A validator is a callable that takes a value and raises a ValidationError if it doesn’t meet some criteria. Validators can be useful for re-using validation logic between different types of fields.
For example, here’s a validator that only allows even numbers:
from django.core.exceptions import ValidationError
from django.utils.translation import gettext_lazy as _
def validate_even(value):
if value % 2 != 0:
raise ValidationError(
_('%(value)s is not an even number'),
params={'value': value},
)
You can add this to a model field via the field’s validators argument:
from django.db import models
class MyModel(models.Model):
even_field = models.IntegerField(validators=[validate_even])
Because values are converted to Python before validators are run, you can even use the same validator with forms:
from django import forms
class MyForm(forms.Form):
even_field = forms.IntegerField(validators=[validate_even])
You can also use a class with a __call__() method for more complex or configurable validators. RegexValidator, for example, uses this technique. If a class-based validator is used in the validators model field option, you should make sure it is serializable by the migration framework by adding deconstruct() and __eq__() methods.
See the form validation for more information on how validators are run in forms, and Validating objects for how they’re run in models. Note that validators will not be run automatically when you save a model, but if you are using a ModelForm, it will run your validators on any fields that are included in your form. See the ModelForm documentation for information on how model validation interacts with forms.
The django.core.validators module contains a collection of callable validators for use with model and form fields. They’re used internally but are available for use with your own fields, too. They can be used in addition to, or in lieu of custom field.clean() methods.
RegexValidatorclass RegexValidator(regex=None, message=None, code=None, inverse_match=None, flags=0) | Parameters: |
|
|---|
A RegexValidator searches the provided value for a given regular expression with re.search(). By default, raises a ValidationError with message and code if a match is not found. Its behavior can be inverted by setting inverse_match to True, in which case the ValidationError is raised when a match is found.
regex The regular expression pattern to search for within the provided value, using re.search(). This may be a string or a pre-compiled regular expression created with re.compile(). Defaults to the empty string, which will be found in every possible value.
message The error message used by ValidationError if validation fails. Defaults to "Enter a valid value".
code The error code used by ValidationError if validation fails. Defaults to "invalid".
inverse_match The match mode for regex. Defaults to False.
flags The regex flags used when compiling the regular expression string regex. If regex is a pre-compiled regular expression, and flags is overridden, TypeError is raised. Defaults to 0.
EmailValidatorclass EmailValidator(message=None, code=None, allowlist=None) | Parameters: |
|---|
message The error message used by ValidationError if validation fails. Defaults to "Enter a valid email address".
code The error code used by ValidationError if validation fails. Defaults to "invalid".
allowlist Allowlist of email domains. By default, a regular expression (the domain_regex attribute) is used to validate whatever appears after the @ sign. However, if that string appears in the allowlist, this validation is bypassed. If not provided, the default allowlist is ['localhost']. Other domains that don’t contain a dot won’t pass validation, so you’d need to add them to the allowlist as necessary.
Deprecated since version 3.2: The whitelist parameter is deprecated. Use allowlist instead. The undocumented domain_whitelist attribute is deprecated. Use domain_allowlist instead.
URLValidatorclass URLValidator(schemes=None, regex=None, message=None, code=None) A RegexValidator subclass that ensures a value looks like a URL, and raises an error code of 'invalid' if it doesn’t.
Loopback addresses and reserved IP spaces are considered valid. Literal IPv6 addresses (RFC 3986#section-3.2.2) and Unicode domains are both supported.
In addition to the optional arguments of its parent RegexValidator class, URLValidator accepts an extra optional attribute:
schemes URL/URI scheme list to validate against. If not provided, the default list is ['http', 'https', 'ftp', 'ftps']. As a reference, the IANA website provides a full list of valid URI schemes.
validate_emailvalidate_email An EmailValidator instance without any customizations.
validate_slugvalidate_slug A RegexValidator instance that ensures a value consists of only letters, numbers, underscores or hyphens.
validate_unicode_slugvalidate_unicode_slug A RegexValidator instance that ensures a value consists of only Unicode letters, numbers, underscores, or hyphens.
validate_ipv4_addressvalidate_ipv4_address A RegexValidator instance that ensures a value looks like an IPv4 address.
validate_ipv6_addressvalidate_ipv6_address Uses django.utils.ipv6 to check the validity of an IPv6 address.
validate_ipv46_addressvalidate_ipv46_address Uses both validate_ipv4_address and validate_ipv6_address to ensure a value is either a valid IPv4 or IPv6 address.
validate_comma_separated_integer_listvalidate_comma_separated_integer_list A RegexValidator instance that ensures a value is a comma-separated list of integers.
int_list_validatorint_list_validator(sep=', ', message=None, code='invalid', allow_negative=False) Returns a RegexValidator instance that ensures a string consists of integers separated by sep. It allows negative integers when allow_negative is True.
MaxValueValidatorclass MaxValueValidator(limit_value, message=None) Raises a ValidationError with a code of 'max_value' if value is greater than limit_value, which may be a callable.
MinValueValidatorclass MinValueValidator(limit_value, message=None) Raises a ValidationError with a code of 'min_value' if value is less than limit_value, which may be a callable.
MaxLengthValidatorclass MaxLengthValidator(limit_value, message=None) Raises a ValidationError with a code of 'max_length' if the length of value is greater than limit_value, which may be a callable.
MinLengthValidatorclass MinLengthValidator(limit_value, message=None) Raises a ValidationError with a code of 'min_length' if the length of value is less than limit_value, which may be a callable.
DecimalValidatorclass DecimalValidator(max_digits, decimal_places) Raises ValidationError with the following codes:
'max_digits' if the number of digits is larger than max_digits.'max_decimal_places' if the number of decimals is larger than decimal_places.'max_whole_digits' if the number of whole digits is larger than the difference between max_digits and decimal_places.FileExtensionValidatorclass FileExtensionValidator(allowed_extensions, message, code) Raises a ValidationError with a code of 'invalid_extension' if the extension of value.name (value is a File) isn’t found in allowed_extensions. The extension is compared case-insensitively with allowed_extensions.
Warning
Don’t rely on validation of the file extension to determine a file’s type. Files can be renamed to have any extension no matter what data they contain.
validate_image_file_extensionvalidate_image_file_extension Uses Pillow to ensure that value.name (value is a File) has a valid image extension.
ProhibitNullCharactersValidatorclass ProhibitNullCharactersValidator(message=None, code=None) Raises a ValidationError if str(value) contains one or more nulls characters ('\x00').
| Parameters: |
|---|
message The error message used by ValidationError if validation fails. Defaults to "Null characters are not allowed.".
code The error code used by ValidationError if validation fails. Defaults to "null_characters_not_allowed".
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Licensed under the BSD License.
https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/3.2/ref/validators/