/drf-simple-api-errors

A library for Django Rest Framework returning consistent, predictable and easy-to-parse API error messages inspired by RFC7807 guidelines.

Primary LanguagePythonMIT LicenseMIT

Django Rest Framework Simple API Errors

PyPI test workflow codecov pyversions

What is this?

A library for Django Rest Framework returning consistent, predictable and easy-to-parse API error messages.

This library was built with RFC7807 guidelines in mind, but with a small twist: it defines a "problem detail" as a list, but it still serves as a way to include errors in a predictable and easy-to-parse format for any API consumer. Error messages are formatted using RFC7807 keywords and DRF exception data.

Compared to other similar and popular libraries, this library is based on RFC7807 guidelines and aims to provide not only a standardized format for error details, but also human readability.

Table of Contents

Installation

Install using the command line:

pip install drf-simple-api-errors

Usage

Exception Handler

Add EXCEPTION_HANDLER in your REST_FRAMEWORK settings of your Django project settings file:

REST_FRAMEWORK = {
    # ...
    "EXCEPTION_HANDLER": "drf_simple_api_errors.exception_handler",
}

Error structure overview

API error messages typically include the following keys:

  • "title" (str): A brief summary that describes the problem type
  • "detail" (list[str] | None): A list of specific explanations related to the problem
  • "invalid_params" (list[dict] | None): A list of dict containing details about parameters that were invalid or malformed in the request. Each dict within this list provides:
    • "name" (str): The name of the parameter that was found to be invalid
    • "reasons" (list[str]): A list of strings describing the specific reasons why the parameter was considered invalid or malformed
{
    "title": "Error message.",
    "detail": [
        "error",
        ...
    ],
    "invalid_params": [
        {
            "name": "field_name",
            "reason": [
                "error",
                ...
            ]
        },
        ...
    ]
}

Example JSON Error Responses

Field validation errors

{
    "title": "Error message.",
    "invalid_params": [
        {
            "name": "field_name",
            "reason": [
                "error",
                ...
            ]
        },
        ...
    ]
}

Non-fields validation errors

{
  "title": "Error message.",
  "detail": [
    "error",
    ...
  ]
}

Other bad requests with no detail

{
  "title": "Error message."
}

Settings

Default available settings:

DRF_SIMPLE_API_ERRORS = {
    "CAMELIZE": False,
    "EXTRA_HANDLERS": [],
    "FIELDS_SEPARATOR": ".",
}
  • CAMELIZE

Camel case support for Django Rest Framework exceptions JSON error responses.

If CAMELIZE is set to True:

{
  "title": "Error message.",
  "invalidParams": [
    {
      "name": "fieldName",
      "reason": [
        "error",
        ...
      ]
    }
    ...
  ]
}
  • EXTRA_HANDLERS

Support for exceptions that differ from the standard structure of the Django Rest Framework.

For instance, you may want to specify you own exception:

class AuthenticationFailed(exceptions.AuthenticationFailed):
    def __init__(self, detail=None, code=None):
        """
        Builds a detail dictionary for the error to give more information
        to API users.
        """
        detail_dict = {"detail": self.default_detail, "code": self.default_code}

        if isinstance(detail, dict):
            detail_dict.update(detail)
        elif detail is not None:
            detail_dict["detail"] = detail

        if code is not None:
            detail_dict["code"] = code

        super().__init__(detail_dict)

Use exception in code:

def my_func():
    raise AuthenticationFailed(
        {
            "detail": _("Error message."),
            "messages": [
                {
                    "metadata": "metadata_data",
                    "type": "type_name",
                    "message": "error message",
                }
            ],
        }
    )

This will result in:

AuthenticationFailed(
    {
        "detail": "Error message.",
        "messages": [
            {
                "metadata": "metadata_data",
                "type": "type_name",
                "message": "error message",
            }
        ],
    }
)

You can handle this by creating a handlers.py file and specifying an handler for your use case:

def handle_exc_custom_authentication_failed(exc):
    from path.to.my.exceptions import AuthenticationFailed

    if isinstance(exc, AuthenticationFailed):
        try:
            exc.detail = exc.detail["messages"][0]["message"]
        except (KeyError, IndexError):
            exc.detail = exc.detail["detail"]

    return exc

Then add it to the EXTRA_HANDLERS list in this package settings:

DRF_SIMPLE_API_ERRORS = {
    "EXTRA_HANDLERS": [
        "path.to.my.handlers.handle_exc_custom_authentication_failed",
        # ...
    ]
}
  • FIELDS_SEPARATOR

Support for nested dicts containing multiple fields to be flattened.

If FIELDS_SEPARATOR is set to .:

{
    "field1": {
        "field2": "value"
    }
}

Will result in:

{
    "field1.field2": "value"
}

Testing

All the necessary commands are included in the Makefile.

We are using tox and poetry to run tests in every supported Python version.

Run test with the commands below:

make install
make test

Support

Please open an issue.

Contributing

Please use the Github Flow. In a nutshell, create a branch, commit your code, and open a pull request.