%global _empty_manifest_terminate_build 0 Name: python-django-url-framework Version: 0.6.0 Release: 1 Summary: Automagically discover urls in a django application, similar to the Ruby on Rails Controller/Action/View implementation. License: MIT URL: https://github.com/zeraien/django-url-framework/ Source0: https://mirrors.aliyun.com/pypi/web/packages/06/fc/b10ba8ac609dcb79c58ef433d462d7c042d82df2b172fd081ed5808387db/django-url-framework-0.6.0.tar.gz BuildArch: noarch %description The django-url-framework will help you get your django applications done faster. ![build](https://github.com/zeraien/django-url-framework/workflows/build/badge.svg) [![Documentation Status](https://readthedocs.org/projects/django-url-framework/badge/?version=latest)](https://django-url-framework.readthedocs.io/en/latest/?badge=latest) [![Join the chat at https://gitter.im/zeraien/django-url-framework](https://badges.gitter.im/zeraien/django-url-framework.svg)](https://gitter.im/zeraien/django-url-framework?utm_source=badge&utm_medium=badge&utm_campaign=pr-badge&utm_content=badge) It automatically detects urls in a django application, similar to the way Ruby on Rails does it with the Controller-Action-View implementation. Controllers are created in each django application with a predefined file naming scheme (`foo_controller.py`) and extending `ActionController`. The `ActionController` contains methods often used in a web context, and does common request-related processing. Each application can have multiple controllers thus allowing for smaller classes in a larger application. Each function not starting with an underscore becomes it's own action. By simply returning a dictionary from the action, it will be rendered with the template named using the `controller/action.html` naming scheme. Each action and controller can override certain global settings such as using a custom template name or giving the action (or controller) a custom name. ## Install From pypi: ``` pip install django-url-framework ``` Alternatively just check out the source here and run `python setup.py install` or `pip install .` ## Add to your project ### settings.py ```python INSTALLED_APPS = ( ..., 'django_url_framework', ... ) ``` ### urls.py ```python import django_url_framework from django.conf import settings from django.conf.urls import patterns, include django_url_framework.site.autodiscover(new_inflection_library=True) urlpatterns = patterns('', (r'^', include(django_url_framework.site.urls) ), ) ``` ## Example ### Folder structure ``` project/ app/ cart_controller.py id_controller.py templates/ cart/ add.html index.html remove.html id_manager/ bar.html ``` ### cart_controller.py ```python from django_url_framework.controller import ActionController class CartController(ActionController): def edit(self, request, id = None): return {} def remove(self, request, id): return {} def index(self, request): return {} ``` ### id_controller.py ```python from django_url_framework.controller import ActionController class IDManagerController(ActionController): def index(self, request, object_id = None): return {} def bar(self, request): return {} def bar__delete(self, request): return {} ``` ### Result The following URLs will be created: ``` /cart/ <- will go to *index action* /cart/(\w+)/ /cart/edit/ /cart/edit/(\w+)/ /cart/remove/(\w+)/ /foo/ /foo/(\w+)/ /foo/bar/ /foo/bar/delete/ ``` You can easily access your URLs using django's built-in `{% url ... %}` tag. Simply call `{% url cart_index %}` or `{% url cart_delete id %}` and it will work as you would expect. There is also a helper tag for faster linking within the same controller. `{% go_action remove %}` will take you to `/cart/remove/`. To use it, `{% load url_framework %}` in your templates. The names of the controller files do not affect your URLs, however, the files must have `_controller.py` suffix. The URL name of the controller is derived from the class name, minus the Controller part. You can also manually specify controller names using the `controller_name` attribute on the controller class. ### Controller names The controller name is derived from it's class name, by converting camelcase into underscores. For instance `FooController` is simple `foo`, while `FooBarController` becomes `foo_bar`. The latest version uses the `inflection` library, however to avoid breaking old code, this is still optional until 2021. The biggest difference is that with `inflection`, `HTTPResponse` becomes `http_response`, while the old name would be `httpresponse`. I suggest enabling the `inflection` library for all new and existing projects. You can manually specify names for controllers whose name change would break your code, or disable the inflection library for those controllers using a flag. You can give the controller a custom name with the `controller_name` parameter: ```python class Controller(ActionController): controller_name = "foo" ``` Enable or disable the use of the new `inflection` library using a flag ```python class Controller(ActionController): use_inflection_library = True ``` ### Other useful controller settings ```python class BarController(ActionController): # default filename extension for all templates template_extension = "pug" # will require every template file to start with this string template_prefix = "foo_" # will not look for templates in subdirectories, but in the root templates/ folder no_subdirectories = False # do not prefix templates with `_` (underscore) when they are called using an AJAX request no_ajax_prefix = False # Set a prefix for the controller's name, applies even if # you set controller_name (template name is based on controller_name, sans prefix) # NOTE: The urlconf name will not include the prefix, only the actual URL itself # Thus: FooController.list will have the URL /prefixed_foo/list/, but the url name will be # `foo_list`. controller_prefix = "prefixed_" # completely override the name of the controller controller_name = "shopping_cart" # When used with custom urlconf in actions, these arguments will not be passed to the action # example: "///" Only `id` will be passed to the `action`, while `skip` will not be. consume_urlconf_keyword_arguments = ['skip'] # set a prefix for all the URLs in this controller # So, what