signals.txt 11 KB

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  1. =======
  2. Signals
  3. =======
  4. .. module:: django.dispatch
  5. :synopsis: Signal dispatch
  6. Django includes a "signal dispatcher" which helps allow decoupled applications
  7. get notified when actions occur elsewhere in the framework. In a nutshell,
  8. signals allow certain *senders* to notify a set of *receivers* that some action
  9. has taken place. They're especially useful when many pieces of code may be
  10. interested in the same events.
  11. Django provides a :doc:`set of built-in signals </ref/signals>` that let user
  12. code get notified by Django itself of certain actions. These include some useful
  13. notifications:
  14. * :data:`django.db.models.signals.pre_save` &
  15. :data:`django.db.models.signals.post_save`
  16. Sent before or after a model's :meth:`~django.db.models.Model.save` method
  17. is called.
  18. * :data:`django.db.models.signals.pre_delete` &
  19. :data:`django.db.models.signals.post_delete`
  20. Sent before or after a model's :meth:`~django.db.models.Model.delete`
  21. method or queryset's :meth:`~django.db.models.query.QuerySet.delete`
  22. method is called.
  23. * :data:`django.db.models.signals.m2m_changed`
  24. Sent when a :class:`~django.db.models.ManyToManyField` on a model is changed.
  25. * :data:`django.core.signals.request_started` &
  26. :data:`django.core.signals.request_finished`
  27. Sent when Django starts or finishes an HTTP request.
  28. See the :doc:`built-in signal documentation </ref/signals>` for a complete list,
  29. and a complete explanation of each signal.
  30. You can also `define and send your own custom signals`_; see below.
  31. .. _define and send your own custom signals: `defining and sending signals`_
  32. Listening to signals
  33. ====================
  34. To receive a signal, register a *receiver* function using the
  35. :meth:`Signal.connect` method. The receiver function is called when the signal
  36. is sent. All of the signal's receiver functions are called one at a time, in
  37. the order they were registered.
  38. .. method:: Signal.connect(receiver, sender=None, weak=True, dispatch_uid=None)
  39. :param receiver: The callback function which will be connected to this
  40. signal. See :ref:`receiver-functions` for more information.
  41. :param sender: Specifies a particular sender to receive signals from. See
  42. :ref:`connecting-to-specific-signals` for more information.
  43. :param weak: Django stores signal handlers as weak references by
  44. default. Thus, if your receiver is a local function, it may be
  45. garbage collected. To prevent this, pass ``weak=False`` when you call
  46. the signal's ``connect()`` method.
  47. :param dispatch_uid: A unique identifier for a signal receiver in cases
  48. where duplicate signals may be sent. See
  49. :ref:`preventing-duplicate-signals` for more information.
  50. Let's see how this works by registering a signal that
  51. gets called after each HTTP request is finished. We'll be connecting to the
  52. :data:`~django.core.signals.request_finished` signal.
  53. .. _receiver-functions:
  54. Receiver functions
  55. ------------------
  56. First, we need to define a receiver function. A receiver can be any Python
  57. function or method::
  58. def my_callback(sender, **kwargs):
  59. print("Request finished!")
  60. Notice that the function takes a ``sender`` argument, along with wildcard
  61. keyword arguments (``**kwargs``); all signal handlers must take these arguments.
  62. We'll look at senders `a bit later`_, but right now look at the ``**kwargs``
  63. argument. All signals send keyword arguments, and may change those keyword
  64. arguments at any time. In the case of
  65. :data:`~django.core.signals.request_finished`, it's documented as sending no
  66. arguments, which means we might be tempted to write our signal handling as
  67. ``my_callback(sender)``.
  68. .. _a bit later: `connecting to signals sent by specific senders`_
  69. This would be wrong -- in fact, Django will throw an error if you do so. That's
  70. because at any point arguments could get added to the signal and your receiver
  71. must be able to handle those new arguments.
  72. .. _connecting-receiver-functions:
  73. Connecting receiver functions
  74. -----------------------------
  75. There are two ways you can connect a receiver to a signal. You can take the
  76. manual connect route::
  77. from django.core.signals import request_finished
  78. request_finished.connect(my_callback)
  79. Alternatively, you can use a :func:`receiver` decorator:
  80. .. function:: receiver(signal)
  81. :param signal: A signal or a list of signals to connect a function to.
  82. Here's how you connect with the decorator::
  83. from django.core.signals import request_finished
  84. from django.dispatch import receiver
  85. @receiver(request_finished)
  86. def my_callback(sender, **kwargs):
  87. print("Request finished!")
  88. Now, our ``my_callback`` function will be called each time a request finishes.
  89. .. admonition:: Where should this code live?
  90. Strictly speaking, signal handling and registration code can live anywhere
  91. you like, although it's recommended to avoid the application's root module
  92. and its ``models`` module to minimize side-effects of importing code.
  93. In practice, signal handlers are usually defined in a ``signals``
  94. submodule of the application they relate to. Signal receivers are
  95. connected in the :meth:`~django.apps.AppConfig.ready` method of your
  96. application configuration class. If you're using the :func:`receiver`
  97. decorator, import the ``signals`` submodule inside
  98. :meth:`~django.apps.AppConfig.ready`.
