| ========================== |
| Serializing Django objects |
| ========================== |
|
|
| Django's serialization framework provides a mechanism for "translating" Django |
| models into other formats. Usually these other formats will be text-based and |
| used for sending Django data over a wire, but it's possible for a |
| serializer to handle any format (text-based or not). |
|
|
| .. seealso:: |
|
|
| If you just want to get some data from your tables into a serialized |
| form, you could use the :djadmin:`dumpdata` management command. |
|
|
| Serializing data |
| ================ |
|
|
| At the highest level, you can serialize data like this:: |
|
|
| from django.core import serializers |
|
|
| data = serializers.serialize("xml", SomeModel.objects.all()) |
|
|
| The arguments to the ``serialize`` function are the format to serialize the data |
| to (see `Serialization formats`_) and a |
| :class:`~django.db.models.query.QuerySet` to serialize. (Actually, the second |
| argument can be any iterator that yields Django model instances, but it'll |
| almost always be a QuerySet). |
|
|
| .. function:: django.core.serializers.get_serializer(format) |
|
|
| You can also use a serializer object directly:: |
|
|
| XMLSerializer = serializers.get_serializer("xml") |
| xml_serializer = XMLSerializer() |
| xml_serializer.serialize(queryset) |
| data = xml_serializer.getvalue() |
|
|
| This is useful if you want to serialize data directly to a file-like object |
| (which includes an :class:`~django.http.HttpResponse`):: |
|
|
| with open("file.xml", "w") as out: |
| xml_serializer.serialize(SomeModel.objects.all(), stream=out) |
|
|
| .. note:: |
|
|
| Calling :func:`~django.core.serializers.get_serializer` with an unknown |
| :ref:`format <serialization-formats>` will raise a |
| ``django.core.serializers.SerializerDoesNotExist`` exception. |
|
|
| .. _subset-of-fields: |
|
|
| Subset of fields |
| ---------------- |
|
|
| If you only want a subset of fields to be serialized, you can |
| specify a ``fields`` argument to the serializer:: |
|
|
| from django.core import serializers |
|
|
| data = serializers.serialize("xml", SomeModel.objects.all(), fields=["name", "size"]) |
|
|
| In this example, only the ``name`` and ``size`` attributes of each model will |
| be serialized. The primary key is always serialized as the ``pk`` element in the |
| resulting output; it never appears in the ``fields`` part. |
|
|
| .. note:: |
|
|
| Depending on your model, you may find that it is not possible to |
| deserialize a model that only serializes a subset of its fields. If a |
| serialized object doesn't specify all the fields that are required by a |
| model, the deserializer will not be able to save deserialized instances. |
|
|
| Inherited models |
| ---------------- |
|
|
| If you have a model that is defined using an :ref:`abstract base class |
| <abstract-base-classes>`, you don't have to do anything special to serialize |
| that model. Call the serializer on the object (or objects) that you want to |
| serialize, and the output will be a complete representation of the serialized |
| object. |
|
|
| However, if you have a model that uses :ref:`multi-table inheritance |
| <multi-table-inheritance>`, you also need to serialize all of the base classes |
| for the model. This is because only the fields that are locally defined on the |
| model will be serialized. For example, consider the following models:: |
|
|
| class Place(models.Model): |
| name = models.CharField(max_length=50) |
|
|
|
|
| class Restaurant(Place): |
| serves_hot_dogs = models.BooleanField(default=False) |
|
|
| If you only serialize the Restaurant model:: |
|
|
| data = serializers.serialize("xml", Restaurant.objects.all()) |
|
|
| the fields on the serialized output will only contain the ``serves_hot_dogs`` |
| attribute. The ``name`` attribute of the base class will be ignored. |
|
|
| In order to fully serialize your ``Restaurant`` instances, you will need to |
| serialize the ``Place`` models as well:: |
|
|
| all_objects = [*Restaurant.objects.all(), *Place.objects.all()] |
| data = serializers.serialize("xml", all_objects) |
