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	Fixed #21836 -- Improved transaction docs about autocommit mode
Clarified that queries in autocommit mode are committed immediately only if a transaction has not already been started. Added to the main transaction docs that Django's TestCase class implicitly wraps its tests in transactions.
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						 Aymeric Augustin
						Aymeric Augustin
					
				
			
			
				
	
			
			
			
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			| @@ -13,14 +13,17 @@ Django's default transaction behavior | ||||
| ------------------------------------- | ||||
|  | ||||
| Django's default behavior is to run in autocommit mode. Each query is | ||||
| immediately committed to the database. :ref:`See below for details | ||||
| <autocommit-details>`. | ||||
| immediately committed to the database, unless a transaction is active. | ||||
| :ref:`See below for details <autocommit-details>`. | ||||
|  | ||||
| Django uses transactions or savepoints automatically to guarantee the | ||||
| integrity of ORM operations that require multiple queries, especially | ||||
| :ref:`delete() <topics-db-queries-delete>` and :ref:`update() | ||||
| <topics-db-queries-update>` queries. | ||||
|  | ||||
| Django's :class:`~django.test.TestCase` class also wraps each test in a | ||||
| transaction for performance reasons. | ||||
|  | ||||
| .. versionchanged:: 1.6 | ||||
|  | ||||
|     Previous version of Django featured :ref:`a more complicated default | ||||
| @@ -231,13 +234,15 @@ Why Django uses autocommit | ||||
| -------------------------- | ||||
|  | ||||
| In the SQL standards, each SQL query starts a transaction, unless one is | ||||
| already in progress. Such transactions must then be committed or rolled back. | ||||
| already active. Such transactions must then be explicitly committed or rolled | ||||
| back. | ||||
|  | ||||
| This isn't always convenient for application developers. To alleviate this | ||||
| problem, most databases provide an autocommit mode. When autocommit is turned | ||||
| on, each SQL query is wrapped in its own transaction. In other words, the | ||||
| transaction is not only automatically started, but also automatically | ||||
| committed. | ||||
| on and no transaction is active, each SQL query gets wrapped in its own | ||||
| transaction. In other words, not only does each such query starts a | ||||
| transaction, but the transaction also gets automatically committed or rolled | ||||
| back, depending on whether the query succeeded. | ||||
|  | ||||
| :pep:`249`, the Python Database API Specification v2.0, requires autocommit to | ||||
| be initially turned off. Django overrides this default and turns autocommit | ||||
|   | ||||
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