A REST Framework for FastAPI
Project description
FastAPI-Restly
Build maintainable REST APIs on FastAPI, SQLAlchemy 2.0, and Pydantic v2 — with real class-based views.
Status:
0.5.1— public beta release.After four years of internal development at two separate companies, Restly is finally ready for its first public release! Right now the goal is to see if the public API of Restly hits the right abstractions, and to stabilize the API for a
1.0.0release. From0.5.0onwards, expect small breaking changes in naming and functionality on the deeper parts of the API surface. Feedback is always appreciated!
pip install "fastapi-restly[standard]"
Docs: https://rjprins.github.io/fastapi-restly/ · Changelog · Contributing · Security · Examples
Why FastAPI-Restly?
Restly helps building FastAPI apps faster, with consistent APIs.
It features class-based views that support inheritance, mixins, and method overrides.
Class-based views are essential for re-using code. The RestView and AsyncRestView provide full CRUD on top of a SQLAlchemy model with a single class declaration. It stays fully customizable by overriding endpoints, perform_* handlers, and other class methods.
- class-based views: group endpoints on real Python classes with inheritance and method overrides.
- REST endpoints in minutes: use
Viewfor custom resources, orAsyncRestView/RestViewfor generated CRUD. - Incremental adoption: Restly doesn't get in your way; use it per resource and step out anytime. See Existing Projects.
- Class-level dependencies: Put dependencies that all endpoints need on the class level, and get them as attributes on
self. - Explicit override points: Call-chain allows for overriding at multiple levels.
- Filtering, pagination, sorting: Get fully-featured list routes specific to your Pydantic schema.
- Field control:
ReadOnly/WriteOnlymarkers, plus foreign-key validation in Pydantic schemas viaIDRef[...]. - React Admin ready:
AsyncReactAdminViewspeaks thera-data-simple-restwire contract, no custom data provider needed. - General app utilities: Things most FastAPI apps will need: SQLAlchemy engine and session setup, alembic test fixtures, etc.
Quickstart
FastAPI-Restly turns a SQLAlchemy model into a class-based CRUD resource:
import fastapi_restly as fr
from fastapi import FastAPI
from sqlalchemy.orm import Mapped
app = FastAPI()
class User(fr.IDBase):
name: Mapped[str]
email: Mapped[str]
@fr.include_view(app)
class UserView(fr.AsyncRestView):
prefix = "/users"
model = User
That view exposes these HTTP routes:
GET /users/ # list users, with filtering, sorting, and pagination
POST /users/ # create a user
GET /users/{id} # read one user
PATCH /users/{id} # partially update one user
DELETE /users/{id} # delete one user
Restly generates the Pydantic schemas automatically. For the full copy-paste app see Getting Started.
Installation (development)
git clone https://github.com/rjprins/fastapi-restly.git
cd fastapi-restly
uv sync
Main features
Manual schema definition
For custom validation, aliases, or stable public contracts, define an explicit read schema:
from datetime import datetime
class UserRead(fr.IDSchema):
name: str
email: str
password: fr.WriteOnly[str]
created_at: fr.ReadOnly[datetime]
@fr.include_view(app)
class UserView(fr.AsyncRestView):
prefix = "/users"
model = User
schema = UserRead
# create_schema = UserCreate # auto-generated from UserRead
# update_schema = UserUpdate # auto-generated from UserCreat
Restly derives create and update schemas from UserRead by default.
The UserCreate schema is created by omitting ReadOnly fields.
The UserUpdate schema allows for partial updates by making all fields optional.
When you need full control over write payloads, declare them explicitly:
class UserCreate(fr.BaseSchema):
name: str
email: str
class UserUpdate(fr.BaseSchema):
name: str | None = None
email: str | None = None
@fr.include_view(app)
class UserView(fr.AsyncRestView):
prefix = "/users"
model = User
schema = UserRead
creation_schema = UserCreate
update_schema = UserUpdate
Use auto-schema for prototypes and internal tools. Use an explicit schema when contract stability and validation control matter (public APIs, aliases, strict response shapes).
List endpoint query parameters
List endpoints expose a stable URL parameter dialect generated from the response schema:
GET /users/?name=John&age__gte=21
GET /users/?status=active,pending # comma-separated → OR (IN)
GET /users/?status__ne=archived,deleted # comma-separated → NOT IN
GET /users/?email__icontains=example
GET /users/?deleted_at__isnull=true
GET /users/?sort=-created_at,name
GET /users/?page=2&page_size=10
Parameter keys follow the response schema's public names end-to-end — including dotted relation paths. If ArticleRead.author has Field(alias="writer") and AuthorRead.name has Field(alias="authorName"), the URL key is writer.authorName. Aliased fields are only reachable by their alias; populate_by_name does not extend the URL surface with the Python field name.
