django-rest-framework/docs/api-guide/renderers.md
2012-10-05 13:04:34 +01:00

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Renderers

Before a TemplateResponse instance can be returned to the client, it must be rendered. The rendering process takes the intermediate representation of template and context, and turns it into the final byte stream that can be served to the client.

Django documentation

REST framework includes a number of built in Renderer classes, that allow you to return responses with various media types. There is also support for defining your own custom renderers, which gives you the flexiblity to design your own media types.

How the renderer is determined

The set of valid renderers for a view is always defined as a list of classes. When a view is entered REST framework will perform content negotiation on the incoming request, and determine the most appropriate renderer to satisfy the request.

The basic process of content negotiation involves examining the request's Accept header, to determine which media types it expects in the response. Optionally, format suffixes on the URL may be used to explicitly request a particular representation. For example the URL http://example.com/api/users_count.json might be an endpoint that always returns JSON data.

For more information see the documentation on content negotation.

Setting the renderers

The default set of renderers may be set globally, using the DEFAULT_RENDERERS setting. For example, the following settings would use YAML as the main media type and also include the self describing API.

REST_FRAMEWORK = {
    'DEFAULT_RENDERERS': (
        'rest_framework.renderers.YAMLRenderer',
        'rest_framework.renderers.DocumentingHTMLRenderer',
    )
}

You can also set the renderers used for an individual view, using the APIView class based views.

class UserCountView(APIView):
    """
    A view that returns the count of active users, in JSON or JSONp.
    """
    renderer_classes = (JSONRenderer, JSONPRenderer)

    def get(self, request, format=None):
        user_count = User.objects.filter(active=True).count()
        content = {'user_count': user_count}
        return Response(content)

Or, if you're using the @api_view decorator with function based views.

@api_view('GET'),
@renderer_classes(JSONRenderer, JSONPRenderer)
def user_count_view(request, format=None):
    """
    A view that returns the count of active users, in JSON or JSONp.
    """
    user_count = User.objects.filter(active=True).count()
    content = {'user_count': user_count}
    return Response(content)

Ordering of renderer classes

It's important when specifying the renderer classes for your API to think about what priority you want to assign to each media type. If a client underspecifies the representations it can accept, such as sending an Accept: */* header, or not including an Accept header at all, then REST framework will select the first renderer in the list to use for the response.

For example if your API serves JSON responses and the HTML browseable API, you might want to make JSONRenderer your default renderer, in order to send JSON responses to clients that do not specify an Accept header.

If your API includes views that can serve both regular webpages and API responses depending on the request, then you might consider making TemplateHTMLRenderer your default renderer, in order to play nicely with older browsers that send broken accept headers.

JSONRenderer

.media_type: application/json

.format: '.json'

JSONPRenderer

.media_type: application/javascript

.format: '.jsonp'

YAMLRenderer

.media_type: application/yaml

.format: '.yaml'

XMLRenderer

.media_type: application/xml

.format: '.xml'

DocumentingHTMLRenderer

Renders data into HTML for the browseable API. This renderer will determine which other renderer would have been given highest priority, and use that to display an API style response within the HTML page.

.media_type: text/html

.format: '.api'

HTMLTemplateRenderer

Renders data to HTML, using Django's standard template rendering. Unlike other renderers, the data passed to the Response does not need to be serialized. Also, unlike other renderers, you may want to include a template_name argument when creating the Response.

The HTMLTemplateRenderer will create a RequestContext, using the response.data as the context dict, and determine a template name to use to render the context.

The template name is determined by (in order of preference):

  1. An explicit .template_name attribute set on the response.
  2. An explicit .template_name attribute set on this class.
  3. The return result of calling view.get_template_names().

You can use HTMLTemplateRenderer either to return regular HTML pages using REST framework, or to return both HTML and API responses from a single endpoint.

If you're building websites that use HTMLTemplateRenderer along with other renderer classes, you should consider listing HTMLTemplateRenderer as the first class in the renderer_classes list, so that it will be prioritised first even for browsers that send poorly formed ACCEPT headers.

.media_type: text/html

.format: '.html'

Custom renderers

To implement a custom renderer, you should override BaseRenderer, set the .media_type and .format properties, and implement the .render(self, data, media_type) method.

Advanced renderer usage

You can do some pretty flexible things using REST framework's renderers. Some examples...

  • Provide either flat or nested representations from the same endpoint, depending on the requested media type.
  • Serve both regular HTML webpages, and JSON based API responses from the same endpoints.
  • Specify multiple types of HTML representation for API clients to use.
  • Underspecify a renderer's media type, such as using media_type = 'image/*', and use the Accept header to vary the encoding of the response.

In some cases you might want your view to use different serialization styles depending on the accepted media type. If you need to do this you can access request.accepted_renderer to determine the negotiated renderer that will be used for the response.

For example:

@api_view(('GET',))
@renderer_classes((TemplateHTMLRenderer, JSONRenderer))
def list_users(request):
    """
    A view that can return JSON or HTML representations
    of the users in the system.
    """
    queryset = Users.objects.filter(active=True)

    if request.accepted_media_type == 'text/html':
        # TemplateHTMLRenderer takes a context dict,
        # and additionally requiresa 'template_name'.
        # It does not require serialization.
        data = {'users': queryset}
        return Response(data, template_name='list_users.html')

    # JSONRenderer requires serialized data as normal.
    serializer = UserSerializer(instance=queryset)
    data = serializer.data
    return Response(data)

Designing your media types

For the purposes of many Web APIs, simple JSON responses with hyperlinked relations may be sufficient. If you want to fully embrace RESTful design and HATEOAS you'll neeed to consider the design and usage of your media types in more detail.

In the words of Roy Fielding, "A REST API should spend almost all of its descriptive effort in defining the media type(s) used for representing resources and driving application state, or in defining extended relation names and/or hypertext-enabled mark-up for existing standard media types.".

For good examples of custom media types, see GitHub's use of a custom application/vnd.github+json media type, and Mike Amundsen's IANA approved application/vnd.collection+json JSON-based hypermedia.