Constraints reference¶
The classes defined in this module create database constraints. They are added
in the model Meta.constraints
option.
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 the
Meta.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(check=Q(age__gte=18),
name='%(app_label)s_%(class)s_is_adult')
.
Validation of Constraints
In general constraints are not checked during full_clean()
, and do
not raise ValidationError
s. Rather you’ll get a database integrity
error on save()
. UniqueConstraint
s without a
condition
(i.e. non-partial unique constraints)
are different in this regard, in that they leverage the existing
validate_unique()
logic, and thus enable two-stage validation. In
addition to IntegrityError
on save()
, ValidationError
is also
raised during model validation when the UniqueConstraint
is violated.
CheckConstraint
¶
-
class
CheckConstraint
(*, check, name)¶ Creates a check constraint in the database.
UniqueConstraint
¶
-
class
UniqueConstraint
(*, fields, name, condition=None)¶ Creates a unique constraint in the database.
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.
name
¶
-
UniqueConstraint.
name
¶
The name of the constraint. You must always specify a unique name for the constraint.
Interpolation of '%(app_label)s'
and '%(class)s'
was added.
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 as
Index.condition
.