DRF-extensions
DRF-extensions is a collection of custom extensions for Django REST Framework. Source repository is available at https://github.com/chibisov/drf-extensions.
Viewsets
Extensions for viewsets.
DetailSerializerMixin
This mixin lets add custom serializer for detail view. Just add mixin and specify serializer_detail_class attribute:
from django.contrib.auth.models import User
from myapps.serializers import UserSerializer, UserDetailSerializer
from rest_framework_extensions.mixins import DetailSerializerMixin
class UserViewSet(DetailSerializerMixin, viewsets.ReadOnlyModelViewSet):
serializer_class = UserSerializer
serializer_detail_class = UserDetailSerializer
queryset = User.objects.all()
Sometimes you need to set custom QuerySet for detail view. For example, in detail view you want to show user groups and permissions for these groups. You can make it by specifying queryset_detail attribute:
from django.contrib.auth.models import User
from myapps.serializers import UserSerializer, UserDetailSerializer
from rest_framework_extensions.mixins import DetailSerializerMixin
class UserViewSet(DetailSerializerMixin, viewsets.ReadOnlyModelViewSet):
serializer_class = UserSerializer
serializer_detail_class = UserDetailSerializer
queryset = User.objects.all()
queryset_detail = queryset.prefetch_related('groups__permissions')
If you use DetailSerializerMixin and don't specify serializer_detail_class attribute, then serializer_class will be used.
If you use DetailSerializerMixin and don't specify queryset_detail attribute, then queryset will be used.
PaginateByMaxMixin
New in DRF-extensions 0.2.2
This mixin allows to paginate results by max_paginate_by value. This approach is useful when clients want to take as much paginated data as possible, but don't want to bother about backend limitations.
from myapps.serializers import UserSerializer
from rest_framework_extensions.mixins import PaginateByMaxMixin
class UserViewSet(PaginateByMaxMixin,
viewsets.ReadOnlyModelViewSet):
max_paginate_by = 100
serializer_class = UserSerializer
And now you can send requests with ?page_size=max argument:
# Request
GET /users/?page_size=max HTTP/1.1
Accept: application/json
# Response
HTTP/1.1 200 OK
Content-Type: application/json; charset=UTF-8
{
count: 1000,
next: "https://localhost:8000/v1/users/?page=2&page_size=max",
previous: null,
results: [
...100 items...
]
}
This mixin could be used only with Django Rest Framework >= 2.3.8, because max_paginate_by was introduced in 2.3.8 version.
Cache/ETAG mixins
ReadOnlyCacheResponseAndETAGMixin
This mixin combines ReadOnlyETAGMixin and CacheResponseMixin. It could be used with
ReadOnlyModelViewSet and helps
to process caching + etag calculation for retrieve and list methods:
from myapps.serializers import UserSerializer
from rest_framework_extensions.mixins import (
ReadOnlyCacheResponseAndETAGMixin
)
class UserViewSet(ReadOnlyCacheResponseAndETAGMixin,
viewsets.ReadOnlyModelViewSet):
serializer_class = UserSerializer
CacheResponseAndETAGMixin
This mixin combines ETAGMixin and CacheResponseMixin. It could be used with
ModelViewSet and helps
to process:
- Caching for
retrieveandlistmethods - Etag for
retrieve,list,updateanddestroymethods
Usage:
from myapps.serializers import UserSerializer
from rest_framework_extensions.mixins import CacheResponseAndETAGMixin
class UserViewSet(CacheResponseAndETAGMixin,
viewsets.ModelViewSet):
serializer_class = UserSerializer
Please, read more about caching, key construction and conditional requests.
Routers
Extensions for routers.
You will need to use custom ExtendedDefaultRouter or ExtendedSimpleRouter for routing if you want to take advantages of described extensions. For example you have standard implementation:
from rest_framework.routers import DefaultRouter
router = DefaultRouter()
You should replace DefaultRouter with ExtendedDefaultRouter:
from rest_framework_extensions.routers import (
ExtendedDefaultRouter as DefaultRouter
)
router = DefaultRouter()
Or SimpleRouter with ExtendedSimpleRouter:
from rest_framework_extensions.routers import (
ExtendedSimpleRouter as SimpleRouter
)
router = SimpleRouter()
Pluggable router mixins
New in DRF-extensions 0.2.4
Every feature in extended routers has it's own mixin. That means that you can use the only features you need in your custom
routers. ExtendedRouterMixin has all set of drf-extensions features. For example you can use it with third-party routes:
from rest_framework_extensions.routers import ExtendedRouterMixin
from third_party_app.routers import SomeRouter
class ExtendedSomeRouter(ExtendedRouterMixin, SomeRouter):
pass
Nested routes
New in DRF-extensions 0.2.4
Nested routes allows you create nested resources with viewsets.
For example:
from rest_framework_extensions.routers import ExtendedSimpleRouter
from yourapp.views import (
UserViewSet,
GroupViewSet,
PermissionViewSet,
)
router = ExtendedSimpleRouter()
(
router.register(r'users', UserViewSet, base_name='user')
.register(r'groups',
GroupViewSet,
base_name='users-group',
parents_query_lookups=['user_groups'])
.register(r'permissions',
PermissionViewSet,
base_name='users-groups-permission',
parents_query_lookups=['group__user', 'group'])
)
urlpatterns = router.urls
There is one requirement for viewsets which used in nested routers. They should add mixin NestedViewSetMixin. That mixin
adds automatic filtering by parent lookups:
# yourapp.views
from rest_framework_extensions.mixins import NestedViewSetMixin
class UserViewSet(NestedViewSetMixin, ModelViewSet):
model = UserModel
class GroupViewSet(NestedViewSetMixin, ModelViewSet):
model = GroupModel
class PermissionViewSet(NestedViewSetMixin, ModelViewSet):
model = PermissionModel
With such kind of router we have next resources:
/users/- list of all users. Resolve name is user-list/users/<pk>/- user detail. Resolve name is user-detail/users/<parent_lookup_user_groups>/groups/- list of groups for exact user. Resolve name is users-group-list/users/<parent_lookup_user_groups>/groups/<pk>/- user group detail. If user doesn't have group then resource will be not found. Resolve name is users-group-detail/users/<parent_lookup_group__user>/groups/<parent_lookup_group>/permissions/- list of permissions for user group. Resolve name is users-groups-permission-list/users/<parent_lookup_group__user>/groups/<parent_lookup_group>/permissions/<pk>/- user group permission detail. If user doesn't have group or group doesn't have permission then resource will be not found. Resolve name is users-groups-permission-detail
Every resource is automatically filtered by parent lookups.
# Request
GET /users/1/groups/2/permissions/ HTTP/1.1
Accept: application/json
# Response
HTTP/1.1 200 OK
Content-Type: application/json; charset=UTF-8
[
{
id: 3,
name: "read"
},
{
id: 4,
name: "update"
},
{
id: 5,
name: "delete"
}
]
For request above permissions will be filtered by user with pk 1 and group with pk 2:
Permission.objects.filter(group__user=1, group=2)
Example with registering more then one nested resource in one depth:
permissions_routes = router.register(
r'permissions',
PermissionViewSet,
base_name='permission'
)
permissions_routes.register(
r'groups',
GroupViewSet,
base_name='permissions-group',
parents_query_lookups=['permissions']
)
permissions_routes.register(
r'users',
UserViewSet,
base_name='permissions-user',
parents_query_lookups=['groups__permissions']
)
With such kind of router we have next resources:
/permissions/- list of all permissions. Resolve name is permission-list/permissions/<pk>/- permission detail. Resolve name is permission-detail/permissions/<parent_lookup_permissions>/groups/- list of groups for exact permission. Resolve name is permissions-group-list/permissions/<parent_lookup_permissions>/groups/<pk>/- permission group detail. If group doesn't have permission then resource will be not found. Resolve name is permissions-group-detail/permissions/<parent_lookup_groups__permissions>/users/- list of users for exact permission. Resolve name is permissions-user-list/permissions/<parent_lookup_groups__permissions>/user/<pk>/- permission user detail. If user doesn't have permission then resource will be not found. Resolve name is permissions-user-detail
Nested router mixin
You can use rest_framework_extensions.routers.NestedRouterMixin for adding nesting feature into your routers:
from rest_framework_extensions.routers import NestedRouterMixin
from rest_framework.routers import SimpleRouter
class SimpleRouterWithNesting(NestedRouterMixin, SimpleRouter):
pass
Usage with generic relations
If you want to use nested router for generic relation
fields, you should explicitly filter QuerySet by content type.
For example if you have such kind of models:
class Task(models.Model):
title = models.CharField(max_length=30)
class Book(models.Model):
title = models.CharField(max_length=30)
class Comment(models.Model):
content_type = models.ForeignKey(ContentType)
object_id = models.PositiveIntegerField()
content_object = generic.GenericForeignKey()
text = models.CharField(max_length=30)
Lets create viewsets for that models:
class TaskViewSet(NestedViewSetMixin, ModelViewSet):
model = TaskModel
class BookViewSet(NestedViewSetMixin, ModelViewSet):
model = BookModel
class CommentViewSet(NestedViewSetMixin, ModelViewSet):
queryset = CommentModel.objects.all()
And router like this:
router = ExtendedSimpleRouter()
# tasks route
(
router.register(r'tasks', TaskViewSet)
.register(r'comments',
CommentViewSet,
'tasks-comment',
parents_query_lookups=['object_id'])
)
# books route
(
router.register(r'books', BookViewSet)
.register(r'comments',
CommentViewSet,
'books-comment',
parents_query_lookups=['object_id'])
)
As you can see we've added to parents_query_lookups only one object_id value. But when you make requests to comments
endpoint for both tasks and books routes there is no context for current content type.
# Request
GET /tasks/123/comments/ HTTP/1.1
Accept: application/json
# Response
HTTP/1.1 200 OK
Content-Type: application/json; charset=UTF-8
[
{
id: 1,
content_type: 1,
object_id: 123,
text: "Good task!"
},
{
id: 2,
content_type: 2, // oops. Wrong content type (for book)
object_id: 123, // task and book has the same id
text: "Good book!"
},
]
For such kind of cases you should explicitly filter QuerySets of nested viewsets by content type:
from django.contrib.contenttypes.models import ContentType
class CommentViewSet(NestedViewSetMixin, ModelViewSet):
queryset = CommentModel.objects.all()
class TaskCommentViewSet(CommentViewSet):
def get_queryset(self):
return super(TaskCommentViewSet, self).get_queryset().filter(
content_type=ContentType.objects.get_for_model(TaskModel)
)
class BookCommentViewSet(CommentViewSet):
def get_queryset(self):
return super(BookCommentViewSet, self).get_queryset().filter(
content_type=ContentType.objects.get_for_model(BookModel)
)
Lets use new viewsets in router:
router = ExtendedSimpleRouter()
# tasks route
(
router.register(r'tasks', TaskViewSet)
.register(r'comments',
TaskCommentViewSet,
'tasks-comment',
parents_query_lookups=['object_id'])
)
# books route
(
router.register(r'books', BookViewSet)
.register(r'comments',
BookCommentViewSet,
'books-comment',
parents_query_lookups=['object_id'])
)
Serializers
Extensions for serializers functionality.
PartialUpdateSerializerMixin
New in DRF-extensions 0.2.3
By default every saving of ModelSerializer saves the whole object. Even partial update just patches model instance. For example:
from myapps.models import City
from myapps.serializers import CitySerializer
moscow = City.objects.get(pk=10)
city_serializer = CitySerializer(
instance=moscow,
data={'country': 'USA'},
partial=True
)
if city_serializer.is_valid():
city_serializer.save()
# equivalent to
moscow.country = 'USA'
moscow.save()
SQL representation for previous example will be:
UPDATE city SET name='Moscow', country='USA' WHERE id=1;
Django's save method has keyword argument update_fields.
Only the fields named in that list will be updated:
moscow.country = 'USA'
moscow.save(update_fields=['country'])
SQL representation for example with update_fields usage will be:
UPDATE city SET country='USA' WHERE id=1;
To use update_fields for every partial update you should mixin PartialUpdateSerializerMixin to your serializer:
from rest_framework_extensions.serializers import (
PartialUpdateSerializerMixin
)
class CitySerializer(PartialUpdateSerializerMixin,
serializers.ModelSerializer):
class Meta:
model = City
Fields
Set of serializer fields that extends default fields functionality.
ResourceUriField
Represents a hyperlinking uri that points to the detail view for that object.
from rest_framework_extensions.fields import ResourceUriField
class CitySerializer(serializers.ModelSerializer):
resource_uri = ResourceUriField(view_name='city-detail')
class Meta:
model = City
Request example:
# Request
GET /cities/268/ HTTP/1.1
Accept: application/json
# Response
HTTP/1.1 200 OK
Content-Type: application/json; charset=UTF-8
{
id: 268,
resource_uri: "http://localhost:8000/v1/cities/268/",
name: "Serpuhov"
}
Permissions
Extensions for permissions.
Object permissions
New in DRF-extensions 0.2.2
Django Rest Framework allows you to use DjangoObjectPermissions out of the box. But it has one limitation - if user has no permissions for viewing resource he will get 404 as response code. In most cases it's good approach because it solves security issues by default. But what if you wanted to return 401 or 403? What if you wanted to say to user - "You need to be logged in for viewing current resource" or "You don't have permissions for viewing current resource"?
ExtenedDjangoObjectPermissions will help you to be more flexible. By default it behaves as standard DjangoObjectPermissions. For example, it is safe to replace DjangoObjectPermissions with extended permissions class:
from rest_framework_extensions.permissions import (
ExtendedDjangoObjectPermissions as DjangoObjectPermissions
)
class CommentView(viewsets.ModelViewSet):
permission_classes = (DjangoObjectPermissions,)
Now every request from unauthorized user will get 404 response:
# Request
GET /comments/1/ HTTP/1.1
Accept: application/json
# Response
HTTP/1.1 404 NOT FOUND
Content-Type: application/json; charset=UTF-8
{"detail": "Not found"}
With ExtenedDjangoObjectPermissions you can disable hiding forbidden for read objects by changing hide_forbidden_for_read_objects attribute:
from rest_framework_extensions.permissions import (
ExtendedDjangoObjectPermissions
)
class CommentViewObjectPermissions(ExtendedDjangoObjectPermissions):
hide_forbidden_for_read_objects = False
class CommentView(viewsets.ModelViewSet):
permission_classes = (CommentViewObjectPermissions,)
Now lets see request response for user that has no permissions for viewing CommentView object:
# Request
GET /comments/1/ HTTP/1.1
Accept: application/json
# Response
HTTP/1.1 403 FORBIDDEN
Content-Type: application/json; charset=UTF-8
{u'detail': u'You do not have permission to perform this action.'}
ExtenedDjangoObjectPermissions could be used only with Django Rest Framework >= 2.3.8, because DjangoObjectPermissions was introduced in 2.3.8 version.
Caching
To cache something is to save the result of an expensive calculation so that you don't have to perform the calculation next time. Here's some pseudocode explaining how this would work for a dynamically generated api response:
given a URL, try finding that API response in the cache
if the response is in the cache:
return the cached response
else:
generate the response
save the generated response in the cache (for next time)
return the generated response
Cache response
DRF-extensions allows you to cache api responses with simple @cache_response decorator.
