Use classes to define settings.
Project description
This project allows you to define your Django project’s settings using classes instead of modules. Among other things, this allows you to use inheritance and calculated properties.
Installation
The easiest way to install is by using pip:
pip install django-classbasedsettings
However you can also just drop the “cbsettings” folder into your pythonpath.
Setup
The places where you’re currently setting DJANGO_SETTINGS_MODULE, you’ll have to instead call cbsettings.configure. So your manage.py will look something like this:
#!/usr/bin/env python import sys import cbsettings if __name__ == "__main__": cbsettings.configure('path.to.MySettings') from django.core.management import execute_from_command_line execute_from_command_line(sys.argv)
You’ll have to make a similar modification to your wsgi file.
Usage
Basic
The only real change you need to make to the settings.py file that Django creates for you is to nest all the variables in a class:
from cbsettings import DjangoDefaults class MySettings(DjangoDefaults): ADMINS = ( # ('Your Name', 'your_email@example.com'), ) MANAGERS = ADMINS DATABASES = { 'default': { 'ENGINE': 'django.db.backends.', 'NAME': '', 'USER': '', 'PASSWORD': '', 'HOST': '', 'PORT': '', } } # etc, etc
Notice that the class extends DjangoDefaults. By inheriting from this class, you get all the default settings values that Django normally composites your settings with. (These are pulled in from django.conf.global_settings so they’ll track with your version of Django, not classbasedsettings.) You can also do stuff like this:
class MySettings(DjangoDefaults): STATICFILES_FINDERS = DjangoDefaults.STATICFILES_FINDERS + ( 'my.custom.StaticFileFinder', ) # etc
These are just normal Python classes, so you can do anything you normally can:
class MySettings(DjangoDefaults): @property def TEMPLATE_DEBUG(self): # Now a subclass can override DEBUG and TEMPLATE_DEBUG will be changed accordingly return self.DEBUG # etc
Using a Settings Factory
You might be thinking that hardcoding your settings class into files is just as bad as Django’s hardcoding of the settings module. That’s true. Which is why configure() can be passed the path to any callable that returns a settings object instance. So your manage.py might instead look like this:
#!/usr/bin/env python import sys import cbsettings if __name__ == "__main__": cbsettings.configure('path.to.my.settings.factory') from django.core.management import execute_from_command_line execute_from_command_line(sys.argv)
Then, in path/to/my/settings.py:
def factory(): if 'DEV' in os.environ: return MyDebugSettings() else: return MyProductionSettings()
Now you can easily change which settings class you’re using based on whatever conditions you want without having to make modifications to multiple files.
Using Switcher
Using a factory method to determine which settings class to use is a powerful feature! But usually you’ll want to switch settings classes based on the same kinds of conditions, so django-classbasedsettings comes with a factory that’ll handle these common cases, and allow you to easily define simple conditions of your own. It also uses a more declarative syntax, which makes it more organized than a factory method. Here’s how you use it in your settings file:
from cbsettings import DjangoDefaults, switcher class MyProductionSettings(DjangoDefaults): DEBUG = False # etc class MyDevSettings(DjangoDefaults): DEBUG = True # etc class MyTestingSettings(MyProductionSettings): SOME_VAR = 'whatever' # You can use one of the preregistered conditions by passing kwargs. The # first class whose conditions are all met will be used. switcher.register(MyTestSettings, testing=True) switcher.register(MyDevSettings, hostnames=['mycompuer.home', 'billscomputer.home']) switcher.register(MyProductionSettings, hostnames=['theserver.com']) # ...or you can define your own simple checks as positional arguments. If # all of the values are truthy (and any kwarg checks pass), the class will # be used. switcher.register(MyDevSettings, 'dev.mysite.com' in __file__) switcher.register(MyDevSettings, os.environ.get('DEV')) # Callable positional arguments will be called, then checked for truthiness. switcher.register(MyDevSettings, lambda: randint(1, 2) == 2)
You can also use switcher.register as a class decorator:
@switcher.register(hostnames=['theserver.com']) class MyProductionSettings(DjangoDefaults): DEBUG = False # etc
Then, wherever you’re calling configure, pass it your module’s switcher variable:
cbsettings.configure('path.to.my.settings.switcher')
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