A set of helpers for baking your Django Wagtail site out as flat files.
- Issues: https://github.com/wagtail/wagtail-bakery/issues
- Testing: https://travis-ci.org/wagtail/wagtail-bakery
- Coverage: https://coveralls.io/github/wagtail/wagtail-bakery
Wagtail-bakery is built on top of Django bakery. Please read their documentation for detailed configuration and how to build default Django flat files. Yes. Wagtail-bakery is not limited to build Wagtail pages specifically, mixed content is possible!
As of July 2022, django-bakery lacks support for Django 4.x. You are advised to use Django 3.2.x (LTS). Alternatively, see wagtail-freezer for a Django 4 compatible replacement.
- Single management command that will build your Wagtail site out as flat files
- Support for multisite, theming and multilingual setup
- Support for
i18n_patterns
- Support for generating a static API
- Ready to use Wagtail Buildable views to build all your (un)published pages at once (no extra code required!)
pip install wagtail-bakery
Add bakery
and wagtailbakery
to your INSTALLED_APPS
setting.
INSTALLED_APPS = (
# ...
'bakery',
'wagtailbakery',
)
Define whether you want to build multiple sites or the default site (see examples for impact on directory output), by default this settings is False
.
BAKERY_MULTISITE = True
Add the build directory where you want to be the site be built as flat files.
BUILD_DIR = '/tmp/build/'
As you may know with Django bakery, the trickiest part is to make your current models/pages buildable with Buildable views. As Django Wagtail uses only the Page
model at their lowest level, you can use at least one of the already present Buildable views provided by Wagtail bakery.
Build all published public pages (use for production).
BAKERY_VIEWS = (
'wagtailbakery.views.AllPublishedPagesView',
)
Build all published and unpublished public pages (use for staging/acceptance).
BAKERY_VIEWS = (
'wagtailbakery.views.AllPagesView',
)
To build static JSON files representing your site's API, use the following views:
BAKERY_VIEWS = (
'wagtailbakery.api_views.PagesAPIDetailView',
'wagtailbakery.api_views.PagesAPIListingView',
'wagtailbakery.api_views.TypedPagesAPIListingView',
)
The API views use Wagtail's V2 API module. To configure the data that is rendered by these views, please refer to Wagtail's V2 API configuration guide.
Build the site out as flat files by running the build
management command.
manage.py build
If you want to check how your static website will look, use the buildserver
command after you have build your static files once.
manage.py buildserver
In the examples directory you can find a Wagtail setup with fixtures for a single site as well as a multisite setup.
Create a virtualenv and go to one of the examples, you can use the Make
command to install all requirements, load fixtures and run the server.
As described in the usage section, use manage.py build
to build out the example as static files.
Build output with BAKERY_MULTISITE=True
:
build/example.com/index.html
build/example.com/about/index.html
build/example.com/blog/index.html
build/example.com/blog/example/index.html
build/static/
Build output with BAKERY_MULTISITE=False
(default):
build/index.html
build/about/index.html
build/blog/index.html
build/blog/example/index.html
build/static/
We align our browser support targets with that of Wagtail. Have a look at the official documentation.
Python versions as defined in setup.py
classifiers.
Wagtail versions as supported by Wagtail (current LTS, current stable).
Django/Wagtail combinations as supported by Wagtail (for the Wagtail versions as defined above).
In order to keep for CI build time from growing out of control, not all Python/Django/Wagtail combinations will be tested.
Test as follow:
- All supported Django/Wagtail combinations with the latest supported Python version.
- The latest supported Django/Wagtail combination for the remaining Python versions.
For issues please submit an issue on GitHub.
- Ensure you have the latest versions of
pip
,setuptools
andtwine
installed in your virtual environment. - Create a new branch (e.g.
release/1.1.3
) for the release of the new version. - Update the version number in
setup.py
following Semantic Versioning. - Update
CHANGELOG.md
. - On GitHub, create a pull request and squash merge it.
- Checkout and pull the
master
branch locally. - (Optional) If you need to verify anything, use
make publish-test
to upload to https://test.pypi.org and enter your PyPi test credentials as needed. - Use
make publish
and enter your PyPi credentials as needed. - On GitHub, create a release and a tag for the new version.
Thanks to @mhnbcu for bringing this idea up initially, and Django Bakery for providing the initial bakery package.
Thanks to all the contributors for their help.