normally would be `/controller/action/`, becomes `^prefix/controller/action/` urlconf_prefix:list = ["^prefix"] # A custom json encoder, subclassing JSONEncoder json_default_encoder:JSONEncoder = None # use the yaml default flow style yaml_default_flow_style:bool = True # use the new inflection library to generate controller url # if this is None, will use the global setting, otherwise override this on a per controller basis use_inflection_library:Union[bool,None] = None ``` ### Template filenames By default templates are stored in the subdirectory with the controller's name, and the templates are given the same filename as the action name. If a request is determinned to be AJAX in nature, the template filename is prefixed with an underscore. Example: ```python class FooController(ActionController): def foo_action(self, request): return {} ``` File structure: ```python /foo/foo_action.html /foo/_foo_action.html <--- for AJAX requests. ``` You can disable this prefixing on a per action or per controller level. For all actions in a controller: ```python class FooController(ActionController): no_ajax_prefix = True ``` For a single action: ```python from django_url_framework.decorators.action_options class FooController(ActionController): @no_ajax_prefix def foo_action(self, request): return {} ``` ## Action names ```python class FooController(ActionController): def action(self, request): return {} ``` Creates the following URL: ``` /controller/action/ ``` Double underscores `__` in action names are converted to slashes in the urlconf, so: `action__name` becomes `/action/name/`. ```python class Controller(ActionController): def action__foo(self, request): return {} ``` Creates the following URL: ``` /controller/action/foo/ ``` ### Decorate to name You can also decorate functions to give them different names and prefixes and urls. See decorator package for more details, here is an example: ```python @action_options.name("foo") @action_options.prefix("prefix_") def bar(self, request): return {} ``` will result in: ``` /controller/prefix_foo/ ``` The action will now have the template `/controller/foo.html`. Prefixes do not affect template naming. ## Action parameters Providing a third parameter to an action will create a URLconf for that parameter, like so: ```python def action(self, request, object_id): return {} ``` Will allow you to call that action with: ``` /controller/action/(\w+)/ <--- parameter consisting of A-Za-z0-9_ ``` If you make the argument optional, an additional URLconf entry is created allowing you to call the action without the third argument. ```python def action(self, request, object_id = None): return {} ``` Results in: ``` /controller/action/ /controller/action/(\w+)/ <--- optional argument consisting of A-Za-z0-9_ ``` ### Decorate for JSON, YAML or Automatic You can decorate any action to have a default renderer. Instead of using `self._as_json` as before, you can just put a decorator like so: ```python from django_url_framework.decorators import json_action @json_action(json_encoder=None) def action(self, request, year, month): ... return {} ``` Other decorators include `@yaml_action(default_flow_style:bool)` and `@auto()`. YaML is self-explanatory, however `@auto` is a bit interesting, it will automatically determine the renderer based on the `HTTP_ACCEPT` header. *Warning* - if you expose raw data in your actions, that normally would be massaged inside a Server-Side template, DO NOT USE the `@auto` decorator as this allows an attacker to download raw data from your server. However, if your responses are designed for an API, the `@auto` decorator will enable the API client to request data as it sees fit, for example, it can request a Server-Side rendered HTML, or the same data as JSON or YaML. Here is a list of supported renderers: - text/html - `TemplateRenderer` - renders using the appropriate Django template - text/plain - `TextRenderer` - prints text data as is, or prints object types using `pprint.pformat` - application/json - `JSONRenderer` - renders data as JSON - application/yaml - `YamlRenderer` - renders data as YaML `@auto()` accepts the following parameters: - json_encoder - yaml_default_flow_style The work the same as if passed to `@json_action()` or `@yaml_action()` ### Set HTTP Status Codes easily Any action can return a tuple of two items, the second item should be an `int` and will become the HTTP status code for your response. ```python @json_action() def update(self, request, year, month): ... return False, 304 #not modified @json_action() def create(self, request, year, month): ... return True, 201 #created ``` ### Decorate for custom parameters You can also create your own custom parameters by using the `@url_parameters` decorator to the function. ```python from django_url_framework.decorators.action_options import url_paramters class Controller(ActionController): @url_parameters(r'(?P\d{4})/(?P\d\d)') def action(self, request, year, month): ... return {} ``` The above will create the following url patterns: ``` /controller/action/(?P\d{4})/(?P\d\d) ``` *Note the lack of trailing slash - you must provide this yourself.* ### Custom url for any action You can write your own urlconf for each action, by decorating it with `@urlconf`. ```python from django_url_framework.decorators.action_options import urlconf class Controller(ActionController): @action_options.urlconf([ r'^bar/(?P\d{4})/$', r'^bar/(?P\d{4})/(?P\d\d)/$', r'^foo/(?P\d{4})/(?P\d\d)/(?P\d\d)/$' ], do_not_autogenerate=True) def action(self, request, year, month=None, day=None): ... return {} ``` The above will create the following url patterns: ``` /controller/bar/(?P\d{4})/ /controller/bar/(?P\d{4})/(?P\d\d)/$ /controller/foo/(?P\d{4})/(?P\d\d)/(?P\d\d)/$ ``` The `do_not_autogenerate` argument is **true** by default and will prevent any urls for this action from being autogenerated. If `do_not_autogenerate` were to be set to false in the example below, the following url would also be created: ``` /controller/action/ ``` This URL would not actually work since the `year` argument is required the `action` function. ## Flash messages The ActionController also has a `_flash` instance variable that allows you to send messages to the user that can survive a redirect. Simply use ```python self._flash.append("Message") self._flash.error("Error message") ``` The flash messages can be either messages or error messages. The flash object is automatically exported into the context and you can use it as such: ```HTML+Django {% if flash.has_messages %} {% for message in flash.get_and_clear %} {% if message.is_error %}{% endif %}

