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settings.md 12 KB

Settings

The wagtail.contrib.settings module allows you to define models that hold settings which are either common across all site records or specific to each site.

Settings are editable by administrators within the Wagtail admin and can be accessed in code as well as in templates.

Installation

Add wagtail.contrib.settings to your INSTALLED_APPS:

INSTALLED_APPS += [
    'wagtail.contrib.settings',
]

Note: If you are using settings within templates, you will also need to update your TEMPLATES settings (discussed later in this page).

Defining settings

Create a model that inherits from either:

  • BaseGenericSetting for generic settings across all sites
  • BaseSiteSetting for site-specific settings

and register it using the register_setting decorator:

from django.db import models
from wagtail.contrib.settings.models import (
    BaseGenericSetting,
    BaseSiteSetting,
    register_setting,
)

@register_setting
class GenericSocialMediaSettings(BaseGenericSetting):
    facebook = models.URLField()

@register_setting
class SiteSpecificSocialMediaSettings(BaseSiteSetting):
    facebook = models.URLField()

Links to your settings will appear in the Wagtail admin 'Settings' menu.

(edit_handlers_settings)=

Edit handlers

Settings use edit handlers much like the rest of Wagtail. Add a panels setting to your model defining all the edit handlers required:

@register_setting
class GenericImportantPages(BaseGenericSetting):
    donate_page = models.ForeignKey(
        'wagtailcore.Page', null=True, on_delete=models.SET_NULL, related_name='+'
    )
    sign_up_page = models.ForeignKey(
        'wagtailcore.Page', null=True, on_delete=models.SET_NULL, related_name='+'
    )

    panels = [
        FieldPanel('donate_page'),
        FieldPanel('sign_up_page'),
    ]

@register_setting
class SiteSpecificImportantPages(BaseSiteSetting):
    donate_page = models.ForeignKey(
        'wagtailcore.Page', null=True, on_delete=models.SET_NULL, related_name='+'
    )
    sign_up_page = models.ForeignKey(
        'wagtailcore.Page', null=True, on_delete=models.SET_NULL, related_name='+'
    )

    panels = [
        FieldPanel('donate_page'),
        FieldPanel('sign_up_page'),
    ]

You can also customize the edit handlers like you would do for Page model with a custom edit_handler attribute:

from wagtail.admin.panels import TabbedInterface, ObjectList

@register_setting
class MySettings(BaseGenericSetting):
    # ...
    first_tab_panels = [
        FieldPanel('field_1'),
    ]
    second_tab_panels = [
        FieldPanel('field_2'),
    ]

    edit_handler = TabbedInterface([
        ObjectList(first_tab_panels, heading='First tab'),
        ObjectList(second_tab_panels, heading='Second tab'),
    ])

Appearance

You can change the label used in the menu by changing the verbose_name of your model.

You can add an icon to the menu by passing an icon argument to the register_setting decorator:

@register_setting(icon='placeholder')
class GenericSocialMediaSettings(BaseGenericSetting):
    ...
    class Meta:
        verbose_name = "Social media settings for all sites"

@register_setting(icon='placeholder')
class SiteSpecificSocialMediaSettings(BaseSiteSetting):
    ...
    class Meta:
        verbose_name = "Site-specific social media settings"

Wagtail’s default icon set can be seen in our icons overview. All icons available in a given project are displayed in the styleguide.

Using the settings

Settings can be used in both Python code and in templates.

Using in Python

Generic settings

If you require access to a generic setting in a view, the BaseGenericSetting.load() method allows you to retrieve the generic settings:

def view(request):
    social_media_settings = GenericSocialMediaSettings.load(request_or_site=request)
    ...

(site_settings)=

Site-specific settings

If you require access to a site-specific setting in a view, the BaseSiteSetting.for_request() method allows you to retrieve the site-specific settings for the current request:

def view(request):
    social_media_settings = SiteSpecificSocialMediaSettings.for_request(request=request)
    ...

In places where the request is unavailable, but you know the Site you wish to retrieve settings for, you can use BaseSiteSetting.for_site instead:

def view(request):
    social_media_settings = SiteSpecificSocialMediaSettings.for_site(site=user.origin_site)
    ...

Using in Django templates

Add the wagtail.contrib.settings.context_processors.settings context processor to your settings:

TEMPLATES = [
    {
        ...

        'OPTIONS': {
            'context_processors': [
                ...

                'wagtail.contrib.settings.context_processors.settings',
            ]
        }
    }
]

Then access the generic settings through {{ settings }}:

{{ settings.app_label.GenericSocialMediaSettings.facebook }}
{{ settings.app_label.SiteSpecificSocialMediaSettings.facebook }}

Note: Replace app_label with the label of the app containing your settings model.

If you are not in a RequestContext, then context processors will not have run, and the settings variable will not be available. To get the settings, use the provided {% get_settings %} template tag.

