> After routing has determined which controller to use for a request, your controller is responsible for making sense of the request and producing the appropriate output.
Django REST framework allows you to combine the logic for a set of related views in a single class, called a `ViewSet`. In other frameworks you may also find conceptually similar implementations named something like 'Resources' or 'Controllers'.
A `ViewSet` class is simply **a type of class-based View, that does not provide any method handlers** such as `.get()` or `.post()`, and instead provides actions such as `.list()` and `.create()`.
The method handlers for a `ViewSet` are only bound to the corresponding actions at the point of finalizing the view, using the `.as_view()` method.
Typically, rather than explicitly registering the views in a viewset in the urlconf, you'll register the viewset with a router class, that automatically determines the urlconf for you.
There are two main advantages of using a `ViewSet` class over using a `View` class.
* Repeated logic can be combined into a single class. In the above example, we only need to specify the `queryset` once, and it'll be used across multiple views.
* By using routers, we no longer need to deal with wiring up the URL conf ourselves.
Both of these come with a trade-off. Using regular views and URL confs is more explicit and gives you more control. ViewSets are helpful if you want to get up and running quickly, or when you have a large API and you want to enforce a consistent URL configuration throughout.
The default routers included with REST framework will provide routes for a standard set of create/retrieve/update/destroy style operations, as shown below:
If you have ad-hoc methods that you need to be routed to, you can mark them as requiring routing using the `@link`, `@action`, `@collection_link`, or `@collection_action` decorators. The `@link` and `@collection_link` decorators will route `GET` requests, and the `@action` and `@collection_action` decorators will route `POST` requests.
The `@link` and `@action` decorators contain `pk` in their URL pattern and are intended for methods which require a single instance. The `@collection_link` and `@collection_action` decorators are intended for methods which operate on a collection of objects.
The `@action` and `@collection_action` decorators will route `POST` requests by default, but may also accept other HTTP methods, by using the `methods` argument. For example:
The `ViewSet` class inherits from `APIView`. You can use any of the standard attributes such as `permission_classes`, `authentication_classes` in order to control the API policy on the viewset.
The `ViewSet` class does not provide any implementations of actions. In order to use a `ViewSet` class you'll override the class and define the action implementations explicitly.
The `GenericViewSet` class inherits from `GenericAPIView`, and provides the default set of `get_object`, `get_queryset` methods and other generic view base behavior, but does not include any actions by default.
In order to use a `GenericViewSet` class you'll override the class and either mixin the required mixin classes, or define the action implementations explicitly.
The `ModelViewSet` class inherits from `GenericAPIView` and includes implementations for various actions, by mixing in the behavior of the various mixin classes.
Because `ModelViewSet` extends `GenericAPIView`, you'll normally need to provide at least the `queryset` and `serializer_class` attributes. For example:
class AccountViewSet(viewsets.ModelViewSet):
"""
A simple ViewSet for viewing and editing accounts.
"""
queryset = Account.objects.all()
serializer_class = AccountSerializer
permission_classes = [IsAccountAdminOrReadOnly]
Note that you can use any of the standard attributes or method overrides provided by `GenericAPIView`. For example, to use a `ViewSet` that dynamically determines the queryset it should operate on, you might do something like this:
class AccountViewSet(viewsets.ModelViewSet):
"""
A simple ViewSet for viewing and editing the accounts
Also note that although this class provides the complete set of create/list/retrieve/update/destroy actions by default, you can restrict the available operations by using the standard permission classes.
The `ReadOnlyModelViewSet` class also inherits from `GenericAPIView`. As with `ModelViewSet` it also includes implementations for various actions, but unlike `ModelViewSet` only provides the 'read-only' actions, `.list()` and `.retrieve()`.
You may need to provide custom `ViewSet` classes that do not have the full set of `ModelViewSet` actions, or that customize the behavior in some other way.
To create a base viewset class that provides `create`, `list` and `retrieve` operations, inherit from `GenericViewSet`, and mixin the required actions: