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serializers.py
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serializers.py
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"""
Serializers and ModelSerializers are similar to Forms and ModelForms.
Unlike forms, they are not constrained to dealing with HTML output, and
form encoded input.
Serialization in REST framework is a two-phase process:
1. Serializers marshal between complex types like model instances, and
python primitives.
2. The process of marshalling between python primitives and request and
response content is handled by parsers and renderers.
"""
import copy
import inspect
import traceback
from collections import OrderedDict, defaultdict
from collections.abc import Mapping
from django.core.exceptions import FieldDoesNotExist, ImproperlyConfigured
from django.core.exceptions import ValidationError as DjangoValidationError
from django.db import models
from django.db.models.fields import Field as DjangoModelField
from django.utils import timezone
from django.utils.functional import cached_property
from django.utils.translation import gettext_lazy as _
from rest_framework.compat import postgres_fields
from rest_framework.exceptions import ErrorDetail, ValidationError
from rest_framework.fields import get_error_detail, set_value
from rest_framework.settings import api_settings
from rest_framework.utils import html, model_meta, representation
from rest_framework.utils.field_mapping import (
ClassLookupDict, get_field_kwargs, get_nested_relation_kwargs,
get_relation_kwargs, get_url_kwargs
)
from rest_framework.utils.serializer_helpers import (
BindingDict, BoundField, JSONBoundField, NestedBoundField, ReturnDict,
ReturnList
)
from rest_framework.validators import (
UniqueForDateValidator, UniqueForMonthValidator, UniqueForYearValidator,
UniqueTogetherValidator
)
# Note: We do the following so that users of the framework can use this style:
#
# example_field = serializers.CharField(...)
#
# This helps keep the separation between model fields, form fields, and
# serializer fields more explicit.
from rest_framework.fields import ( # NOQA # isort:skip
BooleanField, CharField, ChoiceField, DateField, DateTimeField, DecimalField,
DictField, DurationField, EmailField, Field, FileField, FilePathField, FloatField,
HiddenField, HStoreField, IPAddressField, ImageField, IntegerField, JSONField,
ListField, ModelField, MultipleChoiceField, NullBooleanField, ReadOnlyField,
RegexField, SerializerMethodField, SlugField, TimeField, URLField, UUIDField,
)
from rest_framework.relations import ( # NOQA # isort:skip
HyperlinkedIdentityField, HyperlinkedRelatedField, ManyRelatedField,
PrimaryKeyRelatedField, RelatedField, SlugRelatedField, StringRelatedField,
)
# Non-field imports, but public API
from rest_framework.fields import ( # NOQA # isort:skip
CreateOnlyDefault, CurrentUserDefault, SkipField, empty
)
from rest_framework.relations import Hyperlink, PKOnlyObject # NOQA # isort:skip
# We assume that 'validators' are intended for the child serializer,
# rather than the parent serializer.
LIST_SERIALIZER_KWARGS = (
'read_only', 'write_only', 'required', 'default', 'initial', 'source',
'label', 'help_text', 'style', 'error_messages', 'allow_empty',
'instance', 'data', 'partial', 'context', 'allow_null'
)
ALL_FIELDS = '__all__'
# BaseSerializer
# --------------
class BaseSerializer(Field):
"""
The BaseSerializer class provides a minimal class which may be used
for writing custom serializer implementations.
Note that we strongly restrict the ordering of operations/properties
that may be used on the serializer in order to enforce correct usage.
In particular, if a `data=` argument is passed then:
.is_valid() - Available.
.initial_data - Available.
.validated_data - Only available after calling `is_valid()`
.errors - Only available after calling `is_valid()`
.data - Only available after calling `is_valid()`
If a `data=` argument is not passed then:
.is_valid() - Not available.
.initial_data - Not available.
.validated_data - Not available.
.errors - Not available.
.data - Available.
"""
def __init__(self, instance=None, data=empty, **kwargs):
self.instance = instance
if data is not empty:
self.initial_data = data
self.partial = kwargs.pop('partial', False)
self._context = kwargs.pop('context', {})
kwargs.pop('many', None)
super().__init__(**kwargs)
def __new__(cls, *args, **kwargs):
# We override this method in order to automatically create
# `ListSerializer` classes instead when `many=True` is set.
if kwargs.pop('many', False):
return cls.many_init(*args, **kwargs)
return super().__new__(cls, *args, **kwargs)
# Allow type checkers to make serializers generic.
def __class_getitem__(cls, *args, **kwargs):
return cls
@classmethod
def many_init(cls, *args, **kwargs):
"""
This method implements the creation of a `ListSerializer` parent
class when `many=True` is used. You can customize it if you need to
control which keyword arguments are passed to the parent, and
which are passed to the child.