{{message}}

{% endfor %} {% endif } ``` ## Before and After each action You can override `_before_filter` and/or `_after_filter` to perform certain actions and checks before or after an action. Read more in `ActionController` docs. These methods accept the "request" parameter which is an HTTP request object for this request. ```python class AccountController(ActionController): def _before_filter(self, request): campaign_id = request.GET.get("campaign_id") try: self._campaign = Campaign.objects.get(pk=campaign_id) except Campaign.DoesNotExist: self._campaign = None ``` You can disable the before and after filters by decorating any action with the `@disable_filters` decorator. Example: ```python from django_url_framework.decorators.action_options import disable_filters @disable_filters def action(self, request): return {} ``` One of the great features of django url framework is that you can require login for all actions in a controller by simply decorating the before_filter with a decorator to require logging in, see next section! ## Authentication To require login on an action use the `@login_required` decorator provided by django-url-framework. The decorator also works on `_before_filter`. ```python from django_url_framework.decorators import login_required class AccountController(ActionController): @login_required def action(self, request): return {} ``` If the user isn’t logged in, redirect to `settings.LOGIN_URL`, passing the current absolute path in the query string. Example: `/accounts/login/?next=/polls/3/`. `login_required()` also takes an optional `login_url` parameter. Example: ```python from django_url_framework.decorators import login_required class AccountController(ActionController): @login_required(login_url="/login/") def action(self, request): return {} ``` By default, the path that the user should be redirected to upon successful authentication is stored in a query string parameter called "next". If you would prefer to use a different name for this parameter, `login_required()` takes an optional `redirect_field_name` parameter. Additionally you can use `@superuser_required`, `@permission_required(permission_instance)` and `@must_be_member_of_group(group_name="some_group")`. Another example makes it easy to limiting access to a subset of data based on the logged in user for the whole controller. ```python from django_url_framework.decorators import login_required class ItemController(ActionController): @login_required() def _before_filter(self): self.my_items = Item.objects.filter(user=request.user) self.my_products = Product.objects.filter(item__in=self.my_items) return { "page_title": "Item Page" } def item(self, request, pk): item = get_object_or_404(self.my_items, pk=pk) return {"item":item} def product(self, request, pk): item = get_object_or_404(self.my_products, pk=pk) return {"product":product} ``` ## Only POST? (or GET or anything...) You can limit what http methods a function can be called with. The example below limits the `update` action to only **POST** and **DELETE** http methods. ```python from django_url_framework.decorators import http_methods class Controller(ActionController): @http_methods.POST @http_methods.DELETE def update(self, request): return {} ``` By default all actions can be called with all http methods. ## Custom template extensions When using jade or something similar you can specify a custom extension for all templates in the controller. ```python class FooController(ActionController): #custom extension for all templates in this controller template_extension = "jade" ``` %package -n python3-django-url-framework Summary: Automagically discover urls in a django application, similar to the Ruby on Rails Controller/Action/View implementation. Provides: python-django-url-framework BuildRequires: python3-devel BuildRequires: python3-setuptools BuildRequires: python3-pip %description -n python3-django-url-framework The django-url-framework will help you get your django applications done faster. ![build](https://github.com/zeraien/django-url-framework/workflows/build/badge.svg) [![Documentation Status](https://readthedocs.org/projects/django-url-framework/badge/?version=latest)](https://django-url-framework.readthedocs.io/en/latest/?badge=latest) [![Join the chat at https://gitter.im/zeraien/django-url-framework](https://badges.gitter.im/zeraien/django-url-framework.svg)](https://gitter.im/zeraien/django-url-framework?utm_source=badge&utm_medium=badge&utm_campaign=pr-badge&utm_content=badge) It automatically detects urls in a django application, similar to the way Ruby on Rails does it with the Controller-Action-View implementation. Controllers are created in each django application with a predefined file naming scheme (`foo_controller.py`) and extending `ActionController`. The `ActionController` contains methods often used in a web context, and does common request-related processing. Each application can have multiple controllers thus allowing for smaller classes in a larger application. Each function not starting with an underscore becomes it's own action. By simply returning a dictionary from the action, it will be rendered with the template named using the `controller/action.html` naming scheme. Each action and controller can override certain global settings such as using a custom template name or giving the action (or controller) a custom name. ## Install From pypi: ``` pip install django-url-framework ``` Alternatively just check out the source here and run `python setup.py install` or `pip install .