An application for managing site configuration through normal Django forms, and thus through the admin site.
Release | Status |
---|---|
stable (0.5.0) | |
master |
The following versions are tested:
- Python 2.7, or 3.3+
- Django 1.7+
First up, you need to install it (via pip as usual):
pip install django-stagesetting==0.5.0
Once that's downloaded, add the package to your INSTALLED_APPS
in your settings:
INSTALLED_APPS = ( # ... 'stagesetting', # ... )
do a migrate:
python manage.py migrate stagesetting
Add a STAGESETTINGS
dictionary to your project's settings:
STAGESETTINGS = { 'SETTING_NAME': '...', 'ANOTHER_SETTING_NAME': '...', }
The setting collection name is the dictionary key, so must be unique.
Settings may be created in a number of ways, the simplest of which is to
provide a dictionary
as the value:
STAGESETTINGS = { 'MY_SETTING': { 'an_example-datetime': datetime.today(), 'a_date': date.today(), 'time_now': time(4, 23), 'boolean_field': False, 'plain_text': 'char field', 'decimal': Decimal('3.25'), 'float': 2.3, } }
where possible, this will auto-generate a Form class for you, choosing sensible defaults for the field variants where possible.
The other option is for the value to be a list
or a tuple
, where
the first item represents a form (either a dictionary
as above, OR
the dotted.path.to.a.Form.Class
if you need custom validation) and the
second, optional item is the default data. The following should all be valid:
STAGESETTINGS = { 'AUTO_GENERATED': [{ 'datetime': datetime.today(), }], 'IMPORT_A_FORM': ['myapp.forms.MyForm'], 'IMPORT_WITH_DEFAULT': ['myapp.forms.MyForm', {'default': 'data'}], 'AUTO_GENERATED_WITH_OTHER_DEFAULTS': [{ 'datetime': datetime.today(), }, {'default': 'data'}], }
A simple configuration form (for the dotted.path.Format
) might look like:
from django.core.exceptions import ValidationError from django.forms import Form, DateField class DateForm(Form): start = DateField() end = DateField() def clean(self): cd = self.cleaned_data if 'start' in cd and 'end' in cd and cd['start'] > cd['end']: raise ValidationError("Start date cannot be after end date") return cd
As you can see, it really is just a normal Form. Internally, this form's
cleaned_data
will be converted into JSON before being saved to the
database.
It will get re-converted to proper Python values when pulled out
of the database, by going through the given Form class's validation again,
including converting to rich values like model instances.
When detecting a dictionary as the value and auto-generating a form, the following translations will be applied:
None
becomes NullBooleanFielddatetime.datetime
becomes DateTimeFielddatetime.date
becomes DateFielddatetime.time
becomes TimeFielddatetime.timedelta
becomes DurationFielddecimal.Decimal
becomes DecimalFieldfloat
becomes FloatFieldTrue
orFalse
become BooleanFieldint
becomes IntegerFielduuid.UUID
becomes UUIDField or RegexField, depending on the Django versionlist
andtuple
become MultipleChoiceFieldcollections.OrderedDict
,set
,frozenset
, anddict
become ChoiceFieldmodels.Model
instances become ModelChoiceFieldmodels.QuerySet
becomes ModelMultipleChoiceField- strings become one of the following, depending on what checks they pass:
- GenericIPAddressField
- URLField
- EmailField
- SlugField
- CharField
- IntegerField
- DecimalField
- UUIDField (or RegexField, depending on the Django version)
- DateTimeField
- DateField
- TimeField
- Some strings are really special, and will instead turn into one of the following:
- if the string ==
STATIC_URL
orSTATICFILES_STORAGE
the field will be a ChoiceField whose options are all the files found by the project'sSTATICFILES_FINDERS
. - if the string ==
MEDIA_URL``or ``DEFAULT_FILE_STORAGE
the field will be a ChoiceField whose options are all the files found byDEFAULT_FILE_STORAGE
. - if the string starts with
STATIC_URL
it will be the same as using theSTATIC_URL
generated field, but is a regular expression for filtering to only certain files (i.e./static/.*\.css$
would find only css files) - if the string starts with
MEDIA_URL
it will be the same as above, but for files found inDEFAULT_FILE_STORAGE
. - if a string looks like it contains HTML, it will try to use django-bleach for sanitisation, and one of django-ckeditor, django-tinymce, django-markdown, django-pagedown, or django-epiceditor for an appropriate widget.
- if the string ==
The best way to access the settings in your views is to include
stagesetting.middleware.ApplyRuntimeSettings
in your MIDDLEWARE_CLASSES
which will ensure there is a request.stagesettings
variable which can be
used like so:
def myview(request): how_many_form_data = request.stagesetting.LIST_PER_PAGE allow_empty_form_data = request.stagesetting['ALLOW_EMPTY']
each setting will be a dictionary of the Form values, either the default ones or those changed in the database.
If you've already got request
in your template, obviously you can continue
to use request.stagesettings
if the middleware is wired up.
If you don't have request, or you're not using the middleware,
stagesetting.context_processors.runtime_settings
provides a STAGESETTING
template variable which contains the exact same data.
Finally, if not using the middleware nor the context processor, there is a template tag available as a last resort. It's usage is:
{% load stagesetting %} {% stagesetting as NEW_CONTEXT_VARIABLE %} {{ NEW_CONTEXT_VARIABLE.SETTING_NAME.fieldname }}
If you don't have the middleware, or are in a part of the code which doesn't
have a request
, you can use the wrapper object directly:
from stagesetting.models import RuntimeSettingWrapper def my_signal_handler(sender, instance, **kwargs): live_settings = RuntimeSettingWrapper() data = live_settings.LIST_PER_PAGE
Try to keep a single RuntimeSettingWrapper
around for as long as possible,
rather than creating a new instance everywhere, as the object must fetch
the available settings from the database the first time it needs them. It
caches them for it's lifetime thereafter.
Other apps I know of that achieve similar things, or overlap in some obvious way. I won't judge you for using them, and I can't promise this is better. To the victor, the spoils of maintenance!
- django-constance is similar
- uses
pickle
to store an arbitrary python value;stagesetting
only stores stuff it can put into JSON and relies on Django Forms to inflate the JSON back into python values. - Has both database and redis backends;
stagesetting
only supports the database, though it will only do one query most of the time.
- uses
- django-dynamic-preferences by the look of it.
- django-solo as well.
- django-djconfig looks similar in principle, insofar as it uses forms?
- django-aboutconfig maybe?
- django-modelsettings looks pretty similar - define Django application settings with Django ORM models and edit them in the admin area.
If you think GitHub popularity is an indication of usage and battle-tested production-readiness, then any of the above are certainly worth considering, being much more noticed than this, my attempt.