This repository is the friendly fork of the original django-rest-framework-recursive by heywbj. As the original repo is no longer being actively maintained, we've friendly forked it here to undertake maintenance for modern versions of Python, Django, and Django Rest Framework.
This package provides a RecursiveField
that enables you to serailize a tree, linked list, or even a directed acyclic graph. It also supports validation, deserialization, ModeSerializer, and multi-step recursive structures.
from rest_framework import serializers
from django_rest_framework_recursive.fields import RecursiveField
class TreeSerializer(serializers.Serializer):
name = serializers.CharField()
children = serializers.ListField(child=RecursiveField())
from rest_framework import serializers
from django_rest_framework_recursive.fields import RecursiveField
class LinkSerializer(serializers.Serializer):
name = serializers.CharField(max_length=25)
next = RecursiveField(allow_null=True)
Further use cases are documented in the tests, see [here][tests] for more usage examples
This package supports:
- Python 3.10, 3.11, 3.12
- Django 3.2, 4.0, 4.1, 4.2, 5.0, 5.1
- Django Rest Framework 3.12, 3.13, 3.14, 3.15
For an exact list of tested version combinations, see the valid_version_combinations
set in the noxfile
During development you will also need:
uv
installed as a system package.- pre-commit 3 (Optional, but strongly recommended)
Install using pip
...
pip install drf-recursive
When making changes please remember to update the CHANGELOG.md
, which follows the guidelines at
keepachangelog. Add your changes to the [Unreleased]
section when you create your PR.
Ensure one of the above Pythons is installed and used by the python
executable:****
python --version
Python 3.10.13 # or any of the supported versions
Ensure uv
is installed as a system package. This can be done with pipx
or Homebrew.
Then create and activate a virtual environment. If you don't have any other way of managing virtual environments this can be done by running:
uv venv
source .venv/bin/activate
You could also use virtualenvwrapper, direnv or any similar tool to help manage your virtual environments.
Once you are in an active virtual environment run
make dev
This will set up your local development environment, installing all development dependencies.
To run the test suite using the Python version of your virtual environment, run:
make test
To test against multiple Python (and package) versions, we need to:
-
Have
nox
installed outside of the virtualenv. This is best done usingpipx
:pipx install nox
-
Ensure that all supported Python versions are installed and available on your system (as e.g.
python3.10
,python3.11
etc). This can be done withpyenv
.
Then run nox
with:
nox
Nox will create a separate virtual environment for each combination of Python and package versions
defined in noxfile.py
.
To list the available sessions, run:
nox --list-sessions
To run the test suite in a specific Nox session, use:
nox -s $SESSION_NAME
Run all static analysis tools with:
make lint
Reformat code to conform with our conventions using:
make format
Package dependencies are declared in pyproject.toml
.
- package dependencies in the
dependencies
array in the[project]
section. - development dependencies in the
dev
array in the[project.optional-dependencies]
section.
For local development, the dependencies declared in pyproject.toml
are pinned to specific
versions using the requirements/development.txt
lock file.
To install a new Python dependency add it to the appropriate section in pyproject.toml
and then
run:
make dev
This will:
- Build a new version of the
requirements/development.txt
lock file containing the newly added package. - Sync your installed packages with those pinned in
requirements/development.txt
.
This will not change the pinned versions of any packages already in any requirements file unless needed by the new packages, even if there are updated versions of those packages available.
Remember to commit your changed requirements/development.txt
files alongside the changed
pyproject.toml
.
Removing Python dependencies works exactly the same way: edit pyproject.toml
and then run
make dev
.
To update the pinned versions of all packages simply run:
make update
This will update the pinned versions of every package in the requirements/development.txt
lock
file to the latest version which is compatible with the constraints in pyproject.toml
.
You can then run:
make dev
to sync your installed packages with the updated versions pinned in requirements/development.txt
.
Upgrade a single development dependency with:
uv pip compile -P $PACKAGE==$VERSION pyproject.toml --extra=dev --output-file=requirements/development.txt
You can then run:
make dev
to sync your installed packages with the updated versions pinned in requirements/development.txt
.
This project uses SemVer for versioning with no additional suffix after the version number. When
it is time for a new release, run the command make version_{type}
where {type}
should be
replaced with one of major
, minor
, patch
depending on the type of changes in the release.
The command will update the version in pyproject.toml
and move the changes from the "Unreleased"
section of the changelog to a versioned section and create a new "Unreleased" section for future
improvements.