Note that we're over-cautious in passing most arguments to both parent
and child classes in order to try to cover the general case. If you're
overriding this method you'll probably want something much simpler, eg:
@classmethod
def many_init(cls, *args, **kwargs):
kwargs['child'] = cls()
return CustomListSerializer(*args, **kwargs)
"""
allow_empty = kwargs.pop('allow_empty', None)
child_serializer = cls(*args, **kwargs)
list_kwargs = {
'child': child_serializer,
}
if allow_empty is not None:
list_kwargs['allow_empty'] = allow_empty
list_kwargs.update({
key: value for key, value in kwargs.items()
if key in LIST_SERIALIZER_KWARGS
})
meta = getattr(cls, 'Meta', None)
list_serializer_class = getattr(meta, 'list_serializer_class', ListSerializer)
return list_serializer_class(*args, **list_kwargs)
def to_internal_value(self, data):
raise NotImplementedError('`to_internal_value()` must be implemented.')
def to_representation(self, instance):
raise NotImplementedError('`to_representation()` must be implemented.')
def update(self, instance, validated_data):
raise NotImplementedError('`update()` must be implemented.')
def create(self, validated_data):
raise NotImplementedError('`create()` must be implemented.')
def save(self, **kwargs):
assert hasattr(self, '_errors'), (
'You must call `.is_valid()` before calling `.save()`.'
)
assert not self.errors, (
'You cannot call `.save()` on a serializer with invalid data.'
)
# Guard against incorrect use of `serializer.save(commit=False)`
assert 'commit' not in kwargs, (
"'commit' is not a valid keyword argument to the 'save()' method. "
"If you need to access data before committing to the database then "
"inspect 'serializer.validated_data' instead. "
"You can also pass additional keyword arguments to 'save()' if you "
"need to set extra attributes on the saved model instance. "
"For example: 'serializer.save(owner=request.user)'.'"
)
assert not hasattr(self, '_data'), (
"You cannot call `.save()` after accessing `serializer.data`."
"If you need to access data before committing to the database then "
"inspect 'serializer.validated_data' instead. "
)
validated_data = {**self.validated_data, **kwargs}
if self.instance is not None:
self.instance = self.update(self.instance, validated_data)
assert self.instance is not None, (
'`update()` did not return an object instance.'
)
else:
self.instance = self.create(validated_data)
assert self.instance is not None, (
'`create()` did not return an object instance.'
)
return self.instance
def is_valid(self, raise_exception=False):
assert hasattr(self, 'initial_data'), (
'Cannot call `.is_valid()` as no `data=` keyword argument was '
'passed when instantiating the serializer instance.'
)
if not hasattr(self, '_validated_data'):
try:
self._validated_data = self.run_validation(self.initial_data)
except ValidationError as exc:
self._validated_data = {}
self._errors = exc.detail
else:
self._errors = {}
if self._errors and raise_exception:
raise ValidationError(self.errors)
return not bool(self._errors)
@property
def data(self):
if hasattr(self, 'initial_data') and not hasattr(self, '_validated_data'):
msg = (
'When a serializer is passed a `data` keyword argument you '
'must call `.is_valid()` before attempting to access the '
'serialized `.data` representation.\n'
'You should either call `.is_valid()` first, '
'or access `.initial_data` instead.'
)
raise AssertionError(msg)
if not hasattr(self, '_data'):
if self.instance is not None and not getattr(self, '_errors', None):
self._data = self.to_representation(self.instance)
elif hasattr(self, '_validated_data') and not getattr(self, '_errors', None):
self._data = self.to_representation(self.validated_data)
else:
self._data = self.get_initial()
return self._data
@property
def errors(self):
if not hasattr(self, '_errors'):
msg = 'You must call `.is_valid()` before accessing `.errors`.'
raise AssertionError(msg)
return self._errors
@property
def validated_data(self):
if not hasattr(self, '_validated_data'):
msg = 'You must call `.is_valid()` before accessing `.validated_data`.'
raise AssertionError(msg)
return self._validated_data
# Serializer & ListSerializer classes
# -----------------------------------
class SerializerMetaclass(type):
"""
This metaclass sets a dictionary named `_declared_fields` on the class.
