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I am trying to implement a custom error handling in a project using django rest framework, and I want it to return a json when attempting to create a new user but the email is already used (I am enforcing the uniqueness of the email). I want to return an error code 400 and the resulting json to be like this:

{
    "email": [
        "eMAil already in use."
    ]
}

I implemented a solution proposed in https://medium.com/@mwhitt.w/restful-error-messages-with-django-537047892dff, but I get a 500 error code and no json back.

This is my customexception.py

class BaseCustomException(Exception):
    status_code = None
    error_message = None
    is_an_error_response = True

    def __init__(self, error_message):
        Exception.__init__(self, error_message)
        self.error_message = error_message

    def to_dict(self):
        return {'errorMessage':self.error_message}

class ExistingEmailException(BaseCustomException):
    status_code = 400

    def __init__(self):
        BaseCustomException.__init__(self, 'eMail already in use')

This is my middleware.py:

import traceback
from django.http import JsonResponse

def is_registered(exception):
    try:
        return exception.is_an_error_response
    except AttributeError:
        return False

class RequestExceptionHandler:
    def process_exception(self, request, exception):
        if is_registered(exception):
            status = exception.status_code
            exception_dict = exception.to_dict()
        else:
            status = 500
            exception_dict = {'errorMessage':'Unexpected Error!'}

        error_message = exception_dict['errorMessage']
        traceback.print_exc()
        return JsonResponse(exception_dict, status=status)

This is my serializer:

class UserSerializer(serializers.HyperlinkedModelSerializer):
    class Meta:
        model = User
        fields = ('id', 'username', 'first_name', 'last_name', 'email', 'password')

    def create(self, validated_data):
        try:
            user = models.User.objects.get(email=validated_data.get('email'))
        except User.DoesNotExist:
            user = models.User.objects.create(**validated_data)

            user.set_password(user.password)
            user.save()
            Token.objects.create(user=user)

            return user
        else:
            raise ExistingEmailException()

And this is the result I get:

  File "/Users/hugovillalobos/Documents/Code/IntellibookProject/Intellibook/UsersManagerApp/serializers.py", line 27, in create
    raise ExistingEmailException()
GeneralApp.customexceptions.ExistingEmailException: eMail already in use
[06/Jun/2018 17:12:20] "POST /es/users_manager/users/ HTTP/1.1" 500 102163

Thanks for your help.

1 Answer 1

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I think the reason you are getting an unexpected error code is that the example you are following is not designed for use with django-rest-framework. While it should in theory be possible to use django's middleware to hijack the response (I'm looking at the first comment in response to this SO question), the simplest and in my opinion best approach would be to follow the DRF manual on custom exceptions.

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