Pagination is opt-in: omitting page_size returns every matching row. For public/production endpoints set default_page_size and max_page_size on the view class:
class UserView(fr.AsyncRestView):
default_page_size = 25
max_page_size = 200
See How-To: Filter, Sort, and Paginate Lists for the full operator surface, alias rules, and pagination guidance.
Read-only and write-only fields
IDSchema already provides a read-only id, so don't redeclare it unless you need to narrow the type.
class UserRead(fr.IDSchema):
name: str
email: str
password: fr.WriteOnly[str] # stripped by to_response_schema()
created_at: fr.ReadOnly[datetime] # skipped in `apply_schema()`
Relationship handling
Validate relationships on create and update using fr.IDRef[...].
SQLAlchemy init is handled smartly; init is with either the foreign key (customer_id) or the related object (Customer), whichever is in the signature of the SQLAlchemy mapper __init__.
class Order(fr.IDBase):
customer_id: Mapped[int] = mapped_column(ForeignKey("customer.id"))
customer: Mapped[Customer] = relationship()
class OrderRead(fr.IDSchema):
customer_id: fr.IDRef[Customer]
customer: fr.ReadOnly[CustomerRead]
Custom endpoints
Add custom routes using the same form of decorators you would use for regular FastAPI routes.
@fr.get@fr.post@fr.put@fr.patch@fr.delete@fr.route
These simply forward all arguments to their standard FastAPI counterparts.
class UploadView(fr.AsyncRestView):
prefix = "/uploads"
model = Upload
@fr.get(
"/{id}/download",
response_class=FileResponse,
responses={200: {"content": {EXCEL_MIME_TYPE: {}}}},
)
async def download_excel(self, id: int):
upload = await self.perform_get(id)
return to_excel_response(upload)
React Admin integration
Use AsyncReactAdminView to get a backend that react-admin with ra-data-simple-rest connects to out of the box:
@fr.include_view(app)
class ProductView(fr.AsyncReactAdminView):
prefix = "/products"
model = Product
schema = ProductRead
The view speaks the ra-data-simple-rest wire contract.
See React Admin Integration in the docs for CORS setup and customization.
Excluding built-in routes
@fr.include_view(app)
class UserView(fr.AsyncRestView):
prefix = "/users"
model = User
exclude_routes = (fr.ViewRoute.DELETE,)
Pagination metadata
@fr.include_view(app)
class UserView(fr.AsyncRestView):
prefix = "/users"
model = User
include_pagination_metadata = True
# Response: {"items": [...], "total": N, "page": 1, "page_size": 100, "total_pages": N, ...}
Testing
fastapi_restly.pytest_fixtures provides namespaced pytest fixtures (restly_app, restly_client, restly_async_session, restly_session) for test clients and savepoint-based isolation. The testing extra installs a pytest plugin entry point, so pytest auto-loads these fixtures.
Install the testing extra when consuming FastAPI-Restly as a package:
pip install "fastapi-restly[testing]"
Configure Restly for your test database in conftest.py.
RestlyTestClient automatically asserts the expected HTTP status (200 for GET, 201 for POST, 204 for DELETE, ...) and raises a descriptive AssertionError with the response body on failure:
# test_users.py
def test_create_and_fetch_user(restly_client):
# Raises AssertionError if status != 201
response = restly_client.post("/users/", json={"name": "John", "email": "john@example.com"})
user_id = response.json()["id"]
# Raises AssertionError if status != 200
data = restly_client.get(f"/users/{user_id}").json()
assert data["name"] == "John"
Pass assert_status_code=None to skip the assertion and inspect the response yourself.
Configuration
# Async SQLite
fr.configure(async_database_url="sqlite+aiosqlite:///app.db")
# Async PostgreSQL
fr.configure(async_database_url="postgresql+asyncpg://user:pass@localhost/db")
# Sync SQLite
fr.configure(database_url="sqlite:///app.db")
Restly has one public process-wide configuration. For per-view databases, read replicas, or other custom session wiring, use a normal FastAPI dependency on that view; see the existing-project how-to in the documentation.
Documentation
- Getting Started — fast path from zero to a working API
- User Guide — tutorial walkthroughs and topic guides
- API Reference — complete API docs
Examples
Complete applications under example-projects/:
- Shop — e-commerce API with products, orders, customers
- Blog — minimal blog with a single
Blogmodel - SaaS — multi-tenant project management API
Contributing
Pull requests and issue discussions welcome. See CONTRIBUTING.md for setup, coding standards, and the test workflow. Security issues: see SECURITY.md.
License
MIT — see LICENSE.
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