` ## Add to your project ### settings.py ```python INSTALLED_APPS = ( ..., 'django_url_framework', ... ) ``` ### urls.py ```python import django_url_framework from django.conf import settings from django.conf.urls import patterns, include django_url_framework.site.autodiscover(new_inflection_library=True) urlpatterns = patterns('', (r'^', include(django_url_framework.site.urls) ), ) ``` ## Example ### Folder structure ``` project/ app/ cart_controller.py id_controller.py templates/ cart/ add.html index.html remove.html id_manager/ bar.html ``` ### cart_controller.py ```python from django_url_framework.controller import ActionController class CartController(ActionController): def edit(self, request, id = None): return {} def remove(self, request, id): return {} def index(self, request): return {} ``` ### id_controller.py ```python from django_url_framework.controller import ActionController class IDManagerController(ActionController): def index(self, request, object_id = None): return {} def bar(self, request): return {} def bar__delete(self, request): return {} ``` ### Result The following URLs will be created: ``` /cart/ <- will go to *index action* /cart/(\w+)/ /cart/edit/ /cart/edit/(\w+)/ /cart/remove/(\w+)/ /foo/ /foo/(\w+)/ /foo/bar/ /foo/bar/delete/ ``` You can easily access your URLs using django's built-in `{% url ... %}` tag. Simply call `{% url cart_index %}` or `{% url cart_delete id %}` and it will work as you would expect. There is also a helper tag for faster linking within the same controller. `{% go_action remove %}` will take you to `/cart/remove/`. To use it, `{% load url_framework %}` in your templates. The names of the controller files do not affect your URLs, however, the files must have `_controller.py` suffix. The URL name of the controller is derived from the class name, minus the Controller part. You can also manually specify controller names using the `controller_name` attribute on the controller class. ### Controller names The controller name is derived from it's class name, by converting camelcase into underscores. For instance `FooController` is simple `foo`, while `FooBarController` becomes `foo_bar`. The latest version uses the `inflection` library, however to avoid breaking old code, this is still optional until 2021. The biggest difference is that with `inflection`, `HTTPResponse` becomes `http_response`, while the old name would be `httpresponse`. I suggest enabling the `inflection` library for all new and existing projects. You can manually specify names for controllers whose name change would break your code, or disable the inflection library for those controllers using a flag. You can give the controller a custom name with the `controller_name` parameter: ```python class Controller(ActionController): controller_name = "foo" ``` Enable or disable the use of the new `inflection` library using a flag ```python class Controller(ActionController): use_inflection_library = True ``` ### Other useful controller settings ```python class BarController(ActionController): # default filename extension for all templates template_extension = "pug" # will require every template file to start with this string template_prefix = "foo_" # will not look for templates in subdirectories, but in the root templates/ folder no_subdirectories = False # do not prefix templates with `_` (underscore) when they are called using an AJAX request no_ajax_prefix = False # Set a prefix for the controller's name, applies even if # you set controller_name (template name is based on controller_name, sans prefix) # NOTE: The urlconf name will not include the prefix, only the actual URL itself # Thus: FooController.list will have the URL /prefixed_foo/list/, but the url name will be # `foo_list`. controller_prefix = "prefixed_" # completely override the name of the controller controller_name = "shopping_cart" # When used with custom urlconf in actions, these arguments will not be passed to the action # example: "///" Only `id` will be passed to the `action`, while `skip` will not be. consume_urlconf_keyword_arguments = ['skip'] # set a prefix for all the URLs in this controller # So, what normally would be `/controller/action/`, becomes `^prefix/controller/action/` urlconf_prefix:list = ["^prefix"] # A custom json encoder, subclassing JSONEncoder json_default_encoder:JSONEncoder = None # use the yaml default flow style yaml_default_flow_style:bool = True # use the new inflection library to generate controller url # if this is None, will use the global setting, otherwise override this on a per controller basis use_inflection_library:Union[bool,None] = None ``` ### Template filenames By default templates are stored in the subdirectory with the controller's name, and the templates are given the same filename as the action name. If a request is determinned to be AJAX in nature, the template filename is prefixed with an underscore. Example: ```python class FooController(ActionController): def foo_action(self, request): return {} ``` File structure: ```python /foo/foo_action.html /foo/_foo_action.html <--- for AJAX requests. ``` You can disable this prefixing on a per action or per controller level. For all actions in a controller: ```python class FooController(ActionController): no_ajax_prefix = True ``` For a single action: ```python from django_url_framework.decorators.action_options class FooController(ActionController): @no_ajax_prefix def foo_action(self, request): return {} ``` ## Action names ```python class FooController(ActionController): def action(self, request): return {} ``` Creates the following URL: ``` /controller/action/ ``` Double underscores `__` in action names are converted to slashes in the urlconf, so: `action__name` becomes `/action/name/`. ```python class Controller(ActionController): def action__foo(self, request): return {} ``` Creates the following URL: ``` /controller/action/foo/ ``` ### Decorate to name You can also decorate functions to give them different names and prefixes and urls. See decorator package for more details, here is an example: ```python @action_options.name("foo") @action_options.prefix("prefix_") def bar(self, request): return {} ``` will result in: ``` /controller/prefix_foo/ ``` The action will now have the template `/controller/foo.html`. Prefixes do not affect template naming. ## Action parameters Providing a third parameter to an action will create a URLconf for that parameter, like so: ```python def action(self, request, object_id): return {} ``` Will allow you to call that action with: ``` /controller/action/(\w+)/ <--- parameter consisting of