There are two requirements for decorated method:
- It should be method of class which is inherited from
rest_framework.views.APIView - It should return
rest_framework.response.Responseinstance.
Usage example:
from rest_framework.response import Response
from rest_framework import views
from rest_framework_extensions.cache.decorators import (
cache_response
)
from myapp.models import City
class CityView(views.APIView):
@cache_response()
def get(self, request, *args, **kwargs):
cities = City.objects.all().values_list('name', flat=True)
return Response(cities)
If you request view first time you'll get it from processed SQL query. (~60ms response time):
# Request
GET /cities/ HTTP/1.1
Accept: application/json
# Response
HTTP/1.1 200 OK
Content-Type: application/json; charset=UTF-8
['Moscow', 'London', 'Paris']
Second request will hit the cache. No sql evaluation, no database query. (~30 ms response time):
# Request
GET /cities/ HTTP/1.1
Accept: application/json
# Response
HTTP/1.1 200 OK
Content-Type: application/json; charset=UTF-8
['Moscow', 'London', 'Paris']
Reduction in response time depends on calculation complexity inside your API method. Sometimes it reduces from 1 second to 10ms, sometimes you win just 10ms.
Timeout
You can specify cache timeout in seconds, providing first argument:
class CityView(views.APIView):
@cache_response(60 * 15)
def get(self, request, *args, **kwargs):
...
In the above example, the result of the get() view will be cached for 15 minutes.
If you don't specify cache_timeout argument then value from REST_FRAMEWORK_EXTENSIONS settings will be used. By default it's None, which means "cache forever". You can change this default in settings:
REST_FRAMEWORK_EXTENSIONS = {
'DEFAULT_CACHE_RESPONSE_TIMEOUT': 60 * 15
}
Usage of the specific cache
New in DRF-extensions 0.2.3
@cache_response can also take an optional keyword argument, cache, which directs the decorator
to use a specific cache (from your CACHES setting) when caching results.
By default, the default cache will be used, but you can specify any cache you want:
class CityView(views.APIView):
@cache_response(60 * 15, cache='special_cache')
def get(self, request, *args, **kwargs):
...
You can specify what cache to use by default in settings:
REST_FRAMEWORK_EXTENSIONS = {
'DEFAULT_USE_CACHE': 'special_cache'
}
Cache key
By default every cached data from @cache_response decorator stored by key, which calculated
with DefaultKeyConstructor.
You can change cache key by providing key_func argument, which must be callable:
def calculate_cache_key(view_instance, view_method,
request, args, kwargs):
return '.'.join([
len(args),
len(kwargs)
])
class CityView(views.APIView):
@cache_response(60 * 15, key_func=calculate_cache_key)
def get(self, request, *args, **kwargs):
...
You can implement view method and use it for cache key calculation by specifying key_func argument as string:
class CityView(views.APIView):
@cache_response(60 * 15, key_func='calculate_cache_key')
def get(self, request, *args, **kwargs):
...
def calculate_cache_key(self, view_instance, view_method,
request, args, kwargs):
return '.'.join([
len(args),
len(kwargs)
])
Key calculation function will be called with next parameters:
- view_instance - view instance of decorated method
- view_method - decorated method
- request - decorated method request
- args - decorated method positional arguments
- kwargs - decorated method keyword arguments
Default key function
If @cache_response decorator used without key argument then default key function will be used. You can change this function in
settings:
REST_FRAMEWORK_EXTENSIONS = {
'DEFAULT_CACHE_KEY_FUNC':
'rest_framework_extensions.utils.default_cache_key_func'
}
default_cache_key_func uses DefaultKeyConstructor as a base for key calculation.
Caching errors
New in DRF-extensions 0.2.7
By default every response is cached, even failed. For example:
class CityView(views.APIView):
@cache_response()
def get(self, request, *args, **kwargs):
raise Exception("500 error comes from here")
First request to CityView.get will fail with 500 status code error and next requests to this endpoint will
return 500 error from cache.
You can change this behaviour by turning off caching error responses:
class CityView(views.APIView):
@cache_response(cache_errors=False)
def get(self, request, *args, **kwargs):
raise Exception("500 error comes from here")
You can change default behaviour by changing DEFAULT_CACHE_ERRORS setting:
REST_FRAMEWORK_EXTENSIONS = {
'DEFAULT_CACHE_ERRORS': False
}
CacheResponseMixin
It is common to cache standard viewset retrieve and list
methods. That is why CacheResponseMixin exists. Just mix it into viewset implementation and those methods will
use functions, defined in REST_FRAMEWORK_EXTENSIONS settings:
- "DEFAULT_OBJECT_CACHE_KEY_FUNC" for
retrievemethod - "DEFAULT_LIST_CACHE_KEY_FUNC" for
listmethod
By default those functions are using DefaultKeyConstructor and extends it:
- With
RetrieveSqlQueryKeyBitfor "DEFAULT_OBJECT_CACHE_KEY_FUNC" - With
ListSqlQueryKeyBitandPaginationKeyBitfor "DEFAULT_LIST_CACHE_KEY_FUNC"
You can change those settings for custom cache key generation:
REST_FRAMEWORK_EXTENSIONS = {
'DEFAULT_OBJECT_CACHE_KEY_FUNC':
'rest_framework_extensions.utils.default_object_cache_key_func',
'DEFAULT_LIST_CACHE_KEY_FUNC':
'rest_framework_extensions.utils.default_list_cache_key_func',
}
Mixin example usage:
from myapps.serializers import UserSerializer
from rest_framework_extensions.cache.mixins import CacheResponseMixin
class UserViewSet(CacheResponseMixin, viewsets.ModelViewSet):
serializer_class = UserSerializer
You can change cache key function by providing object_cache_key_func or
list_cache_key_func methods in view class:
class UserViewSet(CacheResponseMixin, viewsets.ModelViewSet):
serializer_class = UserSerializer
def object_cache_key_func(self, **kwargs):
return 'some key for object'
def list_cache_key_func(self, **kwargs):
return 'some key for list'
Ofcourse you can use custom key constructor:
from yourapp.key_constructors import (
CustomObjectKeyConstructor,
CustomListKeyConstructor,
)
class UserViewSet(CacheResponseMixin, viewsets.ModelViewSet):
serializer_class = UserSerializer
object_cache_key_func = CustomObjectKeyConstructor()
list_cache_key_func = CustomListKeyConstructor()
If you want to cache only retrieve method then you could use rest_framework_extensions.cache.mixins.RetrieveCacheResponseMixin.
If you want to cache only list method then you could use rest_framework_extensions.cache.mixins.ListCacheResponseMixin.
Key constructor
As you could see from previous section cache key calculation might seem fairly simple operation. But let's see next example. We make ordinary HTTP request to cities resource:
# Request
GET /cities/ HTTP/1.1
Accept: application/json
# Response
HTTP/1.1 200 OK
Content-Type: application/json; charset=UTF-8
['Moscow', 'London', 'Paris']
By the moment all goes fine - response returned and cached. Let's make the same request requiring XML response:
# Request
GET /cities/ HTTP/1.1
Accept: application/xml
# Response
HTTP/1.1 200 OK
Content-Type: application/json; charset=UTF-8
['Moscow', 'London', 'Paris']
What is that? Oh, we forgot about format negotiations. We can add format to key bits:
def calculate_cache_key(view_instance, view_method,
request, args, kwargs):
return '.'.join([
len(args),
len(kwargs),
request.accepted_renderer.format # here it is
])
# Request
GET /cities/ HTTP/1.1
Accept: application/xml
# Response
HTTP/1.1 200 OK
Content-Type: application/xml; charset=UTF-8
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<root>
<list-item>Moscow</list-item>
<list-item>London</list-item>
<list-item>Paris</list-item>
</root>
That's cool now - we have different responses for different formats with different cache keys. But there are many cases, where key should be different for different requests:
- Response format (json, xml);
- User (exact authorized user or anonymous);
- Different request meta data (request.META['REMOTE_ADDR']);
- Language (ru, en);
- Headers;
- Query params. For example,
jsonpresources needcallbackparam, which rendered in response; - Pagination. We should show different data for different pages;
- Etc...
