I have a situation where I want to use the Meta options of unique_together
to enforce a certain rule, here\'s the intermediary model:
from django.core.exceptions import ValidationError
.....
class UserProfileExtension(models.Model):
extension = models.ForeignKey(Extension, unique=False)
userprofile = models.ForeignKey(UserProfile, unique=False)
user = models.ForeignKey(User, unique=False)
def validate_unique(self, *args, **kwargs):
super(UserProfileExtension, self).validate_unique(*args, **kwargs)
query = UserProfileExtension.objects.filter(extension=self.extension)
if query.filter(userprofile__client=self.userprofile.client).exists():
raise ValidationError({'extension':['Extension already exits for userprofile__client',]})
The first query is to filter all records in UserProfileExtension model which has the same extension we are putting in the current record.
Then we filter the query returned to find if it already contains userprofile__client which we are passing in the current record.
My solution was to use Django's get_or_create. By using get_or_create, a useless get will occur if the row already exists in the database, and the row will be created if it does not exist.
Example:
extension = Extension.objects.get(pk=someExtensionPK)
userProfile = UserProfile.objects.get(pk=someUserProfilePK)
UserProfileExtension.objects.get_or_create(extension=extension, userprofile=userProfile)
You need to call Models.full_clean() method to call validate_unique for foreignKey. You can override save() to call this
class UserProfileExtension(models.Model):
extension = models.ForeignKey(Extension, unique=False)
userprofile = models.ForeignKey(UserProfile, unique=False)
user = models.ForeignKey(User, unique=False)
def save(self, *args, **kwargs):
self.full_clean()
super().save(*args, **kwargs)
class Meta:
unique_together = (("userprofile", "extension"),
("user", "extension"),
# How can I enforce UserProfile's Client
# and Extension to be unique? This obviously
# doesn't work, but is this idea possible without
# creating another FK in my intermediary model
("userprofile__client", "extension"))
You can't.
The unique_together
clause is directly translated to the SQL
unique index. And you can only set those on columns of a single table, not a combination of several tables.
You can add validation for it yourself though, simply overwrite the validate_unique
method and add this validation to it.
Docs: http://docs.djangoproject.com/en/dev/ref/models/instances/#django.db.models.Model.validate_unique
My 2 cents, complementing the accepted response from @Wolph
You can add validation for it yourself though, simply overwrite the validate_unique method and add this validation to it.
This is a working example code someone could find usefull.
from django.core.exceptions import ValidationError
class MyModel(models.Model):
fk = models.ForeignKey(AnotherModel, on_delete=models.CASCADE)
my_field = models.CharField(...) # whatever
def validate_unique(self, *args, **kwargs):
super(MyModel, self).validate_unique(*args, **kwargs)
if self.__class__.objects.\
filter(fk=self.fk, my_field=self.my_field).\
exists():
raise ValidationError(
message='MyModel with this (fk, my_field) already exists.',
code='unique_together',
)
From django 2.2+ versions, it is suggested to use constraint & Index as model class meta option:
https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/2.2/ref/models/options/#django.db.models.Options.unique_together
https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/2.2/ref/models/options/#django.db.models.Options.constraints