Any instances of `Field` included as attributes on either the class
or on any of its superclasses will be include in the
`_declared_fields` dictionary.
"""
@classmethod
def _get_declared_fields(cls, bases, attrs):
fields = [(field_name, attrs.pop(field_name))
for field_name, obj in list(attrs.items())
if isinstance(obj, Field)]
fields.sort(key=lambda x: x[1]._creation_counter)
# Ensures a base class field doesn't override cls attrs, and maintains
# field precedence when inheriting multiple parents. e.g. if there is a
# class C(A, B), and A and B both define 'field', use 'field' from A.
known = set(attrs)
def visit(name):
known.add(name)
return name
base_fields = [
(visit(name), f)
for base in bases if hasattr(base, '_declared_fields')
for name, f in base._declared_fields.items() if name not in known
]
return OrderedDict(base_fields + fields)
def __new__(cls, name, bases, attrs):
attrs['_declared_fields'] = cls._get_declared_fields(bases, attrs)
return super().__new__(cls, name, bases, attrs)
def as_serializer_error(exc):
assert isinstance(exc, (ValidationError, DjangoValidationError))
if isinstance(exc, DjangoValidationError):
detail = get_error_detail(exc)
else:
detail = exc.detail
if isinstance(detail, Mapping):
# If errors may be a dict we use the standard {key: list of values}.
# Here we ensure that all the values are *lists* of errors.
return {
key: value if isinstance(value, (list, Mapping)) else [value]
for key, value in detail.items()
}
elif isinstance(detail, list):
# Errors raised as a list are non-field errors.
return {
api_settings.NON_FIELD_ERRORS_KEY: detail
}
# Errors raised as a string are non-field errors.
return {
api_settings.NON_FIELD_ERRORS_KEY: [detail]
}
class Serializer(BaseSerializer, metaclass=SerializerMetaclass):
default_error_messages = {
'invalid': _('Invalid data. Expected a dictionary, but got {datatype}.')
}
@cached_property
def fields(self):
"""
A dictionary of {field_name: field_instance}.
"""
# `fields` is evaluated lazily. We do this to ensure that we don't
# have issues importing modules that use ModelSerializers as fields,
# even if Django's app-loading stage has not yet run.
fields = BindingDict(self)
for key, value in self.get_fields().items():
fields[key] = value
return fields
@property
def _writable_fields(self):
for field in self.fields.values():
if not field.read_only:
yield field
@property
def _readable_fields(self):
for field in self.fields.values():
if not field.write_only:
yield field
def get_fields(self):
"""
Returns a dictionary of {field_name: field_instance}.
"""
# Every new serializer is created with a clone of the field instances.
# This allows users to dynamically modify the fields on a serializer
# instance without affecting every other serializer instance.
return copy.deepcopy(self._declared_fields)
def get_validators(self):
"""
Returns a list of validator callables.
"""
# Used by the lazily-evaluated `validators` property.
meta = getattr(self, 'Meta', None)
validators = getattr(meta, 'validators', None)
return list(validators) if validators else []
def get_initial(self):
if hasattr(self, 'initial_data'):
# initial_data may not be a valid type
if not isinstance(self.initial_data, Mapping):
return OrderedDict()
return OrderedDict([
(field_name, field.get_value(self.initial_data))
for field_name, field in self.fields.items()
if (field.get_value(self.initial_data) is not empty) and
not field.read_only
])
return OrderedDict([
(field.field_name, field.get_initial())
for field in self.fields.values()
if not field.read_only
])
def get_value(self, dictionary):
# We override the default field access in order to support
# nested HTML forms.
if html.is_html_input(dictionary):
return html.parse_html_dict(dictionary, prefix=self.field_name) or empty
return dictionary.get(self.field_name, empty)
def run_validation(self, data=empty):
"""
We override the default `run_validation`, because the validation
performed by validators and the `.validate()` method should
be coerced into an error dictionary with a 'non_fields_error' key.
