14

I am currently exploring the possibilities of the MongoEngine "object document mapper". What is currently not clear to me is to what extent I can move my validation and object creation logic to the Document objects themselves.

I have the impression that it should not be a problem, but I'm not finding a lot of examples/caveats/best practices regarding issues as

  • Custom validation functions that are automatically called on save() to evaluate if field contents are valid;
  • Automatic generation of the identifier on save(), based on the hash of the contents of a field;

I think I need to override the save() method, so that I can call my custom logic, but the lack of examples leads me to believe that that may be a wrong approach...

Any examples, or references to high-quality codebases using mongoEngine, are welcome.

3 Answers 3

25

Custom validation should now be done by implementing the clean() method on a model.

class Essay(Document):
    status = StringField(choices=('Published', 'Draft'), required=True)
    pub_date = DateTimeField()

    def clean(self):
        """
        Ensures that only published essays have a `pub_date` and
        automatically sets the pub_date if published and not set.
        """
        if self.status == 'Draft' and self.pub_date is not None:
            msg = 'Draft entries should not have a publication date.'
            raise ValidationError(msg)

        # Set the pub_date for published items if not set.
        if self.status == 'Published' and self.pub_date is None:
            self.pub_date = datetime.now()

Edit: That said, you have to be careful using clean() as it is called from validate() prior to validating the model based on the the rules set in your model definition.

1
  • 2
    Best way in my opinion. Also see the comment in the clean() function in the MongoEngine source code: github.com/MongoEngine/mongoengine/blob/master/mongoengine/base/… - Hook for doing document level data cleaning before validation is run. Any ValidationError raised by this method will not be associated with a particular field; it will have a special-case association with the field defined by NON_FIELD_ERRORS. So if you want field-level validation I think you should write a custom field.
    – gitaarik
    Sep 27, 2013 at 7:29
15

You can override save(), with the usual caveat that you must call the parent class's method.

If you find that you want to add validation hooks to all your models, you might consider creating a custom child class of Document something like:

class MyDocument(mongoengine.Document):

    def save(self, *args, **kwargs):
        for hook in self._pre_save_hooks:
            # the callable can raise an exception if
            # it determines that it is inappropriate
            # to save this instance; or it can modify
            # the instance before it is saved
            hook(self):

        super(MyDocument, self).save(*args, **kwargs)

You can then define hooks for a given model class in a fairly natural way:

class SomeModel(MyDocument):
    # fields...

    _pre_save_hooks = [
        some_callable,
        another_callable
    ]
7

You could also override the validate method on Document, but you'd need to swallow the superclass Document errors so you can add your errors to them

This unfortunately relies on the internal implementation details in MongoEngine, so who knows if it will break in the future.

class MyDoc(Document):
    def validate(self):
        errors = {}
        try:
            super(MyDoc, self).validate()
        except ValidationError as e:
            errors = e.errors

        # Your custom validation here...
        # Unfortunately this might swallow any other errors on 'myfield'
        if self.something_is_wrong():
            errors['myfield'] = ValidationError("this field is wrong!", field_name='myfield')

        if errors:
            raise ValidationError('ValidationError', errors=errors)

Also, there is proper signal support now in MongoEngine for handling other kinds of hooks (such as the identifier generation you mentioned in the question).

http://mongoengine.readthedocs.io/en/latest/guide/signals.html

1
  • The link is broken, the correct one is mongoengine.readthedocs.org/en/latest/guide/signals.html beside that I would suggest to not go this approach if there are other ways to solve the problem (like suggested in the other answers). In my opinion the maintainability of your code will decrease when intercepting the exception flow of a library.
    – karfau
    Oct 31, 2016 at 14:37

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