django-constance/README.rst
2011-06-28 12:57:21 +02:00

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Dynamic Django settings
=======================
Features
--------
* Easily migrate your static settings to dynamic settings.
* Admin interface to edit the dynamic settings.
Installation
------------
Install from PyPI::
pip install django-constance
Or install the `in-development version`_ using ``pip``::
pip install -e git+git://github.com/comoga/django-constance#egg=django-constance
.. _`in-development version`: https://github.com/comoga/django-constance/tarball/master#egg=django-constance-dev
Configuration
-------------
Modify your ``settings.py``. Add ``'constance'`` to your ``INSTALLED_APPS``,
and move each key you want to turn dynamic into the ``CONSTANCE_CONFIG``
section, like this::
INSTALLED_APPS = (
...
'constance',
)
CONSTANCE_CONFIG = {
'MY_SETTINGS_KEY': (42, 'the answer to everything'),
}
Here, ``42`` is the default value for the key ``MY_SETTINGS_KEY`` if it is
not found in the backend. The other member of the tuple is a help text the
admin will show.
See the `Backends`_ section how to setup the backend.
Backends
~~~~~~~~
Constance ships with a bunch of backends that are used to store the
configuration values. By default it uses the Redis backend. To override
the default please set the ``CONSTANCE_BACKEND`` setting to the appropriate
dotted path.
Redis (default)
+++++++++++++++
::
CONSTANCE_BACKEND = constance.backends.redisd.RedisBackend
The is the default backend and has a couple of options:
* ``CONSTANCE_REDIS_CONNECTION``
A dictionary of parameters to pass to the to Redis client, e.g.::
CONSTANCE_REDIS_CONNECTION = {
'host': 'localhost',
'port': 6379,
'db': 0,
}
* ``CONSTANCE_REDIS_CONNECTION_CLASS``
An (optional) dotted import path to a connection to use, e.g.::
CONSTANCE_REDIS_CONNECTION_CLASS = 'myproject.myapp.mockup.Connection'
* ``CONSTANCE_REDIS_PREFIX``
The (optional) prefix to be used for the key when storing in the Redis
database. Defaults to ``'constance:'``. E.g.::
CONSTANCE_REDIS_PREFIX = 'constance:myproject:'
Database
++++++++
::
CONSTANCE_BACKEND = constance.backends.database.DatabaseBackend
If you want to use this backend you also need to add the databse backend
to your ``INSTALLED_APPS`` setting to make sure the data model is correctly
created::
INSTALLED_APPS = (
# other apps
'constance.backends.database',
)
It also uses `django-picklefield`_ to store the values in the database, so
you need to install this library, too. E.g.::
pip install django-picklefield
The database backend has the ability to automatically cache the config
values and clear them when saving. You need to set the following setting
to enable this feature::
CONSTANCE_DATABASE_CACHE_BACKEND = 'memcached://127.0.0.1:11211/'
.. note:: This won't work with a cache backend that doesn't support
cross-process caching, because correct cache invalidation
can't be guaranteed.
.. _django-picklefield: http://pypi.python.org/pypi/django-picklefield/
Usage
-----
Constance can be used from your Python code and from your Django templates.
* Python
Accessing the config variables is as easy as importing the config
object and accessing the variables with attribute lookups::
from constance import config
# ...
if config.MY_SETTINGS_KEY == 42:
answer_the_question()
* Django templates
To access the config object from your template, you can either
pass the object to the template context::
from django.shortcuts import render_to_response
from constance import config
def myview(request):
return render_to_response('my_template.html', {'config': config})
Or you can use the included config context processor.::
TEMPLATE_CONTEXT_PROCESSORS = (
# ...
'constance.context_processors.config',
)
This will add the config instance to the context of any template
rendered with a ``RequestContext``.
Then, in your template you can refer to the config values just as
any other variable, e.g.::
<h1>Welcome on {% config.SITE_NAME %}</h1>
{% if config.BETA_LAUNCHED %}
Woohoo! Head over <a href="/sekrit/">here</a> to use the beta.
{% else %}
Sadly we haven't launched yet, click <a href="/newsletter/">here</a>
to signup for our newletter.
{% endif %}
Editing
~~~~~~~
Fire up your ``admin`` and you should see a new app called ``Constance``
with ``MY_SETTINGS_KEY`` in the ``Config`` pseudo model.
Screenshots
-----------
.. figure:: https://github.com/comoga/django-constance/raw/master/docs/screenshot2.png
The standard edit screen.
.. figure:: https://github.com/comoga/django-constance/raw/master/docs/screenshot1.png
The virtual application ``Constance`` among your regular applications.