THIS IS UNSTABLE PROJECT, IF YOU WANT TO USE IT - FIX WHAT YOU NEED
Right now we're targeting to get things working on Django 1.11; 2.0 support added, but not tested in production.
Maybe there is better option for mongo support, take a look at https://nesdis.github.io/djongo/; It's python3 only and i have not tried it yet, but looks promising.
- [ok] sessions
- [ok] models/fields, fields needs testing
- [ok] views
- [ok] auth
- [?] admin - partially working, some things broken
Many parts of projects rewritten/removed; Instead of copying django code i try to subclass/reuse/even monkey-patch; Everything listed above is working; admin - just base fuctions like changelist/edit, not tested with every form type; need's more work.
Some code just plaholder to make things work; django/forms/document_options.py - dirty hack absolutely required to get thigs work with django. It replaces mongo _meta on model/class and provide django-like interface. It get's replaced after class creation via some metaclass magick.
- mongo defaults Field(required=False), changed to django-style defaults -> Field(blank=False), and setting required = not blank in Field.__init__
- Sync some files/docs that removed from mongoengine: https://github.com/seglberg/mongoengine/commit/a34f4c1beb93f430c37da20c8fd96ce02a0f20c1?diff=unified
- Add docs for integrating: https://github.com/hmarr/django-debug-toolbar-mongo
- Take a look at django-mongotools: https://github.com/wpjunior/django-mongotools
In your settings.py file, add following lines:
MONGODB_DATABASES = { "default": { "name": database_name, "host": database_host, "password": database_password, "username": database_user, "tz_aware": True, # if you using timezones in django (USE_TZ = True) }, } INSTALLED_APPS += ["django_mongoengine"]
Inhherit your documents from django_mongoengine.Document
,
and define fields using django_mongoengine.fields
.:
from django_mongoengine import Document, EmbeddedDocument, fields class Comment(EmbeddedDocument): created_at = fields.DateTimeField( default=datetime.datetime.now, editable=False, ) author = fields.StringField(verbose_name="Name", max_length=255) email = fields.EmailField(verbose_name="Email") body = fields.StringField(verbose_name="Comment") class Post(Document): created_at = fields.DateTimeField( default=datetime.datetime.now, editable=False, ) title = fields.StringField(max_length=255) slug = fields.StringField(max_length=255, primary_key=True) comments = fields.ListField( fields.EmbeddedDocumentField('Comment'), blank=True, )
Django allows the use of different backend stores for its sessions. MongoEngine
provides a MongoDB-based session backend for Django, which allows you to use
sessions in your Django application with just MongoDB. To enable the MongoEngine
session backend, ensure that your settings module has
'django.contrib.sessions.middleware.SessionMiddleware'
in the
MIDDLEWARE_CLASSES
field and 'django.contrib.sessions'
in your
INSTALLED_APPS
. From there, all you need to do is add the following line
into your settings module:
SESSION_ENGINE = 'django_mongoengine.sessions' SESSION_SERIALIZER = 'django_mongoengine.sessions.BSONSerializer'
Django provides session cookie, which expires after
`SESSION_COOKIE_AGE`
seconds, but doesn't delete cookie at sessions
backend, so 'mongoengine.django.sessions'
supports mongodb TTL.
Note
SESSION_SERIALIZER
is only necessary in Django>1.6 as the default
serializer is based around JSON and doesn't know how to convert
bson.objectid.ObjectId
instances to strings.
virtualenv env ./env/bin/pip install . ./env/bin/pip install -r example/tumblelog/requirements.txt ./env/bin/python example/tumblelog/manage.py runserver
./env/bin/pip install -r requirements_dev.txt ./env/bin/python setup.py -q nosetests -x