Attach images to a Django model without using database backed fields

In this post I want to create a model field that allows to manage derived images from a pre-existing field in the same model without using the database to store the path of the derived images but to derive it from a predefined convention.

In particular let’s suppose that we have a model with a field storing a panoramic image and we want to create from that another set of images, consisting of 6 images of the corresponding faces of the cubemap.

At first I will explain how in the python language, an attribute of a class is returned and which possibilities are available to customize that, after that I will explain how Django uses this functionality to create automagically its fields and at the end I will create my custom pseudo-field with what we have learnt.

Note: this post has been completely rewritten after I realized that I did not understand at all how descriptors in python works.

Descriptors (or the magic art of accessing attributes in Python)

Python is a language full of introspection functionalities; when you access an attribute in python, the resolution algorithm searches in order

class’ __getattribute__ data descriptors in the class’ __dict__ variables from the instance’s __dict__ non data descriptors from the class’ __dict__ variables from the class’ __dict__ class’ __getattr__ raise AttributeError

(if you want to see a really good diagram, look at this piece of art).

But what are data descriptors? in practice an object that implements the following protocol

__get__(self, obj, type=None)

__set__(self, obj, value)

__delete__(self, obj)

if instead implements only the __get__ method then is called a non-data descriptor.

When a descriptor is used to set a class’ attribute, then when you access the attribute (and the resolution algorithm doesn’t find anything before that to return), the access is resolved as desc.__get__(self, instance, type=None) .

Note: descriptors are intended to be used with classes’ attributes, if you set an instance’s attribute to a descriptor, accessing that attribute will return the descriptor, without “magic”.

Before you think that you never used descriptors, you must know that for example functions in python are non-data descriptors, and that the property decorator has the following signature

class property(fget=None, fset=None, fdel=None, doc=None)

indeed if you define a class in the following way

class Model ( object ): @ property def miao ( self ): return 'miao'

you have the following behaviour

>>> m1 = Model () >>> m1 . miao 'miao' >>> m1 . __dict__ [ 'miao' ] --------------------------------------------------------------------------- KeyError Traceback ( most recent call last ) < ipython - input - 14 - ba1f034653b8 > in < module > ----> 1 m1 . __dict__ [ 'miao' ] KeyError : 'miao' >>> m1 . __class__ . __dict__ [ 'miao' ] < property at 0x7fd805d81cb0 > >>> dir ( m1 . __class__ . __dict__ [ 'miao' ]) [ '__class__' , ... '__get__' , ... '__set__' , ... 'setter' ]

Django’s magic

Now let’s talk about Django: when I get my first contact with this framework I was amazed by the magic of describing the database using an object of the language itself, i.e. a class and that the framework was able to automatically create all the necessary to talk with the database and validate the data automagically.

All this is possible by the use of descriptors and metaclasses: we have just seen the descriptors, and metaclasses are out of scope for this post but let me say that a class, roughly speaking, is an instance of a metaclass in the same way an instance of a class is obtained from a class: in particular __new__() is the analogous of __init__() for a metaclass.

If we take a look at the code in django/db/models/base.py we can see that when we create a class in Django, the framework calls the method contribute_to_class() for all the class’ attributes that have it

class ModelBase ( type ): """Metaclass for all models.""" def __new__ ( cls , name , bases , attrs , ** kwargs ): super_new = super (). __new__ ... contributable_attrs = {} for obj_name , obj in list ( attrs . items ()): if _has_contribute_to_class ( obj ): contributable_attrs [ obj_name ] = obj else : new_attrs [ obj_name ] = obj new_class = super_new ( cls , name , bases , new_attrs , ** kwargs ) ... # Add remaining attributes (those with a contribute_to_class() method) # to the class. for obj_name , obj in contributable_attrs . items (): new_class . add_to_class ( obj_name , obj ) ... def _has_contribute_to_class ( value ): # Only call contribute_to_class() if it's bound. return not inspect . isclass ( value ) and hasattr ( value , 'contribute_to_class' ) def add_to_class ( cls , name , value ): if _has_contribute_to_class ( value ): value . contribute_to_class ( cls , name ) else : setattr ( cls , name , value ) ...

