The connection class

.. sectionauthor:: Daniele Varrazzo daniele.varrazzo@gmail.com

.. testsetup::

from pprint import pprint
import psycopg2.extensions

drop_test_table('foo')

.. class:: connection

Handles the connection to a PostgreSQL database instance. It encapsulates
a database session.

Connections are created using the factory function
`~psycopg2.connect()`.

Connections are thread safe and can be shared among many threads. See
:ref:`thread-safety` for details.

Connections can be used as context managers. Note that a context wraps a
transaction: if the context exits with success the transaction is
committed, if it exits with an exception the transaction is rolled back.
Note that the connection is not closed by the context and it can be used
for several contexts.

.. code:: python

    conn = psycopg2.connect(DSN)

    with conn:
        with conn.cursor() as curs:
            curs.execute(SQL1)

    with conn:
        with conn.cursor() as curs:
            curs.execute(SQL2)

    # leaving contexts doesn't close the connection
    conn.close()


.. method:: cursor(name=None, cursor_factory=None, scrollable=None, withhold=False)

    Return a new `cursor` object using the connection.

    If *name* is specified, the returned cursor will be a :ref:`server
    side cursor <server-side-cursors>` (also known as *named cursor*).
    Otherwise it will be a regular *client side* cursor.  By default a
    named cursor is declared without :sql:`SCROLL` option and
    :sql:`WITHOUT HOLD`: set the argument or property `~cursor.scrollable`
    to `!True`/`!False` and or `~cursor.withhold` to `!True` to change the
    declaration.

    The name can be a string not valid as a PostgreSQL identifier: for
    example it may start with a digit and contain non-alphanumeric
    characters and quotes.

    .. versionchanged:: 2.4
        previously only valid PostgreSQL identifiers were accepted as
        cursor name.

    The *cursor_factory* argument can be used to create non-standard
    cursors. The class returned must be a subclass of
    `psycopg2.extensions.cursor`. See :ref:`subclassing-cursor` for
    details. A default factory for the connection can also be specified
    using the `~connection.cursor_factory` attribute.

    .. versionchanged:: 2.4.3 added the *withhold* argument.
    .. versionchanged:: 2.5 added the *scrollable* argument.

    .. extension::

        All the function arguments are Psycopg extensions to the |DBAPI|.


.. index::
    pair: Transaction; Commit

.. method:: commit()

    Commit any pending transaction to the database.

    By default, Psycopg opens a transaction before executing the first
    command: if `!commit()` is not called, the effect of any data
    manipulation will be lost.

    The connection can be also set in "autocommit" mode: no transaction is
    automatically open, commands have immediate effect. See
    :ref:`transactions-control` for details.

    .. versionchanged:: 2.5 if the connection is used in a ``with``
        statement, the method is automatically called if no exception is
        raised in the ``with`` block.


.. index::
    pair: Transaction; Rollback

.. method:: rollback()

    Roll back to the start of any pending transaction.  Closing a
    connection without committing the changes first will cause an implicit
    rollback to be performed.

    .. versionchanged:: 2.5 if the connection is used in a ``with``
        statement, the method is automatically called if an exception is
        raised in the ``with`` block.


.. method:: close()

    Close the connection now (rather than whenever `del` is executed).
    The connection will be unusable from this point forward; an
    `~psycopg2.InterfaceError` will be raised if any operation is
    attempted with the connection.  The same applies to all cursor objects
    trying to use the connection.  Note that closing a connection without
    committing the changes first will cause any pending change to be
    discarded as if a :sql:`ROLLBACK` was performed (unless a different
    isolation level has been selected: see
    `~connection.set_isolation_level()`).

    .. index::
        single: PgBouncer; unclean server

    .. versionchanged:: 2.2
        previously an explicit :sql:`ROLLBACK` was issued by Psycopg on
        `!close()`. The command could have been sent to the backend at an
        inappropriate time, so Psycopg currently relies on the backend to
        implicitly discard uncommitted changes. Some middleware are known
        to behave incorrectly though when the connection is closed during
        a transaction (when `~connection.status` is
        `~psycopg2.extensions.STATUS_IN_TRANSACTION`), e.g. PgBouncer_
        reports an ``unclean server`` and discards the connection. To
        avoid this problem you can ensure to terminate the transaction
        with a `~connection.commit()`/`~connection.rollback()` before
        closing.

        .. _PgBouncer: http://www.pgbouncer.org/


.. index::
    single: Exceptions; In the connection class

.. rubric:: Exceptions as connection class attributes

The `!connection` also exposes as attributes the same exceptions
available in the `psycopg2` module.  See :ref:`dbapi-exceptions`.



.. index::
    single: Two-phase commit; methods

.. rubric:: Two-phase commit support methods

.. versionadded:: 2.3

.. seealso:: :ref:`tpc` for an introductory explanation of these methods.

Note that PostgreSQL supports two-phase commit since release 8.1: these
methods raise `~psycopg2.NotSupportedError` if used with an older version
server.


.. _tpc_methods:

.. method:: xid(format_id, gtrid, bqual)

    Returns a `~psycopg2.extensions.Xid` instance to be passed to the
    `!tpc_*()` methods of this connection. The argument types and
    constraints are explained in :ref:`tpc`.

    The values passed to the method will be available on the returned
    object as the members `~psycopg2.extensions.Xid.format_id`,
    `~psycopg2.extensions.Xid.gtrid`, `~psycopg2.extensions.Xid.bqual`.
    The object also allows accessing to these members and unpacking as a
    3-items tuple.


.. method:: tpc_begin(xid)

    Begins a TPC transaction with the given transaction ID *xid*.

    This method should be called outside of a transaction (i.e. nothing
    may have executed since the last `~connection.commit()` or
    `~connection.rollback()` and `connection.status` is
    `~psycopg2.extensions.STATUS_READY`).

    Furthermore, it is an error to call `!commit()` or `!rollback()`
    within the TPC transaction: in this case a `~psycopg2.ProgrammingError`
    is raised.

    The *xid* may be either an object returned by the `~connection.xid()`
    method or a plain string: the latter allows to create a transaction
    using the provided string as PostgreSQL transaction id. See also
    `~connection.tpc_recover()`.


.. index::
    pair: Transaction; Prepare

.. method:: tpc_prepare()

    Performs the first phase of a transaction started with
    `~connection.tpc_begin()`.  A `~psycopg2.ProgrammingError` is raised if
    this method is used outside of a TPC transaction.

    After calling `!tpc_prepare()`, no statements can be executed until
    `~connection.tpc_commit()` or `~connection.tpc_rollback()` will be
    called.  The `~connection.reset()` method can be used to restore the
    status of the connection to `~psycopg2.extensions.STATUS_READY`: the
    transaction will remain prepared in the database and will be
    possible to finish it with `!tpc_commit(xid)` and
    `!tpc_rollback(xid)`.

    .. seealso:: the |PREPARE TRANSACTION|_ PostgreSQL command.

    .. |PREPARE TRANSACTION| replace:: :sql:`PREPARE TRANSACTION`
    .. _PREPARE TRANSACTION: https://www.postgresql.org/docs/current/static/sql-prepare-transaction.html


.. index::
    pair: Commit; Prepared

.. method:: tpc_commit([xid])

    When called with no arguments, `!tpc_commit()` commits a TPC
    transaction previously prepared with `~connection.tpc_prepare()`.

    If `!tpc_commit()` is called prior to `!tpc_prepare()`, a single phase
    commit is performed.  A transaction manager may choose to do this if
    only a single resource is participating in the global transaction.

    When called with a transaction ID *xid*, the database commits
    the given transaction.  If an invalid transaction ID is
    provided, a `~psycopg2.ProgrammingError` will be raised.  This form
    should be called outside of a transaction, and is intended for use in
    recovery.

    On return, the TPC transaction is ended.

    .. seealso:: the |COMMIT PREPARED|_ PostgreSQL command.

    .. |COMMIT PREPARED| replace:: :sql:`COMMIT PREPARED`
    .. _COMMIT PREPARED: https://www.postgresql.org/docs/current/static/sql-commit-prepared.html


.. index::
    pair: Rollback; Prepared

.. method:: tpc_rollback([xid])

    When called with no arguments, `!tpc_rollback()` rolls back a TPC
    transaction.  It may be called before or after
    `~connection.tpc_prepare()`.

    When called with a transaction ID *xid*, it rolls back the given
    transaction.  If an invalid transaction ID is provided, a
    `~psycopg2.ProgrammingError` is raised.  This form should be called
    outside of a transaction, and is intended for use in recovery.

    On return, the TPC transaction is ended.