Of course we can use custom calculate_cache_key methods and reuse them for different API methods, but we can't reuse just parts of them. For example, one method depends on user id and language, but another only on user id. How to be more DRYish? Let's see some magic:
from rest_framework_extensions.key_constructor.constructors import (
KeyConstructor
)
from rest_framework_extensions.key_constructor import bits
from your_app.utils import get_city_by_ip
class CityGetKeyConstructor(KeyConstructor):
unique_method_id = bits.UniqueMethodIdKeyBit()
format = bits.FormatKeyBit()
language = bits.LanguageKeyBit()
class CityHeadKeyConstructor(CityGetKeyConstructor):
user = bits.UserKeyBit()
request_meta = bits.RequestMetaKeyBit(params=['REMOTE_ADDR'])
class CityView(views.APIView):
@cache_response(key_func=CityGetKeyConstructor())
def get(self, request, *args, **kwargs):
cities = City.objects.all().values_list('name', flat=True)
return Response(cities)
@cache_response(key_func=CityHeadKeyConstructor())
def head(self, request, *args, **kwargs):
city = ''
user = self.request.user
if user.is_authenticated() and user.city:
city = Response(user.city.name)
if not city:
city = get_city_by_ip(request.META['REMOTE_ADDR'])
return Response(city)
Firstly, let's revise CityView.get method cache key calculation. It constructs from 3 bits:
- unique_method_id - remember that default key calculation? Here it is. Just one of the cache key bits.
headmethod has different set of bits and they can't collide withgetmethod bits. But there could be another view class with the same bits. - format - key would be different for different formats.
- language - key would be different for different languages.
The second method head has the same unique_method_id, format and language bits, buts extends with 2 more:
- user - key would be different for different users. As you can see in response calculation we use
request.userinstance. For different users we need different responses. - request_meta - key would be different for different ip addresses. As you can see in response calculation we are falling back to getting city from ip address if couldn't get it from authorized user model.
All default key bits are listed in this section.
Default key constructor
DefaultKeyConstructor is located in rest_framework_extensions.key_constructor.constructors module and constructs a key
from unique method id, request format and request language. It has next implementation:
class DefaultKeyConstructor(KeyConstructor):
unique_method_id = bits.UniqueMethodIdKeyBit()
format = bits.FormatKeyBit()
language = bits.LanguageKeyBit()
How key constructor works
Key constructor class works in the same manner as the standard django forms and key bits used like form fields. Lets go through key construction steps for DefaultKeyConstructor.
Firstly, constructor starts iteration over every key bit:
- unique_method_id
- format
- language
Then constructor gets data from every key bit calling method get_data:
- unique_method_id -
u'your_app.views.SometView.get' - format -
u'json' - language -
u'en'
Every key bit get_data method is called with next arguments:
- view_instance - view instance of decorated method
- view_method - decorated method
- request - decorated method request
- args - decorated method positional arguments
- kwargs - decorated method keyword arguments
After this it combines every key bit data to one dict, which keys are a key bits names in constructor, and values are returned data:
{
'unique_method_id': u'your_app.views.SometView.get',
'format': u'json',
'language': u'en'
}
Then constructor dumps resulting dict to json:
'{"unique_method_id": "your_app.views.SometView.get", "language": "en", "format": "json"}'
And finally compresses json with md5 and returns hash value:
'b04f8f03c89df824e0ecd25230a90f0e0ebe184cf8c0114342e9471dd2275baa'
Custom key bit
We are going to create a simple key bit which could be used in real applications with next properties:
- High read rate
- Low write rate
The task is - cache every read request and invalidate all cache data after write to any model, which used in API. This approach let us don't think about granular cache invalidation - just flush it after any model instance change/creation/deletion.
Lets create models:
# models.py
from django.db import models
class Group(models.Model):
title = models.CharField()
class Profile(models.Model):
name = models.CharField()
group = models.ForeignKey(Group)
Define serializers:
# serializers.py
from yourapp.models import Group, Profile
from rest_framework import serializers
class GroupSerializer(serializers.ModelSerializer):
class Meta:
model = Group
class ProfileSerializer(serializers.ModelSerializer):
group = GroupSerializer()
class Meta:
model = Profile
Create views:
# views.py
from yourapp.serializers import GroupSerializer, ProfileSerializer
from yourapp.models import Group, Profile
class GroupViewSet(viewsets.ReadOnlyModelViewSet):
serializer_class = GroupSerializer
queryset = Group.objects.all()
class ProfileViewSet(viewsets.ReadOnlyModelViewSet):
serializer_class = ProfileSerializer
queryset = Profile.objects.all()
And finally register views in router:
# urls.py
from yourapp.views import GroupViewSet,ProfileViewSet
router = DefaultRouter()
router.register(r'groups', GroupViewSet)
router.register(r'profiles', ProfileViewSet)
urlpatterns = router.urls
At the moment we have API, but it's not cached. Lets cache it and create our custom key bit:
# views.py
import datetime
from django.core.cache import cache
from django.utils.encoding import force_text
from yourapp.serializers import GroupSerializer, ProfileSerializer
from rest_framework_extensions.cache.decorators import cache_response
from rest_framework_extensions.key_constructor.constructors import (
DefaultKeyConstructor
)
from rest_framework_extensions.key_constructor.bits import (
KeyBitBase,
RetrieveSqlQueryKeyBit,
ListSqlQueryKeyBit,
PaginationKeyBit
)
class UpdatedAtKeyBit(KeyBitBase):
def get_data(self, **kwargs):
key = 'api_updated_at_timestamp'
value = cache.get(key, None)
if not value:
value = datetime.datetime.utcnow()
cache.set(key, value=value)
return force_text(value)
class CustomObjectKeyConstructor(DefaultKeyConstructor):
retrieve_sql = RetrieveSqlQueryKeyBit()
updated_at = UpdatedAtKeyBit()
class CustomListKeyConstructor(DefaultKeyConstructor):
list_sql = ListSqlQueryKeyBit()
pagination = PaginationKeyBit()
updated_at = UpdatedAtKeyBit()
class GroupViewSet(viewsets.ReadOnlyModelViewSet):
serializer_class = GroupSerializer
@cache_response(key_func=CustomObjectKeyConstructor())
def retrieve(self, *args, **kwargs):
return super(GroupViewSet, self).retrieve(*args, **kwargs)
@cache_response(key_func=CustomListKeyConstructor())
def list(self, *args, **kwargs):
return super(GroupViewSet, self).list(*args, **kwargs)
class ProfileViewSet(viewsets.ReadOnlyModelViewSet):
serializer_class = ProfileSerializer
@cache_response(key_func=CustomObjectKeyConstructor())
def retrieve(self, *args, **kwargs):
return super(ProfileViewSet, self).retrieve(*args, **kwargs)
@cache_response(key_func=CustomListKeyConstructor())
def list(self, *args, **kwargs):
return super(ProfileViewSet, self).list(*args, **kwargs)
As you can see UpdatedAtKeyBit just adds to key information when API models has been update last time. If there is no
information about it then new datetime will be used for key bit data.
