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Also document correctly - these methods are now public and will fall under the deprecation policy from now on.
173 lines
6.7 KiB
Markdown
173 lines
6.7 KiB
Markdown
<a class="github" href="decorators.py"></a> <a class="github" href="views.py"></a>
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# Class Based Views
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> Django's class based views are a welcome departure from the old-style views.
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>
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> — [Reinout van Rees][cite]
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REST framework provides an `APIView` class, which subclasses Django's `View` class.
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`APIView` classes are different from regular `View` classes in the following ways:
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* Requests passed to the handler methods will be REST framework's `Request` instances, not Django's `HttpRequest` instances.
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* Handler methods may return REST framework's `Response`, instead of Django's `HttpResponse`. The view will manage content negotiation and setting the correct renderer on the response.
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* Any `APIException` exceptions will be caught and mediated into appropriate responses.
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* Incoming requests will be authenticated and appropriate permission and/or throttle checks will be run before dispatching the request to the handler method.
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Using the `APIView` class is pretty much the same as using a regular `View` class, as usual, the incoming request is dispatched to an appropriate handler method such as `.get()` or `.post()`. Additionally, a number of attributes may be set on the class that control various aspects of the API policy.
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For example:
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from rest_framework.views import APIView
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from rest_framework.response import Response
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from rest_framework import authentication, permissions
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class ListUsers(APIView):
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"""
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View to list all users in the system.
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* Requires token authentication.
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* Only admin users are able to access this view.
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"""
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authentication_classes = (authentication.TokenAuthentication,)
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permission_classes = (permissions.IsAdminUser,)
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def get(self, request, format=None):
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"""
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Return a list of all users.
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"""
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usernames = [user.username for user in User.objects.all()]
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return Response(usernames)
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## API policy attributes
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The following attributes control the pluggable aspects of API views.
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### .renderer_classes
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### .parser_classes
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### .authentication_classes
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### .throttle_classes
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### .permission_classes
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### .content_negotiation_class
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## API policy instantiation methods
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The following methods are used by REST framework to instantiate the various pluggable API policies. You won't typically need to override these methods.
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### .get_renderers(self)
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### .get_parsers(self)
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### .get_authenticators(self)
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### .get_throttles(self)
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### .get_permissions(self)
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### .get_content_negotiator(self)
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## API policy implementation methods
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The following methods are called before dispatching to the handler method.
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### .check_permissions(self, request)
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### .check_throttles(self, request)
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### .perform_content_negotiation(self, request, force=False)
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## Dispatch methods
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The following methods are called directly by the view's `.dispatch()` method.
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These perform any actions that need to occur before or after calling the handler methods such as `.get()`, `.post()`, `put()`, `patch()` and `.delete()`.
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### .initial(self, request, \*args, **kwargs)
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Performs any actions that need to occur before the handler method gets called.
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This method is used to enforce permissions and throttling, and perform content negotiation.
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You won't typically need to override this method.
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### .handle_exception(self, exc)
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Any exception thrown by the handler method will be passed to this method, which either returns a `Response` instance, or re-raises the exception.
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The default implementation handles any subclass of `rest_framework.exceptions.APIException`, as well as Django's `Http404` and `PermissionDenied` exceptions, and returns an appropriate error response.
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If you need to customize the error responses your API returns you should subclass this method.
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### .initialize_request(self, request, \*args, **kwargs)
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Ensures that the request object that is passed to the handler method is an instance of `Request`, rather than the usual Django `HttpRequest`.
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You won't typically need to override this method.
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### .finalize_response(self, request, response, \*args, **kwargs)
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Ensures that any `Response` object returned from the handler method will be rendered into the correct content type, as determined by the content negotation.
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You won't typically need to override this method.
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---
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# Function Based Views
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> Saying [that Class based views] is always the superior solution is a mistake.
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>
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> — [Nick Coghlan][cite2]
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REST framework also allows you to work with regular function based views. It provides a set of simple decorators that wrap your function based views to ensure they receive an instance of `Request` (rather than the usual Django `HttpRequest`) and allows them to return a `Response` (instead of a Django `HttpResponse`), and allow you to configure how the request is processed.
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## @api_view()
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**Signature:** `@api_view(http_method_names)`
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The core of this functionality is the `api_view` decorator, which takes a list of HTTP methods that your view should respond to. For example, this is how you would write a very simple view that just manually returns some data:
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from rest_framework.decorators import api_view
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@api_view(['GET'])
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def hello_world(request):
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return Response({"message": "Hello, world!"})
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This view will use the default renderers, parsers, authentication classes etc specified in the [settings](settings).
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## API policy decorators
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To override the default settings, REST framework provides a set of additional decorators which can be added to your views. These must come *after* (below) the `@api_view` decorator. For example, to create a view that uses a [throttle](throttling) to ensure it can only be called once per day by a particular user, use the `@throttle_classes` decorator, passing a list of throttle classes:
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from rest_framework.decorators import api_view, throttle_classes
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from rest_framework.throttling import UserRateThrottle
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class OncePerDayUserThrottle(UserRateThrottle):
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rate = '1/day'
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@api_view(['GET'])
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@throttle_classes([OncePerDayUserThrottle])
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def view(request):
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return Response({"message": "Hello for today! See you tomorrow!"})
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These decorators correspond to the attributes set on `APIView` subclasses, described above.
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The available decorators are:
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* `@renderer_classes(...)`
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* `@parser_classes(...)`
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* `@authentication_classes(...)`
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* `@throttle_classes(...)`
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* `@permission_classes(...)`
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Each of these decorators takes a single argument which must be a list or tuple of classes.
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[cite]: http://reinout.vanrees.org/weblog/2011/08/24/class-based-views-usage.html
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[cite2]: http://www.boredomandlaziness.org/2012/05/djangos-cbvs-are-not-mistake-but.html
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[settings]: api-guide/settings.md
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[throttling]: api-guide/throttling.md
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