    .. seealso:: the |ROLLBACK PREPARED|_ PostgreSQL command.

    .. |ROLLBACK PREPARED| replace:: :sql:`ROLLBACK PREPARED`
    .. _ROLLBACK PREPARED: https://www.postgresql.org/docs/current/static/sql-rollback-prepared.html


.. index::
    pair: Transaction; Recover

.. method:: tpc_recover()

    Returns a list of `~psycopg2.extensions.Xid` representing pending
    transactions, suitable for use with `tpc_commit()` or
    `tpc_rollback()`.

    If a transaction was not initiated by Psycopg, the returned Xids will
    have attributes `~psycopg2.extensions.Xid.format_id` and
    `~psycopg2.extensions.Xid.bqual` set to `!None` and the
    `~psycopg2.extensions.Xid.gtrid` set to the PostgreSQL transaction ID: such Xids are still
    usable for recovery.  Psycopg uses the same algorithm of the
    `PostgreSQL JDBC driver`__ to encode a XA triple in a string, so
    transactions initiated by a program using such driver should be
    unpacked correctly.

    .. __: https://jdbc.postgresql.org/

    Xids returned by `!tpc_recover()` also have extra attributes
    `~psycopg2.extensions.Xid.prepared`, `~psycopg2.extensions.Xid.owner`,
    `~psycopg2.extensions.Xid.database` populated with the values read
    from the server.

    .. seealso:: the |pg_prepared_xacts|_ system view.

    .. |pg_prepared_xacts| replace:: `pg_prepared_xacts`
    .. _pg_prepared_xacts: https://www.postgresql.org/docs/current/static/view-pg-prepared-xacts.html



.. extension::

    The above methods are the only ones defined by the |DBAPI| protocol.
    The Psycopg connection objects exports the following additional
    methods and attributes.


.. attribute:: closed

    Read-only integer attribute: 0 if the connection is open, nonzero if
    it is closed or broken.


.. method:: cancel

    Cancel the current database operation.

    The method interrupts the processing of the current operation. If no
    query is being executed, it does nothing. You can call this function
    from a different thread than the one currently executing a database
    operation, for instance if you want to cancel a long running query if a
    button is pushed in the UI. Interrupting query execution will cause the
    cancelled method to raise a
    `~psycopg2.extensions.QueryCanceledError`. Note that the termination
    of the query is not guaranteed to succeed: see the documentation for
    |PQcancel|_.

    .. |PQcancel| replace:: `!PQcancel()`
    .. _PQcancel: https://www.postgresql.org/docs/current/static/libpq-cancel.html#LIBPQ-PQCANCEL

    .. versionadded:: 2.3


.. method:: reset

    Reset the connection to the default.

    The method rolls back an eventual pending transaction and executes the
    PostgreSQL |RESET|_ and |SET SESSION AUTHORIZATION|__ to revert the
    session to the default values. A two-phase commit transaction prepared
    using `~connection.tpc_prepare()` will remain in the database
    available for recover.

    .. |RESET| replace:: :sql:`RESET`
    .. _RESET: https://www.postgresql.org/docs/current/static/sql-reset.html

    .. |SET SESSION AUTHORIZATION| replace:: :sql:`SET SESSION AUTHORIZATION`
    .. __: https://www.postgresql.org/docs/current/static/sql-set-session-authorization.html

    .. versionadded:: 2.0.12


.. attribute:: dsn

    Read-only string containing the connection string used by the
    connection.

    If a password was specified in the connection string it will be
    obscured.



.. rubric:: Transaction control methods and attributes.

.. index::
    pair: Transaction; Autocommit
    pair: Transaction; Isolation level

.. method:: set_session(isolation_level=None, readonly=None, deferrable=None, autocommit=None)

    Set one or more parameters for the next transactions or statements in
    the current session.

    :param isolation_level: set the `isolation level`_ for the next
        transactions/statements.  The value can be one of the literal
        values ``READ UNCOMMITTED``, ``READ COMMITTED``, ``REPEATABLE
        READ``, ``SERIALIZABLE`` or the equivalent :ref:`constant
        <isolation-level-constants>` defined in the `~psycopg2.extensions`
        module.
    :param readonly: if `!True`, set the connection to read only;
        read/write if `!False`.
    :param deferrable: if `!True`, set the connection to deferrable;
        non deferrable if `!False`. Only available from PostgreSQL 9.1.
    :param autocommit: switch the connection to autocommit mode: not a
        PostgreSQL session setting but an alias for setting the
        `autocommit` attribute.