Lets write cache invalidation. We just connect models to standard signals and change value in cache by key api_updated_at_timestamp:
# models.py
import datetime
from django.db import models
from django.db.models.signals import post_save, post_delete
def change_api_updated_at(sender=None, instance=None, *args, **kwargs):
cache.set('api_updated_at_timestamp', datetime.datetime.utcnow())
class Group(models.Model):
title = models.CharField()
class Profile(models.Model):
name = models.CharField()
group = models.ForeignKey(Group)
for model in [Group, Profile]:
post_save.connect(receiver=change_api_updated_at, sender=model)
post_delete.connect(receiver=change_api_updated_at, sender=model)
And that's it. When any model changes then value in cache by key api_updated_at_timestamp will be changed too. After this every
key constructor, that used UpdatedAtKeyBit, will construct new keys and @cache_response decorator will
cache data in new places.
Key constructor params
New in DRF-extensions 0.2.3
You can change params attribute for specific key bit by providing params dict for key constructor initialization
function. For example, here is custom key constructor, which inherits from DefaultKeyConstructor
and adds geoip key bit:
class CityKeyConstructor(DefaultKeyConstructor):
geoip = bits.RequestMetaKeyBit(params=['GEOIP_CITY'])
If you wanted to use GEOIP_COUNTRY, you could create new key constructor:
class CountryKeyConstructor(DefaultKeyConstructor):
geoip = bits.RequestMetaKeyBit(params=['GEOIP_COUNTRY'])
But there is another way. You can send params in key constructor initialization method. This is the dict attribute, where
keys are bit names and values are bit params attribute value (look at CountryView):
class CityKeyConstructor(DefaultKeyConstructor):
geoip = bits.RequestMetaKeyBit(params=['GEOIP_COUNTRY'])
class CityView(views.APIView):
@cache_response(key_func=CityKeyConstructor())
def get(self, request, *args, **kwargs):
...
class CountryView(views.APIView):
@cache_response(key_func=CityKeyConstructor(
params={'geoip': ['GEOIP_COUNTRY']}
))
def get(self, request, *args, **kwargs):
...
If there is no item provided for key bit then default key bit params value will be used.
Constructor's bits list
You can dynamically change key constructor's bits list in initialization method by altering bits attribute:
class CustomKeyConstructor(DefaultKeyConstructor):
def __init__(self, *args, **kwargs):
super(CustomKeyConstructor, self).__init__(*args, **kwargs)
self.bits['geoip'] = bits.RequestMetaKeyBit(
params=['GEOIP_CITY']
)
Default key bits
Out of the box DRF-extensions has some basic key bits. They are all located in rest_framework_extensions.key_constructor.bits module.
FormatKeyBit
Retrieves format info from request. Usage example:
class MyKeyConstructor(KeyConstructor):
format = FormatKeyBit()
LanguageKeyBit
Retrieves active language for request. Usage example:
class MyKeyConstructor(KeyConstructor):
user = LanguageKeyBit()
UserKeyBit
Retrieves user id from request. If it is anonymous then returnes "anonymous" string. Usage example:
class MyKeyConstructor(KeyConstructor):
user = UserKeyBit()
RequestMetaKeyBit
Retrieves data from request.META dict. Usage example:
class MyKeyConstructor(KeyConstructor):
ip_address_and_user_agent = bits.RequestMetaKeyBit(
['REMOTE_ADDR', 'HTTP_USER_AGENT']
)
You can use * for retrieving all meta data to key bit:
New in DRF-extensions 0.2.7
class MyKeyConstructor(KeyConstructor):
all_request_meta = bits.RequestMetaKeyBit('*')
HeadersKeyBit
Same as RequestMetaKeyBit retrieves data from request.META dict.
The difference is that HeadersKeyBit allows to use normal header names:
class MyKeyConstructor(KeyConstructor):
user_agent_and_geobase_id = bits.HeadersKeyBit(
['user-agent', 'x-geobase-id']
)
# will process request.META['HTTP_USER_AGENT'] and
# request.META['HTTP_X_GEOBASE_ID']
You can use * for retrieving all headers to key bit:
New in DRF-extensions 0.2.7
class MyKeyConstructor(KeyConstructor):
all_headers = bits.HeadersKeyBit('*')
ArgsKeyBit
New in DRF-extensions 0.2.7
Retrieves data from the view's positional arguments.
A list of position indices can be passed to indicate which arguments to use. For retrieving all arguments you can use * which is also the default value:
class MyKeyConstructor(KeyConstructor):
args = bits.ArgsKeyBit() # will use all positional arguments
class MyKeyConstructor(KeyConstructor):
args = bits.ArgsKeyBit('*') # same as above
class MyKeyConstructor(KeyConstructor):
args = bits.ArgsKeyBit([0, 2])
KwargsKeyBit
New in DRF-extensions 0.2.7
Retrieves data from the views's keyword arguments.
A list of keyword argument names can be passed to indicate which kwargs to use. For retrieving all kwargs you can use * which is also the default value:
class MyKeyConstructor(KeyConstructor):
kwargs = bits.KwargsKeyBit() # will use all keyword arguments
class MyKeyConstructor(KeyConstructor):
kwargs = bits.KwargsKeyBit('*') # same as above
class MyKeyConstructor(KeyConstructor):
kwargs = bits.KwargsKeyBit(['user_id', 'city'])
QueryParamsKeyBit
Retrieves data from request.GET dict. Usage example:
class MyKeyConstructor(KeyConstructor):
part_and_callback = bits.QueryParamsKeyBit(
['part', 'callback']
)
You can use * for retrieving all query params to key bit which is also the default value:
New in DRF-extensions 0.2.7
class MyKeyConstructor(KeyConstructor):
all_query_params = bits.QueryParamsKeyBit('*') # all qs parameters
class MyKeyConstructor(KeyConstructor):
all_query_params = bits.QueryParamsKeyBit() # same as above
PaginationKeyBit
Inherits from QueryParamsKeyBit and returns data from used pagination params.
class MyKeyConstructor(KeyConstructor):
pagination = bits.PaginationKeyBit()
ListSqlQueryKeyBit
Retrieves sql query for view.filter_queryset(view.get_queryset()) filtering.
class MyKeyConstructor(KeyConstructor):
list_sql_query = bits.ListSqlQueryKeyBit()
RetrieveSqlQueryKeyBit
Retrieves sql query for retrieving exact object.
class MyKeyConstructor(KeyConstructor):
retrieve_sql_query = bits.RetrieveSqlQueryKeyBit()
UniqueViewIdKeyBit
Combines data about view module and view class name.
class MyKeyConstructor(KeyConstructor):
unique_view_id = bits.UniqueViewIdKeyBit()
UniqueMethodIdKeyBit
Combines data about view module, view class name and view method name.
class MyKeyConstructor(KeyConstructor):
unique_view_id = bits.UniqueMethodIdKeyBit()
Conditional requests
This documentation section uses information from RESTful Web Services Cookbook 10-th chapter.
Conditional HTTP request allows API clients to accomplish 2 goals:
- Conditional HTTP GET saves client and server time and bandwidth.
- For unsafe requests such as PUT, POST, and DELETE, conditional requests provide concurrency control.
HTTP Etag
An ETag or entity tag, is part of HTTP, the protocol for the World Wide Web. It is one of several mechanisms that HTTP provides for web cache validation, and which allows a client to make conditional requests. - Wikipedia
For etag calculation and conditional request processing you should use rest_framework_extensions.etag.decorators.etag decorator. It's similar to native django decorator.
from rest_framework_extensions.etag.decorators import etag
class CityView(views.APIView):
@etag()
def get(self, request, *args, **kwargs):
cities = City.objects.all().values_list('name', flat=True)
return Response(cities)
By default @etag would calculate header value with the same algorithm as cache key default calculation performs.