|
|
| Deserializing data |
| ================== |
|
|
| Deserializing data is very similar to serializing it:: |
|
|
| for obj in serializers.deserialize("xml", data): |
| do_something_with(obj) |
|
|
| As you can see, the ``deserialize`` function takes the same format argument as |
| ``serialize``, a string or stream of data, and returns an iterator. |
|
|
| However, here it gets slightly complicated. The objects returned by the |
| ``deserialize`` iterator *aren't* regular Django objects. Instead, they are |
| special ``DeserializedObject`` instances that wrap a created -- but unsaved -- |
| object and any associated relationship data. |
|
|
| Calling ``DeserializedObject.save()`` saves the object to the database. |
|
|
| .. note:: |
|
|
| If the ``pk`` attribute in the serialized data doesn't exist or is |
| null, a new instance will be saved to the database. |
|
|
| This ensures that deserializing is a non-destructive operation even if the |
| data in your serialized representation doesn't match what's currently in the |
| database. Usually, working with these ``DeserializedObject`` instances looks |
| something like:: |
|
|
| for deserialized_object in serializers.deserialize("xml", data): |
| if object_should_be_saved(deserialized_object): |
| deserialized_object.save() |
|
|
| In other words, the usual use is to examine the deserialized objects to make |
| sure that they are "appropriate" for saving before doing so. If you trust your |
| data source you can instead save the object directly and move on. |
|
|
| The Django object itself can be inspected as ``deserialized_object.object``. |
| If fields in the serialized data do not exist on a model, a |
| ``DeserializationError`` will be raised unless the ``ignorenonexistent`` |
| argument is passed in as ``True``:: |
|
|
| serializers.deserialize("xml", data, ignorenonexistent=True) |
|
|
| .. _serialization-formats: |
|
|
| Serialization formats |
| ===================== |
|
|
| Django supports a number of serialization formats, some of which require you |
| to install third-party Python modules: |
|
|
| ========== ============================================================== |
| Identifier Information |
| ========== ============================================================== |
| ``xml`` Serializes to and from a simple XML dialect. |
|
|
| ``json`` Serializes to and from JSON_. |
|
|
| ``jsonl`` Serializes to and from JSONL_. |
|
|
| ``yaml`` Serializes to YAML (YAML Ain't a Markup Language). This |
| serializer is only available if PyYAML_ is installed. |
| ========== ============================================================== |
|
|
| .. _json: https://json.org/ |
| .. _jsonl: https://jsonlines.org/ |
| .. _PyYAML: https://pyyaml.org/ |
|
|
| XML |
| --- |
|
|
| The basic XML serialization format looks like this: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: xml |
|
|
| <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?> |
| <django-objects version="1.0"> |
| <object pk="123" model="sessions.session"> |
| <field type="DateTimeField" name="expire_date">2013-01-16T08:16:59.844560+00:00</field> |
| <!-- ... --> |
| </object> |
| </django-objects> |
|
|
| The whole collection of objects that is either serialized or deserialized is |
| represented by a ``<django-objects>``-tag which contains multiple |
| ``<object>``-elements. Each such object has two attributes: "pk" and "model", |
| the latter being represented by the name of the app ("sessions") and the |
| lowercase name of the model ("session") separated by a dot. |
|
|
| Each field of the object is serialized as a ``<field>``-element sporting the |
| fields "type" and "name". The text content of the element represents the value |
| that should be stored. |
|
|
| Foreign keys and other relational fields are treated a little bit differently: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: xml |
|
|
| <object pk="27" model="auth.permission"> |
| <!-- ... --> |
| <field to="contenttypes.contenttype" name="content_type" rel="ManyToOneRel">9</field> |
| <!-- ... --> |
| </object> |
|
|