A-Za-z0-9_ ``` If you make the argument optional, an additional URLconf entry is created allowing you to call the action without the third argument. ```python def action(self, request, object_id = None): return {} ``` Results in: ``` /controller/action/ /controller/action/(\w+)/ <--- optional argument consisting of A-Za-z0-9_ ``` ### Decorate for JSON, YAML or Automatic You can decorate any action to have a default renderer. Instead of using `self._as_json` as before, you can just put a decorator like so: ```python from django_url_framework.decorators import json_action @json_action(json_encoder=None) def action(self, request, year, month): ... return {} ``` Other decorators include `@yaml_action(default_flow_style:bool)` and `@auto()`. YaML is self-explanatory, however `@auto` is a bit interesting, it will automatically determine the renderer based on the `HTTP_ACCEPT` header. *Warning* - if you expose raw data in your actions, that normally would be massaged inside a Server-Side template, DO NOT USE the `@auto` decorator as this allows an attacker to download raw data from your server. However, if your responses are designed for an API, the `@auto` decorator will enable the API client to request data as it sees fit, for example, it can request a Server-Side rendered HTML, or the same data as JSON or YaML. Here is a list of supported renderers: - text/html - `TemplateRenderer` - renders using the appropriate Django template - text/plain - `TextRenderer` - prints text data as is, or prints object types using `pprint.pformat` - application/json - `JSONRenderer` - renders data as JSON - application/yaml - `YamlRenderer` - renders data as YaML `@auto()` accepts the following parameters: - json_encoder - yaml_default_flow_style The work the same as if passed to `@json_action()` or `@yaml_action()` ### Set HTTP Status Codes easily Any action can return a tuple of two items, the second item should be an `int` and will become the HTTP status code for your response. ```python @json_action() def update(self, request, year, month): ... return False, 304 #not modified @json_action() def create(self, request, year, month): ... return True, 201 #created ``` ### Decorate for custom parameters You can also create your own custom parameters by using the `@url_parameters` decorator to the function. ```python from django_url_framework.decorators.action_options import url_paramters class Controller(ActionController): @url_parameters(r'(?P\d{4})/(?P\d\d)') def action(self, request, year, month): ... return {} ``` The above will create the following url patterns: ``` /controller/action/(?P\d{4})/(?P\d\d) ``` *Note the lack of trailing slash - you must provide this yourself.* ### Custom url for any action You can write your own urlconf for each action, by decorating it with `@urlconf`. ```python from django_url_framework.decorators.action_options import urlconf class Controller(ActionController): @action_options.urlconf([ r'^bar/(?P\d{4})/$', r'^bar/(?P\d{4})/(?P\d\d)/$', r'^foo/(?P\d{4})/(?P\d\d)/(?P\d\d)/$' ], do_not_autogenerate=True) def action(self, request, year, month=None, day=None): ... return {} ``` The above will create the following url patterns: ``` /controller/bar/(?P\d{4})/ /controller/bar/(?P\d{4})/(?P\d\d)/$ /controller/foo/(?P\d{4})/(?P\d\d)/(?P\d\d)/$ ``` The `do_not_autogenerate` argument is **true** by default and will prevent any urls for this action from being autogenerated. If `do_not_autogenerate` were to be set to false in the example below, the following url would also be created: ``` /controller/action/ ``` This URL would not actually work since the `year` argument is required the `action` function. ## Flash messages The ActionController also has a `_flash` instance variable that allows you to send messages to the user that can survive a redirect. Simply use ```python self._flash.append("Message") self._flash.error("Error message") ``` The flash messages can be either messages or error messages. The flash object is automatically exported into the context and you can use it as such: ```HTML+Django {% if flash.has_messages %} {% for message in flash.get_and_clear %} {% if message.is_error %}{% endif %}

{{message}}

{% endfor %} {% endif } ``` ## Before and After each action You can override `_before_filter` and/or `_after_filter` to perform certain actions and checks before or after an action. Read more in `ActionController` docs. These methods accept the "request" parameter which is an HTTP request object for this request. ```python class AccountController(ActionController): def _before_filter(self, request): campaign_id = request.GET.get("campaign_id") try: self._campaign = Campaign.objects.get(pk=campaign_id) except Campaign.DoesNotExist: self._campaign = None ``` You can disable the before and after filters by decorating any action with the `@disable_filters` decorator. Example: ```python from django_url_framework.decorators.action_options import disable_filters @disable_filters def action(self, request): return {} ``` One of the great features of django url framework is that you can require login for all actions in a controller by simply decorating the before_filter with a decorator to require logging in, see next section! ## Authentication To require login on an action use the `@login_required` decorator provided by django-url-framework. The decorator also works on `_before_filter`. ```python from django_url_framework.decorators import login_required class AccountController(ActionController): @login_required def action(self, request): return {} ``` If the user isn’t logged in, redirect to `settings.LOGIN_URL`, passing the current absolute path in the query string. Example: `/accounts/login/?next=/polls/3/`. `login_required()` also takes an optional `login_url` parameter. Example: ```python from django_url_framework.decorators import login_required class AccountController(ActionController): @login_required(login_url="/login/") def action(self, request): return {} ``` By default, the path that the user should be redirected to upon successful authentication is stored in a query string parameter called "next". If you would prefer to use a different name for this parameter, `login_required()` takes an optional `redirect_field_name` parameter. Additionally