* View suffix already set by initializer * Add 'name' and 'description' attributes to ViewSet ViewSets may now provide their `name` and `description` attributes directly, instead of relying on view introspection to derive them. These attributes may also be provided with the view's initkwargs. The ViewSet `name` and `suffix` initkwargs are mutually exclusive. The `action` decorator now provides the `name` and `description` to the view's initkwargs. By default, these values are derived from the method name and its docstring. The `name` may be overridden by providing it as an argument to the decorator. The `get_view_name` and `get_view_description` hooks now provide the view instance to the handler, instead of the view class. The default implementations of these handlers now respect the `name`/`description`. * Add 'extra actions' to ViewSet & browsable APIs * Update simple router tests Removed old test logic around link/action decorators from `v2.3`. Also simplified the test by making the results explicit instead of computed. * Add method mapping to ViewSet actions * Document extra action method mapping
14 KiB
source: viewsets.py
ViewSets
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.
Example
Let's define a simple viewset that can be used to list or retrieve all the users in the system.
from django.contrib.auth.models import User
from django.shortcuts import get_object_or_404
from myapps.serializers import UserSerializer
from rest_framework import viewsets
from rest_framework.response import Response
class UserViewSet(viewsets.ViewSet):
"""
A simple ViewSet for listing or retrieving users.
"""
def list(self, request):
queryset = User.objects.all()
serializer = UserSerializer(queryset, many=True)
return Response(serializer.data)
def retrieve(self, request, pk=None):
queryset = User.objects.all()
user = get_object_or_404(queryset, pk=pk)
serializer = UserSerializer(user)
return Response(serializer.data)
If we need to, we can bind this viewset into two separate views, like so:
user_list = UserViewSet.as_view({'get': 'list'})
user_detail = UserViewSet.as_view({'get': 'retrieve'})
Typically we wouldn't do this, but would instead register the viewset with a router, and allow the urlconf to be automatically generated.
from myapp.views import UserViewSet
from rest_framework.routers import DefaultRouter
router = DefaultRouter()
router.register(r'users', UserViewSet, base_name='user')
urlpatterns = router.urls
Rather than writing your own viewsets, you'll often want to use the existing base classes that provide a default set of behavior. For example:
class UserViewSet(viewsets.ModelViewSet):
"""
A viewset for viewing and editing user instances.
"""
serializer_class = UserSerializer
queryset = User.objects.all()
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.
ViewSet actions
The default routers included with REST framework will provide routes for a standard set of create/retrieve/update/destroy style actions, as shown below:
class UserViewSet(viewsets.ViewSet):
"""
Example empty viewset demonstrating the standard
actions that will be handled by a router class.
If you're using format suffixes, make sure to also include
the `format=None` keyword argument for each action.
"""
def list(self, request):
pass
def create(self, request):
pass
def retrieve(self, request, pk=None):
pass
def update(self, request, pk=None):
pass
def partial_update(self, request, pk=None):
pass
def destroy(self, request, pk=None):
pass
Introspecting ViewSet actions
During dispatch, the following attributes are available on the ViewSet
.
basename
- the base to use for the URL names that are created.action
- the name of the current action (e.g.,list
,create
).detail
- boolean indicating if the current action is configured for a list or detail view.suffix
- the display suffix for the viewset type - mirrors thedetail
attribute.name
- the display name for the viewset. This argument is mutually exclusive tosuffix
.description
- the display description for the individual view of a viewset.
You may inspect these attributes to adjust behaviour based on the current action. For example, you could restrict permissions to everything except the list
action similar to this:
def get_permissions(self):
"""
Instantiates and returns the list of permissions that this view requires.
"""
if self.action == 'list':
permission_classes = [IsAuthenticated]
else:
permission_classes = [IsAdmin]
return [permission() for permission in permission_classes]
Marking extra actions for routing
If you have ad-hoc methods that should be routable, you can mark them as such with the @action
decorator. Like regular actions, extra actions may be intended for either a list of objects, or a single instance. To indicate this, set the detail
argument to True
or False
. The router will configure its URL patterns accordingly. e.g., the DefaultRouter
will configure detail actions to contain pk
in their URL patterns.
