Django Exceções¶
Django raises some of its own exceptions as well as standard Python exceptions.
Django Core Exceptions¶
Django core exception classes are defined in django.core.exceptions
.
AppRegistryNotReady
¶
-
exception
AppRegistryNotReady
[código fonte]¶ This exception is raised when attempting to use models before the app loading process, which initializes the ORM, is complete.
ObjectDoesNotExist
¶
-
exception
ObjectDoesNotExist
[código fonte]¶ The base class for
DoesNotExist
exceptions; atry/except
forObjectDoesNotExist
will catchDoesNotExist
exceptions for all models.See
get()
for further information onObjectDoesNotExist
andDoesNotExist
.
EmptyResultSet
¶
-
exception
EmptyResultSet
[código fonte]¶ EmptyResultSet
may be raised during query generation if a query won’t return any results. Most Django projects won’t encounter this exception, but it might be useful for implementing custom lookups and expressions.Changed in Django 1.11:In older versions, it’s only importable from
django.db.models.sql
.
FieldDoesNotExist
¶
-
exception
FieldDoesNotExist
[código fonte]¶ The
FieldDoesNotExist
exception is raised by a model’s_meta.get_field()
method when the requested field does not exist on the model or on the model’s parents.
MultipleObjectsReturned
¶
-
exception
MultipleObjectsReturned
[código fonte]¶ The
MultipleObjectsReturned
exception is raised by a query if only one object is expected, but multiple objects are returned. A base version of this exception is provided indjango.core.exceptions
; each model class contains a subclassed version that can be used to identify the specific object type that has returned multiple objects.See
get()
for further information.
SuspiciousOperation
¶
-
exception
SuspiciousOperation
[código fonte]¶ The
SuspiciousOperation
exception is raised when a user has performed an operation that should be considered suspicious from a security perspective, such as tampering with a session cookie. Subclasses ofSuspiciousOperation
include:DisallowedHost
DisallowedModelAdminLookup
DisallowedModelAdminToField
DisallowedRedirect
InvalidSessionKey
RequestDataTooBig
SuspiciousFileOperation
SuspiciousMultipartForm
SuspiciousSession
TooManyFieldsSent
If a
SuspiciousOperation
exception reaches the WSGI handler level it is logged at theError
level and results in aHttpResponseBadRequest
. See the logging documentation for more information.
PermissionDenied
¶
-
exception
PermissionDenied
[código fonte]¶ The
PermissionDenied
exception is raised when a user does not have permission to perform the action requested.
ViewDoesNotExist
¶
-
exception
ViewDoesNotExist
[código fonte]¶ The
ViewDoesNotExist
exception is raised bydjango.urls
when a requested view does not exist.
MiddlewareNotUsed
¶
-
exception
MiddlewareNotUsed
[código fonte]¶ The
MiddlewareNotUsed
exception is raised when a middleware is not used in the server configuration.
ImproperlyConfigured
¶
-
exception
ImproperlyConfigured
[código fonte]¶ The
ImproperlyConfigured
exception is raised when Django is somehow improperly configured – for example, if a value insettings.py
is incorrect or unparseable.
FieldError
¶
-
exception
FieldError
[código fonte]¶ The
FieldError
exception is raised when there is a problem with a model field. This can happen for several reasons:- A field in a model clashes with a field of the same name from an abstract base class
- An infinite loop is caused by ordering
- A keyword cannot be parsed from the filter parameters
- A field cannot be determined from a keyword in the query parameters
- A join is not permitted on the specified field
- O nome do campo é inválido
- A query contains invalid order_by arguments
ValidationError
¶
-
exception
ValidationError
[código fonte]¶ The
ValidationError
exception is raised when data fails form or model field validation. For more information about validation, see Form and Field Validation, Model Field Validation and the Validator Reference.
URL Resolver exceptions¶
URL Resolver exceptions are defined in django.urls
.
Resolver404
¶
-
exception
Resolver404
[código fonte]¶ The
Resolver404
exception is raised byresolve()
if the path passed toresolve()
doesn’t map to a view. It’s a subclass ofdjango.http.Http404
.
NoReverseMatch
¶
-
exception
NoReverseMatch
[código fonte]¶ The
NoReverseMatch
exception is raised bydjango.urls
when a matching URL in your URLconf cannot be identified based on the parameters supplied.
Exceções de Banco de dados¶
Database exceptions may be imported from django.db
.
Django wraps the standard database exceptions so that your Django code has a guaranteed common implementation of these classes.
-
exception
Error
[código fonte]¶
-
exception
InterfaceError
[código fonte]¶
-
exception
DatabaseError
[código fonte]¶
-
exception
DataError
[código fonte]¶
-
exception
OperationalError
[código fonte]¶
-
exception
IntegrityError
[código fonte]¶
-
exception
InternalError
[código fonte]¶
-
exception
ProgrammingError
[código fonte]¶
-
exception
NotSupportedError
[código fonte]¶
The Django wrappers for database exceptions behave exactly the same as the underlying database exceptions. See PEP 249, the Python Database API Specification v2.0, for further information.
As per PEP 3134, a __cause__
attribute is set with the original
(underlying) database exception, allowing access to any additional
information provided.
-
exception
models.
ProtectedError
¶
Raised to prevent deletion of referenced objects when using
django.db.models.PROTECT
. models.ProtectedError
is a subclass
of IntegrityError
.
Exceções Http¶
Http exceptions may be imported from django.http
.
UnreadablePostError
¶
-
exception
UnreadablePostError
[código fonte]¶ UnreadablePostError
is raised when a user cancels an upload.
Exceções de Transações¶
Transaction exceptions are defined in django.db.transaction
.
TransactionManagementError
¶
-
exception
TransactionManagementError
[código fonte]¶ TransactionManagementError
is raised for any and all problems related to database transactions.
Testing Framework Exceptions¶
Exceptions provided by the django.test
package.
RedirectCycleError
¶
-
exception
client.
RedirectCycleError
¶ RedirectCycleError
is raised when the test client detects a loop or an overly long chain of redirects.
Python Exceções¶
Django raises built-in Python exceptions when appropriate as well. See the Python documentation for further information on the Built-in Exceptions.