Django Rest Framework: turn on pagination on a ViewSet (like ModelViewSet pagination)

PythonDjangoDjango Rest-Framework

Python Problem Overview


I have a ViewSet like this one to list users' data:

class Foo(viewsets.ViewSet):

    def list(self, request):
        queryset = User.objects.all()
        serializer = UserSerializer(queryset, many=True)
        return Response(serializer.data)

I want to turn on pagination like the default pagination for ModelViewSet:

{
    "count": 55,
    "next": "http://myUrl/?page=2",
    "previous": null,
    "results": [{...},{...},...,{...}]
}

The official doc says:

> Pagination is only performed automatically if you're using the generic views or viewsets

...but my resultset is not paginated at all. How can I paginate it?

Python Solutions


Solution 1 - Python

For those using DRF 3.1 or higher, they are changing the default way pagination is handled. See http://www.django-rest-framework.org/topics/3.1-announcement/ for details.

Now if you want to enable pagination for a ModelViewSet you can either do it globally by setting in your settings.py file:

REST_FRAMEWORK = {
    'DEFAULT_PAGINATION_CLASS': 'rest_framework.pagination.PageNumberPagination',
    'PAGE_SIZE': 100
}

Or if you just want it for one ModelViewSet you can manually set the pagination_class for just that viewset.

from rest_framework.pagination import PageNumberPagination

class StandardResultsSetPagination(PageNumberPagination):
    page_size = 100
    page_size_query_param = 'page_size'
    max_page_size = 1000

class FooViewSet(viewsets.ModelViewSet):
    pagination_class = StandardResultsSetPagination

This also allows you to tweak the way the pagination is handled for just that viewset.

DRF 3.1 also has introduced new types of default pagination schemes that you can use such as LimitOffset and Cursor.

Solution 2 - Python

> Pagination is only performed automatically if you're using the generic > views or viewsets

The first roadblock is translating the docs to english. What they intended to convey is that you desire a generic viewset. The generic viewsets extend from generic ApiViews which have extra class methods for paginating querysets and responses.

Additionally, you're providing your own list method, but the default pagination process is actually handled by the mixin:

class ListModelMixin(object):
    """
    List a queryset.
    """
    def list(self, request, *args, **kwargs):
        queryset = self.filter_queryset(self.get_queryset())

        page = self.paginate_queryset(queryset)
        if page is not None:
            serializer = self.get_serializer(page, many=True)
            return self.get_paginated_response(serializer.data)

        serializer = self.get_serializer(queryset, many=True)
        return Response(serializer.data)

The easy solution, use the framework code:

class Foo(mixins.ListModelMixin, viewsets.GenericViewSet):
    queryset = User.objects.all()
    serializer = UserSerializer

The more complex solution would be if you need a custom list method, then you should write it as you see fit but in the style of the above mixin code snippet.

Solution 3 - Python

Try providing a class variable

paginate_by = 10 #This will paginate by 10 results per page.

Create a Custom ViewSet which performs only list operation as your case for here currently.

class ListModelViewSet(mixins.ListModelMixin, viewsets.GenericViewSet):
    pass

Now inherit your class Foo with this custom made viewset

class Foo(ListModelViewSet):

    paginate_by = 10

    def list(self, request):
        queryset = User.objects.all()
        serializer = UserSerializer(queryset, many=True)
        return Response(serializer.data)

This should help you get the pagination working.

Solution 4 - Python

Pagination in DRF using viewsets and list.

Here I have handled a exception If page is empty it will show empty records.

In setting define the page size, this page size is global and it is used by paginator_queryset in view.

> REST_FRAMEWORK = { 'PAGE_SIZE': 10, }

In view.py:

from rest_framework import mixins, viewsets

class SittingViewSet(viewsets.GenericViewSet,
    mixins.ListModelMixin):

    serializer_class = SittingSerializer
    queryset = Sitting.objects.all()
    serializer = serializer_class(queryset, many=True)

    def list(self, request, *args, **kwargs):
        queryset =self.filter_queryset(Sitting.objects.all().order_by('id'))

        page = request.GET.get('page')

        try: 
            page = self.paginate_queryset(queryset)
        except Exception as e:
            page = []
            data = page
            return Response({
                "status": status.HTTP_200_OK,
                "message": 'No more record.',
                "data" : data
                })

        if page is not None:
            serializer = self.get_serializer(page, many=True)
            data = serializer.data
            return self.get_paginated_response(data)

        # serializer = self.get_serializer(queryset, many=True)
        return Response({
            "status": status.HTTP_200_OK,
            "message": 'Sitting records.',
            "data" : data
        })

Note: If you not use Order_by it will show exception because this list gives unordered list.

Solution 5 - Python

A slightly simpler variation on this answer if you want pagination for a particular ViewSet, but don't need to customize the page size:

REST_FRAMEWORK = {
    'PAGE_SIZE': 100
}

class FooViewSet(viewsets.ModelViewSet):
    pagination_class = PageNumberPagination

Solution 6 - Python

This way also worked in Django Rest apiViews Api's

from rest_framework.pagination import PageNumberPagination
class FooList(APIView):

    page_size = 10

    def get(self, request):
        foo = Foo.objects.all()
        paginator = PageNumberPagination()
        paginator.page_size = page_size
        result_page = paginator.paginate_queryset(foo, request)
        serializer = FooSerializer(result_page, many=True)
        return paginator.get_paginated_response(serializer.data)

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