Middleware¶
Middleware is a framework of hooks into Django’s request/response processing. It’s a light, low-level “plugin” system for globally altering Django’s input or output.
Each middleware component is responsible for doing some specific function. For
example, Django includes a middleware component,
AuthenticationMiddleware
, that
associates users with requests using sessions.
This document explains how middleware works, how you activate middleware, and how to write your own middleware. Django ships with some built-in middleware you can use right out of the box. They’re documented in the built-in middleware reference.
Writing your own middleware¶
A middleware factory is a callable that takes a get_response
callable and
returns a middleware. A middleware is a callable that takes a request and
returns a response, just like a view.
A middleware can be written as a function that looks like this:
def simple_middleware(get_response):
# One-time configuration and initialization.
def middleware(request):
# Code to be executed for each request before
# the view (and later middleware) are called.
response = get_response(request)
# Code to be executed for each request/response after
# the view is called.
return response
return middleware
Or it can be written as a class whose instances are callable, like this:
class SimpleMiddleware:
def __init__(self, get_response):
self.get_response = get_response
# One-time configuration and initialization.
def __call__(self, request):
# Code to be executed for each request before
# the view (and later middleware) are called.
response = self.get_response(request)
# Code to be executed for each request/response after
# the view is called.
return response
The get_response
callable provided by Django might be the actual view (if
this is the last listed middleware) or it might be the next middleware in the
chain. The current middleware doesn’t need to know or care what exactly it is,
just that it represents whatever comes next.
The above is a slight simplification – the get_response
callable for the
last middleware in the chain won’t be the actual view but rather a wrapper
method from the handler which takes care of applying view middleware, calling the view with appropriate URL arguments, and
applying template-response and
exception middleware.
Middleware can either support only synchronous Python (the default), only asynchronous Python, or both. See Asynchronous support for details of how to advertise what you support, and know what kind of request you are getting.
Middleware can live anywhere on your Python path.
__init__(get_response)
¶
Middleware factories must accept a get_response
argument. You can also
initialize some global state for the middleware. Keep in mind a couple of
caveats:
Django initializes your middleware with only the
get_response
argument, so you can’t define__init__()
as requiring any other arguments.Unlike the
__call__()
method which is called once per request,__init__()
is called only once, when the web server starts.
Marking middleware as unused¶
It’s sometimes useful to determine at startup time whether a piece of
middleware should be used. In these cases, your middleware’s __init__()
method may raise MiddlewareNotUsed
. Django will
then remove that middleware from the middleware process and log a debug message
to the django.request logger when DEBUG
is True
.
Activating middleware¶
To activate a middleware component, add it to the MIDDLEWARE
list in
your Django settings.
In MIDDLEWARE
, each middleware component is represented by a string:
the full Python path to the middleware factory’s class or function name. For
example, here’s the default value created by django-admin
startproject
:
MIDDLEWARE = [
"django.middleware.security.SecurityMiddleware",
"django.contrib.sessions.middleware.SessionMiddleware",
"django.middleware.common.CommonMiddleware",
"django.middleware.csrf.CsrfViewMiddleware",
"django.contrib.auth.middleware.AuthenticationMiddleware",
"django.contrib.messages.middleware.MessageMiddleware",
"django.middleware.clickjacking.XFrameOptionsMiddleware",
]
A Django installation doesn’t require any middleware — MIDDLEWARE
can be empty, if you’d like — but it’s strongly suggested that you at least use
CommonMiddleware
.
The order in MIDDLEWARE
matters because a middleware can depend on
other middleware. For instance,
AuthenticationMiddleware
stores the
authenticated user in the session; therefore, it must run after
SessionMiddleware
. See
Middleware ordering for some common hints about ordering of Django
middleware classes.
Middleware order and layering¶
During the request phase, before calling the view, Django applies middleware in
the order it’s defined in MIDDLEWARE
, top-down.
You can think of it like an onion: each middleware class is a “layer” that
wraps the view, which is in the core of the onion. If the request passes
through all the layers of the onion (each one calls get_response
to pass
the request in to the next layer), all the way to the view at the core, the
response will then pass through every layer (in reverse order) on the way back
out.
If one of the layers decides to short-circuit and return a response without
ever calling its get_response
, none of the layers of the onion inside that
layer (including the view) will see the request or the response. The response
will only return through the same layers that the request passed in through.