you can use `@superuser_required`, `@permission_required(permission_instance)` and `@must_be_member_of_group(group_name="some_group")`. Another example makes it easy to limiting access to a subset of data based on the logged in user for the whole controller. ```python from django_url_framework.decorators import login_required class ItemController(ActionController): @login_required() def _before_filter(self): self.my_items = Item.objects.filter(user=request.user) self.my_products = Product.objects.filter(item__in=self.my_items) return { "page_title": "Item Page" } def item(self, request, pk): item = get_object_or_404(self.my_items, pk=pk) return {"item":item} def product(self, request, pk): item = get_object_or_404(self.my_products, pk=pk) return {"product":product} ``` ## Only POST? (or GET or anything...) You can limit what http methods a function can be called with. The example below limits the `update` action to only **POST** and **DELETE** http methods. ```python from django_url_framework.decorators import http_methods class Controller(ActionController): @http_methods.POST @http_methods.DELETE def update(self, request): return {} ``` By default all actions can be called with all http methods. ## Custom template extensions When using jade or something similar you can specify a custom extension for all templates in the controller. ```python class FooController(ActionController): #custom extension for all templates in this controller template_extension = "jade" ``` %package help Summary: Development documents and examples for django-url-framework Provides: python3-django-url-framework-doc %description help The django-url-framework will help you get your django applications done faster. ![build](https://github.com/zeraien/django-url-framework/workflows/build/badge.svg) [![Documentation Status](https://readthedocs.org/projects/django-url-framework/badge/?version=latest)](https://django-url-framework.readthedocs.io/en/latest/?badge=latest) [![Join the chat at https://gitter.im/zeraien/django-url-framework](https://badges.gitter.im/zeraien/django-url-framework.svg)](https://gitter.im/zeraien/django-url-framework?utm_source=badge&utm_medium=badge&utm_campaign=pr-badge&utm_content=badge) It automatically detects urls in a django application, similar to the way Ruby on Rails does it with the Controller-Action-View implementation. Controllers are created in each django application with a predefined file naming scheme (`foo_controller.py`) and extending `ActionController`. The `ActionController` contains methods often used in a web context, and does common request-related processing. Each application can have multiple controllers thus allowing for smaller classes in a larger application. Each function not starting with an underscore becomes it's own action. By simply returning a dictionary from the action, it will be rendered with the template named using the `controller/action.html` naming scheme. Each action and controller can override certain global settings such as using a custom template name or giving the action (or controller) a custom name. ## Install From pypi: ``` pip install django-url-framework ``` Alternatively just check out the source here and run `python setup.py install` or `pip install .` ## Add to your project ### settings.py ```python INSTALLED_APPS = ( ..., 'django_url_framework', ... ) ``` ### urls.py ```python import django_url_framework from django.conf import settings from django.conf.urls import patterns, include django_url_framework.site.autodiscover(new_inflection_library=True) urlpatterns = patterns('', (r'^', include(django_url_framework.site.urls) ), ) ``` ## Example ### Folder structure ``` project/ app/ cart_controller.py id_controller.py templates/ cart/ add.html index.html remove.html id_manager/ bar.html ``` ### cart_controller.py ```python from django_url_framework.controller import ActionController class CartController(ActionController): def edit(self, request, id = None): return {} def remove(self, request, id): return {} def index(self, request): return {} ``` ### id_controller.py ```python from django_url_framework.controller import ActionController class IDManagerController(ActionController): def index(self, request, object_id = None): return {} def bar(self, request): return {} def bar__delete(self, request): return {} ``` ### Result The following URLs will be created: ``` /cart/ <- will go to *index action* /cart/(\w+)/ /cart/edit/ /cart/edit/(\w+)/ /cart/remove/(\w+)/ /foo/ /foo/(\w+)/ /foo/bar/ /foo/bar/delete/ ``` You can easily access your URLs using django's built-in `{% url ... %}` tag. Simply call `{% url cart_index %}` or `{% url cart_delete id %}` and it will work as you would expect. There is also a helper tag for faster linking within the same controller. `{% go_action remove %}` will take you to `/cart/remove/`. To use it, `{% load url_framework %}` in your templates. The names of the controller files do not affect your URLs, however, the files must have `_controller.py` suffix. The URL name of the controller is derived from the class name, minus the Controller part. You can also manually specify controller names using the `controller_name` attribute on the controller class. ### Controller names The controller name is derived from it's class name, by converting camelcase into underscores. For instance `FooController` is simple `foo`, while `FooBarController` becomes `foo_bar`. The latest version uses the `inflection` library, however to avoid breaking old code, this is still optional until 2021. The biggest difference is that with `inflection`, `HTTPResponse` becomes `http_response`, while the old name would be `httpresponse`. I suggest enabling the `inflection` library for all new and existing projects. You can manually specify names for controllers whose name change would break your code, or disable the inflection library for those controllers using a flag. You can give the controller a custom name with the `controller_name` parameter: ```python class Controller(ActionController): controller_name = "foo" ``` Enable or disable the use of the new `inflection` library using a flag ```python class Controller(ActionController): use_inflection_library = True ``` ### Other useful controller settings ```python class BarController(ActionController): # default filename extension for all templates template_extension = "pug" # will require every template file to start with this string template_prefix = "foo_" # will not look for templates in subdirectories, but in the root templates/ folder no_subdirectories = False # do not prefix templates with `_` (underscore) when they are called using an AJAX request no_ajax_prefix = False # Set a prefix for the controller's name, applies even if # you set controller_name (template name is based on controller_name, sans prefix) # NOTE: The urlconf name will not include the prefix, only the actual URL itself # Thus: FooController.list will have the URL /prefixed_foo/list/, but the url name will be # `foo_list`. controller_prefix = "prefixed_" # completely override the name of the controller controller_name = "shopping_cart" # When used with custom urlconf in actions, these arguments will not be passed to the action # example: "///" Only `id` will be passed to the `action`, while `skip` will not be. consume_urlconf_keyword_arguments = ['skip'] # set a prefix for all the URLs in this controller # So, what normally would be `/controller/action/`, becomes `^prefix/controller/action/` urlconf_prefix:list = ["^prefix"] # A custom json encoder, subclassing JSONEncoder json_default_encoder:JSONEncoder = None # use the yaml default flow style yaml_default_flow_style:bool = True # use the new inflection library to generate controller url # if this is None, will use the global setting, otherwise override this on a per controller basis use_inflection_library:Union[bool,None] = None ``` ### Template filenames By default templates are stored in the subdirectory with the controller's name, and the templates are given the same filename as the action name. If a request is determinned to be AJAX in nature, the template filename is prefixed with an underscore. Example: ```python class FooController(ActionController): def foo_action(self, request): return {} ``` File structure: ```python /foo/foo_action.html /foo/_foo_action.html <--- for AJAX requests. ``` You can disable this prefixing on a per action or per controller level. For all actions in a controller: ```python class FooController(ActionController): no_ajax_prefix = True ``` For a single action: ```python from django_url_framework.decorators.action_options class FooController(ActionController): @no_ajax_prefix def foo_action(self, request): return {} ``` ## Action names ```python class FooController(ActionController): def action(self, request): return {} ``` Creates the following URL: ``` /controller/action/ ``` Double underscores `__` in action names are converted to slashes in the urlconf, so: `action__name` becomes `/action/name/`. ```python class Controller(ActionController): def action__foo(self, request): return {} ``` Creates the following URL: ``` /controller/action/foo/ ``` ### Decorate to name You can also decorate functions to give them different names and prefixes and urls. See decorator package for more details, here is an example: ```python @action_options.name("foo") @action_options.prefix("prefix_") def bar(self, request): return {} ``` will result in: ``` /controller/prefix_foo/ ``` The action will now have the template `/controller/foo.html`. Prefixes do not affect template naming. ## Action parameters Providing a third parameter to an action will create a URLconf for that parameter, like so: ```python def action(self, request, object_id): return {} ``` Will allow you to call that action with: ``` /controller/action/(\w+)/ <--- parameter consisting of A-Za-z0-9_ ``` If you make the argument optional, an additional URLconf entry is created allowing you to call the action without the third argument. ```python def action(self, request, object_id = None): return {} ``` Results in: ``` /controller/action/ /controller/action/(\w+)/ <--- optional argument consisting of A-Za-z0-9_ ``` ### Decorate for JSON, YAML or Automatic You can decorate any action to have a default renderer. Instead of using `self._as_json` as before, you can just put a decorator like so: ```python from django_url_framework.decorators import json_action @json_action(json_encoder=None) def action(self, request, year, month): ... return {} ``` Other decorators include `@yaml_action(default_flow_style:bool)` and `@auto()`. YaML is self-explanatory, however `@auto` is a bit interesting, it will automatically determine the renderer based on the `HTTP_ACCEPT` header. *Warning* - if you expose raw data in your actions, that normally would be massaged inside a Server-Side template, DO NOT USE the `@auto` decorator as this allows an attacker to download raw data from your server. However, if your responses are designed for an API, the `@auto` decorator will enable the API client to request data as it sees fit, for example, it can request a Server-Side rendered HTML, or the same data as JSON or YaML. Here is a list of supported renderers: - text/html - `TemplateRenderer` - renders using the appropriate Django template - text/plain - `TextRenderer` - prints text data as is, or prints object types using `pprint.pformat` - application/json - `JSONRenderer` - renders data as JSON - application/yaml - `YamlRenderer` - renders data as YaML `@auto()` accepts the following parameters: - json_encoder - yaml_default_flow_style The work the same as if passed to `@json_action()` or `@yaml_action()` ### Set HTTP Status Codes easily Any action can return a tuple of two items, the second item should be an `int` and will become the HTTP status code for your response. ```python @json_action() def update(self, request, year, month): ... return False, 304 #not modified @json_action() def create(self, request, year, month): ... return True, 201 #created ``` ### Decorate for custom parameters You can also create your own custom parameters by using the `@url_parameters` decorator to the function. ```python from django_url_framework.decorators.action_options import url_paramters class Controller(ActionController): @url_parameters(r'(?P\d{4})/(?P\d\d)') def action(self, request, year, month): ... return {} ``` The above will create the following url patterns: ``` /controller/action/(?P\d{4})/(?P\d\d) ``` *Note the lack of trailing slash - you must provide this yourself.