custom-management-commands.txt 11 KB

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  1. ====================================
  2. Writing custom django-admin commands
  3. ====================================
  4. Applications can register their own actions with ``manage.py``. For example,
  5. you might want to add a ``manage.py`` action for a Django app that you're
  6. distributing. In this document, we will be building a custom ``closepoll``
  7. command for the ``polls`` application from the
  8. :doc:`tutorial</intro/tutorial01>`.
  9. To do this, just add a ``management/commands`` directory to the application.
  10. Django will register a ``manage.py`` command for each Python module in that
  11. directory whose name doesn't begin with an underscore. For example::
  12. polls/
  13. __init__.py
  14. models.py
  15. management/
  16. __init__.py
  17. commands/
  18. __init__.py
  19. _private.py
  20. closepoll.py
  21. tests.py
  22. views.py
  23. In this example, the ``closepoll`` command will be made available to any project
  24. that includes the ``polls`` application in :setting:`INSTALLED_APPS`.
  25. The ``_private.py`` module will not be available as a management command.
  26. The ``closepoll.py`` module has only one requirement -- it must define a class
  27. ``Command`` that extends :class:`BaseCommand` or one of its
  28. :ref:`subclasses<ref-basecommand-subclasses>`.
  29. .. admonition:: Standalone scripts
  30. Custom management commands are especially useful for running standalone
  31. scripts or for scripts that are periodically executed from the UNIX crontab
  32. or from Windows scheduled tasks control panel.
  33. To implement the command, edit ``polls/management/commands/closepoll.py`` to
  34. look like this:
  35. .. code-block:: python
  36. from django.core.management.base import BaseCommand, CommandError
  37. from example.polls.models import Poll
  38. class Command(BaseCommand):
  39. args = '<poll_id poll_id ...>'
  40. help = 'Closes the specified poll for voting'
  41. def handle(self, *args, **options):
  42. for poll_id in args:
  43. try:
  44. poll = Poll.objects.get(pk=int(poll_id))
  45. except Poll.DoesNotExist:
  46. raise CommandError('Poll "%s" does not exist' % poll_id)
  47. poll.opened = False
  48. poll.save()
  49. self.stdout.write('Successfully closed poll "%s"\n' % poll_id)
  50. .. note::
  51. When you are using management commands and wish to provide console
  52. output, you should write to ``self.stdout`` and ``self.stderr``,
  53. instead of printing to ``stdout`` and ``stderr`` directly. By
  54. using these proxies, it becomes much easier to test your custom
  55. command.
  56. The new custom command can be called using ``python manage.py closepoll
  57. <poll_id>``.
  58. The ``handle()`` method takes zero or more ``poll_ids`` and sets ``poll.opened``
  59. to ``False`` for each one. If the user referenced any nonexistent polls, a
  60. :class:`CommandError` is raised. The ``poll.opened`` attribute does not exist
  61. in the :doc:`tutorial</intro/tutorial01>` and was added to
  62. ``polls.models.Poll`` for this example.
  63. The same ``closepoll`` could be easily modified to delete a given poll instead
  64. of closing it by accepting additional command line options. These custom options
  65. must be added to :attr:`~BaseCommand.option_list` like this:
  66. .. code-block:: python
  67. from optparse import make_option
  68. class Command(BaseCommand):
  69. option_list = BaseCommand.option_list + (
  70. make_option('--delete',
  71. action='store_true',
  72. dest='delete',
  73. default=False,
  74. help='Delete poll instead of closing it'),
  75. )
  76. # ...
  77. In addition to being able to add custom command line options, all
  78. :doc:`management commands</ref/django-admin>` can accept some
  79. default options such as :djadminopt:`--verbosity` and :djadminopt:`--traceback`.
  80. .. admonition:: Management commands and locales
  81. The :meth:`BaseCommand.execute` method sets the hardcoded ``en-us`` locale
  82. because the commands shipped with Django perform several tasks
  83. (for example, user-facing content rendering and database population) that
  84. require a system-neutral string language (for which we use ``en-us``).
  85. If your custom management command uses another locale, you should manually
  86. activate and deactivate it in your :meth:`~BaseCommand.handle` or
  87. :meth:`~NoArgsCommand.handle_noargs` method using the functions provided by
  88. the I18N support code:
  89. .. code-block:: python
  90. from django.core.management.base import BaseCommand, CommandError
  91. from django.utils import translation
  92. class Command(BaseCommand):
  93. ...
  94. self.can_import_settings = True
  95. def handle(self, *args, **options):
  96. # Activate a fixed locale, e.g. Russian
  97. translation.activate('ru')
  98. # Or you can activate the LANGUAGE_CODE
  99. # chosen in the settings:
  100. #
  101. #from django.conf import settings
  102. #translation.activate(settings.LANGUAGE_CODE)
  103. # Your command logic here
  104. # ...
  105. translation.deactivate()
  106. Take into account though, that system management commands typically have to
  107. be very careful about running in non-uniform locales, so:
  108. * Make sure the :setting:`USE_I18N` setting is always ``True`` when running
  109. the command (this is one good example of the potential problems stemming
  110. from a dynamic runtime environment that Django commands avoid offhand by
  111. always using a fixed locale).
  112. * Review the code of your command and the code it calls for behavioral
  113. differences when locales are changed and evaluate its impact on
  114. predictable behavior of your command.