# Request
GET /cities/ HTTP/1.1
Accept: application/json
# Response
HTTP/1.1 200 OK
Content-Type: application/json; charset=UTF-8
ETag: "e7b50490dc546d116635a14cfa58110306dd6c5434146b6740ec08bf0a78f9a2"
['Moscow', 'London', 'Paris']
You can define custom function for Etag value calculation with etag_func argument:
from rest_framework_extensions.etag.decorators import etag
def calculate_etag(view_instance, view_method,
request, args, kwargs):
return '.'.join([
len(args),
len(kwargs)
])
class CityView(views.APIView):
@etag(etag_func=calculate_etag)
def get(self, request, *args, **kwargs):
cities = City.objects.all().values_list('name', flat=True)
return Response(cities)
You can implement view method and use it for Etag calculation by specifying etag_func argument as string:
from rest_framework_extensions.etag.decorators import etag
class CityView(views.APIView):
@etag(etag_func='calculate_etag_from_method')
def get(self, request, *args, **kwargs):
cities = City.objects.all().values_list('name', flat=True)
return Response(cities)
def calculate_etag_from_method(self, view_instance, view_method,
request, args, kwargs):
return '.'.join([
len(args),
len(kwargs)
])
Etag calculation function will be called with next parameters:
- view_instance - view instance of decorated method
- view_method - decorated method
- request - decorated method request
- args - decorated method positional arguments
- kwargs - decorated method keyword arguments
Default etag function
If @etag decorator used without etag_func argument then default etag function will be used. You can change this function in
settings:
REST_FRAMEWORK_EXTENSIONS = {
'DEFAULT_ETAG_FUNC':
'rest_framework_extensions.utils.default_etag_func'
}
default_etag_func uses DefaultKeyConstructor as a base for etag calculation.
Usage with caching
As you can see @etag and @cache_response decorators has similar key calculation approaches. They both can take key from simple callable function. And more then this - in many cases they share the same calculation logic. In the next example we use both decorators, which share one calculation function:
from rest_framework_extensions.etag.decorators import etag
from rest_framework_extensions.cache.decorators import cache_response
from rest_framework_extensions.key_constructor import bits
from rest_framework_extensions.key_constructor.constructors import (
KeyConstructor
)
class CityGetKeyConstructor(KeyConstructor):
format = bits.FormatKeyBit()
language = bits.LanguageKeyBit()
class CityView(views.APIView):
key_constructor_func = CityGetKeyConstructor()
@etag(key_constructor_func)
@cache_response(key_func=key_constructor_func)
def get(self, request, *args, **kwargs):
cities = City.objects.all().values_list('name', flat=True)
return Response(cities)
Note the decorators order. First goes @etag and after goes @cache_response. We want firstly perform conditional processing and after it response processing.
There is one more point for it. If conditional processing didn't fail then key_constructor_func would be called again in @cache_response.
But in most cases first calculation is enough. To accomplish this goal you could use KeyConstructor initial argument memoize_for_request:
>>> key_constructor_func = CityGetKeyConstructor(memoize_for_request=True)
>>> request1, request1 = 'request1', 'request2'
>>> print key_constructor_func(request=request1) # full calculation
request1-key
>>> print key_constructor_func(request=request1) # data from cache
request1-key
>>> print key_constructor_func(request=request2) # full calculation
request2-key
>>> print key_constructor_func(request=request2) # data from cache
request2-key
By default memoize_for_request is False, but you can change it in settings:
REST_FRAMEWORK_EXTENSIONS = {
'DEFAULT_KEY_CONSTRUCTOR_MEMOIZE_FOR_REQUEST': True
}
It's important to note that this memoization is thread safe.
Saving time and bandwith
When a server returns ETag header, you should store it along with the representation data on the client.
When making GET and HEAD requests for the same resource in the future, include the If-None-Match header
to make these requests "conditional".
For example, retrieve all cities:
# Request
GET /cities/ HTTP/1.1
Accept: application/json
# Response
HTTP/1.1 200 OK
Content-Type: application/json; charset=UTF-8
ETag: "some_etag_value"
['Moscow', 'London', 'Paris']
If you make same request with If-None-Match and there is the cached value for this request,
then server will respond with 304 status code without body data.
# Request
GET /cities/ HTTP/1.1
Accept: application/json
If-None-Match: some_etag_value
# Response
HTTP/1.1 304 NOT MODIFIED
Content-Type: application/json; charset=UTF-8
Etag: "some_etag_value"
After this response you can use existing cities data on the client.
Concurrency control
Concurrency control ensures the correct processing of data under concurrent operations by clients. There are two ways to implement concurrency control:
- Pessimistic concurrency control. In this model, the client gets a lock, obtains the current state of the resource, makes modifications, and then releases the lock. During this process, the server prevents other clients from acquiring a lock on the same resource. Relational databases operate in this manner.
- Optimistic concurrency control. In this model, the client first gets a token. Instead of obtaining a lock, the client attempts a write operation with the token included in the request. The operation succeeds if the token is still valid and fails otherwise.
HTTP, being a stateless application control, is designed for optimistic concurrency control.
PUT
|
+-------------+
| Etag |
| supplied? |
+-------------+
| |
Yes No
| |
+--------------------+ +-----------------------+
| Do preconditions | | Does the |
| match? | | resource exist? |
+--------------------+ +-----------------------+
| | | |
Yes No Yes No
| | | |
+--------------+ +--------------------+ +-------------+ |
| Update the | | 412 Precondition | | 403 | |
| resource | | failed | | Forbidden | |
+--------------+ +--------------------+ +-------------+ |
|
+-----------------------+
| Can clients |
| create resources |
+-----------------------+
| |
Yes No
| |
+-----------+ +-------------+
| 201 | | 404 |
| Created | | Not Found |
+-----------+ +-------------+
Delete:
DELETE
|
+-------------+
| Etag |
| supplied? |
+-------------+
| |
Yes No
| |
+--------------------+ +-------------+
| Do preconditions | | 403 |
| match? | | Forbidden |
+--------------------+ +-------------+
| |
Yes No
| |
+--------------+ +--------------------+
| Delete the | | 412 Precondition |
| resource | | failed |
+--------------+ +--------------------+
Here is example of implementation for all CRUD methods (except create, because it doesn't need concurrency control)
wrapped with etag decorator:
from rest_framework.viewsets import ModelViewSet
from rest_framework_extensions.key_constructor import bits
from rest_framework_extensions.key_constructor.constructors import (
KeyConstructor
)
from your_app.models import City
from your_app.key_bits import UpdatedAtKeyBit
class CityListKeyConstructor(KeyConstructor):
format = bits.FormatKeyBit()
language = bits.LanguageKeyBit()
pagination = bits.PaginationKeyBit()
list_sql_query = bits.ListSqlQueryKeyBit()
unique_view_id = bits.UniqueViewIdKeyBit()
class CityDetailKeyConstructor(KeyConstructor):
format = bits.FormatKeyBit()
language = bits.LanguageKeyBit()
retrieve_sql_query = bits.RetrieveSqlQueryKeyBit()
unique_view_id = bits.UniqueViewIdKeyBit()
updated_at = UpdatedAtKeyBit()
class CityViewSet(ModelViewSet):
list_key_func = CityListKeyConstructor(
memoize_for_request=True
)
obj_key_func = CityDetailKeyConstructor(
memoize_for_request=True
)
@etag(list_key_func)
@cache_response(key_func=list_key_func)
def list(self, request, *args, **kwargs):
return super(CityViewSet, self).list(request, *args, **kwargs)
@etag(obj_key_func)
@cache_response(key_func=obj_key_func)
def retrieve(self, request, *args, **kwargs):
return super(CityViewSet, self).retrieve(request, *args, **kwargs)
@etag(obj_key_func)
def update(self, request, *args, **kwargs):
return super(CityViewSet, self).update(request, *args, **kwargs)
@etag(obj_key_func)
def destroy(self, request, *args, **kwargs):
return super(CityViewSet, self).destroy(request, *args, **kwargs)
Etag for unsafe methods
From previous section you could see that unsafe methods, such update (PUT, PATCH) or destroy (DELETE), have the same @etag
decorator wrapping manner as the safe methods.