"""
(is_empty_value, data) = self.validate_empty_values(data)
if is_empty_value:
return data
value = self.to_internal_value(data)
try:
self.run_validators(value)
value = self.validate(value)
assert value is not None, '.validate() should return the validated data'
except (ValidationError, DjangoValidationError) as exc:
raise ValidationError(detail=as_serializer_error(exc))
return value
def _read_only_defaults(self):
fields = [
field for field in self.fields.values()
if (field.read_only) and (field.default != empty) and (field.source != '*') and ('.' not in field.source)
]
defaults = OrderedDict()
for field in fields:
try:
default = field.get_default()
except SkipField:
continue
defaults[field.source] = default
return defaults
def run_validators(self, value):
"""
Add read_only fields with defaults to value before running validators.
"""
if isinstance(value, dict):
to_validate = self._read_only_defaults()
to_validate.update(value)
else:
to_validate = value
super().run_validators(to_validate)
def to_internal_value(self, data):
"""
Dict of native values <- Dict of primitive datatypes.
"""
if not isinstance(data, Mapping):
message = self.error_messages['invalid'].format(
datatype=type(data).__name__
)
raise ValidationError({
api_settings.NON_FIELD_ERRORS_KEY: [message]
}, code='invalid')
ret = OrderedDict()
errors = OrderedDict()
fields = self._writable_fields
for field in fields:
validate_method = getattr(self, 'validate_' + field.field_name, None)
primitive_value = field.get_value(data)
try:
validated_value = field.run_validation(primitive_value)
if validate_method is not None:
validated_value = validate_method(validated_value)
except ValidationError as exc:
errors[field.field_name] = exc.detail
except DjangoValidationError as exc:
errors[field.field_name] = get_error_detail(exc)
except SkipField:
pass
else:
set_value(ret, field.source_attrs, validated_value)
if errors:
raise ValidationError(errors)
return ret
def to_representation(self, instance):
"""
Object instance -> Dict of primitive datatypes.
"""
ret = OrderedDict()
fields = self._readable_fields
for field in fields:
try:
attribute = field.get_attribute(instance)
except SkipField:
continue
# We skip `to_representation` for `None` values so that fields do
# not have to explicitly deal with that case.
#
# For related fields with `use_pk_only_optimization` we need to
# resolve the pk value.
check_for_none = attribute.pk if isinstance(attribute, PKOnlyObject) else attribute
if check_for_none is None:
ret[field.field_name] = None
else:
ret[field.field_name] = field.to_representation(attribute)
return ret
def validate(self, attrs):
return attrs
def __repr__(self):
return representation.serializer_repr(self, indent=1)
# The following are used for accessing `BoundField` instances on the
# serializer, for the purposes of presenting a form-like API onto the
# field values and field errors.
def __iter__(self):
for field in self.fields.values():
yield self[field.field_name]
def __getitem__(self, key):
field = self.fields[key]
value = self.data.get(key)
error = self.errors.get(key) if hasattr(self, '_errors') else None
if isinstance(field, Serializer):
return NestedBoundField(field, value, error)
if isinstance(field, JSONField):
return JSONBoundField(field, value, error)
return BoundField(field, value, error)
# Include a backlink to the serializer class on return objects.
# Allows renderers such as HTMLFormRenderer to get the full field info.
@property
def data(self):
ret = super().data
return ReturnDict(ret, serializer=self)
@property
def errors(self):
ret = super().errors
if isinstance(ret, list) and len(ret) == 1 and getattr(ret[0], 'code', None) == 'null':
# Edge case. Provide a more descriptive error than
# "this field may not be null", when no data is passed.
detail = ErrorDetail('No data provided', code='null')
ret = {api_settings.NON_FIELD_ERRORS_KEY: [detail]}
return ReturnDict(ret, serializer=self)
# There's some replication of `ListField` here,
# but that's probably better than obfuscating the call hierarchy.
class ListSerializer(BaseSerializer):
child = None
many = True
default_error_messages = {
'not_a_list': _('Expected a list of items but got type "{input_type}".'),
'empty': _('This list may not be empty.')