| In this example we specify that the ``auth.Permission`` object with the PK 27 |
| has a foreign key to the ``contenttypes.ContentType`` instance with the PK 9. |
|
|
| ManyToMany-relations are exported for the model that binds them. For instance, |
| the ``auth.User`` model has such a relation to the ``auth.Permission`` model: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: xml |
|
|
| <object pk="1" model="auth.user"> |
| <!-- ... --> |
| <field to="auth.permission" name="user_permissions" rel="ManyToManyRel"> |
| <object pk="46"></object> |
| <object pk="47"></object> |
| </field> |
| </object> |
|
|
| This example links the given user with the permission models with PKs 46 and 47. |
|
|
| .. admonition:: Control characters |
|
|
| If the content to be serialized contains control characters that are not |
| accepted in the XML 1.0 standard, the serialization will fail with a |
| :exc:`ValueError` exception. Read also the W3C's explanation of `HTML, |
| XHTML, XML and Control Codes |
| <https://www.w3.org/International/questions/qa-controls>`_. |
|
|
| .. _serialization-formats-json: |
|
|
| JSON |
| ---- |
|
|
| When staying with the same example data as before it would be serialized as |
| JSON in the following way:: |
|
|
| [ |
| { |
| "pk": "4b678b301dfd8a4e0dad910de3ae245b", |
| "model": "sessions.session", |
| "fields": { |
| "expire_date": "2013-01-16T08:16:59.844Z", |
| # ... |
| }, |
| } |
| ] |
|
|
| The formatting here is a bit simpler than with XML. The whole collection |
| is just represented as an array and the objects are represented by JSON objects |
| with three properties: "pk", "model" and "fields". "fields" is again an object |
| containing each field's name and value as property and property-value |
| respectively. |
|
|
| Foreign keys have the PK of the linked object as property value. |
| ManyToMany-relations are serialized for the model that defines them and are |
| represented as a list of PKs. |
|
|
| Be aware that not all Django output can be passed unmodified to :mod:`json`. |
| For example, if you have some custom type in an object to be serialized, you'll |
| have to write a custom :mod:`json` encoder for it. Something like this will |
| work:: |
|
|
| from django.core.serializers.json import DjangoJSONEncoder |
|
|
|
|
| class LazyEncoder(DjangoJSONEncoder): |
| def default(self, obj): |
| if isinstance(obj, YourCustomType): |
| return str(obj) |
| return super().default(obj) |
|
|
| You can then pass ``cls=LazyEncoder`` to the ``serializers.serialize()`` |
| function:: |
|
|
| from django.core.serializers import serialize |
|
|
| serialize("json", SomeModel.objects.all(), cls=LazyEncoder) |
|
|
| Also note that GeoDjango provides a :doc:`customized GeoJSON serializer |
| </ref/contrib/gis/serializers>`. |
|
|
| ``DjangoJSONEncoder`` |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
|
|
| .. class:: django.core.serializers.json.DjangoJSONEncoder |
|
|
| The JSON serializer uses ``DjangoJSONEncoder`` for encoding. A subclass of |
| :class:`~json.JSONEncoder`, it handles these additional types: |
|
|
| :class:`~datetime.datetime` |
| A string of the form ``YYYY-MM-DDTHH:mm:ss.sssZ`` or |
| ``YYYY-MM-DDTHH:mm:ss.sss+HH:MM`` as defined in `ECMA-262`_. |
|
|
| :class:`~datetime.date` |
| A string of the form ``YYYY-MM-DD`` as defined in `ECMA-262`_. |
|
|
| :class:`~datetime.time` |
| A string of the form ``HH:MM:ss.sss`` as defined in `ECMA-262`_. |
|
|
| :class:`~datetime.timedelta` |
| A string representing a duration as defined in ISO-8601. For example, |
| ``timedelta(days=1, hours=2, seconds=3.4)`` is represented as |
| ``'P1DT02H00M03.400000S'``. |
|
|
| :class:`~decimal.Decimal`, ``Promise`` (``django.utils.functional.lazy()`` objects), :class:`~uuid.UUID` |
| A string representation of the object. |
|
|
| .. _ecma-262: https://262.ecma-international.org/5.1/#sec-15.9.1.15 |
|
|
| .. _serialization-formats-jsonl: |
|
|
| JSONL |
| ----- |
|
|
| *JSONL* stands for *JSON Lines*. With this format, objects are separated by new |
| lines, and each line contains a valid JSON object. JSONL serialized data looks |
| like this:: |
|
|
