:

User.objects.get(pk=1)
SELECT "auth_user"."id",
       "auth_user"."password",
       "auth_user"."last_login",
       "auth_user"."is_superuser",
       "auth_user"."username",
       "auth_user"."first_name",
       "auth_user"."last_name",
       "auth_user"."email",
       "auth_user"."is_staff",
       "auth_user"."is_active",
       "auth_user"."date_joined"
FROM "auth_user"
WHERE "auth_user"."id" = 1

Execution time: 0.002466s [Database: default]

<User: username>

I am using it with --print-sql or with SHELL_PLUS_PRINT_SQL = True and it doesn't help - I still cannot see the queries. any idea why? django 1.8
You need to set DEBUG = True in your settings.py to see queries
This answer is a godsend.
p
poolie

Take a look at debug_toolbar, it's very useful for debugging.

Documentation and source is available at http://django-debug-toolbar.readthedocs.io/.

https://i.stack.imgur.com/VR75R.png


debug_toolbar is especially useful when you have a query that's failing with a SQL syntax error; it will display the last query that attempted to run (and failed), making it easier to debug.
The only thing is you see SQL queries on browser. If you run tests from terminal and wish to see it there, this is not a viable solution. Still great tho, I've been using it to this day.
Shows all queries as 'None' if run inside Docker.
@EugZol, take a look here, they mentioned Docker when setting up INTERNAL_IPS maybe that will help
P
Private

The query is actually embedded in the models API:

q = Query.objects.values('val1','val2','val_etc')

print(q.query)

Has this functionality been removed? It doesn't work when I do m = MyModel.objects.get(...) followed by m.query
That's because m is not a queryset anymore. Use q = MyModel.objects.filter(...), then q.query, then m = q.get().
B
Bryce

No other answer covers this method, so:

I find by far the most useful, simple, and reliable method is to ask your database. For example on Linux for Postgres you might do:

sudo su postgres
tail -f /var/log/postgresql/postgresql-8.4-main.log

Each database will have slightly different procedure. In the database logs you'll see not only the raw SQL, but any connection setup or transaction overhead django is placing on the system.


don't forget to set log_statement='all' in postgresql.conf for this method.
You can find your postgresql.conf by running psql -U postgres -c 'SHOW config_file'
g
googletorp

Though you can do it with with the code supplied, I find that using the debug toolbar app is a great tool to show queries. You can download it from github here.

This gives you the option to show all the queries ran on a given page along with the time to query took. It also sums up the number of queries on a page along with total time for a quick review. This is a great tool, when you want to look at what the Django ORM does behind the scenes. It also have a lot of other nice features, that you can use if you like.


Looks to me like this is the best version: github.com/django-debug-toolbar/django-debug-toolbar
O
Overclocked

Another option, see logging options in settings.py described by this post

http://dabapps.com/blog/logging-sql-queries-django-13/

debug_toolbar slows down each page load on your dev server, logging does not so it's faster. Outputs can be dumped to console or file, so the UI is not as nice. But for views with lots of SQLs, it can take a long time to debug and optimize the SQLs through debug_toolbar since each page load is so slow.


Excellent! While the toolbar looks great, I think this answer should be the accepted one. This is the solution I wanted because it lets "manage.py runserver" log SQL to the console and it works with "manage.py migrate". The latter let me see that "on delete cascade" was definitely not being set when my tables are created. It's worth noting that this answer is based on docs.djangoproject.com/en/1.9/topics/logging/…
v
vishes_shell

If you make sure your settings.py file has:

django.core.context_processors.debug listed in CONTEXT_PROCESSORS DEBUG=True your IP in the INTERNAL_IPS tuple

Then you should have access to the sql_queries variable. I append a footer to each page that looks like this:

{%if sql_queries %}
  <div class="footNav">
    <h2>Queries</h2>
    <p>
      {{ sql_queries|length }} Quer{{ sql_queries|pluralize:"y,ies" }}, {{sql_time_sum}} Time
    {% ifnotequal sql_queries|length 0 %}
      (<span style="cursor: pointer;" onclick="var s=document.getElementById('debugQueryTable').style;s.disp\
lay=s.display=='none'?'':'none';this.innerHTML=this.innerHTML=='Show'?'Hide':'Show';">Show</span>)
    {% endifnotequal %}
    </p>
    <table id="debugQueryTable" style="display: none;">
      <col width="1"></col>
      <col></col>
      <col width="1"></col>
      <thead>
        <tr>
          <th scope="col">#</th>
          <th scope="col">SQL</th>
          <th scope="col">Time</th>
        </tr>
      </thead>
      <tbody>
        {% for query in sql_queries %}
          <tr class="{% cycle odd,even %}">
            <td>{{ forloop.counter }}</td>
            <td>{{ query.sql|escape }}</td>
            <td>{{ query.time }}</td>
          </tr>
        {% endfor %}
      </tbody>
    </table>
  </div>
{% endif %}

I got the variable sql_time_sum by adding the line

context_extras['sql_time_sum'] = sum([float(q['time']) for q in connection.queries])

to the debug function in django_src/django/core/context_processors.py.


I just tried this, and (having removed the sql_time_sum part), got: No named cycles in template. 'odd,even' is not defined - what am I missing?
r
rabbit.aaron

I developed an extension for this purpose, so you can easily put a decorator on your view function and see how many queries are executed.

To install:

$ pip install django-print-sql

To use as context manager:

from django_print_sql import print_sql

# set `count_only` to `True` will print the number of executed SQL statements only
with print_sql(count_only=False):

  # write the code you want to analyze in here,
  # e.g. some complex foreign key lookup,
  # or analyzing a DRF serializer's performance

  for user in User.objects.all()[:10]:
      user.groups.first()

To use as decorator:

from django_print_sql import print_sql_decorator


@print_sql_decorator(count_only=False)  # this works on class-based views as well
def get(request):
    # your view code here

Github: https://github.com/rabbit-aaron/django-print-sql


I like this idea! I tried it out, but it doesn't add queries when you create or update an object, right?
yes, this is only for read quries for now, I haven't really maintained this project. The insert, update and delete are in a different compilers, django.db.models.sql.compiler.SQLInsertCompiler/SQLUpdateCompiler/SQLDeleteCompiler I might soon add the feature to count these too. Or you're welcome to contribute :D
r
robert wallace

Just to add, in django, if you have a query like:

MyModel.objects.all()

do:

MyModel.objects.all().query.sql_with_params()

or:

str(MyModel.objects.all().query)

to get the sql string


m
mgphys

Django SQL Sniffer is another alternative for viewing (and seeing the stats of) raw executed queries coming out of any process utilising Django ORM. I've built it to satisfy a particular use-case that I had, which I haven't seen covered anywhere, namely:

no changes to the source code that the target process is executing (no need to register a new app in django settings, import decorators all over the place etc.)

no changes to logging configuration (e.g. because I'm interested in one particular process, and not the entire process fleet that the configuration applies to)

no restarting of target process needed (e.g. because it's a vital component, and restarts may incur some downtime)

Therefore, Django SQL Sniffer can be used ad-hoc, and attached to an already running process. The tool then "sniffs" the executed queries and prints them to console as they are executed. When the tool is stopped a statistical summary is displayed with outlier queries based on some possible metric (count, max duration and total combined duration).

https://i.stack.imgur.com/6MU8m.png

You can check out the live demo and more details on the github page.


Simple and straightforward. Catches inserts and updates as well.
If you're on Ubuntu you'll need to run apt-get install gdb or this will fail. Additionally, I needed to attach the sniffer by PID before I did anything else in the shell or it wouldn't work. Other than those two caveats, it worked brilliantly.
c
clichedmoog

This is a much late answer but for the others are came here by searching.

I want to introduce a logging method, which is very simple; add django.db.backends logger in settins.py

LOGGING = {
    'version': 1,
    'disable_existing_loggers': False,
    'handlers': {
        'console': {
            'class': 'logging.StreamHandler',
        },
    },
    'loggers': {
        'django.db.backends': {
            'handlers': ['console'],
            'level': 'DEBUG',
        },
    },
}

I am also using an environment variable to set the level. So when I want to see the SQL queries I just set the environment variable, and debug log shows the actual queries.


g
getup8

I put this function in a util file in one of the apps in my project:

import logging
import re

from django.db import connection

logger = logging.getLogger(__name__)

def sql_logger():
    logger.debug('TOTAL QUERIES: ' + str(len(connection.queries)))
    logger.debug('TOTAL TIME: ' + str(sum([float(q['time']) for q in connection.queries])))

    logger.debug('INDIVIDUAL QUERIES:')
    for i, query in enumerate(connection.queries):
        sql = re.split(r'(SELECT|FROM|WHERE|GROUP BY|ORDER BY|INNER JOIN|LIMIT)', query['sql'])
        if not sql[0]: sql = sql[1:]
        sql = [(' ' if i % 2 else '') + x for i, x in enumerate(sql)]
        logger.debug('\n### {} ({} seconds)\n\n{};\n'.format(i, query['time'], '\n'.join(sql)))

Then, when needed, I just import it and call it from whatever context (usually a view) is necessary, e.g.:

# ... other imports
from .utils import sql_logger

class IngredientListApiView(generics.ListAPIView):
    # ... class variables and such

    # Main function that gets called when view is accessed
    def list(self, request, *args, **kwargs):
        response = super(IngredientListApiView, self).list(request, *args, **kwargs)

        # Call our function
        sql_logger()

        return response

It's nice to do this outside the template because then if you have API views (usually Django Rest Framework), it's applicable there too.


c
chander

I believe this ought to work if you are using PostgreSQL:

from django.db import connections
from app_name import models
from django.utils import timezone

# Generate a queryset, use your favorite filter, QS objects, and whatnot.
qs=models.ThisDataModel.objects.filter(user='bob',date__lte=timezone.now())

# Get a cursor tied to the default database
cursor=connections['default'].cursor()

# Get the query SQL and parameters to be passed into psycopg2, then pass
# those into mogrify to get the query that would have been sent to the backend
# and print it out. Note F-strings require python 3.6 or later.
print(f'{cursor.mogrify(*qs.query.sql_with_params())}')

This worked even in Python 2. Only a refactor like print(cursor.mogrify(*qs.query.sql_with_params())) is all it needs.
IIRC Cursor.mogrify returns a string, so I suppose the use of the f string for formatting is superfluous..
F
Flash

The following returns the query as valid SQL, based on https://code.djangoproject.com/ticket/17741:

def str_query(qs):
    """
    qs.query returns something that isn't valid SQL, this returns the actual
    valid SQL that's executed: https://code.djangoproject.com/ticket/17741
    """
    cursor = connections[qs.db].cursor()
    query, params = qs.query.sql_with_params()
    cursor.execute('EXPLAIN ' + query, params)
    res = str(cursor.db.ops.last_executed_query(cursor, query, params))
    assert res.startswith('EXPLAIN ')
    return res[len('EXPLAIN '):]

t
turkus

I've made a small snippet you can use:

from django.conf import settings
from django.db import connection


def sql_echo(method, *args, **kwargs):
    settings.DEBUG = True
    result = method(*args, **kwargs)
    for query in connection.queries:
        print(query)
    return result


# HOW TO USE EXAMPLE:
# 
# result = sql_echo(my_method, 'whatever', show=True)

It takes as parameters function (contains sql queryies) to inspect and args, kwargs needed to call that function. As the result it returns what function returns and prints SQL queries in a console.


m
megajoe

To get result query from django to database(with correct parameter substitution) you could use this function:

from django.db import connection

def print_database_query_formatted(query):
    sql, params = query.sql_with_params()
    cursor = connection.cursor()
    cursor.execute('EXPLAIN ' + sql, params)
    db_query = cursor.db.ops.last_executed_query(cursor, sql, params).replace('EXPLAIN ', '')

    parts = '{}'.format(db_query).split('FROM')
    print(parts[0])
    if len(parts) > 1:
        parts = parts[1].split('WHERE')
        print('FROM{}'.format(parts[0]))
        if len(parts) > 1:
            parts = parts[1].split('ORDER BY')
            print('WHERE{}'.format(parts[0]))
            if len(parts) > 1:
                print('ORDER BY{}'.format(parts[1]))