Other middleware hooks¶
Besides the basic request/response middleware pattern described earlier, you can add three other special methods to class-based middleware:
process_view()
¶
- process_view(request, view_func, view_args, view_kwargs)¶
request
is an HttpRequest
object. view_func
is
the Python function that Django is about to use. (It’s the actual function
object, not the name of the function as a string.) view_args
is a list of
positional arguments that will be passed to the view, and view_kwargs
is a
dictionary of keyword arguments that will be passed to the view. Neither
view_args
nor view_kwargs
include the first view argument
(request
).
process_view()
is called just before Django calls the view.
It should return either None
or an HttpResponse
object. If it returns None
, Django will continue processing this request,
executing any other process_view()
middleware and, then, the appropriate
view. If it returns an HttpResponse
object, Django won’t
bother calling the appropriate view; it’ll apply response middleware to that
HttpResponse
and return the result.
Note
Accessing request.POST
inside
middleware before the view runs or in process_view()
will prevent any
view running after the middleware from being able to modify the
upload handlers for the request,
and should normally be avoided.
The CsrfViewMiddleware
class can be
considered an exception, as it provides the
csrf_exempt()
and
csrf_protect()
decorators which allow
views to explicitly control at what point the CSRF validation should occur.
process_exception()
¶
- process_exception(request, exception)¶
request
is an HttpRequest
object. exception
is an
Exception
object raised by the view function.
Django calls process_exception()
when a view raises an exception.
process_exception()
should return either None
or an
HttpResponse
object. If it returns an
HttpResponse
object, the template response and response
middleware will be applied and the resulting response returned to the
browser. Otherwise, default exception handling kicks in.
Again, middleware are run in reverse order during the response phase, which
includes process_exception
. If an exception middleware returns a response,
the process_exception
methods of the middleware classes above that
middleware won’t be called at all.
process_template_response()
¶
- process_template_response(request, response)¶
request
is an HttpRequest
object. response
is
the TemplateResponse
object (or equivalent)
returned by a Django view or by a middleware.
process_template_response()
is called just after the view has finished
executing, if the response instance has a render()
method, indicating that
it is a TemplateResponse
or equivalent.
It must return a response object that implements a render
method. It could
alter the given response
by changing response.template_name
and
response.context_data
, or it could create and return a brand-new
TemplateResponse
or equivalent.
You don’t need to explicitly render responses – responses will be automatically rendered once all template response middleware has been called.
Middleware are run in reverse order during the response phase, which
includes process_template_response()
.
Dealing with streaming responses¶
Unlike HttpResponse
,
StreamingHttpResponse
does not have a content
attribute. As a result, middleware can no longer assume that all responses
will have a content
attribute. If they need access to the content, they
must test for streaming responses and adjust their behavior accordingly:
if response.streaming:
response.streaming_content = wrap_streaming_content(response.streaming_content)
else:
response.content = alter_content(response.content)
Note
streaming_content
should be assumed to be too large to hold in memory.
Response middleware may wrap it in a new generator, but must not consume
it. Wrapping is typically implemented as follows:
def wrap_streaming_content(content):
for chunk in content:
yield alter_content(chunk)
StreamingHttpResponse
allows both synchronous and
asynchronous iterators. The wrapping function must match. Check
StreamingHttpResponse.is_async
if your middleware needs to
support both types of iterator.
Support for streaming responses with asynchronous iterators was added.
Exception handling¶
Django automatically converts exceptions raised by the view or by middleware into an appropriate HTTP response with an error status code. Certain exceptions are converted to 4xx status codes, while an unknown exception is converted to a 500 status code.
This conversion takes place before and after each middleware (you can think of
it as the thin film in between each layer of the onion), so that every
middleware can always rely on getting some kind of HTTP response back from
calling its get_response
callable. Middleware don’t need to worry about
wrapping their call to get_response
in a try/except
and handling an
exception that might have been raised by a later middleware or the view. Even
if the very next middleware in the chain raises an
Http404
exception, for example, your middleware won’t see
that exception; instead it will get an HttpResponse
object with a status_code
of 404.
You can set DEBUG_PROPAGATE_EXCEPTIONS
to True
to skip this
conversion and propagate exceptions upward.
Asynchronous support¶
Middleware can support any combination of synchronous and asynchronous requests. Django will adapt requests to fit the middleware’s requirements if it cannot support both, but at a performance penalty.
By default, Django assumes that your middleware is capable of handling only synchronous requests. To change these assumptions, set the following attributes on your middleware factory function or class:
sync_capable
is a boolean indicating if the middleware can handle synchronous requests. Defaults toTrue
.async_capable
is a boolean indicating if the middleware can handle asynchronous requests. Defaults toFalse
.
