It came out about three weeks ago one of the most expected features of FastAPI. At least when we're talking about Pydantic Models + FastAPI.
Yes, I'm talking about the ability to use Pydantic Models to map your query parameters.
So in this post, I'll try to show you all you π can and π can't do about this subject π:
π» Mapping Query Parameters
The first thing you need to do to start mapping your query parameters with Pydantic is making sure you are using FastAPI version 0.115.0
and above.
After this, you can always go to FastAPI docs to check what is already available. SebastiΓ‘n and the team members make a really, really good work on keeping do docs updated and informative β¨.
π A little bit of History
Let's start with some examples on how we used to map Query Parameters
in FastAPI
. π€
The simplest way to do it would be:
from fastapi import FastAPI
app = FastAPI()
@app.get("/")
async def search(
limit: int | None = 10,
skip: int | None = 1,
filter: str | None = None
):
return {
"limit": limit,
"skip": skip,
"filter": filter
}
And now you can simply call:
GET http://localhost:8000/?limit=42&skip=12&filter=banana
But if we identified that this Query Parameters
would be used in other routes, we would isolate it with something like:
from typing import Any
from fastapi import Depends, FastAPI, Query
app = FastAPI()
async def pagination_query_string(
limit: int | None = Query(10, ge=5, le=100),
skip: int | None = Query(1, ge=1),
filter: str | None = Query(None)
) -> dict[str, Any]:
return {
"limit": limit,
"skip": skip,
"filter": filter
}
@app.get("/")
async def search(q: dict[str, Any] = Depends(pagination_query_string)):
return q
Or since we're using Pydantic to map our models, with just a little refactoring we would get:
from fastapi import Depends, FastAPI, Query
from pydantic import BaseModel
app = FastAPI()
class PaginationQueryString(BaseModel):
limit: int | None = 10
skip: int | None = 1
filter: str | None = None
async def pagination_query_string(
limit: int | None = Query(10, ge=5, le=100),
skip: int | None = Query(1, ge=1),
filter: str | None = Query(None)
) -> PaginationQueryString:
return PaginationQueryString(
limit=limit,
skip=skip,
filter=filter
)
@app.get("/")
async def search(q: PaginationQueryString = Depends(pagination_query_string)):
return q
β¨οΈ Using Pydantic to map the Query Strings
Now, if we want to get our query string
, we don't need to create a function and then add it as a dependency. We can simply tell FastAPI
that we want an object of type PaginationQueryString
and that it's a query string:
from typing import Annotated
from fastapi import FastAPI, Query
from pydantic import BaseModel
app = FastAPI()
class PaginationQueryString(BaseModel):
limit: int | None = 10
skip: int | None = 1
filter: str | None = None
@app.get("/")
async def search(q: Annotated[PaginationQueryString, Query()]):
return q
Easy, right? π
β Forbid extra Query Parameters
To forbid extra parameters in our query strings we need to configure our Pydantic model to do so.
We'll simply add a model_config
with the option extra="forbid"
:
from typing import Annotated
from fastapi import FastAPI, Query
from pydantic import BaseModel, ConfigDict
app = FastAPI()
class PaginationQueryString(BaseModel):
model_config = ConfigDict(extra="forbid")
limit: int | None = 10
skip: int | None = 1
@app.get("/")
async def search(q: Annotated[PaginationQueryString, Query()]):
return q
Note that we removed the filter
parameter in our model. Now if we call:
GET http://localhost:8000/?limit=42&skip=12&filter=banana
We'll get an error informing us that extra inputs are not allowed:
{
"detail": [
{
"type": "extra_forbidden",
"loc": [
"query",
"filter"
],
"msg": "Extra inputs are not permitted",
"input": "banana"
}
]
}
β οΈ What are the limitations?
At least at version 0.115.0
, it don't work very well with nested models.
Let's try something like:
from typing import Annotated
from fastapi import FastAPI, Query
from pydantic import BaseModel
app = FastAPI()
class Filter(BaseModel):
name: str | None = None
age: int | None = None
nickname: str | None = None
class PaginationQueryString(BaseModel):
limit: int | None = 10
skip: int | None = 1
filter: Filter | None = None
@app.get("/")
async def search(q: Annotated[PaginationQueryString, Query()]):
return q
If we call it like before:
GET http://localhost:8000/?limit=42&skip=12&filter=chocolate
We'll get an error telling us that filter
is an object:
{
"detail": [
{
"type": "model_attributes_type",
"loc": [
"query",
"filter"
],
"msg": "Input should be a valid dictionary or object to extract fields from",
"input": "chocolate"
}
]
}
At least right now, it's absolutely right! We changed our filter to be a Pydantic
model, not a string. But if we try to convert it to a dictionary:
http://localhost:8000/?limit=42&skip=12&filter={%22name%22:%20%22Rafael%22,%20%22age%22:%2038,%20%22nickname%22:%20%22ceb10n%22}
FastAPI will tell us that filter needs to be a valid dictionary π:
{
"detail": [
{
"type": "model_attributes_type",
"loc": [
"query",
"filter"
],
"msg": "Input should be a valid dictionary or object to extract fields from",
"input": "{\"name\": \"Rafael\", \"age\": 38, \"nickname\": \"ceb10n\"}"
}
]
}
It's happening this because FastAPI
will rely on Starlette
's QueryParams
, that will give a string
to FastAPI
, not a dict
. And at least in version 0.115.0
, this will give you an error.
βοΈ So, when do I use Pydantic models with my Query Parameters?
It's quite simple:
β You have simple query strings that don't need any elaborate fancy nested objects? Use it! π
β You created a complex nested query string? Don't use it yet π. (And maybe you should try to rethink your query strings. π The simpler, the better π)
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