Yes, you are correct, at a moment that's all it does.

On Tue, Aug 8, 2017 at 6:37 PM, Dave Cramer <davecra...@gmail.com> wrote:

> Hi,
>
> I guess my question was a bit vague. I get that it loads drivers. But note
> it does not actually put them anywhere.
>
> First it creates a dict
> sets the attribute in the app
> loads the drivers dynamically
> and returns an empty dict.
>
> From what I can tell this:
>
> DriverRegistry.load_drivers()
>
> is all it does?
>
>
>
>
>
>
> Dave Cramer
>
> On 7 August 2017 at 23:35, Murtuza Zabuawala <murtuza.zabuawala@
> enterprisedb.com> wrote:
>
>> Hi,
>>
>> This piece of code allow us to dynamically import all the available
>> driver modules from '../utils/driver/' directory into our application.
>>
>> --
>> Regards,
>> Murtuza Zabuawala
>> EnterpriseDB: http://www.enterprisedb.com
>> The Enterprise PostgreSQL Company
>>
>> [image: https://community.postgresrocks.net/]
>> <https://community.postgresrocks.net/>
>>
>> On Tue, Aug 8, 2017 at 4:20 AM, Dave Cramer <davecra...@gmail.com> wrote:
>>
>>> I'm fairly new to Python so excuse my naiveté.
>>>
>>> This code: in web/pgadmin/utils/driver/__init__.py  does not appear to
>>> load the drivers into the drivers dictionary ? Or am I missing something
>>>
>>> def init_app(app):
>>>     drivers = dict()
>>>
>>>     setattr(app, '_pgadmin_server_drivers', drivers)
>>>     DriverRegistry.load_drivers()
>>>
>>>     return drivers
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> Dave Cramer
>>>
>>
>>
>

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