Django provides a few classes that help you manage paginated data – that is, data that’s split across several pages, with “Previous/Next” links.
REST framework includes support for customizable pagination styles. This allows you to modify how large result sets are split into individual pages of data.
The pagination API can support either:
Content-Range
or Link
.The built-in styles currently all use links included as part of the content of the response. This style is more accessible when using the browsable API.
Pagination is only performed automatically if you're using the generic views or viewsets. If you're using a regular APIView
, you'll need to call into the pagination API yourself to ensure you return a paginated response. See the source code for the mixins.ListModelMixin
and generics.GenericAPIView
classes for an example.
Pagination can be turned off by setting the pagination class to None
.
The pagination style may be set globally, using the DEFAULT_PAGINATION_CLASS
and PAGE_SIZE
setting keys. For example, to use the built-in limit/offset pagination, you would do something like this:
REST_FRAMEWORK = { 'DEFAULT_PAGINATION_CLASS': 'rest_framework.pagination.LimitOffsetPagination', 'PAGE_SIZE': 100 }
Note that you need to set both the pagination class, and the page size that should be used. Both DEFAULT_PAGINATION_CLASS
and PAGE_SIZE
are None
by default.
You can also set the pagination class on an individual view by using the pagination_class
attribute. Typically you'll want to use the same pagination style throughout your API, although you might want to vary individual aspects of the pagination, such as default or maximum page size, on a per-view basis.
If you want to modify particular aspects of the pagination style, you'll want to override one of the pagination classes, and set the attributes that you want to change.
class LargeResultsSetPagination(PageNumberPagination): page_size = 1000 page_size_query_param = 'page_size' max_page_size = 10000 class StandardResultsSetPagination(PageNumberPagination): page_size = 100 page_size_query_param = 'page_size' max_page_size = 1000
You can then apply your new style to a view using the pagination_class
attribute:
class BillingRecordsView(generics.ListAPIView): queryset = Billing.objects.all() serializer_class = BillingRecordsSerializer pagination_class = LargeResultsSetPagination
Or apply the style globally, using the DEFAULT_PAGINATION_CLASS
settings key. For example:
REST_FRAMEWORK = { 'DEFAULT_PAGINATION_CLASS': 'apps.core.pagination.StandardResultsSetPagination' }
This pagination style accepts a single number page number in the request query parameters.
Request:
GET https://api.example.org/accounts/?page=4
Response:
HTTP 200 OK { "count": 1023 "next": "https://api.example.org/accounts/?page=5", "previous": "https://api.example.org/accounts/?page=3", "results": [ … ] }
To enable the PageNumberPagination
style globally, use the following configuration, and set the PAGE_SIZE
as desired:
REST_FRAMEWORK = { 'DEFAULT_PAGINATION_CLASS': 'rest_framework.pagination.PageNumberPagination', 'PAGE_SIZE': 100 }
On GenericAPIView
subclasses you may also set the pagination_class
attribute to select PageNumberPagination
on a per-view basis.
The PageNumberPagination
class includes a number of attributes that may be overridden to modify the pagination style.
To set these attributes you should override the PageNumberPagination
class, and then enable your custom pagination class as above.
django_paginator_class
- The Django Paginator class to use. Default is django.core.paginator.Paginator
, which should be fine for most use cases.page_size
- A numeric value indicating the page size. If set, this overrides the PAGE_SIZE
setting. Defaults to the same value as the PAGE_SIZE
settings key.page_query_param
- A string value indicating the name of the query parameter to use for the pagination control.page_size_query_param
- If set, this is a string value indicating the name of a query parameter that allows the client to set the page size on a per-request basis. Defaults to None
, indicating that the client may not control the requested page size.max_page_size
- If set, this is a numeric value indicating the maximum allowable requested page size. This attribute is only valid if page_size_query_param
is also set.last_page_strings
- A list or tuple of string values indicating values that may be used with the page_query_param
to request the final page in the set. Defaults to ('last',)
template
- The name of a template to use when rendering pagination controls in the browsable API. May be overridden to modify the rendering style, or set to None
to disable HTML pagination controls completely. Defaults to "rest_framework/pagination/numbers.html"
.This pagination style mirrors the syntax used when looking up multiple database records. The client includes both a "limit" and an "offset" query parameter. The limit indicates the maximum number of items to return, and is equivalent to the page_size
in other styles. The offset indicates the starting position of the query in relation to the complete set of unpaginated items.