But every unsafe method has one distinction from safe method - it changes the data
which could be used for Etag calculation. In our case it is UpdatedAtKeyBit. It means that we should calculate Etag:
- Before building response - for
If-MatchandIf-None-Matchconditions validation - After building response (if necessary) - for clients
@etag decorator has special attribute rebuild_after_method_evaluation, which by default is False.
If you specify rebuild_after_method_evaluation as True then Etag will be rebuilt after method evaluation:
class CityViewSet(ModelViewSet):
...
@etag(obj_key_func, rebuild_after_method_evaluation=True)
def update(self, request, *args, **kwargs):
return super(CityViewSet, self).update(request, *args, **kwargs)
@etag(obj_key_func)
def destroy(self, request, *args, **kwargs):
return super(CityViewSet, self).destroy(request, *args, **kwargs)
# Request
PUT /cities/1/ HTTP/1.1
Accept: application/json
{"name": "London"}
# Response
HTTP/1.1 200 OK
Content-Type: application/json; charset=UTF-8
ETag: "4e63ef056f47270272b96523f51ad938b5ea141024b767880eac047d10a0b339"
{
id: 1,
name: "London"
}
As you can see we didn't specify rebuild_after_method_evaluation for destroy method. That is because there is no
sense to use returned Etag value on clients if object deletion already performed.
With rebuild_after_method_evaluation parameter Etag calculation for PUT/PATCH method would look like:
+--------------+
| Request |
+--------------+
|
+--------------------------+
| Calculate Etag |
| for condition matching |
+--------------------------+
|
+--------------------+
| Do preconditions |
| match? |
+--------------------+
| |
Yes No
| |
+--------------+ +--------------------+
| Update the | | 412 Precondition |
| resource | | failed |
+--------------+ +--------------------+
|
+--------------------+
| Calculate Etag |
| again and add it |
| to response |
+--------------------+
|
+------------+
| Return |
| response |
+------------+
If-None-Match example for DELETE method:
# Request
DELETE /cities/1/ HTTP/1.1
Accept: application/json
If-None-Match: some_etag_value
# Response
HTTP/1.1 304 NOT MODIFIED
Content-Type: application/json; charset=UTF-8
Etag: "some_etag_value"
If-Match example for DELETE method:
# Request
DELETE /cities/1/ HTTP/1.1
Accept: application/json
If-Match: another_etag_value
# Response
HTTP/1.1 412 PRECONDITION FAILED
Content-Type: application/json; charset=UTF-8
Etag: "some_etag_value"
ETAGMixin
It is common to process etags for standard viewset
retrieve, list, update and destroy methods.
That is why ETAGMixin exists. Just mix it into viewset
implementation and those methods will use functions, defined in REST_FRAMEWORK_EXTENSIONS settings:
- "DEFAULT_OBJECT_ETAG_FUNC" for
retrieve,updateanddestroymethods - "DEFAULT_LIST_ETAG_FUNC" for
listmethod
By default those functions are using DefaultKeyConstructor and extends it:
- With
RetrieveSqlQueryKeyBitfor "DEFAULT_OBJECT_ETAG_FUNC" - With
ListSqlQueryKeyBitandPaginationKeyBitfor "DEFAULT_LIST_ETAG_FUNC"
You can change those settings for custom etag generation:
REST_FRAMEWORK_EXTENSIONS = {
'DEFAULT_OBJECT_ETAG_FUNC':
'rest_framework_extensions.utils.default_object_etag_func',
'DEFAULT_LIST_ETAG_FUNC':
'rest_framework_extensions.utils.default_list_etag_func',
}
Mixin example usage:
from myapps.serializers import UserSerializer
from rest_framework_extensions.etag.mixins import ETAGMixin
class UserViewSet(ETAGMixin, viewsets.ModelViewSet):
serializer_class = UserSerializer
You can change etag function by providing object_etag_func or
list_etag_func methods in view class:
class UserViewSet(ETAGMixin, viewsets.ModelViewSet):
serializer_class = UserSerializer
def object_etag_func(self, **kwargs):
return 'some key for object'
def list_etag_func(self, **kwargs):
return 'some key for list'
Ofcourse you can use custom key constructor:
from yourapp.key_constructors import (
CustomObjectKeyConstructor,
CustomListKeyConstructor,
)
class UserViewSet(ETAGMixin, viewsets.ModelViewSet):
serializer_class = UserSerializer
object_etag_func = CustomObjectKeyConstructor()
list_etag_func = CustomListKeyConstructor()
It is important to note that etags for unsafe method update is processed with parameter
rebuild_after_method_evaluation equals True. You can read why from this section.
There are other mixins for more granular Etag calculation in rest_framework_extensions.etag.mixins module:
- ReadOnlyETAGMixin - only for
retrieveandlistmethods - RetrieveETAGMixin - only for
retrievemethod - ListETAGMixin - only for
listmethod - DestroyETAGMixin - only for
destroymethod - UpdateETAGMixin - only for
updatemethod
Gzipped ETags
If you use GZipMiddleware
and your client accepts Gzipped response, then you should return different ETags for compressed and not compressed responses.
That's what GZipMiddleware does by default while processing response -
it adds ;gzip postfix to ETag response header if client requests compressed response.
Lets see it in example. First request without compression:
# Request
GET /cities/ HTTP/1.1
Accept: application/json
# Response
HTTP/1.1 200 OK
Content-Type: application/json; charset=UTF-8
ETag: "e7b50490dc"
['Moscow', 'London', 'Paris']
Second request with compression:
# Request
GET /cities/ HTTP/1.1
Accept: application/json
Accept-Encoding: gzip
# Response
HTTP/1.1 200 OK
Content-Type: application/json
Content-Length: 675
Content-Encoding: gzip
ETag: "e7b50490dc;gzip"
wS?n?0?_%o?cc?Ҫ?Eʒ?Cժʻ?a\1?a?^T*7q<>[Nvh?[?^9?x:/Ms?79?Fd/???ۦjES?ڽ?&??c%^?C[K۲%N?w{?졭2?m?}?Q&Egz??
As you can see there is ;gzip postfix in ETag response header.
That's ok but there is one caveat - drf-extension doesn't know how you post-processed calculated ETag value.
And your clients could have next problem with conditional request:
- Client sends request to retrieve compressed data about cities to
/cities/ - DRF-extensions decorator calculates ETag header for response equals, for example,
123 GZipMiddlewareadds;gzippostfix to ETag header response, and now it equals123;gzip- Client retrieves response with ETag equals
123;gzip - Client again makes request to retrieve compressed data about cities,
but now it's conditional request with
If-None-Matchheader equals123;gzip - DRF-extensions decorator calculates ETag value for processing conditional request.
But it doesn't know, that
GZipMiddlewareadded;gzippostfix for previous response. DRF-extensions decorator calculates ETag equals123, compares it with123;gzipand returns response with status code 200, because123!=123;gzip
You can solve this problem by stripping ;gzip postfix on client side.
But there are so many libraries that just magically uses ETag response header without allowing to
pre-process conditional requests (for example, browser). If that's you case then you could add custom middleware which removes ;gzip
postfix from header:
# yourapp/middleware.py
class RemoveEtagGzipPostfix(object):
def process_response(self, request, response):
if response.has_header('ETag') and response['ETag'][-6:] == ';gzip"':
response['ETag'] = response['ETag'][:-6] + '"'
return response
Don't forget to add this middleware in your settings before GZipMiddleware:
# settings.py
MIDDLEWARE_CLASSES = (
...
