REST framework includes a number of built in Parser classes, that allow you to accept requests with various media types. There is also support for defining your own custom parsers, which gives you the flexiblity to design the media types that your API accepts.
## How the parser is determined
The set of valid parsers for a view is always defined as a list of classes. When either `request.DATA` or `request.FILES` is accessed, REST framework will examine the `Content-Type` header on the incoming request, and determine which parser to use to parse the request content.
## Setting the parsers
The default set of parsers may be set globally, using the `DEFAULT_PARSERS` setting. For example, the following settings would allow requests with `YAML` content.
REST_FRAMEWORK = {
'DEFAULT_PARSERS': (
'rest_framework.parsers.YAMLParser',
)
}
You can also set the renderers used for an individual view, using the `APIView` class based views.
class ExampleView(APIView):
"""
A view that can accept POST requests with YAML content.
"""
parser_classes = (YAMLParser,)
def post(self, request, format=None):
return Response({'received data': request.DATA})
Or, if you're using the `@api_view` decorator with function based views.
@api_view(('POST',)),
@parser_classes((YAMLParser,))
def example_view(request, format=None):
"""
A view that can accept POST requests with YAML content.
Note that the `XML` markup language is used typically used as the base language for more strictly defined domain-specific languages, such as `RSS`, `Atom`, and `XHTML`.
If you are considering using `XML` for your API, you may want to consider implementing a custom renderer and parser for your specific requirements, and using an existing domain-specific media-type, or creating your own custom XML-based media-type.
Parses HTML form content. `request.DATA` will be populated with a `QueryDict` of data, `request.FILES` will be populated with an empty `QueryDict` of data.
You will typically want to use both `FormParser` and `MultiPartParser` together in order to fully support HTML form data.
To implement a custom parser, you should override `BaseParser`, set the `.media_type` property, and implement the `.parse(self, stream, parser_context)` method.
Optional. If provided, this is the media type of the incoming request.
Depending on the request's `Content-Type:` header, this may be more specific than the renderer's `media_type` attribute, and may include media type parameters. For example `"text/plain; charset=utf-8"`.
If your custom parser needs to support file uploads, you may return a `DataAndFiles` object from the `.parse()` method. `DataAndFiles` should be instantiated with two arguments. The first argument will be used to populate the `request.DATA` property, and the second argument will be used to populate the `request.FILES` property.