This file is indexed.

/usr/share/pyshared/SQLAlchemy-0.7.4.egg-info/PKG-INFO is in python-sqlalchemy 0.7.4-1.

This file is owned by root:root, with mode 0o644.

The actual contents of the file can be viewed below.

  1
  2
  3
  4
  5
  6
  7
  8
  9
 10
 11
 12
 13
 14
 15
 16
 17
 18
 19
 20
 21
 22
 23
 24
 25
 26
 27
 28
 29
 30
 31
 32
 33
 34
 35
 36
 37
 38
 39
 40
 41
 42
 43
 44
 45
 46
 47
 48
 49
 50
 51
 52
 53
 54
 55
 56
 57
 58
 59
 60
 61
 62
 63
 64
 65
 66
 67
 68
 69
 70
 71
 72
 73
 74
 75
 76
 77
 78
 79
 80
 81
 82
 83
 84
 85
 86
 87
 88
 89
 90
 91
 92
 93
 94
 95
 96
 97
 98
 99
100
101
102
103
104
105
106
107
108
109
110
111
112
113
114
115
116
117
118
119
120
121
122
123
124
125
126
127
128
129
130
131
132
133
134
135
136
137
138
139
140
Metadata-Version: 1.1
Name: SQLAlchemy
Version: 0.7.4
Summary: Database Abstraction Library
Home-page: http://www.sqlalchemy.org
Author: Mike Bayer
Author-email: mike_mp@zzzcomputing.com
License: MIT License
Description:     SQLAlchemy is:
        
                * The Python SQL toolkit and Object Relational Mapper
                  that gives application developers the full power and
                  flexibility of SQL. SQLAlchemy provides a full suite
                  of well known enterprise-level persistence patterns,
                  designed for efficient and high-performing database
                  access, adapted into a simple and Pythonic domain
                  language.
                * extremely easy to use for all the basic tasks, such
                  as: accessing pooled connections, constructing SQL
                  from Python expressions, finding object instances, and
                  commiting object modifications back to the database.
                * powerful enough for complicated tasks, such as: eager
                  load a graph of objects and their dependencies via
                  joins; map recursive adjacency structures
                  automatically; map objects to not just tables but to
                  any arbitrary join or select statement; combine
                  multiple tables together to load whole sets of
                  otherwise unrelated objects from a single result set;
                  commit entire graphs of object changes in one step.
                * built to conform to what DBAs demand, including the
                  ability to swap out generated SQL with hand-optimized
                  statements, full usage of bind parameters for all
                  literal values, fully transactionalized and consistent
                  updates using Unit of Work.
                * modular. Different parts of SQLAlchemy can be used
                  independently of the rest, including the connection
                  pool, SQL construction, and ORM. SQLAlchemy is
                  constructed in an open style that allows plenty of
                  customization, with an architecture that supports
                  custom datatypes, custom SQL extensions, and ORM
                  plugins which can augment or extend mapping
                  functionality.
        
            SQLAlchemy's Philosophy:
        
                * SQL databases behave less and less like object
                  collections the more size and performance start to
                  matter; object collections behave less and less like
                  tables and rows the more abstraction starts to matter.
                  SQLAlchemy aims to accomodate both of these
                  principles.
                * Your classes aren't tables, and your objects aren't
                  rows. Databases aren't just collections of tables;
                  they're relational algebra engines. You don't have to
                  select from just tables, you can select from joins,
                  subqueries, and unions. Database and domain concepts
                  should be visibly decoupled from the beginning,
                  allowing both sides to develop to their full
                  potential.
                * For example, table metadata (objects that describe
                  tables) are declared distinctly from the classes
                  theyre designed to store. That way database
                  relationship concepts don't interfere with your object
                  design concepts, and vice-versa; the transition from
                  table-mapping to selectable-mapping is seamless; a
                  class can be mapped against the database in more than
                  one way. SQLAlchemy provides a powerful mapping layer
                  that can work as automatically or as manually as you
                  choose, determining relationships based on foreign
                  keys or letting you define the join conditions
                  explicitly, to bridge the gap between database and
                  domain.
        
            SQLAlchemy's Advantages:
        
                * The Unit Of Work system organizes pending CRUD
                  operations into queues and commits them all in one
                  batch. It then performs a topological "dependency
                  sort" of all items to be committed and deleted and
                  groups redundant statements together. This produces
                  the maxiumum efficiency and transaction safety, and
                  minimizes chances of deadlocks. Modeled after Fowler's
                  "Unit of Work" pattern as well as Java Hibernate.
                * Function-based query construction allows boolean
                  expressions, operators, functions, table aliases,
                  selectable subqueries, create/update/insert/delete
                  queries, correlated updates, correlated EXISTS
                  clauses, UNION clauses, inner and outer joins, bind
                  parameters, free mixing of literal text within
                  expressions, as little or as much as desired.
                  Query-compilation is vendor-specific; the same query
                  object can be compiled into any number of resulting
                  SQL strings depending on its compilation algorithm.
                * Database mapping and class design are totally
                  separate. Persisted objects have no subclassing
                  requirement (other than 'object') and are POPO's :
                  plain old Python objects. They retain serializability
                  (pickling) for usage in various caching systems and
                  session objects. SQLAlchemy "decorates" classes with
                  non-intrusive property accessors to automatically log
                  object creates and modifications with the UnitOfWork
                  engine, to lazyload related data, as well as to track
                  attribute change histories.
                * Custom list classes can be used with eagerly or lazily
                  loaded child object lists, allowing rich relationships
                  to be created on the fly as SQLAlchemy appends child
                  objects to an object attribute.
                * Composite (multiple-column) primary keys are
                  supported, as are "association" objects that represent
                  the middle of a "many-to-many" relationship.
                * Self-referential tables and mappers are supported.
                  Adjacency list structures can be created, saved, and
                  deleted with proper cascading, with no extra
                  programming.
                * Data mapping can be used in a row-based manner. Any
                  bizarre hyper-optimized query that you or your DBA can
                  cook up, you can run in SQLAlchemy, and as long as it
                  returns the expected columns within a rowset, you can
                  get your objects from it. For a rowset that contains
                  more than one kind of object per row, multiple mappers
                  can be chained together to return multiple object
                  instance lists from a single database round trip.
                * The type system allows pre- and post- processing of
                  data, both at the bind parameter and the result set
                  level. User-defined types can be freely mixed with
                  built-in types. Generic types as well as SQL-specific
                  types are available.
        
            
Platform: UNKNOWN
Classifier: Development Status :: 5 - Production/Stable
Classifier: Intended Audience :: Developers
Classifier: License :: OSI Approved :: MIT License
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: Implementation :: CPython
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: Implementation :: Jython
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: Implementation :: PyPy
Classifier: Topic :: Database :: Front-Ends
Classifier: Operating System :: OS Independent