    .. _isolation level:
        https://www.postgresql.org/docs/current/static/transaction-iso.html

    Arguments set to `!None` (the default for all) will not be changed.
    The parameters *isolation_level*, *readonly* and *deferrable* also
    accept the string ``DEFAULT`` as a value: the effect is to reset the
    parameter to the server default.  Defaults are defined by the server
    configuration: see values for |default_transaction_isolation|__,
    |default_transaction_read_only|__, |default_transaction_deferrable|__.

    .. |default_transaction_isolation| replace:: :sql:`default_transaction_isolation`
    .. __: https://www.postgresql.org/docs/current/static/runtime-config-client.html#GUC-DEFAULT-TRANSACTION-ISOLATION
    .. |default_transaction_read_only| replace:: :sql:`default_transaction_read_only`
    .. __: https://www.postgresql.org/docs/current/static/runtime-config-client.html#GUC-DEFAULT-TRANSACTION-READ-ONLY
    .. |default_transaction_deferrable| replace:: :sql:`default_transaction_deferrable`
    .. __: https://www.postgresql.org/docs/current/static/runtime-config-client.html#GUC-DEFAULT-TRANSACTION-DEFERRABLE

    The function must be invoked with no transaction in progress.

    .. seealso:: |SET TRANSACTION|_ for further details about the behaviour
        of the transaction parameters in the server.

        .. |SET TRANSACTION| replace:: :sql:`SET TRANSACTION`
        .. _SET TRANSACTION: https://www.postgresql.org/docs/current/static/sql-set-transaction.html

    .. versionadded:: 2.4.2

    .. versionchanged:: 2.7
        Before this version, the function would have set
        :sql:`default_transaction_*` attribute in the current session;
        this implementation has the problem of not playing well with
        external connection pooling working at transaction level and not
        resetting the state of the session: changing the default
        transaction would pollute the connections in the pool and create
        problems to other applications using the same pool.

        Starting from 2.7, if the connection is not autocommit, the
        transaction characteristics are issued together with :sql:`BEGIN`
        and will leave the :sql:`default_transaction_*` settings untouched.
        For example::

            conn.set_session(readonly=True)

        will not change :sql:`default_transaction_read_only`, but
        following transaction will start with a :sql:`BEGIN READ ONLY`.
        Conversely, using::

            conn.set_session(readonly=True, autocommit=True)

        will set :sql:`default_transaction_read_only` to :sql:`on` and
        rely on the server to apply the read only state to whatever
        transaction, implicit or explicit, is executed in the connection.


.. attribute:: autocommit

    Read/write attribute: if `!True`, no transaction is handled by the
    driver and every statement sent to the backend has immediate effect;
    if `!False` a new transaction is started at the first command
    execution: the methods `commit()` or `rollback()` must be manually
    invoked to terminate the transaction.

    The autocommit mode is useful to execute commands requiring to be run
    outside a transaction, such as :sql:`CREATE DATABASE` or
    :sql:`VACUUM`.

    The default is `!False` (manual commit) as per DBAPI specification.

    .. warning::

        By default, any query execution, including a simple :sql:`SELECT`
        will start a transaction: for long-running programs, if no further
        action is taken, the session will remain "idle in transaction", an
        undesirable condition for several reasons (locks are held by
        the session, tables bloat...). For long lived scripts, either
        ensure to terminate a transaction as soon as possible or use an
        autocommit connection.

    .. versionadded:: 2.4.2


.. attribute:: isolation_level

    Return or set the `transaction isolation level`_ for the current
    session.  The value is one of the :ref:`isolation-level-constants`
    defined in the `psycopg2.extensions` module.  On set it is also
    possible to use one of the literal values ``READ UNCOMMITTED``, ``READ
    COMMITTED``, ``REPEATABLE READ``, ``SERIALIZABLE``, ``DEFAULT``.

    .. versionchanged:: 2.7

        the property is writable.

    .. versionchanged:: 2.7

        the default value for `!isolation_level` is
        `~psycopg2.extensions.ISOLATION_LEVEL_DEFAULT`; previously the
        property would have queried the server and returned the real value
        applied. To know this value you can run a query such as :sql:`show
        transaction_isolation`. Usually the default value is `READ
        COMMITTED`, but this may be changed in the server configuration.