}
def __init__(self, *args, **kwargs):
self.child = kwargs.pop('child', copy.deepcopy(self.child))
self.allow_empty = kwargs.pop('allow_empty', True)
assert self.child is not None, '`child` is a required argument.'
assert not inspect.isclass(self.child), '`child` has not been instantiated.'
super().__init__(*args, **kwargs)
self.child.bind(field_name='', parent=self)
def get_initial(self):
if hasattr(self, 'initial_data'):
return self.to_representation(self.initial_data)
return []
def get_value(self, dictionary):
"""
Given the input dictionary, return the field value.
"""
# We override the default field access in order to support
# lists in HTML forms.
if html.is_html_input(dictionary):
return html.parse_html_list(dictionary, prefix=self.field_name, default=empty)
return dictionary.get(self.field_name, empty)
def run_validation(self, data=empty):
"""
We override the default `run_validation`, because the validation
performed by validators and the `.validate()` method should
be coerced into an error dictionary with a 'non_fields_error' key.
"""
(is_empty_value, data) = self.validate_empty_values(data)
if is_empty_value:
return data
value = self.to_internal_value(data)
try:
self.run_validators(value)
value = self.validate(value)
assert value is not None, '.validate() should return the validated data'
except (ValidationError, DjangoValidationError) as exc:
raise ValidationError(detail=as_serializer_error(exc))
return value
def to_internal_value(self, data):
"""
List of dicts of native values <- List of dicts of primitive datatypes.
"""
if html.is_html_input(data):
data = html.parse_html_list(data, default=[])
if not isinstance(data, list):
message = self.error_messages['not_a_list'].format(
input_type=type(data).__name__
)
raise ValidationError({
api_settings.NON_FIELD_ERRORS_KEY: [message]
}, code='not_a_list')
if not self.allow_empty and len(data) == 0:
message = self.error_messages['empty']
raise ValidationError({
api_settings.NON_FIELD_ERRORS_KEY: [message]
}, code='empty')
ret = []
errors = []
for item in data:
try:
validated = self.child.run_validation(item)
except ValidationError as exc:
errors.append(exc.detail)
else:
ret.append(validated)
errors.append({})
if any(errors):
raise ValidationError(errors)
return ret
def to_representation(self, data):
"""
List of object instances -> List of dicts of primitive datatypes.
"""
# Dealing with nested relationships, data can be a Manager,
# so, first get a queryset from the Manager if needed
iterable = data.all() if isinstance(data, models.Manager) else data
return [
self.child.to_representation(item) for item in iterable
]
def validate(self, attrs):
return attrs
def update(self, instance, validated_data):
raise NotImplementedError(
"Serializers with many=True do not support multiple update by "
"default, only multiple create. For updates it is unclear how to "
"deal with insertions and deletions. If you need to support "
"multiple update, use a `ListSerializer` class and override "
"`.update()` so you can specify the behavior exactly."
)
def create(self, validated_data):
return [
self.child.create(attrs) for attrs in validated_data
]
def save(self, **kwargs):
"""
Save and return a list of object instances.
"""
# Guard against incorrect use of `serializer.save(commit=False)`
assert 'commit' not in kwargs, (
"'commit' is not a valid keyword argument to the 'save()' method. "
"If you need to access data before committing to the database then "
"inspect 'serializer.validated_data' instead. "
"You can also pass additional keyword arguments to 'save()' if you "
"need to set extra attributes on the saved model instance. "
"For example: 'serializer.save(owner=request.user)'.'"
)
validated_data = [
{**attrs, **kwargs} for attrs in self.validated_data
]
if self.instance is not None:
self.instance = self.update(self.instance, validated_data)
assert self.instance is not None, (
'`update()` did not return an object instance.'
)
else:
self.instance = self.create(validated_data)
assert self.instance is not None, (
'`create()` did not return an object instance.'
)
return self.instance
def is_valid(self, raise_exception=False):
# This implementation is the same as the default,
# except that we use lists, rather than dicts, as the empty case.
assert hasattr(self, 'initial_data'), (
'Cannot call `.is_valid()` as no `data=` keyword argument was '
'passed when instantiating the serializer instance.'
