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Its a spicy meatball for serving up fresh hot entity-relationship diagrams straight from your django models.

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Its a spicy meatball for serving up fresh hot entity-relationship diagrams straight from your django models.

Adding spaghetti to your project

Install some spaghetti:

pip install django-spaghetti-and-meatballs

Add "django_spaghetti" to your INSTALLED_APPS setting like this:

INSTALLED_APPS = [
    ...
    'django_spaghetti',
]

Configure your sauce

django-spaghetti-and-meatballs takes a few options set in the SPAGHETTI_SAUCE variable from your projects settings.py file that make it extra spicy:

SPAGHETTI_SAUCE = {
    'apps': ['auth', 'polls'],
    'show_fields': False,
    'exclude': {'auth': ['user']},
}

In the above dictionary, the following settings are used:

  • apps is a list of apps you want to show in the graph. If its not in here it won’t be seen.

  • show_fields is a boolean that states if the field names should be shown in the graph or just in the however over. For small graphs, you can set this to True to show fields as well, but as you get more models it gets messier.

  • exclude is a dictionary where each key is an app_label and the items for that key are model names to hide in the graph.

If its not working as expected make sure your app labels and model names are all lower case.

Serve your plate in your urls file

Once you’ve configured your sauce, make sure you serve up a plate of spaghetti in your urls.py like so:

urlpatterns += patterns('',
    url(r'^plate/', include('django_spaghetti.urls')),
)

A sample platter

Below is an example image showing the connections between models from the django-reversion and django-notifications apps and Django’s built-in auth models.

Colored edges illustrate foreign key relations, with arrows pointing from the defining model to the related model, while gray edges illustrate many-to-many relations. Different colors signify the different Django apps, and when relations link between apps the edges are colored with a gradient.

https://cloud.githubusercontent.com/assets/2173174/9053053/a45e185c-3ab2-11e5-9ea0-89dafb7ac274.png

Hovering over a model, gives a pop-up that lists the following information:

  • model name

  • app label

  • The models docstring

  • A list of every field, with its field type and its help text (if defined). Unique fields have their name underlined.

This was build with the sauce:

SPAGHETTI_SAUCE = {
    'apps': ['auth', 'notifications', 'reversion'],
    'show_fields': False,
}

A complex live-demo

To see a complex example, where django-spaghetti-and-meatballs really shines, checkout the live version built for the Aristotle Metadata Registry

Testing and developing

I like keeping my development environments isolated in docker. You can too. If you want to install poetry locally, you can skip this bit.

  • Build a container with Pythong and Poetry installed - docker build . -t spaghetti

  • Run a container for developing docker run -v “$(realpath .)”:/site -w /site -p 8000:8000 -it –rm spaghetti bash

  • Install the dependencies - poetry install

  • Open a poetry shell - poetry shell

  • Run the server - django-admin runserver 0.0.0.0:8000

If you navigate to 127.0.0.1:8000 should should see the demo app.

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