* ### Custom url for any action You can write your own urlconf for each action, by decorating it with `@urlconf`. ```python from django_url_framework.decorators.action_options import urlconf class Controller(ActionController): @action_options.urlconf([ r'^bar/(?P\d{4})/$', r'^bar/(?P\d{4})/(?P\d\d)/$', r'^foo/(?P\d{4})/(?P\d\d)/(?P\d\d)/$' ], do_not_autogenerate=True) def action(self, request, year, month=None, day=None): ... return {} ``` The above will create the following url patterns: ``` /controller/bar/(?P\d{4})/ /controller/bar/(?P\d{4})/(?P\d\d)/$ /controller/foo/(?P\d{4})/(?P\d\d)/(?P\d\d)/$ ``` The `do_not_autogenerate` argument is **true** by default and will prevent any urls for this action from being autogenerated. If `do_not_autogenerate` were to be set to false in the example below, the following url would also be created: ``` /controller/action/ ``` This URL would not actually work since the `year` argument is required the `action` function. ## Flash messages The ActionController also has a `_flash` instance variable that allows you to send messages to the user that can survive a redirect. Simply use ```python self._flash.append("Message") self._flash.error("Error message") ``` The flash messages can be either messages or error messages. The flash object is automatically exported into the context and you can use it as such: ```HTML+Django {% if flash.has_messages %} {% for message in flash.get_and_clear %} {% if message.is_error %}{% endif %}

{{message}}

{% endfor %} {% endif } ``` ## Before and After each action You can override `_before_filter` and/or `_after_filter` to perform certain actions and checks before or after an action. Read more in `ActionController` docs. These methods accept the "request" parameter which is an HTTP request object for this request. ```python class AccountController(ActionController): def _before_filter(self, request): campaign_id = request.GET.get("campaign_id") try: self._campaign = Campaign.objects.get(pk=campaign_id) except Campaign.DoesNotExist: self._campaign = None ``` You can disable the before and after filters by decorating any action with the `@disable_filters` decorator. Example: ```python from django_url_framework.decorators.action_options import disable_filters @disable_filters def action(self, request): return {} ``` One of the great features of django url framework is that you can require login for all actions in a controller by simply decorating the before_filter with a decorator to require logging in, see next section! ## Authentication To require login on an action use the `@login_required` decorator provided by django-url-framework. The decorator also works on `_before_filter`. ```python from django_url_framework.decorators import login_required class AccountController(ActionController): @login_required def action(self, request): return {} ``` If the user isn’t logged in, redirect to `settings.LOGIN_URL`, passing the current absolute path in the query string. Example: `/accounts/login/?next=/polls/3/`. `login_required()` also takes an optional `login_url` parameter. Example: ```python from django_url_framework.decorators import login_required class AccountController(ActionController): @login_required(login_url="/login/") def action(self, request): return {} ``` By default, the path that the user should be redirected to upon successful authentication is stored in a query string parameter called "next". If you would prefer to use a different name for this parameter, `login_required()` takes an optional `redirect_field_name` parameter. Additionally you can use `@superuser_required`, `@permission_required(permission_instance)` and `@must_be_member_of_group(group_name="some_group")`. Another example makes it easy to limiting access to a subset of data based on the logged in user for the whole controller. ```python from django_url_framework.decorators import login_required class ItemController(ActionController): @login_required() def _before_filter(self): self.my_items = Item.objects.filter(user=request.user) self.my_products = Product.objects.filter(item__in=self.my_items) return { "page_title": "Item Page" } def item(self, request, pk): item = get_object_or_404(self.my_items, pk=pk) return {"item":item} def product(self, request, pk): item = get_object_or_404(self.my_products, pk=pk) return {"product":product} ``` ## Only POST? (or GET or anything...) You can limit what http methods a function can be called with. The example below limits the `update` action to only **POST** and **DELETE** http methods. ```python from django_url_framework.decorators import http_methods class Controller(ActionController): @http_methods.POST @http_methods.DELETE def update(self, request): return {} ``` By default all actions can be called with all http methods. ## Custom template extensions When using jade or something similar you can specify a custom extension for all templates in the controller. ```python class FooController(ActionController): #custom extension for all templates in this controller template_extension = "jade" ``` %prep %autosetup -n django-url-framework-0.6.0 %build %py3_build %install %py3_install install -d -m755 %{buildroot}/%{_pkgdocdir} if [ -d doc ]; then cp -arf doc %{buildroot}/%{_pkgdocdir}; fi if [ -d docs ]; then cp -arf docs %{buildroot}/%{_pkgdocdir}; fi if [ -d example ]; then cp -arf example %{buildroot}/%{_pkgdocdir}; fi if [ -d examples ]; then cp -arf examples %{buildroot}/%{_pkgdocdir}; fi pushd %{buildroot} if [ -d usr/lib ]; then find usr/lib -type f -printf "\"/%h/%f\"\n" >> filelist.lst fi if [ -d usr/lib64 ]; then find usr/lib64 -type f -printf "\"/%h/%f\"\n" >> filelist.lst fi if [ -d usr/bin ]; then find usr/bin -type f -printf "\"/%h/%f\"\n" >> filelist.lst fi if [ -d usr/sbin ]; then find usr/sbin -type f -printf "\"/%h/%f\"\n" >> filelist.lst fi touch doclist.lst if [ -d usr/share/man ]; then find usr/share/man -type f -printf "\"/%h/%f.gz\"\n" >> doclist.lst fi popd mv %{buildroot}/filelist.lst . mv %{buildroot}/doclist.lst . %files -n python3-django-url-framework -f filelist.lst %dir %{python3_sitelib}/* %files help -f doclist.lst %{_docdir}/* %changelog * Tue Jun 20 2023 Python_Bot - 0.6.0-1 - Package Spec generated