{% load wagtailsettings_tags %}
{% get_settings %}
{{ settings.app_label.GenericSocialMediaSettings.facebook }}
{{ settings.app_label.SiteSpecificSocialMediaSettings.facebook }}

By default, the tag will create or update a settings variable in the context. If you want to assign to a different context variable instead, use {% get_settings as other_variable_name %}:

{% load wagtailsettings_tags %}
{% get_settings as wagtail_settings %}
{{ wagtail_settings.app_label.GenericSocialMediaSettings.facebook }}
{{ wagtail_settings.app_label.SiteSpecificSocialMediaSettings.facebook }}

Using in Jinja2 templates

Add wagtail.contrib.settings.jinja2tags.settings extension to your Jinja2 settings:

TEMPLATES = [
    ...

    {
        'BACKEND': 'django.template.backends.jinja2.Jinja2',
        'APP_DIRS': True,
        'OPTIONS': {
            'extensions': [
                ...

                'wagtail.contrib.settings.jinja2tags.settings',
            ],
        },
    }
]

Then access the settings through the settings() template function:

{{ settings("app_label.GenericSocialMediaSettings").facebook }}
{{ settings("app_label.SiteSpecificSocialMediaSettings").facebook }}

Note: Replace app_label with the label of the app containing your settings model.

If there is no request available in the template at all, you can use the settings for the default site instead:

{{ settings("app_label.GenericSocialMediaSettings", use_default_site=True).facebook }}
{{ settings("app_label.SiteSpecificSocialMediaSettings", use_default_site=True).facebook }}

Note: You can not reliably get the correct settings instance for the current site from this template tag if the request object is not available. This is only relevant for multi-site instances of Wagtail.

You can store the settings instance in a variable to save some typing, if you have to use multiple values from one model:

{% with generic_social_settings=settings("app_label.GenericSocialMediaSettings") %}
    Follow us on Facebook at {{ generic_social_settings.facebook }},
    or Instagram at @{{ generic_social_settings.instagram }}.
{% endwith %}

{% with site_social_settings=settings("app_label.SiteSpecificSocialMediaSettings") %}
    Follow us on Facebook at {{ site_social_settings.facebook }},
    or Instagram at {{ site_social_settings.instagram }}.
{% endwith %}

Or, alternately, using the set tag:

{% set generic_social_settings=settings("app_label.GenericSocialMediaSettings") %}
{% set site_social_settings=settings("app_label.SiteSpecificSocialMediaSettings") %}

Utilising select_related to improve efficiency

For models with foreign key relationships to other objects (for example pages), which are very often needed to output values in templates, you can set the select_related attribute on your model to have Wagtail utilize Django's QuerySet.select_related() method to fetch the settings object and related objects in a single query. With this, the initial query is more complex, but you will be able to freely access the foreign key values without any additional queries, making things more efficient overall.

Building on the GenericImportantPages example from the previous section, the following shows how select_related can be set to improve efficiency:

@register_setting
class GenericImportantPages(BaseGenericSetting):

    # Fetch these pages when looking up GenericImportantPages for or a site
    select_related = ["donate_page", "sign_up_page"]

    donate_page = models.ForeignKey(
        'wagtailcore.Page', null=True, on_delete=models.SET_NULL, related_name='+'
    )
    sign_up_page = models.ForeignKey(
        'wagtailcore.Page', null=True, on_delete=models.SET_NULL, related_name='+'
    )

    panels = [
        FieldPanel('donate_page'),
        FieldPanel('sign_up_page'),
    ]

With these additions, the following template code will now trigger a single database query instead of three (one to fetch the settings, and two more to fetch each page):

{% load wagtailcore_tags %}
{% pageurl settings.app_label.GenericImportantPages.donate_page %}
{% pageurl settings.app_label.GenericImportantPages.sign_up_page %}

Utilising the page_url setting shortcut

If, like in the previous section, your settings model references pages, and you often need to output the URLs of those pages in your project, you can likely use the setting model's page_url shortcut to do that more cleanly. For example, instead of doing the following:

{% load wagtailcore_tags %}
{% pageurl settings.app_label.GenericImportantPages.donate_page %}
{% pageurl settings.app_label.GenericImportantPages.sign_up_page %}

You could write:

{{ settings.app_label.GenericImportantPages.page_url.donate_page }}
{{ settings.app_label.GenericImportantPages.page_url.sign_up_page }}

Using the page_url shortcut has a few of advantages over using the tag:

  1. The 'specific' page is automatically fetched to generate the URL, so you don't have to worry about doing this (or forgetting to do this) yourself.
  2. The results are cached, so if you need to access the same page URL in more than one place (for example in a form and in footer navigation), using the page_url shortcut will be more efficient.
  3. It's more concise, and the syntax is the same whether using it in templates or views (or other Python code), allowing you to write more consistent code.

When using the page_url shortcut, there are a couple of points worth noting:

  1. The same limitations that apply to the {% pageurl %} tag apply to the shortcut: If the settings are accessed from a template context where the current request is not available, all URLs returned will include the site's scheme/domain, and URL generation will not be quite as efficient.
  2. If using the shortcut in views or other Python code, the method will raise an AttributeError if the attribute you request from page_url is not an attribute on the settings object.
  3. If the settings object DOES have the attribute, but the attribute returns a value of None (or something that is not a Page), the shortcut will return an empty string.