jsonfield is a reusable model field that allows you to store validated JSON, automatically handling
serialization to and from the database. To use, add jsonfield.JSONField
to one of your models.
Note: django.contrib.postgres now supports PostgreSQL's jsonb type, which includes extended querying capabilities. If you're an end user of PostgreSQL and want full-featured JSON support, then it is recommended that you use the built-in JSONField. However, jsonfield is still useful when your app needs to be database-agnostic, or when the built-in JSONField's extended querying is not being leveraged. e.g., a configuration field.
jsonfield aims to support all current versions of Django, however the explicity tested versions are:
- Python: 3.6, 3.7, 3.8
- Django: 2.2, 3.0
pip install jsonfield
from django.db import models
from jsonfield import JSONField
class MyModel(models.Model):
json = JSONField()
As stated above, JSONField
is not intended to provide extended querying capabilities.
That said, you may perform the same basic lookups provided by regular text fields (e.g.,
exact
or regex
lookups). Since values are stored as serialized JSON, it is highly
recommended that you test your queries to ensure the expected results are returned.
A model field's null
argument typically controls whether null values may be stored in
its column by setting a not-null constraint. However, because JSONField
serializes its
values (including nulls), this option instead controls how null values are persisted. If
null=True
, then nulls are not serialized and are stored as a null value in the
database. If null=False
, then the null is instead stored in its serialized form.
This in turn affects how null values may be queried. Both fields support exact matching:
MyModel.objects.filter(json=None)
However, if you want to use the isnull
lookup, you must set null=True
.
class MyModel(models.Model):
json = JSONField(null=True)
MyModel.objects.filter(json__isnull=True)
Note that as JSONField.null
does not prevent nulls from being stored, achieving this
must instead be handled with a validator.
By default python deserializes json into dict objects. This behavior differs from the standard json behavior because python dicts do not have ordered keys. To overcome this limitation and keep the sort order of OrderedDict keys the deserialisation can be adjusted on model initialisation:
import collections
class MyModel(models.Model):
json = JSONField(load_kwargs={'object_pairs_hook': collections.OrderedDict})
jsonfield.JSONCharField
Subclasses models.CharField instead of models.TextField.
The test suite requires tox
.
$ pip install tox
Then, run the tox
command, which will run all test jobs.
$ tox
Or, to test just one job (for example Django 2.0 on Python 3.6):
$ tox -e py36-django20
- Update changelog
- Update package version in setup.py
- Check supported versions in setup.py and readme
- Create git tag for version
- Upload release to PyPI test server
- Upload release to official PyPI server
$ pip install -U pip setuptools wheel twine
$ rm -rf dist/ build/
$ python setup.py sdist bdist_wheel
$ twine upload -r test dist/*
$ twine upload dist/*
Take a look at the changelog.