  99. .. note::
  100. The :meth:`~django.apps.AppConfig.ready` method may be executed more than
  101. once during testing, so you may want to :ref:`guard your signals from
  102. duplication <preventing-duplicate-signals>`, especially if you're planning
  103. to send them within tests.
  104. .. _connecting-to-specific-signals:
  105. Connecting to signals sent by specific senders
  106. ----------------------------------------------
  107. Some signals get sent many times, but you'll only be interested in receiving a
  108. certain subset of those signals. For example, consider the
  109. :data:`django.db.models.signals.pre_save` signal sent before a model gets saved.
  110. Most of the time, you don't need to know when *any* model gets saved -- just
  111. when one *specific* model is saved.
  112. In these cases, you can register to receive signals sent only by particular
  113. senders. In the case of :data:`django.db.models.signals.pre_save`, the sender
  114. will be the model class being saved, so you can indicate that you only want
  115. signals sent by some model::
  116. from django.db.models.signals import pre_save
  117. from django.dispatch import receiver
  118. from myapp.models import MyModel
  119. @receiver(pre_save, sender=MyModel)
  120. def my_handler(sender, **kwargs):
  121. ...
  122. The ``my_handler`` function will only be called when an instance of ``MyModel``
  123. is saved.
  124. Different signals use different objects as their senders; you'll need to consult
  125. the :doc:`built-in signal documentation </ref/signals>` for details of each
  126. particular signal.
  127. .. _preventing-duplicate-signals:
  128. Preventing duplicate signals
  129. ----------------------------
  130. In some circumstances, the code connecting receivers to signals may run
  131. multiple times. This can cause your receiver function to be registered more
  132. than once, and thus called multiple times for a single signal event.
  133. If this behavior is problematic (such as when using signals to
  134. send an email whenever a model is saved), pass a unique identifier as
  135. the ``dispatch_uid`` argument to identify your receiver function. This
  136. identifier will usually be a string, although any hashable object will
  137. suffice. The end result is that your receiver function will only be
  138. bound to the signal once for each unique ``dispatch_uid`` value::
  139. from django.core.signals import request_finished
  140. request_finished.connect(my_callback, dispatch_uid="my_unique_identifier")
  141. Defining and sending signals
  142. ============================
  143. Your applications can take advantage of the signal infrastructure and provide
  144. its own signals.
  145. .. admonition:: When to use custom signals
  146. Signals are implicit function calls which make debugging harder. If the
  147. sender and receiver of your custom signal are both within your project,
  148. you're better off using an explicit function call.
  149. Defining signals
  150. ----------------
  151. .. class:: Signal(providing_args=list)
  152. All signals are :class:`django.dispatch.Signal` instances. The
  153. ``providing_args`` is a list of the names of arguments the signal will provide
  154. to listeners. This is purely documentational, however, as there is nothing that
  155. checks that the signal actually provides these arguments to its listeners.
  156. For example::
  157. import django.dispatch
  158. pizza_done = django.dispatch.Signal(providing_args=["toppings", "size"])
  159. This declares a ``pizza_done`` signal that will provide receivers with
  160. ``toppings`` and ``size`` arguments.
  161. Remember that you're allowed to change this list of arguments at any time, so
  162. getting the API right on the first try isn't necessary.
  163. Sending signals
  164. ---------------
  165. There are two ways to send signals in Django.
  166. .. method:: Signal.send(sender, **kwargs)
  167. .. method:: Signal.send_robust(sender, **kwargs)
  168. To send a signal, call either :meth:`Signal.send` (all built-in signals use
  169. this) or :meth:`Signal.send_robust`. You must provide the ``sender`` argument
  170. (which is a class most of the time) and may provide as many other keyword
  171. arguments as you like.
  172. For example, here's how sending our ``pizza_done`` signal might look::
  173. class PizzaStore:
  174. ...
  175. def send_pizza(self, toppings, size):
  176. pizza_done.send(sender=self.__class__, toppings=toppings, size=size)
  177. ...
  178. Both ``send()`` and ``send_robust()`` return a list of tuple pairs
  179. ``[(receiver, response), ... ]``, representing the list of called receiver
  180. functions and their response values.
  181. ``send()`` differs from ``send_robust()`` in how exceptions raised by receiver
  182. functions are handled. ``send()`` does *not* catch any exceptions raised by
  183. receivers; it simply allows errors to propagate. Thus not all receivers may
  184. be notified of a signal in the face of an error.
  185. ``send_robust()`` catches all errors derived from Python's ``Exception`` class,
  186. and ensures all receivers are notified of the signal. If an error occurs, the
  187. error instance is returned in the tuple pair for the receiver that raised the error.
  188. The tracebacks are present on the ``__traceback__`` attribute of the errors
  189. returned when calling ``send_robust()``.
  190. Disconnecting signals
  191. =====================
  192. .. method:: Signal.disconnect(receiver=None, sender=None, dispatch_uid=None)
  193. To disconnect a receiver from a signal, call :meth:`Signal.disconnect`. The
  194. arguments are as described in :meth:`.Signal.connect`. The method returns
  195. ``True`` if a receiver was disconnected and ``False`` if not.
  196. The ``receiver`` argument indicates the registered receiver to disconnect. It
  197. may be ``None`` if ``dispatch_uid`` is used to identify the receiver.