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Enhanced support for natural keys in Django and Django REST Framework

Project description

Enhanced support for natural keys in Django and Django REST Framework. Extracted from wq.db for general use.

Django Natural Keys provides a number of useful model methods (e.g. get_or_create_by_natural_key()) that speed up working with natural keys in Django. The module also provides a couple of serializer classes that streamline creating REST API support for models with natural keys.

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Usage

Django Natural Keys is available via PyPI:

pip3 install natural-keys

Model API

To use natural keys in vanilla Django, you need to define a natural_key() method on your Model class and a get_natural_key() method on the Manager class. With Django Natural Keys, you can instead extend NaturalKeyModel and define a unique_together property on your Model’s Meta class or use a field with unique=True. The first unique_together entry or the first unique field (except an AutoField) will be treated as the natural key for the model, and all of the necessary functions for working with natural keys will automatically work.

from natural_keys import NaturalKeyModel

class Event(NaturalKeyModel):
    name = models.CharField(max_length=255)
    date = models.DateField()
    class Meta:
        unique_together = (('name','date'),)

class Note(models.Model):
    event = models.ForeignKey(Event)
    note = models.TextField()

or

from natural_keys import NaturalKeyModel

class Event(NaturalKeyModel):
    name = models.CharField(unique=True)

The following methods will then be available on your Model and its Manager:

# Default Django methods
instance = Event.objects.get_by_natural_key('ABC123', date(2016, 1, 1))
instance.natural_key == ('ABC123', date(2016, 1, 1))

# get_or_create + natural keys
instance, is_new = Event.objects.get_or_create_by_natural_key('ABC123', date(2016, 1, 1))

# Like get_or_create_by_natural_key, but discards is_new
# Useful for quick lookup/creation when you don't care whether the object exists already
instance = Event.objects.find('ABC123', date(2016, 1, 1))
note = Note.objects.create(
     event=Event.objects.find('ABC123', date(2016, 1, 1)),
     note="This is a note"
)
instance == note.event

# Inspect natural key fields on a model without instantiating it
Event.get_natural_key_fields() == ('name', 'date')

Nested Natural Keys

One key feature of Django Natural Keys is that it will automatically traverse ForeignKeys to related models (which should also be NaturalKeyModel classes). This makes it possible to define complex, arbitrarily nested natural keys with minimal effort.

class Place(NaturalKeyModel):
    name = models.CharField(max_length=255)
    class Meta:
        unique_together = (('name',),)

class Event(NaturalKeyModel):
    place = models.ForeignKey(Place)
    date = models.DateField()
    class Meta:
        unique_together = (('place', 'date'),)
Event.get_natural_key_fields() == ('place__name', 'date')
instance = Event.find('ABC123', date(2016, 1, 1))
instance.place.name == 'ABC123'

Serializers

Django Natural Keys provides two ModelSerializer classes for use with Django REST Framework. The first is NaturalKeySerializer, which is meant to be used with NaturalKeyModel classes. The second serializer class, NaturalKeyModelSerializer, handles the more common use case: serializing a model that has a foreign key to a NaturalKeyModel but is not a NaturalKeyModel itself. (One concrete example of this is the vera.Report model, which has a ForeignKey to vera.Event, which is a NaturalKeyModel).

You can use these serializer classes with Django REST Framework and/or wq.db just like any other serializer:

# Django REST Framework usage example
from rest_framework import viewsets
from rest_framework import routers
from natural_keys import NaturalKeySerializer, NaturalKeyModelSerializer
from .models import Event, Note

class EventSerializer(NaturalKeySerializer):
    class Meta:
        model = Event

class NoteSerializer(NaturalKeyModelSerializer):
    class Meta:
        model = Note

class EventViewSet(viewsets.ModelViewSet):
    queryset = Event.objects.all()
    serializer_class = EventSerializer

class NoteViewSet(viewsets.ModelViewSet):
    queryset = Note.objects.all()
    serializer_class = NoteSerializer

router = routers.DefaultRouter()
router.register(r'events', EventViewSet)
router.register(r'notes', NoteViewSet)

# wq.db usage example
from wq.db import rest
from natural_keys import NaturalKeySerializer, NaturalKeyModelSerializer
from .models import Event, Note

rest.router.register_model(Event, serializer=NaturalKeySerializer)
rest.router.register_model(Note, serializer=NaturalKeyModelSerializer)

Once this is set up, you can use your REST API to create and view your NaturalKeyModel instances and related data. To facilitate integration with regular HTML Forms, Django Natural Keys is integrated with the HTML JSON Forms package, which supports nested keys via an array naming convention, as the examples below demonstrate.

<form action="/events/" method="post">
  <input name="place[name]">
  <input type="date" name="date">
</form>
// /events.json
[
    {
        "id": 123,
        "place": {"name": "ABC123"},
        "date": "2016-01-01"
    }
]
<form action="/notes/" method="post">
  <input name="event[place][name]">
  <input type="date" name="event[date]">
  <textarea name="note"></textarea>
</form>
// /notes.json
[
    {
        "id": 12345,
        "event": {
            "place": {"name": "ABC123"},
            "date": "2016-01-01"
        },
        "note": "This is a note"
    }
]

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