        This value is now entirely separate from the `autocommit`
        property: in previous version, if `!autocommit` was set to `!True`
        this property would have returned
        `~psycopg2.extensions.ISOLATION_LEVEL_AUTOCOMMIT`; it will now
        return the server isolation level.


.. attribute:: readonly

    Return or set the read-only status for the current session. Available
    values are `!True` (new transactions will be in read-only mode),
    `!False` (new transactions will be writable), `!None` (use the default
    configured for the server by :sql:`default_transaction_read_only`).

    .. versionadded:: 2.7


.. attribute:: deferrable

    Return or set the `deferrable status`__ for the current session.
    Available values are `!True` (new transactions will be in deferrable
    mode), `!False` (new transactions will be in non deferrable mode),
    `!None` (use the default configured for the server by
    :sql:`default_transaction_deferrable`).

    .. __: `SET TRANSACTION`_

    .. versionadded:: 2.7


.. method:: set_isolation_level(level)

    .. note::

        This is a legacy method mixing `~conn.isolation_level` and
        `~conn.autocommit`. Using the respective properties is a better
        option.

    Set the `transaction isolation level`_ for the current session.
    The level defines the different phenomena that can happen in the
    database between concurrent transactions.

    The value set is an integer: symbolic constants are defined in
    the module `psycopg2.extensions`: see
    :ref:`isolation-level-constants` for the available values.

    The default level is `~psycopg2.extensions.ISOLATION_LEVEL_DEFAULT`:
    at this level a transaction is automatically started the first time a
    database command is executed.  If you want an *autocommit* mode,
    switch to `~psycopg2.extensions.ISOLATION_LEVEL_AUTOCOMMIT` before
    executing any command::

        >>> conn.set_isolation_level(psycopg2.extensions.ISOLATION_LEVEL_AUTOCOMMIT)

    See also :ref:`transactions-control`.


.. index::
    pair: Client; Encoding

.. attribute:: encoding
.. method:: set_client_encoding(enc)

    Read or set the client encoding for the current session. The default
    is the encoding defined by the database. It should be one of the
    `characters set supported by PostgreSQL`__

    .. __: https://www.postgresql.org/docs/current/static/multibyte.html


.. index::
    pair: Client; Logging

.. attribute:: notices

    A list containing all the database messages sent to the client during
    the session.

    .. doctest::
        :options: +NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE

        >>> cur.execute("CREATE TABLE foo (id serial PRIMARY KEY);")
        >>> pprint(conn.notices)
        ['NOTICE:  CREATE TABLE / PRIMARY KEY will create implicit index "foo_pkey" for table "foo"\n',
         'NOTICE:  CREATE TABLE will create implicit sequence "foo_id_seq" for serial column "foo.id"\n']

    .. versionchanged:: 2.7
        The `!notices` attribute is writable: the user may replace it
        with any Python object exposing an `!append()` method. If
        appending raises an exception the notice is silently
        dropped.

    To avoid a leak in case excessive notices are generated, only the last
    50 messages are kept. This check is only in place if the `!notices`
    attribute is a list: if any other object is used it will be up to the
    user to guard from leakage.

    You can configure what messages to receive using `PostgreSQL logging
    configuration parameters`__ such as ``log_statement``,
    ``client_min_messages``, ``log_min_duration_statement`` etc.

    .. __: https://www.postgresql.org/docs/current/static/runtime-config-logging.html


.. attribute:: notifies

    List of `~psycopg2.extensions.Notify` objects containing asynchronous
    notifications received by the session.

    For other details see :ref:`async-notify`.

    .. versionchanged:: 2.3
        Notifications are instances of the `!Notify` object. Previously the
        list was composed by 2 items tuples :samp:`({pid},{channel})` and
        the payload was not accessible. To keep backward compatibility,
        `!Notify` objects can still be accessed as 2 items tuples.

    .. versionchanged:: 2.7
        The `!notifies` attribute is writable: the user may replace it
        with any Python object exposing an `!append()` method. If
        appending raises an exception the notification is silently
        dropped.


.. attribute:: cursor_factory

    The default cursor factory used by `~connection.cursor()` if the
    parameter is not specified.

    .. versionadded:: 2.5


.. index::
    pair: Connection; Info

.. attribute:: info

    A `~psycopg2.extensions.ConnectionInfo` object exposing information
    about the native libpq connection.

