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Odoo Development Cookbook
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When working with Odoo, all the data in your instance is stored in a PostgreSQL database. All the standard database management tools you are used to are available, but Odoo also proposes a web interface for some common operations.
We are assuming that your work environment is set up and that you have an instance running.
The Odoo database management interface provides tools to create, duplicate, remove, back up, and restore a database. There is also a way to change the master password, which is used to protect access to the database management interface.
To access the database, perform the following steps:
Figure 1.3 – Database manager
If you’ve set up your instance with default values and haven’t modified it yet, as we will explain in the following section, the database management screen will display a warning, telling you that the master password
instance hasn’t been set and will advise you to set one with a direct link:
Figure 1.4 – Master password warning
To set the master password, perform the following steps:
Figure 1.5 – Setting a new master password
If the master password is already set, click on the Set Master Password button at the bottom of the screen to change it. In the dialog box that opens, type the previous master password and the new one, and then click Continue:
Figure 1.6 – Changing the master password
Note
The master password is the server configuration file under the admin_passwd
key. If the server is started without a configuration file being specified, a new one will be generated in ~/.odoorc
. Refer to the next recipe for more information about the configuration file.
This dialog box can be used to create a new database instance that will be handled by the current Odoo server. Follow these steps:
Figure 1.7 – The Create Database dialog
Note
If you wish to use the database to run automated tests for the modules (refer to Chapter 7, Debugging Modules), you need to have the demonstration data since the vast majority of the automated tests in Odoo depend on these records to run successfully.
Troubleshooting
If you are redirected to a login screen, this is probably because the --db-filter option was passed to Odoo and the new database name didn’t match the filter
option. Note that the odoo-bin start
command does this silently, making only the current database available. To work around this, simply restart Odoo without the start
command, as shown in the Installing Odoo from the source recipe. If you have a configuration file (refer to the Storing the instance configuration in a file recipe later in this chapter), check that the db_filter
option is unset or set to a value matching the new database name.
Often, you will have an existing database, and you will want to experiment with it to try a procedure or run a test, but without modifying the existing data. The solution here is simple: duplicate the database and run the test on the copy. Repeat this as many times as required:
Figure 1.8 – The Duplicate Database dialog
When you have finished your tests, you will want to clean up the duplicated databases. To do this, perform the following steps:
Figure 1.9 – The Delete Database dialog
Caution! Potential data loss!
If you selected the wrong database and have no backup, there is no way to recover the lost data.
To create a backup, perform the following steps:
Figure 1.10 – The Backup Database dialog
zip
for a production database since this is the only real full backup format. Only use the pg_dump
format for a development database when you don’t care about the file store.If you need to restore a backup, this is what you need to do:
Figure 1.11 – The Restore Database dialog
Note
It isn’t possible to restore a database on top of itself. If you try to do this, you will get an error message (Database restore error: Database already exists). You need to remove the database first.
These features, apart from the Change master password screen, run PostgreSQL administration commands on the server and report back through the web interface.
The master password is a very important piece of information that only lives in the Odoo server configuration file and is never stored in the database. There used to be a default value of admin
, but using this value is a security liability. In Odoo v9 and later, this is identified as an unset master password, and you are urged to change it when accessing the database administration interface. Even if it is stored in the configuration file under the admin_passwd
entry, this is not the same as the password of the admin
user; these are two independent passwords. The master password is set for an Odoo server process, which itself can handle multiple database instances, each of which has an independent admin
user with their own password.
Security considerations
Remember that we are considering a development environment in this chapter. The Odoo database management interface is something that needs to be secured when you are working on a production server as it gives access to a lot of sensitive information, especially if the server hosts Odoo instances for several different clients.
To create a new database, Odoo uses the PostgreSQL createdb
utility and calls the internal Odoo function to initialize the new database in the same way as when you start Odoo on an empty database.
To duplicate a database, Odoo uses the --template
option of createdb
, passing the original database as an argument. This duplicates the structure of the template database in the new database using internal and optimized PostgreSQL routines, which is much faster than creating a backup and restoring it (especially when using the web interface, which requires you to download the backup file and upload it again).
Backup and restore operations use the pg_dump
and pg_restore
utilities, respectively. When using the zip
format, the backup will also include a copy of the file store that contains a copy of the documents when you configure Odoo so that it doesn’t keep these in the database; this is the default option in 14.0. Unless you change it, these files reside in ~/.local/share/Odoo/filestore
.
If the backup becomes too large, downloading it may fail. This will be either because the Odoo server itself is unable to handle the large file in memory or because the server is running behind a reverse proxy because there is a limit to the size of HTTP responses that were set in the proxy. Conversely, for the same reasons, you will likely experience issues with the database restore operation. When you start running into these issues, it’s time to invest in a more robust external backup solution.
Experienced Odoo developers generally don’t use the database management interface and perform operations from the command line. To initialize a new database with demo data, for instance, the following single-line command can be used:
$ createdb testdb && odoo-bin -d testdb
The bonus of using this command line is that you can request add-ons to be installed while you are using it – for instance, -
i sale,purchase,stock
.
To duplicate a database, stop the server and run the following commands:
$ createdb -T dbname newdbname $ cd ~/.local/share/Odoo/filestore # adapt if you have changed the data_dir $ cp -r dbname newdbname $ cd -
Note that, in the context of development, the file store is often omitted.
Note
The use of createdb -T
only works if there are no active sessions on the database, which means that you have to shut down your Odoo server before duplicating the database from the command line.
To remove an instance, run the following command:
$ dropdb dbname $ rm -rf ~/.local/share/Odoo/filestore/dbname
To create a backup (assuming that the PostgreSQL server is running locally), use the following command:
$ pg_dump -Fc -f dbname.dump dbname $ tar cjf dbname.tgz dbname.dump ~/.local/share/Odoo/filestore/dbname
To restore the backup, run the following command:
$ tar xf dbname.tgz $ pg_restore -C -d dbname dbname.dump
Caution!
If your Odoo instance uses a different user to connect to the database, you need to pass -U username
so that the correct user is the owner of the restored database.