)
if not hasattr(self, '_validated_data'):
try:
self._validated_data = self.run_validation(self.initial_data)
except ValidationError as exc:
self._validated_data = []
self._errors = exc.detail
else:
self._errors = []
if self._errors and raise_exception:
raise ValidationError(self.errors)
return not bool(self._errors)
def __repr__(self):
return representation.list_repr(self, indent=1)
# Include a backlink to the serializer class on return objects.
# Allows renderers such as HTMLFormRenderer to get the full field info.
@property
def data(self):
ret = super().data
return ReturnList(ret, serializer=self)
@property
def errors(self):
ret = super().errors
if isinstance(ret, list) and len(ret) == 1 and getattr(ret[0], 'code', None) == 'null':
# Edge case. Provide a more descriptive error than
# "this field may not be null", when no data is passed.
detail = ErrorDetail('No data provided', code='null')
ret = {api_settings.NON_FIELD_ERRORS_KEY: [detail]}
if isinstance(ret, dict):
return ReturnDict(ret, serializer=self)
return ReturnList(ret, serializer=self)
# ModelSerializer & HyperlinkedModelSerializer
# --------------------------------------------
def raise_errors_on_nested_writes(method_name, serializer, validated_data):
"""
Give explicit errors when users attempt to pass writable nested data.
If we don't do this explicitly they'd get a less helpful error when
calling `.save()` on the serializer.
We don't *automatically* support these sorts of nested writes because
there are too many ambiguities to define a default behavior.
Eg. Suppose we have a `UserSerializer` with a nested profile. How should
we handle the case of an update, where the `profile` relationship does
not exist? Any of the following might be valid:
* Raise an application error.
* Silently ignore the nested part of the update.
* Automatically create a profile instance.
"""
ModelClass = serializer.Meta.model
model_field_info = model_meta.get_field_info(ModelClass)
# Ensure we don't have a writable nested field. For example:
#
# class UserSerializer(ModelSerializer):
# ...
# profile = ProfileSerializer()
assert not any(
isinstance(field, BaseSerializer) and
(field.source in validated_data) and
(field.source in model_field_info.relations) and
isinstance(validated_data[field.source], (list, dict))
for field in serializer._writable_fields
), (
'The `.{method_name}()` method does not support writable nested '
'fields by default.\nWrite an explicit `.{method_name}()` method for '
'serializer `{module}.{class_name}`, or set `read_only=True` on '
'nested serializer fields.'.format(
method_name=method_name,
module=serializer.__class__.__module__,
class_name=serializer.__class__.__name__
)
)
# Ensure we don't have a writable dotted-source field. For example:
#
# class UserSerializer(ModelSerializer):
# ...
# address = serializer.CharField('profile.address')
#
# Though, non-relational fields (e.g., JSONField) are acceptable. For example:
#
# class NonRelationalPersonModel(models.Model):
# profile = JSONField()
#
# class UserSerializer(ModelSerializer):
# ...
# address = serializer.CharField('profile.address')
assert not any(
len(field.source_attrs) > 1 and
(field.source_attrs[0] in validated_data) and
(field.source_attrs[0] in model_field_info.relations) and
isinstance(validated_data[field.source_attrs[0]], (list, dict))
for field in serializer._writable_fields
), (
'The `.{method_name}()` method does not support writable dotted-source '
'fields by default.\nWrite an explicit `.{method_name}()` method for '
'serializer `{module}.{class_name}`, or set `read_only=True` on '
'dotted-source serializer fields.'.format(
method_name=method_name,
module=serializer.__class__.__module__,
class_name=serializer.__class__.__name__
)
)
class ModelSerializer(Serializer):
"""
A `ModelSerializer` is just a regular `Serializer`, except that:
* A set of default fields are automatically populated.
* A set of default validators are automatically populated.
* Default `.create()` and `.update()` implementations are provided.
The process of automatically determining a set of serializer fields
based on the model fields is reasonably complex, but you almost certainly
don't need to dig into the implementation.
If the `ModelSerializer` class *doesn't* generate the set of fields that
you need you should either declare the extra/differing fields explicitly on
the serializer class, or simply use a `Serializer` class.