| {"pk": "4b678b301dfd8a4e0dad910de3ae245b", "model": "sessions.session", "fields": {...}} |
| {"pk": "88bea72c02274f3c9bf1cb2bb8cee4fc", "model": "sessions.session", "fields": {...}} |
| {"pk": "9cf0e26691b64147a67e2a9f06ad7a53", "model": "sessions.session", "fields": {...}} |
|
|
| JSONL can be useful for populating large databases, since the data can be |
| processed line by line, rather than being loaded into memory all at once. |
|
|
| YAML |
| ---- |
|
|
| YAML serialization looks quite similar to JSON. The object list is serialized |
| as a sequence mappings with the keys "pk", "model" and "fields". Each field is |
| again a mapping with the key being name of the field and the value the value: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: yaml |
|
|
| - model: sessions.session |
| pk: 4b678b301dfd8a4e0dad910de3ae245b |
| fields: |
| expire_date: 2013-01-16 08:16:59.844560+00:00 |
|
|
| Referential fields are again represented by the PK or sequence of PKs. |
|
|
| .. _topics-serialization-natural-keys: |
|
|
| Natural keys |
| ============ |
|
|
| The default serialization strategy for foreign keys and many-to-many relations |
| is to serialize the value of the primary key(s) of the objects in the relation. |
| This strategy works well for most objects, but it can cause difficulty in some |
| circumstances. |
|
|
| Consider the case of a list of objects that have a foreign key referencing |
| :class:`~django.contrib.contenttypes.models.ContentType`. If you're going to |
| serialize an object that refers to a content type, then you need to have a way |
| to refer to that content type to begin with. Since ``ContentType`` objects are |
| automatically created by Django during the database synchronization process, |
| the primary key of a given content type isn't easy to predict; it will |
| depend on how and when :djadmin:`migrate` was executed. This is true for all |
| models which automatically generate objects, notably including |
| :class:`~django.contrib.auth.models.Permission`, |
| :class:`~django.contrib.auth.models.Group`, and |
| :class:`~django.contrib.auth.models.User`. |
|
|
| .. warning:: |
|
|
| You should never include automatically generated objects in a fixture or |
| other serialized data. By chance, the primary keys in the fixture |
| may match those in the database and loading the fixture will |
| have no effect. In the more likely case that they don't match, the fixture |
| loading will fail with an :class:`~django.db.IntegrityError`. |
|
|
| There is also the matter of convenience. An integer id isn't always |
| the most convenient way to refer to an object; sometimes, a |
| more natural reference would be helpful. |
|
|
| It is for these reasons that Django provides *natural keys*. A natural |
| key is a tuple of values that can be used to uniquely identify an |
| object instance without using the primary key value. |
|
|
| Deserialization of natural keys |
| ------------------------------- |
|
|
| Consider the following two models:: |
|
|
| from django.db import models |
|
|
|
|
| class Person(models.Model): |
| first_name = models.CharField(max_length=100) |
| last_name = models.CharField(max_length=100) |
|
|
| birthdate = models.DateField() |
|
|
| class Meta: |
| constraints = [ |
| models.UniqueConstraint( |
| fields=["first_name", "last_name"], |
| name="unique_first_last_name", |
| ), |
| ] |
|
|
|
|
| class Book(models.Model): |
| name = models.CharField(max_length=100) |
| author = models.ForeignKey(Person, on_delete=models.CASCADE) |
|
|
| Ordinarily, serialized data for ``Book`` would use an integer to refer to |
| the author. For example, in JSON, a Book might be serialized as:: |
|
|
| ... |
| {"pk": 1, "model": "store.book", "fields": {"name": "Mostly Harmless", "author": 42}} |
| ... |
|
|
| This isn't a particularly natural way to refer to an author. It |
| requires that you know the primary key value for the author; it also |
| requires that this primary key value is stable and predictable. |
|
|
| However, if we add natural key handling to Person, the fixture becomes |
| much more humane. To add natural key handling, you define a default |