    .. versionadded:: 2.8


.. index::
    pair: Connection; Status

.. attribute:: status

    A read-only integer representing the status of the connection.
    Symbolic constants for the values are defined in the module
    `psycopg2.extensions`: see :ref:`connection-status-constants`
    for the available values.

    The status is undefined for `closed` connections.


.. method:: lobject([oid [, mode [, new_oid [, new_file [, lobject_factory]]]]])

    Return a new database large object as a `~psycopg2.extensions.lobject`
    instance.

    See :ref:`large-objects` for an overview.

    :param oid: The OID of the object to read or write. 0 to create
        a new large object and and have its OID assigned automatically.
    :param mode: Access mode to the object, see below.
    :param new_oid: Create a new object using the specified OID. The
        function raises `~psycopg2.OperationalError` if the OID is already
        in use. Default is 0, meaning assign a new one automatically.
    :param new_file: The name of a file to be imported in the database
        (using the |lo_import|_ function)
    :param lobject_factory: Subclass of
        `~psycopg2.extensions.lobject` to be instantiated.

    .. |lo_import| replace:: `!lo_import()`
    .. _lo_import: https://www.postgresql.org/docs/current/static/lo-interfaces.html#LO-IMPORT

    Available values for *mode* are:

    ======= =========
    *mode*  meaning
    ======= =========
    ``r``   Open for read only
    ``w``   Open for write only
    ``rw``  Open for read/write
    ``n``   Don't open the file
    ``b``   Don't decode read data (return data as `!str` in Python 2 or `!bytes` in Python 3)
    ``t``   Decode read data according to `connection.encoding` (return data as `!unicode` in Python 2 or `!str` in Python 3)
    ======= =========

    ``b`` and ``t`` can be specified together with a read/write mode. If
    neither ``b`` nor ``t`` is specified, the default is ``b`` in Python 2
    and ``t`` in Python 3.

    .. versionadded:: 2.0.8

    .. versionchanged:: 2.4 added ``b`` and ``t`` mode and unicode
        support.


.. rubric:: Methods related to asynchronous support

.. versionadded:: 2.2

.. seealso:: :ref:`async-support` and :ref:`green-support`.


.. attribute:: async
               async_

    Read only attribute: 1 if the connection is asynchronous, 0 otherwise.

    .. versionchanged:: 2.7 added the `!async_` alias for Python versions
        where `!async` is a keyword.


.. method:: poll()

    Used during an asynchronous connection attempt, or when a cursor is
    executing a query on an asynchronous connection, make communication
    proceed if it wouldn't block.

    Return one of the constants defined in :ref:`poll-constants`. If it
    returns `~psycopg2.extensions.POLL_OK` then the connection has been
    established or the query results are available on the client.
    Otherwise wait until the file descriptor returned by `fileno()` is
    ready to read or to write, as explained in :ref:`async-support`.
    `poll()` should be also used by the function installed by
    `~psycopg2.extensions.set_wait_callback()` as explained in
    :ref:`green-support`.

    `poll()` is also used to receive asynchronous notifications from the
    database: see :ref:`async-notify` from further details.


.. method:: fileno()

    Return the file descriptor underlying the connection: useful to read
    its status during asynchronous communication.


.. method:: isexecuting()

    Return `!True` if the connection is executing an asynchronous operation.


.. rubric:: Interoperation with other C API modules

.. attribute:: pgconn_ptr

    Return the internal `!PGconn*` as integer. Useful to pass the libpq
    raw connection structure to C functions, e.g. via `ctypes`::

        >>> import ctypes
        >>> import ctypes.util
        >>> libpq = ctypes.pydll.LoadLibrary(ctypes.util.find_library('pq'))
        >>> libpq.PQserverVersion.argtypes = [ctypes.c_void_p]
        >>> libpq.PQserverVersion.restype = ctypes.c_int
        >>> libpq.PQserverVersion(conn.pgconn_ptr)
        90611

    .. versionadded:: 2.8


.. method:: get_native_connection()

    Return the internal `!PGconn*` wrapped in a PyCapsule object. This is
    only useful for passing the `libpq` raw connection associated to this
    connection object to other C-level modules that may have a use for it.

    .. seealso:: Python C API `Capsules`__  docs.