# USAGE
users = User.objects.filter(email='admin@admin.com').order_by('-id')
print_database_query_formatted(users.query)

Output example

SELECT "users_user"."password", "users_user"."last_login", "users_user"."is_superuser", "users_user"."deleted", "users_user"."id", "users_user"."phone", "users_user"."username", "users_user"."userlastname", "users_user"."email", "users_user"."is_staff", "users_user"."is_active", "users_user"."date_joined", "users_user"."latitude", "users_user"."longitude", "users_user"."point"::bytea, "users_user"."default_search_radius", "users_user"."notifications", "users_user"."admin_theme", "users_user"."address", "users_user"."is_notify_when_buildings_in_radius", "users_user"."active_campaign_id", "users_user"."is_unsubscribed", "users_user"."sf_contact_id", "users_user"."is_agree_terms_of_service", "users_user"."is_facebook_signup", "users_user"."type_signup" 
FROM "users_user" 
WHERE "users_user"."email" = 'admin@admin.com' 
ORDER BY "users_user"."id" DESC

It based on this ticket comment: https://code.djangoproject.com/ticket/17741#comment:4


D
Dave Vogt

There's another way that's very useful if you need to reuse the query for some custom SQL. I've used this in an analytics app that goes far beyond what Django's ORM can do comfortably, so I'm including ORM-generated SQL as subqueries.

from django.db import connection
from myapp.models import SomeModel

queryset = SomeModel.objects.filter(foo='bar')

sql_query, params = queryset.query.as_sql(None, connection)

This will give you the SQL with placeholders, as well as a tuple with query params to use. You can pass this along to the DB directly:

with connection.connection.cursor(cursor_factory=DictCursor) as cursor:
    cursor.execute(sql_query, params)
    data = cursor.fetchall()

M
Muhammad Parwej

View Queries using django.db.connection.queries

from django.db import connection
print(connection.queries)

Access raw SQL query on QuerySet object

 qs = MyModel.objects.all()
 print(qs.query)

g
goutham_mi3

For Django 2.2:

As most of the answers did not helped me much when using ./manage.py shell. Finally i found the answer. Hope this helps to someone.

To view all the queries:

from django.db import connection
connection.queries

To view query for a single query:

q=Query.objects.all()
q.query.__str__()

q.query just displaying the object for me. Using the __str__()(String representation) displayed the full query.


p
pymen

To generate SQL for CREATE / UPDATE / DELETE / commands, which are immediate in Django

from django.db.models import sql

def generate_update_sql(queryset, update_kwargs):
    """Converts queryset with update_kwargs
    like : queryset.update(**update_kwargs) to UPDATE SQL"""

    query = queryset.query.clone(sql.UpdateQuery)
    query.add_update_values(update_kwargs)
    compiler = query.get_compiler(queryset.db)
    sql, params = compiler.as_sql()
    return sql % params
from django.db.models import sql

def generate_delete_sql(queryset):
    """Converts select queryset to DELETE SQL """
    query = queryset.query.chain(sql.DeleteQuery)
    compiler = query.get_compiler(queryset.db)
    sql, params = compiler.as_sql()
    return sql % params
from django.db.models import sql

def generate_create_sql(model, model_data):
    """Converts queryset with create_kwargs
    like if was: queryset.create(**create_kwargs) to SQL CREATE"""
    
    not_saved_instance = model(**model_data)
    not_saved_instance._for_write = True

    query = sql.InsertQuery(model)

    fields = [f for f in model._meta.local_concrete_fields if not isinstance(f, AutoField)]
    query.insert_values(fields, [not_saved_instance], raw=False)

    compiler = query.get_compiler(model.objects.db)
    sql, params = compiler.as_sql()[0]
    return sql % params

Tests & usage

    def test_generate_update_sql_with_F(self):
        qs = Event.objects.all()
        update_kwargs = dict(description=F('slug'))
        result = generate_update_sql(qs, update_kwargs)
        sql = "UPDATE `api_event` SET `description` = `api_event`.`slug`"
        self.assertEqual(sql, result)

    def test_generate_create_sql(self):
        result = generate_create_sql(Event, dict(slug='a', app='b', model='c', action='e'))
        sql = "INSERT INTO `api_event` (`slug`, `app`, `model`, `action`, `action_type`, `description`) VALUES (a, b, c, e, , )"
        self.assertEqual(sql, result)