Request:
GET https://api.example.org/accounts/?limit=100&offset=400
Response:
HTTP 200 OK { "count": 1023 "next": "https://api.example.org/accounts/?limit=100&offset=500", "previous": "https://api.example.org/accounts/?limit=100&offset=300", "results": [ … ] }
To enable the LimitOffsetPagination
style globally, use the following configuration:
REST_FRAMEWORK = { 'DEFAULT_PAGINATION_CLASS': 'rest_framework.pagination.LimitOffsetPagination' }
Optionally, you may also set a PAGE_SIZE
key. If the PAGE_SIZE
parameter is also used then the limit
query parameter will be optional, and may be omitted by the client.
On GenericAPIView
subclasses you may also set the pagination_class
attribute to select LimitOffsetPagination
on a per-view basis.
The LimitOffsetPagination
class includes a number of attributes that may be overridden to modify the pagination style.
To set these attributes you should override the LimitOffsetPagination
class, and then enable your custom pagination class as above.
default_limit
- A numeric value indicating the limit to use if one is not provided by the client in a query parameter. Defaults to the same value as the PAGE_SIZE
settings key.limit_query_param
- A string value indicating the name of the "limit" query parameter. Defaults to 'limit'
.offset_query_param
- A string value indicating the name of the "offset" query parameter. Defaults to 'offset'
.max_limit
- If set this is a numeric value indicating the maximum allowable limit that may be requested by the client. Defaults to None
.template
- The name of a template to use when rendering pagination controls in the browsable API. May be overridden to modify the rendering style, or set to None
to disable HTML pagination controls completely. Defaults to "rest_framework/pagination/numbers.html"
.The cursor-based pagination presents an opaque "cursor" indicator that the client may use to page through the result set. This pagination style only presents forward and reverse controls, and does not allow the client to navigate to arbitrary positions.
Cursor based pagination requires that there is a unique, unchanging ordering of items in the result set. This ordering might typically be a creation timestamp on the records, as this presents a consistent ordering to paginate against.
Cursor based pagination is more complex than other schemes. It also requires that the result set presents a fixed ordering, and does not allow the client to arbitrarily index into the result set. However it does provide the following benefits:
CursorPagination
ensures that the client will never see the same item twice when paging through records, even when new items are being inserted by other clients during the pagination process.Proper use of cursor based pagination requires a little attention to detail. You'll need to think about what ordering you want the scheme to be applied against. The default is to order by "-created"
. This assumes that there must be a 'created' timestamp field on the model instances, and will present a "timeline" style paginated view, with the most recently added items first.
You can modify the ordering by overriding the 'ordering'
attribute on the pagination class, or by using the OrderingFilter
filter class together with CursorPagination
. When used with OrderingFilter
you should strongly consider restricting the fields that the user may order by.
Proper usage of cursor pagination should have an ordering field that satisfies the following:
CursorPagination
subclass that uses decimals to limit precision is available here.)Using an ordering field that does not satisfy these constraints will generally still work, but you'll be losing some of the benefits of cursor pagination.
For more technical details on the implementation we use for cursor pagination, the "Building cursors for the Disqus API" blog post gives a good overview of the basic approach.
To enable the CursorPagination
style globally, use the following configuration, modifying the PAGE_SIZE
as desired:
REST_FRAMEWORK = { 'DEFAULT_PAGINATION_CLASS': 'rest_framework.pagination.CursorPagination', 'PAGE_SIZE': 100 }
On GenericAPIView
subclasses you may also set the pagination_class
attribute to select CursorPagination
on a per-view basis.
The CursorPagination
class includes a number of attributes that may be overridden to modify the pagination style.