| Manager for Person with a ``get_by_natural_key()`` method. In the case |
| of a Person, a good natural key might be the pair of first and last |
| name:: |
|
|
| from django.db import models |
|
|
|
|
| class PersonManager(models.Manager): |
| def get_by_natural_key(self, first_name, last_name): |
| return self.get(first_name=first_name, last_name=last_name) |
|
|
|
|
| class Person(models.Model): |
| first_name = models.CharField(max_length=100) |
| last_name = models.CharField(max_length=100) |
| birthdate = models.DateField() |
|
|
| objects = PersonManager() |
|
|
| class Meta: |
| constraints = [ |
| models.UniqueConstraint( |
| fields=["first_name", "last_name"], |
| name="unique_first_last_name", |
| ), |
| ] |
|
|
| Now books can use that natural key to refer to ``Person`` objects:: |
|
|
| ... |
| { |
| "pk": 1, |
| "model": "store.book", |
| "fields": {"name": "Mostly Harmless", "author": ["Douglas", "Adams"]}, |
| } |
| ... |
|
|
| When you try to load this serialized data, Django will use the |
| ``get_by_natural_key()`` method to resolve ``["Douglas", "Adams"]`` |
| into the primary key of an actual ``Person`` object. |
|
|
| .. note:: |
|
|
| Whatever fields you use for a natural key must be able to uniquely |
| identify an object. This will usually mean that your model will |
| have a uniqueness clause (either ``unique=True`` on a single field, or a |
| ``UniqueConstraint`` or ``unique_together`` over multiple fields) for the |
| field or fields in your natural key. However, uniqueness doesn't need to be |
| enforced at the database level. If you are certain that a set of fields |
| will be effectively unique, you can still use those fields as a natural |
| key. |
|
|
| Deserialization of objects with no primary key will always check whether the |
| model's manager has a ``get_by_natural_key()`` method and if so, use it to |
| populate the deserialized object's primary key. |
|
|
| Serialization of natural keys |
| ----------------------------- |
|
|
| So how do you get Django to emit a natural key when serializing an object? |
| Firstly, you need to add another method -- this time to the model itself:: |
|
|
| class Person(models.Model): |
| first_name = models.CharField(max_length=100) |
| last_name = models.CharField(max_length=100) |
| birthdate = models.DateField() |
|
|
| objects = PersonManager() |
|
|
| class Meta: |
| constraints = [ |
| models.UniqueConstraint( |
| fields=["first_name", "last_name"], |
| name="unique_first_last_name", |
| ), |
| ] |
|
|
| def natural_key(self): |
| return (self.first_name, self.last_name) |
|
|
| That method should always return a natural key tuple -- in this |
| example, ``(first name, last name)``. Then, when you call |
| ``serializers.serialize()``, you provide ``use_natural_foreign_keys=True`` |
| or ``use_natural_primary_keys=True`` arguments: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: pycon |
|
|
| >>> serializers.serialize( |
| ... "json", |
| ... [book1, book2], |
| ... indent=2, |
| ... use_natural_foreign_keys=True, |
| ... use_natural_primary_keys=True, |
| ... ) |
|
|
| When ``use_natural_foreign_keys=True`` is specified, Django will use the |
| ``natural_key()`` method to serialize any foreign key reference to objects |
| of the type that defines the method. |
|
|
| When ``use_natural_primary_keys=True`` is specified, Django will not provide the |
| primary key in the serialized data of this object since it can be calculated |
| during deserialization:: |
|
|
| ... |
| { |
| "model": "store.person", |
| "fields": { |
| "first_name": "Douglas", |
| "last_name": "Adams", |
| "birth_date": "1952-03-11", |
| }, |
| } |
| ... |
|
|
| This can be useful when you need to load serialized data into an existing |
| database and you cannot guarantee that the serialized primary key value is not |
| already in use, and do not need to ensure that deserialized objects retain the |
| same primary keys. |
|
|
| If you are using :djadmin:`dumpdata` to generate serialized data, use the |
| :option:`dumpdata --natural-foreign` and :option:`dumpdata --natural-primary` |
| command line flags to generate natural keys. |
|
|
| .. note:: |