A more complete example of extra actions:
from django.contrib.auth.models import User
from rest_framework import status, viewsets
from rest_framework.decorators import action
from rest_framework.response import Response
from myapp.serializers import UserSerializer, PasswordSerializer
class UserViewSet(viewsets.ModelViewSet):
"""
A viewset that provides the standard actions
"""
queryset = User.objects.all()
serializer_class = UserSerializer
@action(detail=True, methods=['post'])
def set_password(self, request, pk=None):
user = self.get_object()
serializer = PasswordSerializer(data=request.data)
if serializer.is_valid():
user.set_password(serializer.data['password'])
user.save()
return Response({'status': 'password set'})
else:
return Response(serializer.errors,
status=status.HTTP_400_BAD_REQUEST)
@action(detail=False)
def recent_users(self, request):
recent_users = User.objects.all().order('-last_login')
page = self.paginate_queryset(recent_users)
if page is not None:
serializer = self.get_serializer(page, many=True)
return self.get_paginated_response(serializer.data)
serializer = self.get_serializer(recent_users, many=True)
return Response(serializer.data)
The decorator can additionally take extra arguments that will be set for the routed view only. For example:
@action(detail=True, methods=['post'], permission_classes=[IsAdminOrIsSelf])
def set_password(self, request, pk=None):
...
These decorator will route GET
requests by default, but may also accept other HTTP methods by setting the methods
argument. For example:
@action(detail=True, methods=['post', 'delete'])
def unset_password(self, request, pk=None):
...
The two new actions will then be available at the urls ^users/{pk}/set_password/$
and ^users/{pk}/unset_password/$
To view all extra actions, call the .get_extra_actions()
method.
Routing additional HTTP methods for extra actions
Extra actions can be mapped to different ViewSet
methods. For example, the above password set/unset methods could be consolidated into a single route. Note that additional mappings do not accept arguments.
@action(detail=True, methods=['put'], name='Change Password')
def password(self, request, pk=None):
"""Update the user's password."""
...
@password.mapping.delete
def delete_password(self, request, pk=None):
"""Delete the user's password."""
...
Reversing action URLs
If you need to get the URL of an action, use the .reverse_action()
method. This is a convenience wrapper for reverse()
, automatically passing the view's request
object and prepending the url_name
with the .basename
attribute.
Note that the basename
is provided by the router during ViewSet
registration. If you are not using a router, then you must provide the basename
argument to the .as_view()
method.
Using the example from the previous section:
>>> view.reverse_action('set-password', args=['1'])
'http://localhost:8000/api/users/1/set_password'
Alternatively, you can use the url_name
attribute set by the @action
decorator.
>>> view.reverse_action(view.set_password.url_name, args=['1'])
'http://localhost:8000/api/users/1/set_password'
The url_name
argument for .reverse_action()
should match the same argument to the @action
decorator. Additionally, this method can be used to reverse the default actions, such as list
and create
.
API Reference
ViewSet
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.
GenericViewSet
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.
ModelViewSet
The ModelViewSet
class inherits from GenericAPIView
and includes implementations for various actions, by mixing in the behavior of the various mixin classes.
The actions provided by the ModelViewSet
class are .list()
, .retrieve()
, .create()
, .update()
, .partial_update()
, and .destroy()
.
Example
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
associated with the user.
"""
serializer_class = AccountSerializer
permission_classes = [IsAccountAdminOrReadOnly]
def get_queryset(self):
return self.request.user.accounts.all()
Note however that upon removal of the queryset
property from your ViewSet
, any associated router will be unable to derive the base_name of your Model automatically, and so you will have to specify the base_name
kwarg as part of your router registration.
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.
ReadOnlyModelViewSet
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()
.
Example
As with ModelViewSet
, you'll normally need to provide at least the queryset
and serializer_class
attributes. For example:
class AccountViewSet(viewsets.ReadOnlyModelViewSet):
"""
A simple ViewSet for viewing accounts.
"""
queryset = Account.objects.all()
serializer_class = AccountSerializer
Again, as with ModelViewSet
, you can use any of the standard attributes and method overrides available to GenericAPIView
.
Custom ViewSet base classes
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.
Example
To create a base viewset class that provides create
, list
and retrieve
operations, inherit from GenericViewSet
, and mixin the required actions:
from rest_framework import mixins
class CreateListRetrieveViewSet(mixins.CreateModelMixin,
mixins.ListModelMixin,
mixins.RetrieveModelMixin,
viewsets.GenericViewSet):
"""
A viewset that provides `retrieve`, `create`, and `list` actions.
To use it, override the class and set the `.queryset` and
`.serializer_class` attributes.
"""
pass
By creating your own base ViewSet
classes, you can provide common behavior that can be reused in multiple viewsets across your API.