If this attributes are derived from Field (code at django/db/models/fields/__init__.py ) you see that the instance of the attribute are wrapped around a (non data-)descriptor

@ total_ordering class Field ( RegisterLookupMixin ): """Base class for all field types""" ... descriptor_class = DeferredAttribute ... def contribute_to_class ( self , cls , name , private_only = False ): """ Register the field with the model class it belongs to. If private_only is True, create a separate instance of this field for every subclass of cls, even if cls is not an abstract model. """ ... if self . column : # Don't override classmethods with the descriptor. This means that # if you have a classmethod and a field with the same name, then # such fields can't be deferred (we don't have a check for this). if not getattr ( cls , self . attname , None ): setattr ( cls , self . attname , self . descriptor_class ( self )) ...

called DeferredAttribute that you can find at django/db/models/query_utils.py

class DeferredAttribute : """ A wrapper for a deferred-loading field. When the value is read from this object the first time, the query is executed. """ def __init__ ( self , field ): self . field = field def __get__ ( self , instance , cls = None ): """ Retrieve and caches the value from the datastore on the first lookup. Return the cached value. """ if instance is None : return self data = instance . __dict__ field_name = self . field . attname if data . get ( field_name , self ) is self : # Let's see if the field is part of the parent chain. If so we # might be able to reuse the already loaded value. Refs #18343. val = self . _check_parent_chain ( instance ) if val is None : instance . refresh_from_db ( fields = [ field_name ]) val = getattr ( instance , field_name ) data [ field_name ] = val return data [ field_name ] ...

You can see that the actual value of the field is retrieved from the instance’s __dict__ attribute if exists otherwise is refreshed from the database and saved there.

By the way this seems a nice trick in Django: if you have modified a field and you want to return to the originary value, you can del the entry of the field from __dict__ and the next access to the attribute will return the value stored in the database (doesn’t seem to work with id though).

There is only one more thing to explore: the FileField and ImageField ; these classes has a custom descriptor (the code can be found at django/db/models/fields/files.py )

class FileField ( Field ): # The class to wrap instance attributes in. Accessing the file object off # the instance will always return an instance of attr_class. attr_class = FieldFile # The descriptor to use for accessing the attribute off of the class. descriptor_class = FileDescriptor ...

as you see it’s using FileDescriptor and has one more class attribute named attr_class , that is set to FieldFile (to not be confused with the original FileField !).

Indeed the descriptor uses the attr_class to wrap the value stored in the __dict__ ’s instance

class FileDescriptor : """ The descriptor for the file attribute on the model instance. Return a FieldFile when accessed so you can write code like:: >>> from myapp.models import MyModel >>> instance = MyModel.objects.get(pk=1) >>> instance.file.size Assign a file object on assignment so you can do:: >>> with open('/path/to/hello.world') as f: ... instance.file = File(f) """ def __init__ ( self , field ): self . field = field def __get__ ( self , instance , cls = None ): if instance is None : return self # This is slightly complicated, so worth an explanation. # instance.file`needs to ultimately return some instance of `File`, # probably a subclass. Additionally, this returned object needs to have # the FieldFile API so that users can easily do things like # instance.file.path and have that delegated to the file storage engine. # Easy enough if we're strict about assignment in __set__, but if you # peek below you can see that we're not. So depending on the current # value of the field we have to dynamically construct some sort of # "thing" to return. # The instance dict contains whatever was originally assigned # in __set__. if self . field . name in instance . __dict__ : file = instance . __dict__ [ self . field . name ] else : instance . refresh_from_db ( fields = [ self . field . name ]) file = getattr ( instance , self . field . name ) # If this value is a string (instance.file = "path/to/file") or None # then we simply wrap it with the appropriate attribute class according # to the file field. [This is FieldFile for FileFields and # ImageFieldFile for ImageFields; it's also conceivable that user # subclasses might also want to subclass the attribute class]. This # object understands how to convert a path to a file, and also how to # handle None. if isinstance ( file , str ) or file is None : attr = self . field . attr_class ( instance , self . field , file ) instance . __dict__ [ self . field . name ] = attr # Other types of files may be assigned as well, but they need to have # the FieldFile interface added to them. Thus, we wrap any other type of # File inside a FieldFile (well, the field's attr_class, which is # usually FieldFile). elif isinstance ( file , File ) and not isinstance ( file , FieldFile ): file_copy = self . field . attr_class ( instance , self . field , file . name ) file_copy . file = file file_copy . _committed = False instance . __dict__ [ self . field . name ] = file_copy # Finally, because of the (some would say boneheaded) way pickle works, # the underlying FieldFile might not actually itself have an associated # file. So we need to reset the details of the FieldFile in those cases. elif isinstance ( file , FieldFile ) and not hasattr ( file , 'field' ): file . instance = instance file . field = self . field file . storage = self . field . storage # Make sure that the instance is correct. elif isinstance ( file , FieldFile ) and instance is not file . instance : file . instance = instance # That was fun, wasn't it? return instance . __dict__ [ self . field . name ] def __set__ ( self , instance , value ): instance . __dict__ [ self . field . name ] = value

Note how this is a real data descriptor, this means that has priority over the __dict__ of the instance for retrieving the element (I think because otherwise couldn’t wrap the object with the proper attr_class instance).