"""
serializer_field_mapping = {
models.AutoField: IntegerField,
models.BigIntegerField: IntegerField,
models.BooleanField: BooleanField,
models.CharField: CharField,
models.CommaSeparatedIntegerField: CharField,
models.DateField: DateField,
models.DateTimeField: DateTimeField,
models.DecimalField: DecimalField,
models.DurationField: DurationField,
models.EmailField: EmailField,
models.Field: ModelField,
models.FileField: FileField,
models.FloatField: FloatField,
models.ImageField: ImageField,
models.IntegerField: IntegerField,
models.NullBooleanField: BooleanField,
models.PositiveIntegerField: IntegerField,
models.PositiveSmallIntegerField: IntegerField,
models.SlugField: SlugField,
models.SmallIntegerField: IntegerField,
models.TextField: CharField,
models.TimeField: TimeField,
models.URLField: URLField,
models.UUIDField: UUIDField,
models.GenericIPAddressField: IPAddressField,
models.FilePathField: FilePathField,
}
if hasattr(models, 'JSONField'):
serializer_field_mapping[models.JSONField] = JSONField
if postgres_fields:
serializer_field_mapping[postgres_fields.HStoreField] = HStoreField
serializer_field_mapping[postgres_fields.ArrayField] = ListField
serializer_field_mapping[postgres_fields.JSONField] = JSONField
serializer_related_field = PrimaryKeyRelatedField
serializer_related_to_field = SlugRelatedField
serializer_url_field = HyperlinkedIdentityField
serializer_choice_field = ChoiceField
# The field name for hyperlinked identity fields. Defaults to 'url'.
# You can modify this using the API setting.
#
# Note that if you instead need modify this on a per-serializer basis,
# you'll also need to ensure you update the `create` method on any generic
# views, to correctly handle the 'Location' response header for
# "HTTP 201 Created" responses.
url_field_name = None
# Default `create` and `update` behavior...
def create(self, validated_data):
"""
We have a bit of extra checking around this in order to provide
descriptive messages when something goes wrong, but this method is
essentially just:
return ExampleModel.objects.create(**validated_data)
If there are many to many fields present on the instance then they
cannot be set until the model is instantiated, in which case the
implementation is like so:
example_relationship = validated_data.pop('example_relationship')
instance = ExampleModel.objects.create(**validated_data)
instance.example_relationship = example_relationship
return instance
The default implementation also does not handle nested relationships.
If you want to support writable nested relationships you'll need
to write an explicit `.create()` method.
"""
raise_errors_on_nested_writes('create', self, validated_data)
ModelClass = self.Meta.model
# Remove many-to-many relationships from validated_data.
# They are not valid arguments to the default `.create()` method,
# as they require that the instance has already been saved.
info = model_meta.get_field_info(ModelClass)
many_to_many = {}
for field_name, relation_info in info.relations.items():
if relation_info.to_many and (field_name in validated_data):
many_to_many[field_name] = validated_data.pop(field_name)
try:
instance = ModelClass._default_manager.create(**validated_data)
except TypeError:
tb = traceback.format_exc()
msg = (
'Got a `TypeError` when calling `%s.%s.create()`. '
'This may be because you have a writable field on the '
'serializer class that is not a valid argument to '
'`%s.%s.create()`. You may need to make the field '
'read-only, or override the %s.create() method to handle '
'this correctly.\nOriginal exception was:\n %s' %
(
ModelClass.__name__,
ModelClass._default_manager.name,
ModelClass.__name__,
ModelClass._default_manager.name,
self.__class__.__name__,
tb
)
)
raise TypeError(msg)
# Save many-to-many relationships after the instance is created.
if many_to_many:
for field_name, value in many_to_many.items():
field = getattr(instance, field_name)
field.set(value)
return instance
def update(self, instance, validated_data):
raise_errors_on_nested_writes('update', self, validated_data)
info = model_meta.get_field_info(instance)
# Simply set each attribute on the instance, and then save it.
# Note that unlike `.create()` we don't need to treat many-to-many
# relationships as being a special case. During updates we already
# have an instance pk for the relationships to be associated with.
m2m_fields = []
for attr, value in validated_data.items():
if attr in info.relations and info.relations[attr].to_many:
m2m_fields.append((attr, value))
else:
setattr(instance, attr, value)
instance.save()
# Note that many-to-many fields are set after updating instance.
# Setting m2m fields triggers signals which could potentially change
# updated instance and we do not want it to collide with .update()
for attr, value in m2m_fields:
field = getattr(instance, attr)
field.set(value)
return instance
# Determine the fields to apply...
def get_fields(self):
"""
Return the dict of field names -> field instances that should be
used for `self.fields` when instantiating the serializer.
"""