If your middleware has both sync_capable = True
and
async_capable = True
, then Django will pass it the request without
converting it. In this case, you can work out if your middleware will receive
async requests by checking if the get_response
object you are passed is a
coroutine function, using asgiref.sync.iscoroutinefunction
.
The django.utils.decorators
module contains
sync_only_middleware()
,
async_only_middleware()
, and
sync_and_async_middleware()
decorators that
allow you to apply these flags to middleware factory functions.
The returned callable must match the sync or async nature of the
get_response
method. If you have an asynchronous get_response
, you must
return a coroutine function (async def
).
process_view
, process_template_response
and process_exception
methods, if they are provided, should also be adapted to match the sync/async
mode. However, Django will individually adapt them as required if you do not,
at an additional performance penalty.
Here’s an example of how to create a middleware function that supports both:
from asgiref.sync import iscoroutinefunction
from django.utils.decorators import sync_and_async_middleware
@sync_and_async_middleware
def simple_middleware(get_response):
# One-time configuration and initialization goes here.
if iscoroutinefunction(get_response):
async def middleware(request):
# Do something here!
response = await get_response(request)
return response
else:
def middleware(request):
# Do something here!
response = get_response(request)
return response
return middleware
Note
If you declare a hybrid middleware that supports both synchronous and asynchronous calls, the kind of call you get may not match the underlying view. Django will optimize the middleware call stack to have as few sync/async transitions as possible.
Thus, even if you are wrapping an async view, you may be called in sync mode if there is other, synchronous middleware between you and the view.
When using an asynchronous class-based middleware, you must ensure that instances are correctly marked as coroutine functions:
from asgiref.sync import iscoroutinefunction, markcoroutinefunction
class AsyncMiddleware:
async_capable = True
sync_capable = False
def __init__(self, get_response):
self.get_response = get_response
if iscoroutinefunction(self.get_response):
markcoroutinefunction(self)
async def __call__(self, request):
response = await self.get_response(request)
# Some logic ...
return response
Upgrading pre-Django 1.10-style middleware¶
- class django.utils.deprecation.MiddlewareMixin¶
Django provides django.utils.deprecation.MiddlewareMixin
to ease creating
middleware classes that are compatible with both MIDDLEWARE
and the
old MIDDLEWARE_CLASSES
, and support synchronous and asynchronous requests.
All middleware classes included with Django are compatible with both settings.
The mixin provides an __init__()
method that requires a get_response
argument and stores it in self.get_response
.
The __call__()
method:
Calls
self.process_request(request)
(if defined).Calls
self.get_response(request)
to get the response from later middleware and the view.Calls
self.process_response(request, response)
(if defined).Returns the response.
If used with MIDDLEWARE_CLASSES
, the __call__()
method will
never be used; Django calls process_request()
and process_response()
directly.
In most cases, inheriting from this mixin will be sufficient to make an old-style middleware compatible with the new system with sufficient backwards-compatibility. The new short-circuiting semantics will be harmless or even beneficial to the existing middleware. In a few cases, a middleware class may need some changes to adjust to the new semantics.
These are the behavioral differences between using MIDDLEWARE
and
MIDDLEWARE_CLASSES
:
Under
MIDDLEWARE_CLASSES
, every middleware will always have itsprocess_response
method called, even if an earlier middleware short-circuited by returning a response from itsprocess_request
method. UnderMIDDLEWARE
, middleware behaves more like an onion: the layers that a response goes through on the way out are the same layers that saw the request on the way in. If a middleware short-circuits, only that middleware and the ones before it inMIDDLEWARE
will see the response.Under
MIDDLEWARE_CLASSES
,process_exception
is applied to exceptions raised from a middlewareprocess_request
method. UnderMIDDLEWARE
,process_exception
applies only to exceptions raised from the view (or from therender
method of aTemplateResponse
). Exceptions raised from a middleware are converted to the appropriate HTTP response and then passed to the next middleware.Under
MIDDLEWARE_CLASSES
, if aprocess_response
method raises an exception, theprocess_response
methods of all earlier middleware are skipped and a500 Internal Server Error
HTTP response is always returned (even if the exception raised was e.g. anHttp404
). UnderMIDDLEWARE
, an exception raised from a middleware will immediately be converted to the appropriate HTTP response, and then the next middleware in line will see that response. Middleware are never skipped due to a middleware raising an exception.