This django app adds a management command that starts a livereload server watching all your static files and templates as well
as a custom runserver
command that issues livereload requests when the development server is ready after a restart.
Install package:
$ pip install django-livereload-server
Add 'livereload'
to the INSTALLED_APPS
, before 'django.contrib.staticfiles'
if this is used:
INSTALLED_APPS = ( ... 'livereload', ... )
Add 'livereload.middleware.LiveReloadScript'
to
MIDDLEWARE_CLASSES
(probably at the end):
MIDDLEWARE_CLASSES = ( ... 'livereload.middleware.LiveReloadScript', )
Or to MIDDLEWARE
for Django >= 1.10:
MIDDLEWARE = [ ... 'livereload.middleware.LiveReloadScript', ]
This will inject the livereload.js
script into your webpages if DEBUG
setting is on.
If you need the livereload server to use a different host and port than the default 127.0.0.1 and 35729,
specify them by setting LIVERELOAD_HOST
and LIVERELOAD_PORT
in settings.py
.
Start the livereload server:
$ python manage.py livereload
keep the livereload server running.
Start the django development server as usual (in another console):
$ python manage.py runserver
In the browser's address bar access your web app by doing:
127.0.0.1:8000 or localhost:8000
now every time you hit save in your editor, the django-development-server/livereload-server automatically updates the staticfiles
By default both template and staticfiles directories are watched.
You can ignore template directories using:
$ ./manage.py livereload --ignore-template-dirs
Or staticfiles directories using:
$ ./manage.py livereload --ignore-static-dirs
You can ignore file extensions:
$ ./manage.py livereload --ignore-file-extensions=.less,.scss
Extra files and/or paths to watch for changes can be added as positional arguments. By default livereload server watches the files that are found by your staticfiles finders and your template loaders.
$ python manage.py livereload path/to/my-extra-directory/
This will be excluded from the paths ignored by --ignore-template-dirs and --ignore-static-dirs.
Host and port can be overridden with --host
and --port
options.
$ python manage.py livereload --host=myhost.com --port=9090
the runserver command python manage.py runserver
also accepts three additional options:
* ``--nolivereload`` to disable livereload functionality * ``--livereload-host`` to override both default and settings file specified host address * ``--livereload-port`` to override both default and settings file specified port
This project is based on a merge of python-livereload and django-livereload, excellent projects both and even better for smooth django development when combined.