|
|
| You don't need to define both ``natural_key()`` and |
| ``get_by_natural_key()``. If you don't want Django to output |
| natural keys during serialization, but you want to retain the |
| ability to load natural keys, then you can opt to not implement |
| the ``natural_key()`` method. |
|
|
| Conversely, if (for some strange reason) you want Django to output |
| natural keys during serialization, but *not* be able to load those |
| key values, just don't define the ``get_by_natural_key()`` method. |
|
|
| .. _natural-keys-and-forward-references: |
|
|
| Natural keys and forward references |
| ----------------------------------- |
|
|
| Sometimes when you use :ref:`natural foreign keys |
| <topics-serialization-natural-keys>` you'll need to deserialize data where |
| an object has a foreign key referencing another object that hasn't yet been |
| deserialized. This is called a "forward reference". |
|
|
| For instance, suppose you have the following objects in your fixture:: |
|
|
| ... |
| { |
| "model": "store.book", |
| "fields": {"name": "Mostly Harmless", "author": ["Douglas", "Adams"]}, |
| }, |
| ... |
| {"model": "store.person", "fields": {"first_name": "Douglas", "last_name": "Adams"}}, |
| ... |
|
|
| In order to handle this situation, you need to pass |
| ``handle_forward_references=True`` to ``serializers.deserialize()``. This will |
| set the ``deferred_fields`` attribute on the ``DeserializedObject`` instances. |
| You'll need to keep track of ``DeserializedObject`` instances where this |
| attribute isn't ``None`` and later call ``save_deferred_fields()`` on them. |
|
|
| Typical usage looks like this:: |
|
|
| objs_with_deferred_fields = [] |
|
|
| for obj in serializers.deserialize("xml", data, handle_forward_references=True): |
| obj.save() |
| if obj.deferred_fields is not None: |
| objs_with_deferred_fields.append(obj) |
|
|
| for obj in objs_with_deferred_fields: |
| obj.save_deferred_fields() |
|
|
| For this to work, the ``ForeignKey`` on the referencing model must have |
| ``null=True``. |
|
|
| Dependencies during serialization |
| --------------------------------- |
|
|
| It's often possible to avoid explicitly having to handle forward references by |
| taking care with the ordering of objects within a fixture. |
|
|
| To help with this, calls to :djadmin:`dumpdata` that use the :option:`dumpdata |
| --natural-foreign` option will serialize any model with a ``natural_key()`` |
| method before serializing standard primary key objects. |
|
|
| However, this may not always be enough. If your natural key refers to |
| another object (by using a foreign key or natural key to another object |
| as part of a natural key), then you need to be able to ensure that |
| the objects on which a natural key depends occur in the serialized data |
| before the natural key requires them. |
|
|
| To control this ordering, you can define dependencies on your |
| ``natural_key()`` methods. You do this by setting a ``dependencies`` |
| attribute on the ``natural_key()`` method itself. |
|
|
| For example, let's add a natural key to the ``Book`` model from the |
| example above:: |
|
|
| class Book(models.Model): |
| name = models.CharField(max_length=100) |
| author = models.ForeignKey(Person, on_delete=models.CASCADE) |
|
|
| def natural_key(self): |
| return (self.name,) + self.author.natural_key() |
|
|
| The natural key for a ``Book`` is a combination of its name and its |
| author. This means that ``Person`` must be serialized before ``Book``. |
| To define this dependency, we add one extra line:: |
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| def natural_key(self): |
| return (self.name,) + self.author.natural_key() |
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| natural_key.dependencies = ["example_app.person"] |
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| This definition ensures that all ``Person`` objects are serialized before |
| any ``Book`` objects. In turn, any object referencing ``Book`` will be |
| serialized after both ``Person`` and ``Book`` have been serialized. |
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