Constraints reference | Django documentation (original) (raw)
The classes defined in this module create database constraints. They are added in the model Meta.constraintsoption.
Referencing built-in constraints
Constraints are defined in django.db.models.constraints
, but for convenience they’re imported into django.db.models. The standard convention is to use from django.db import models
and refer to the constraints as models.<Foo>Constraint
.
Constraints in abstract base classes
You must always specify a unique name for the constraint. As such, you cannot normally specify a constraint on an abstract base class, since theMeta.constraints option is inherited by subclasses, with exactly the same values for the attributes (including name
) each time. To work around name collisions, part of the name may contain '%(app_label)s'
and '%(class)s'
, which are replaced, respectively, by the lowercased app label and class name of the concrete model. For example CheckConstraint(condition=Q(age__gte=18), name='%(app_label)s_%(class)s_is_adult')
.
BaseConstraint
¶
class BaseConstraint(*name, violation_error_code=None, violation_error_message=None)[source]¶
Base class for all constraints. Subclasses must implementconstraint_sql()
, create_sql()
, remove_sql()
andvalidate()
methods.
All constraints have the following parameters in common:
name
¶
BaseConstraint.name¶
The name of the constraint. You must always specify a unique name for the constraint.
violation_error_code
¶
BaseConstraint.violation_error_code¶
The error code used when ValidationError
is raised duringmodel validation. Defaults to None
.
violation_error_message
¶
BaseConstraint.violation_error_message¶
The error message used when ValidationError
is raised duringmodel validation. Defaults to"Constraint “%(name)s” is violated."
.
validate()
¶
BaseConstraint.validate(model, instance, exclude=None, using=DEFAULT_DB_ALIAS)[source]¶
Validates that the constraint, defined on model
, is respected on theinstance
. This will do a query on the database to ensure that the constraint is respected. If fields in the exclude
list are needed to validate the constraint, the constraint is ignored.
Raise a ValidationError
if the constraint is violated.
This method must be implemented by a subclass.
CheckConstraint
¶
class CheckConstraint(*, condition, name, violation_error_code=None, violation_error_message=None)[source]¶
Creates a check constraint in the database.
condition
¶
CheckConstraint.condition¶
A Q object or boolean Expression that specifies the conditional check you want the constraint to enforce.
For example, CheckConstraint(condition=Q(age__gte=18), name='age_gte_18')
ensures the age field is never less than 18.
Expression order
Q
argument order is not necessarily preserved, however the order ofQ
expressions themselves are preserved. This may be important for databases that preserve check constraint expression order for performance reasons. For example, use the following format if order matters:
CheckConstraint( condition=Q(age__gte=18) & Q(expensive_check=condition), name="age_gte_18_and_others", )
Oracle < 23c
Checks with nullable fields on Oracle < 23c must include a condition allowing for NULL
values in order for validate()to behave the same as check constraints validation. For example, if age
is a nullable field:
CheckConstraint(condition=Q(age__gte=18) | Q(age__isnull=True), name="age_gte_18")
UniqueConstraint
¶
class UniqueConstraint(*expressions, fields=(), name=None, condition=None, deferrable=None, include=None, opclasses=(), nulls_distinct=None, violation_error_code=None, violation_error_message=None)[source]¶
Creates a unique constraint in the database.
expressions
¶
UniqueConstraint.expressions¶
Positional argument *expressions
allows creating functional unique constraints on expressions and database functions.
For example:
UniqueConstraint(Lower("name").desc(), "category", name="unique_lower_name_category")
creates a unique constraint on the lowercased value of the name
field in descending order and the category
field in the default ascending order.
Functional unique constraints have the same database restrictions asIndex.expressions.
fields
¶
UniqueConstraint.fields¶
A list of field names that specifies the unique set of columns you want the constraint to enforce.
For example, UniqueConstraint(fields=['room', 'date'], name='unique_booking')
ensures each room can only be booked once for each date.
condition
¶
UniqueConstraint.condition¶
A Q object that specifies the condition you want the constraint to enforce.
For example:
UniqueConstraint(fields=["user"], condition=Q(status="DRAFT"), name="unique_draft_user")
ensures that each user only has one draft.
These conditions have the same database restrictions asIndex.condition.
deferrable
¶
UniqueConstraint.deferrable¶
Set this parameter to create a deferrable unique constraint. Accepted values are Deferrable.DEFERRED
or Deferrable.IMMEDIATE
. For example:
from django.db.models import Deferrable, UniqueConstraint
UniqueConstraint( name="unique_order", fields=["order"], deferrable=Deferrable.DEFERRED, )
By default constraints are not deferred. A deferred constraint will not be enforced until the end of the transaction. An immediate constraint will be enforced immediately after every command.
MySQL, MariaDB, and SQLite.
Deferrable unique constraints are ignored on MySQL, MariaDB, and SQLite as they do not support them.
include
¶
UniqueConstraint.include¶
A list or tuple of the names of the fields to be included in the covering unique index as non-key columns. This allows index-only scans to be used for queries that select only included fields (include) and filter only by unique fields (fields).
For example:
UniqueConstraint(name="unique_booking", fields=["room", "date"], include=["full_name"])
will allow filtering on room
and date
, also selecting full_name
, while fetching data only from the index.
Unique constraints with non-key columns are ignored for databases besides PostgreSQL.
Non-key columns have the same database restrictions as Index.include.
opclasses
¶
UniqueConstraint.opclasses¶
The names of the PostgreSQL operator classes to use for this unique index. If you require a custom operator class, you must provide one for each field in the index.
For example:
UniqueConstraint( name="unique_username", fields=["username"], opclasses=["varchar_pattern_ops"] )
creates a unique index on username
using varchar_pattern_ops
.
opclasses
are ignored for databases besides PostgreSQL.
nulls_distinct
¶
UniqueConstraint.nulls_distinct¶
Whether rows containing NULL
values covered by the unique constraint should be considered distinct from each other. The default value is None
which uses the database default which is True
on most backends.
For example:
UniqueConstraint(name="ordering", fields=["ordering"], nulls_distinct=False)
creates a unique constraint that only allows one row to store a NULL
value in the ordering
column.
Unique constraints with nulls_distinct
are ignored for databases besides PostgreSQL 15+.
violation_error_code
¶
UniqueConstraint.violation_error_code¶
The error code used when a ValidationError
is raised duringmodel validation.
Defaults to BaseConstraint.violation_error_code, when eitherUniqueConstraint.condition is set or UniqueConstraint.fieldsis not set.
If UniqueConstraint.fields is set without aUniqueConstraint.condition, defaults to the Meta.unique_together error code when there are multiple fields, and to the Field.unique error code when there is a single field.
Changed in Django 5.2:
In older versions, the providedUniqueConstraint.violation_error_code was not used whenUniqueConstraint.fields was set without aUniqueConstraint.condition.
violation_error_message
¶
UniqueConstraint.violation_error_message¶
The error message used when a ValidationError
is raised duringmodel validation.
Defaults to BaseConstraint.violation_error_message, when eitherUniqueConstraint.condition is set or UniqueConstraint.fieldsis not set.
If UniqueConstraint.fields is set without aUniqueConstraint.condition, defaults to the Meta.unique_together error message when there are multiple fields, and to the Field.unique error message when there is a single field.
Changed in Django 5.2:
In older versions, the providedUniqueConstraint.violation_error_message was not used whenUniqueConstraint.fields was set without aUniqueConstraint.condition.