To set these attributes you should override the CursorPagination
class, and then enable your custom pagination class as above.
page_size
= A numeric value indicating the page size. If set, this overrides the PAGE_SIZE
setting. Defaults to the same value as the PAGE_SIZE
settings key.cursor_query_param
= A string value indicating the name of the "cursor" query parameter. Defaults to 'cursor'
.ordering
= This should be a string, or list of strings, indicating the field against which the cursor based pagination will be applied. For example: ordering = 'slug'
. Defaults to -created
. This value may also be overridden by using OrderingFilter
on the view.template
= The name of a template to use when rendering pagination controls in the browsable API. May be overridden to modify the rendering style, or set to None
to disable HTML pagination controls completely. Defaults to "rest_framework/pagination/previous_and_next.html"
.To create a custom pagination serializer class you should subclass pagination.BasePagination
and override the paginate_queryset(self, queryset, request, view=None)
and get_paginated_response(self, data)
methods:
paginate_queryset
method is passed the initial queryset and should return an iterable object that contains only the data in the requested page.get_paginated_response
method is passed the serialized page data and should return a Response
instance.Note that the paginate_queryset
method may set state on the pagination instance, that may later be used by the get_paginated_response
method.
Suppose we want to replace the default pagination output style with a modified format that includes the next and previous links under in a nested 'links' key. We could specify a custom pagination class like so:
class CustomPagination(pagination.PageNumberPagination): def get_paginated_response(self, data): return Response({ 'links': { 'next': self.get_next_link(), 'previous': self.get_previous_link() }, 'count': self.page.paginator.count, 'results': data })
We'd then need to setup the custom class in our configuration:
REST_FRAMEWORK = { 'DEFAULT_PAGINATION_CLASS': 'my_project.apps.core.pagination.CustomPagination', 'PAGE_SIZE': 100 }
Note that if you care about how the ordering of keys is displayed in responses in the browsable API you might choose to use an OrderedDict
when constructing the body of paginated responses, but this is optional.
To have your custom pagination class be used by default, use the DEFAULT_PAGINATION_CLASS
setting:
REST_FRAMEWORK = { 'DEFAULT_PAGINATION_CLASS': 'my_project.apps.core.pagination.LinkHeaderPagination', 'PAGE_SIZE': 100 }
API responses for list endpoints will now include a Link
header, instead of including the pagination links as part of the body of the response, for example:
A custom pagination style, using the 'Link' header'
You can also make the pagination controls available to the schema autogeneration that REST framework provides, by implementing a get_schema_fields()
method. This method should have the following signature:
get_schema_fields(self, view)
The method should return a list of coreapi.Field
instances.
By default using the pagination classes will cause HTML pagination controls to be displayed in the browsable API. There are two built-in display styles. The PageNumberPagination
and LimitOffsetPagination
classes display a list of page numbers with previous and next controls. The CursorPagination
class displays a simpler style that only displays a previous and next control.
You can override the templates that render the HTML pagination controls. The two built-in styles are:
rest_framework/pagination/numbers.html
rest_framework/pagination/previous_and_next.html
Providing a template with either of these paths in a global template directory will override the default rendering for the relevant pagination classes.
Alternatively you can disable HTML pagination controls completely by subclassing on of the existing classes, setting template = None
as an attribute on the class. You'll then need to configure your DEFAULT_PAGINATION_CLASS
settings key to use your custom class as the default pagination style.
The low-level API for determining if a pagination class should display the controls or not is exposed as a display_page_controls
attribute on the pagination instance. Custom pagination classes should be set to True
in the paginate_queryset
method if they require the HTML pagination controls to be displayed.
The .to_html()
and .get_html_context()
methods may also be overridden in a custom pagination class in order to further customize how the controls are rendered.
The following third party packages are also available.
The DRF-extensions
package includes a PaginateByMaxMixin
mixin class that allows your API clients to specify ?page_size=max
to obtain the maximum allowed page size.
The drf-proxy-pagination
package includes a ProxyPagination
class which allows to choose pagination class with a query parameter.
The django-rest-framework-link-header-pagination
package includes a LinkHeaderPagination
class which provides pagination via an HTTP Link
header as described in Github's developer documentation.
Copyright © 2011–present Encode OSS Ltd.
Licensed under the BSD License.
https://www.django-rest-framework.org/api-guide/pagination/