3.8 KiB
source: metadata.py
Metadata
[The
OPTIONS
] method allows a client to determine the options and/or requirements associated with a resource, or the capabilities of a server, without implying a resource action or initiating a resource retrieval.
REST framework includes a configurable mechanism for determining how your API should respond to OPTIONS
requests. This allows you to return API schema or other resource information.
There are not currently any widely adopted conventions for exactly what style of response should be returned for HTTP OPTIONS
requests, so we provide an ad-hoc style that returns some useful information.
Here's an example response that demonstrates the information that is returned by default.
HTTP 200 OK
Allow: GET, POST, HEAD, OPTIONS
Content-Type: application/json
{
"name": "To Do List",
"description": "List existing 'To Do' items, or create a new item.",
"renders": [
"application/json",
"text/html"
],
"parses": [
"application/json",
"application/x-www-form-urlencoded",
"multipart/form-data"
],
"actions": {
"POST": {
"note": {
"type": "string",
"required": false,
"read_only": false,
"label": "title",
"max_length": 100
}
}
}
}
Setting the metadata scheme
You can set the metadata class globally using the 'DEFAULT_METADATA_CLASS'
settings key:
REST_FRAMEWORK = {
'DEFAULT_METADATA_CLASS': 'rest_framework.metadata.SimpleMetadata'
}
Or you can set the metadata class individually for a view:
class APIRoot(APIView):
metadata_class = APIRootMetadata
def get(self, request, format=None):
return Response({
...
})
The REST framework package only includes a single metadata class implementation, named SimpleMetadata
. If you want to use an alternative style you'll need to implement a custom metadata class.
Creating schema endpoints
If you have specific requirements for creating schema endpoints that are accessed with regular GET
requests, you might consider re-using the metadata API for doing so.
For example, the following additional route could be used on a viewset to provide a linkable schema endpoint.
@list_route(methods=['GET'])
def schema(self, request):
meta = self.metadata_class()
data = meta.determine_metadata(request, self)
return Response(data)
There are a couple of reasons that you might choose to take this approach, including that OPTIONS
responses are not cacheable.
Custom metadata classes
If you want to provide a custom metadata class you should override BaseMetadata
and implement the determine_metadata(self, request, view)
method.
Useful things that you might want to do could include returning schema information, using a format such as JSON schema, or returning debug information to admin users.
Example
The following class could be used to limit the information that is returned to OPTIONS
requests.
class MinimalMetadata(BaseMetadata):
"""
Don't include field and other information for `OPTIONS` requests.
Just return the name and description.
"""
def determine_metadata(self, request, view):
return {
'name': view.get_view_name(),
'description': view.get_view_description()
}