'yourapp.RemoveEtagGzipPostfix',
'django.middleware.gzip.GZipMiddleware',
'django.middleware.common.CommonMiddleware',
...
)
Bulk operations
New in DRF-extensions 0.2.4
Bulk operations allows you to perform operations over set of objects with one request. There is third-party package django-rest-framework-bulk with support for all CRUD methods, but it iterates over every instance in bulk operation, serializes it and only after that executes operation.
It plays nice with create or update
operations, but becomes unacceptable with partial update and delete methods over the QuerySet. Such kind of
QuerySet could contain thousands of objects and should be performed as database query over the set at once.
Please note - DRF-extensions bulk operations applies over QuerySet, not over instances. It means that:
- No serializer's
saveordeletemethods would be called - No viewset's
pre_save,post_save,pre_deleteandpost_deletewould be called - No model signals would be called
Safety
Bulk operations are very dangerous in case of making stupid mistakes. For example you wanted to delete user instance
with DELETE request from your client application.
# Request
DELETE /users/1/ HTTP/1.1
Accept: application/json
# Response
HTTP/1.1 204 NO CONTENT
Content-Type: application/json; charset=UTF-8
That was example of successful deletion. But there is the common situation when client could not get instance id and sends request to endpoint without it:
# Request
DELETE /users/ HTTP/1.1
Accept: application/json
# Response
HTTP/1.1 204 NO CONTENT
Content-Type: application/json; charset=UTF-8
If you used bulk destroy mixin for /users/ endpoint, then all your user objects would be deleted.
To protect from such confusions DRF-extensions asks you to send X-BULK-OPERATION header
for every bulk operation request. With this protection previous example would not delete any user instances:
# Request
DELETE /users/ HTTP/1.1
Accept: application/json
# Response
HTTP/1.1 400 BAD REQUEST
Content-Type: application/json; charset=UTF-8
{
"detail": "Header 'X-BULK-OPERATION' should be provided for bulk operation."
}
With X-BULK-OPERATION header it works as expected - deletes all user instances:
# Request
DELETE /users/ HTTP/1.1
Accept: application/json
X-BULK-OPERATION: true
# Response
HTTP/1.1 204 NO CONTENT
Content-Type: application/json; charset=UTF-8
You can change bulk operation header name in settings:
REST_FRAMEWORK_EXTENSIONS = {
'DEFAULT_BULK_OPERATION_HEADER_NAME': 'X-CUSTOM-BULK-OPERATION'
}
To turn off protection you can set DEFAULT_BULK_OPERATION_HEADER_NAME as None.
Bulk destroy
This mixin allows you to delete many instances with one DELETE request.
from rest_framework_extensions.mixins import ListDestroyModelMixin
class UserViewSet(ListDestroyModelMixin, viewsets.ModelViewSet):
serializer_class = UserSerializer
Bulk destroy example - delete all users which emails ends with gmail.com:
# Request
DELETE /users/?email__endswith=gmail.com HTTP/1.1
Accept: application/json
X-BULK-OPERATION: true
# Response
HTTP/1.1 204 NO CONTENT
Content-Type: application/json; charset=UTF-8
Bulk update
This mixin allows you to update many instances with one PATCH request. Note, that this mixin works only with partial update.
from rest_framework_extensions.mixins import ListUpdateModelMixin
class UserViewSet(ListUpdateModelMixin, viewsets.ModelViewSet):
serializer_class = UserSerializer
Bulk partial update example - set email_provider of every user as google, if it's email ends with gmail.com:
# Request
PATCH /users/?email__endswith=gmail.com HTTP/1.1
Accept: application/json
X-BULK-OPERATION: true
{"email_provider": "google"}
# Response
HTTP/1.1 204 NO CONTENT
Content-Type: application/json; charset=UTF-8
Settings
DRF-extesions follows Django Rest Framework approach in settings implementation.
In Django Rest Framework you specify custom settings by changing REST_FRAMEWORK variable in settings file:
REST_FRAMEWORK = {
'DEFAULT_RENDERER_CLASSES': (
'rest_framework.renderers.YAMLRenderer',
),
'DEFAULT_PARSER_CLASSES': (
'rest_framework.parsers.YAMLParser',
)
}
In DRF-extesions there is a magic variable too called REST_FRAMEWORK_EXTENSIONS:
REST_FRAMEWORK_EXTENSIONS = {
'DEFAULT_CACHE_RESPONSE_TIMEOUT': 60 * 15
}
Accessing settings
If you need to access the values of DRF-exteinsions API settings in your project, you should use the extensions_api_settings object. For example:
from rest_framework_extensions.settings import extensions_api_settings
print extensions_api_settings.DEFAULT_CACHE_RESPONSE_TIMEOUT
Release notes
You can read about versioning, deprecation policy and upgrading from Django REST framework documentation.
0.3.1
Sep 29, 2016
- Fix
schema_urlsExtendedDefaultRoutercompatability issue introduced by DRF 3.4.0 - Removed deprecated @action() and @link() decorators
- DRF 3.4.x compatibility
- Django 1.9 and 1.10 compatibility
0.2.8
Sep 21, 2015
- Fixed
ListSqlQueryKeyBitandRetrieveSqlQueryKeyBitproblems withEmptyResultSetexception (pull). - All items are now by default in ArgsKeyBit, KwargsKeyBit and QueryParamsKeyBit
- Respect parent lookup regex value for Nested routes (issue).
0.2.7
Feb 2, 2015
- DRF 3.x compatibility
- DetailSerializerMixin is now compatible with DRF 3.0
- Added ArgsKeyBit
- Added KwargsKeyBit
- Fixed PartialUpdateSerializerMixin compatibility issue with DRF 3.x
- Added cache_errors attribute for switching caching for error responses
- Added ability to specify usage of all items for RequestMetaKeyBit, HeadersKeyBit
and QueryParamsKeyBit providing
params='*' - Collection level controllers is in pending deprecation
- Controller endpoint name is in pending deprecation
0.2.6
Sep 9, 2014
- Usage of django.core.cache.caches for django >= 1.7
- Documented ETag usage with GZipMiddleware
- Fixed
ListSqlQueryKeyBitandRetrieveSqlQueryKeyBitproblems withEmptyResultSet. - Fixed cache response compatibility issue with DRF 2.4.x
0.2.5
July 9, 2014
0.2.4
July 7, 2014
- Added tests for Django REST Framework 2.3.14
- Added Bulk operations
- Fixed extended routers compatibility issue with default controller decorators
- Documented pluggable router mixins
- Added nested routes
0.2.3
Apr. 25, 2014
- Added PartialUpdateSerializerMixin
- Added Key constructor params
- Documented dynamically constructor's bits list altering
- Added ability to use a specific cache for
@cache_responsedecorator
0.2.2
Mar. 23, 2014
- Added PaginateByMaxMixin
- Added ExtenedDjangoObjectPermissions
- Added tests for django 1.7
0.2.1
Feb. 1, 2014
- Rewritten tests to nose and tox
- New tests directory structure
- Rewritten HTTP documentation requests examples into more raw manner
- Added trailing_slash on extended routers for Django Rest Framework versions
>=2.3.6(which supports this feature) - Added caching
- Added key constructor
- Added conditional requests with Etag calculation
- Added Cache/ETAG mixins
- Added CacheResponseMixin
- Added ETAGMixin
- Documented ResourceUriField
- Documented settings customization
0.2
Nov. 5, 2013
- Moved docs from readme to github pages
- Docs generation with Backdoc