        .. __: https://docs.python.org/3.1/c-api/capsule.html

    .. versionadded:: 2.8



.. rubric:: informative methods of the native connection

.. note::

    These methods are better accessed using the `~connection.info`
    attributes and may be dropped in future versions.


.. index::
    pair: Transaction; Status

.. method:: get_transaction_status()

    Also available as `~connection.info`\ `!.`\
    `~psycopg2.extensions.ConnectionInfo.transaction_status`.

    Return the current session transaction status as an integer.  Symbolic
    constants for the values are defined in the module
    `psycopg2.extensions`: see :ref:`transaction-status-constants`
    for the available values.

    .. seealso:: libpq docs for `PQtransactionStatus()`__ for details.

        .. __: https://www.postgresql.org/docs/current/static/libpq-status.html#LIBPQ-PQTRANSACTIONSTATUS


.. index::
    pair: Protocol; Version

.. attribute:: protocol_version

    Also available as `~connection.info`\ `!.`\
    `~psycopg2.extensions.ConnectionInfo.protocol_version`.

    A read-only integer representing frontend/backend protocol being used.
    Currently Psycopg supports only protocol 3, which allows connection
    to PostgreSQL server from version 7.4. Psycopg versions previous than
    2.3 support both protocols 2 and 3.

    .. seealso:: libpq docs for `PQprotocolVersion()`__ for details.

        .. __: https://www.postgresql.org/docs/current/static/libpq-status.html#LIBPQ-PQPROTOCOLVERSION

    .. versionadded:: 2.0.12


.. index::
    pair: Server; Version

.. attribute:: server_version

    Also available as `~connection.info`\ `!.`\
    `~psycopg2.extensions.ConnectionInfo.server_version`.

    A read-only integer representing the backend version.

    The number is formed by converting the major, minor, and revision
    numbers into two-decimal-digit numbers and appending them together.
    For example, version 8.1.5 will be returned as ``80105``.

    .. seealso:: libpq docs for `PQserverVersion()`__ for details.

        .. __: https://www.postgresql.org/docs/current/static/libpq-status.html#LIBPQ-PQSERVERVERSION

    .. versionadded:: 2.0.12


.. index::
    pair: Backend; PID

.. method:: get_backend_pid()

    Also available as `~connection.info`\ `!.`\
    `~psycopg2.extensions.ConnectionInfo.backend_pid`.

    Returns the process ID (PID) of the backend server process *you
    connected to*. Note that if you use a connection pool service such as
    PgBouncer_ this value will not be updated if your connection is
    switched to a different backend.

    Note that the PID belongs to a process executing on the database
    server host, not the local host!

    .. seealso:: libpq docs for `PQbackendPID()`__ for details.

        .. __: https://www.postgresql.org/docs/current/static/libpq-status.html#LIBPQ-PQBACKENDPID

    .. versionadded:: 2.0.8


.. index::
    pair: Server; Parameters

.. method:: get_parameter_status(parameter)

    Also available as `~connection.info`\ `!.`\
    `~psycopg2.extensions.ConnectionInfo.parameter_status()`.

    Look up a current parameter setting of the server.

    Potential values for ``parameter`` are: ``server_version``,
    ``server_encoding``, ``client_encoding``, ``is_superuser``,
    ``session_authorization``, ``DateStyle``, ``TimeZone``,
    ``integer_datetimes``, and ``standard_conforming_strings``.

    If server did not report requested parameter, return `!None`.

    .. seealso:: libpq docs for `PQparameterStatus()`__ for details.

        .. __: https://www.postgresql.org/docs/current/static/libpq-status.html#LIBPQ-PQPARAMETERSTATUS

    .. versionadded:: 2.0.12


.. index::
    pair: Connection; Parameters

.. method:: get_dsn_parameters()

    Also available as `~connection.info`\ `!.`\
    `~psycopg2.extensions.ConnectionInfo.dsn_parameters`.

    Get the effective dsn parameters for the connection as a dictionary.

    The *password* parameter is removed from the result.

    Example::

        >>> conn.get_dsn_parameters()
        {'dbname': 'test', 'user': 'postgres', 'port': '5432', 'sslmode': 'prefer'}

    Requires libpq >= 9.3.

    .. seealso:: libpq docs for `PQconninfo()`__ for details.

        .. __: https://www.postgresql.org/docs/current/static/libpq-connect.html#LIBPQ-PQCONNINFO

    .. versionadded:: 2.7

.. testcode:: :hide:

conn.rollback()