  115. Command objects
  116. ===============
  117. .. class:: BaseCommand
  118. The base class from which all management commands ultimately derive.
  119. Use this class if you want access to all of the mechanisms which
  120. parse the command-line arguments and work out what code to call in
  121. response; if you don't need to change any of that behavior,
  122. consider using one of its :ref:`subclasses<ref-basecommand-subclasses>`.
  123. Subclassing the :class:`BaseCommand` class requires that you implement the
  124. :meth:`~BaseCommand.handle` method.
  125. Attributes
  126. ----------
  127. All attributes can be set in your derived class and can be used in
  128. :class:`BaseCommand`'s :ref:`subclasses<ref-basecommand-subclasses>`.
  129. .. attribute:: BaseCommand.args
  130. A string listing the arguments accepted by the command,
  131. suitable for use in help messages; e.g., a command which takes
  132. a list of application names might set this to '<appname
  133. appname ...>'.
  134. .. attribute:: BaseCommand.can_import_settings
  135. A boolean indicating whether the command needs to be able to
  136. import Django settings; if ``True``, ``execute()`` will verify
  137. that this is possible before proceeding. Default value is
  138. ``True``.
  139. .. attribute:: BaseCommand.help
  140. A short description of the command, which will be printed in the
  141. help message when the user runs the command
  142. ``python manage.py help <command>``.
  143. .. attribute:: BaseCommand.option_list
  144. This is the list of ``optparse`` options which will be fed
  145. into the command's ``OptionParser`` for parsing arguments.
  146. .. attribute:: BaseCommand.output_transaction
  147. A boolean indicating whether the command outputs SQL
  148. statements; if ``True``, the output will automatically be
  149. wrapped with ``BEGIN;`` and ``COMMIT;``. Default value is
  150. ``False``.
  151. .. attribute:: BaseCommand.requires_model_validation
  152. A boolean; if ``True``, validation of installed models will be
  153. performed prior to executing the command. Default value is
  154. ``True``. To validate an individual application's models
  155. rather than all applications' models, call
  156. :meth:`~BaseCommand.validate` from :meth:`~BaseCommand.handle`.
  157. Methods
  158. -------
  159. :class:`BaseCommand` has a few methods that can be overridden but only
  160. the :meth:`~BaseCommand.handle` method must be implemented.
  161. .. admonition:: Implementing a constructor in a subclass
  162. If you implement ``__init__`` in your subclass of :class:`BaseCommand`,
  163. you must call :class:`BaseCommand`'s ``__init__``.
  164. .. code-block:: python
  165. class Command(BaseCommand):
  166. def __init__(self, *args, **kwargs):
  167. super(Command, self).__init__(*args, **kwargs)
  168. # ...
  169. .. method:: BaseCommand.get_version()
  170. Return the Django version, which should be correct for all
  171. built-in Django commands. User-supplied commands can
  172. override this method to return their own version.
  173. .. method:: BaseCommand.execute(*args, **options)
  174. Try to execute this command, performing model validation if
  175. needed (as controlled by the attribute
  176. :attr:`requires_model_validation`). If the command raises a
  177. :class:`CommandError`, intercept it and print it sensibly to
  178. stderr.
  179. .. method:: BaseCommand.handle(*args, **options)
  180. The actual logic of the command. Subclasses must implement this method.
  181. .. _ref-basecommand-subclasses:
  182. BaseCommand subclasses
  183. ----------------------
  184. .. class:: AppCommand
  185. A management command which takes one or more installed application
  186. names as arguments, and does something with each of them.
  187. Rather than implementing :meth:`~BaseCommand.handle`, subclasses must implement
  188. :meth:`~AppCommand.handle_app`, which will be called once for each application.
  189. .. method:: AppCommand.handle_app(app, **options)
  190. Perform the command's actions for ``app``, which will be the
  191. Python module corresponding to an application name given on
  192. the command line.
  193. .. class:: LabelCommand
  194. A management command which takes one or more arbitrary arguments
  195. (labels) on the command line, and does something with each of
  196. them.
  197. Rather than implementing :meth:`~BaseCommand.handle`, subclasses must implement
  198. :meth:`~LabelCommand.handle_label`, which will be called once for each label.
  199. .. method:: LabelCommand.handle_label(label, **options)
  200. Perform the command's actions for ``label``, which will be the
  201. string as given on the command line.
  202. .. class:: NoArgsCommand
  203. A command which takes no arguments on the command line.
  204. Rather than implementing :meth:`~BaseCommand.handle`, subclasses must implement
  205. :meth:`~NoArgsCommand.handle_noargs`; :meth:`~BaseCommand.handle` itself is
  206. overridden to ensure no arguments are passed to the command.
  207. .. method:: NoArgsCommand.handle_noargs(**options)
  208. Perform this command's actions
  209. .. _ref-command-exceptions:
  210. Command exceptions
  211. ------------------
  212. .. class:: CommandError
  213. Exception class indicating a problem while executing a management
  214. command.
  215. If this exception is raised during the execution of a management
  216. command, it will be caught and turned into a nicely-printed error
  217. message to the appropriate output stream (i.e., stderr); as a
  218. result, raising this exception (with a sensible description of the
  219. error) is the preferred way to indicate that something has gone
  220. wrong in the execution of a command.