Tracking changes to django models.
- Model fields for keeping track of the user and session that created and modified a model instance.
- Abstract model class with fields
created_by
andmodified_by
fields. - A model manager class that can automatically track changes made to a model in the database.
- Support for Django 1.6 and 1.7, South migrations, Django 1.7 migrations and custom User classes.
- Python 3 and 2.x support
The documentation can be found here
Tracking full model history on M2M relations is not supported yet. Version 0.3.0 onwards is tested with Django 1.6. It should work with older versions of Django, but may break things unexpectedly!
Install it with pip from PyPi:
pip install django-audit-log
Add audit_log.middleware.UserLoggingMiddleware
to your MIDDLEWARE_CLASSES
:
MIDDLEWARE_CLASSES = (
'django.contrib.sessions.middleware.SessionMiddleware',
'django.middleware.common.CommonMiddleware',
'django.middleware.csrf.CsrfViewMiddleware',
'django.contrib.auth.middleware.AuthenticationMiddleware',
'django.contrib.messages.middleware.MessageMiddleware',
'django.middleware.clickjacking.XFrameOptionsMiddleware',
'audit_log.middleware.UserLoggingMiddleware',
)
To just track who created or edited a model instance just make it inherit from AuthStampedModel
:
from audit_log.models import AuthStampedModel
class WarehouseEntry(AuthStampedModel):
product = models.ForeignKey(Product)
quantity = models.DecimalField(max_digits = 10, decimal_places = 2)
This will add 4 fields to the WarehouseEntry
model:
created_by
- A foreign key to the user that created the model instance.created_with_session_key
- Stores the session key with which the model instance was first created.modified_by
- A foreign key to the user that last saved a model instance.modified_with_session_key
- Stores the session key with which the model instance was last saved.
If you want to track full model change history you need to attach an AuditLog
manager to the model:
from django.db import models
from audit_log.models.fields import LastUserField
from audit_log.models.managers import AuditLog
class ProductCategory(models.Model):
name = models.CharField(max_length=150, primary_key = True)
description = models.TextField()
audit_log = AuditLog()
class Product(models.Model):
name = models.CharField(max_length = 150)
description = models.TextField()
price = models.DecimalField(max_digits = 10, decimal_places = 2)
category = models.ForeignKey(ProductCategory)
audit_log = AuditLog()
You can then query the audit log:
In [2]: Product.audit_log.all()
Out[2]: [<ProductAuditLogEntry: Product: My widget changed at 2011-02-25 06:04:29.292363>,
<ProductAuditLogEntry: Product: My widget changed at 2011-02-25 06:04:24.898991>,
<ProductAuditLogEntry: Product: My Gadget super changed at 2011-02-25 06:04:15.448934>,
<ProductAuditLogEntry: Product: My Gadget changed at 2011-02-25 06:04:06.566589>,
<ProductAuditLogEntry: Product: My Gadget created at 2011-02-25 06:03:57.751222>,
<ProductAuditLogEntry: Product: My widget created at 2011-02-25 06:03:42.027220>]
The documentation can be found here
Note: This project was not maintained actively for a while. One of the reasons was that I wasn't receiving email notifications from GitHub. The other reason: We were using it just on a couple of projects that were frozen to old versions of Django. If you need any help with the project you can contact me by email directly if I don't respond to your GitHub issues. Feel free to nudge me over email if you have a patch for something. You can find my email in the AUTHORS file.