Let’s create our field

The idea is to attach to the model a manager-like object (but avoiding the database part) that in some way uses the information of a pre-existing ImageField to resolve derived images. Note that here we don’t need any setter since the paths must derive from the pre-existing field.

The only thing you need to do is add a CubeImagesManager instance to a field in order to attach six properties to the instances of the MyModel class

class MyModel ( models . Model ): ... image = models . ImageField ( upload_to = 'kebab' ) cubes = CubeImagesManager ( 'image' )

after that is possible to access the six images via the cubes attribute

>>> m = MyModel.objects.first() >>> m.image <ImageFieldFile: kebab / miao.txt > >>> m.cubes <cube_images.manager.CubeImages object at 0 x7fcc008fd150 > >>> m.cubes.tile_f <ImageFieldFile: kebab / miao_tile_f.jpeg > >>> m.cubes.tile_u.path '/tmp/tmp9xouh9d7/kebab/miao_tile_u.jpeg' >>> m.cubes.tile_d.url '/media/kebab/miao_tile_d.jpeg'

The steps to implement this field

since we don’t need the database we can derive the field from object , instead of Field without worries we need to implement the contribute_to_class() method that set the appropriate descriptor the descriptor needs only the __get__() method implemented since we don’t want anyone to set explicitely the value we want only a predefined number of attributes from what is returned from the manager; this can be done using __getattr__ we want to reuse the FieldImage wrapper class so to have the attributes of CubeImages behave like ImageField instances.

We can do that with the following four classes

from django.core.files.storage import default_storage as django_default_storage from django.db.models.fields.files import ImageFieldFile from pathlib import Path def get_upload_path_cube ( base , filename ): '''Builds the path of a cube image given the original filename and the final part.''' base = Path ( base ) components = list ( base . parts ) components [ - 1 ] = '%s_%s' % ( base . stem , filename ) return str ( Path ( * components )) class CubeImagesManager ( object ): '''Attach a field to the model that has the 6 faces of the cube.''' def __init__ ( self , field_name , files_extension = 'jpeg' ): # maybe ext in a settings self . field_name = field_name self . files_extension = files_extension def contribute_to_class ( self , model , name ): setattr ( model , name , CubeImagesDescriptor ( self . field_name , self . files_extension )) class CubeImagesDescriptor ( object ): def __init__ ( self , field_name , files_extension ): self . files_extension = files_extension self . field_name = field_name def __get__ ( self , instance , value ): field = getattr ( instance , self . field_name ) return CubeImages ( instance , field , self . files_extension ) class CubeImages ( object ): def __init__ ( self , instance , field_image_instance , files_extension ): self . instance = instance self . field_image_instance = field_image_instance self . files_extension = files_extension self . format = 'tile_%s' self . allowed_attributes = [ self . format % _ for _ in ( 'f' , 'b' , 'l' , 'r' , 'u' , 'd' ) ] def __getattr__ ( self , item ): if item in self . allowed_attributes : complete_filename = "%s.%s" % ( item , self . files_extension ) # THE EXTENSION IS FIXED? return ImageFieldFile ( self . instance , self . field_image_instance , get_upload_path_cube ( self . field_image_instance . name , complete_filename )) raise AttributeError ( 'You call this object with wrong attribute name \' %s \' , allowed %s' % ( item , self . allowed_attributes )) class CubeImage ( object ): def __init__ ( self , path ): self . path = path self . storage = django_default_storage def _storage_attr ( self , attr , * args , ** kwargs ): fn = getattr ( self . storage , attr ) return fn ( self . path , * args , ** kwargs ) def save ( self , content , ** kwargs ): return self . _storage_attr ( 'save' , content , ** kwargs ) @ property def url ( self ): return self . _storage_attr ( 'url' )

Note: the way the manager it’s implemented has the side effect that each time you access it, a new CubeImages instance is returned by __get__ .

If you want to experiment I create a little django application that contains the code above, you can find it in this github repo.