Model Customization¶
So far under Content Architecture the concept of subclassing Mezzanine’s models has been described. This section describes the hooks Mezzanine provides for directly modifying the behaviour of its models.
Field Injection¶
Mezzanine provides the setting EXTRA_MODEL_FIELDS which allows you
to define a sequence of fields that will be injected into Mezzanine’s
(or any library’s) models.
Note
Using the following approach comes with certain trade-offs
described below in Field Injection Caveats. Be sure to fully
understand these prior to using the EXTRA_MODEL_FIELDS setting.
Each item in the EXTRA_MODEL_FIELDS sequence is a four item
sequence. The first two items are the dotted path to the model and its
field name to be added, and the dotted path to the field class to use
for the field. The third and fourth items are a sequence of positional
args and a dictionary of keyword args, to use when creating the field
instance.
For example suppose you want to inject a custom ImageField from a
third party library into Mezzanine’s BlogPost model, you would
define the following in your projects’s settings module:
EXTRA_MODEL_FIELDS = (
# Four-item sequence for one field injected.
(
# Dotted path to field.
"mezzanine.blog.models.BlogPost.image",
# Dotted path to field class.
"somelib.fields.ImageField",
# Positional args for field class.
("Image",),
# Keyword args for field class.
{"blank": True, "upload_to: "blog"},
),
)
Each BlogPost instance will now have an image attribute, using the
ImageField class defined in the fictitious somelib.fields module.
Another interesting example would be adding a field to all of Mezzanine’s
content types by injecting fields into the Page class. Continuing on
from the previous example, suppose you wanted to add a regular Django
IntegerField to all content types:
EXTRA_MODEL_FIELDS = (
(
"mezzanine.blog.models.BlogPost.image",
"somelib.fields.ImageField",
("Image",),
{"blank": True, "upload_to": "blog"},
),
# Example of adding a field to *all* of Mezzanine's content types:
(
"mezzanine.pages.models.Page.another_field",
"IntegerField", # 'django.db.models.' is implied if path is omitted.
("Another name",),
{"blank": True, "default": 1},
),
)
Note here that the full path for the field class isn’t required since a
regular Django field is used - the django.db.models. path is implied.
Field Injection Caveats¶
The above technique provides a great way of avoiding the performance
penalties of SQL JOINS required by the traditional approach of
subclassing models,
however some extra consideration is required when used with
migration tools like South. In the
first example above, South views the new image field on the
BlogPost model of the mezzanine.blog app. As such in order to
create a migration for it, the migration must be created for the blog
app itself and by default would end up in the migrations directory of
the blog app, which completely goes against the notion of not
modifying the blog app to add your own custom fields.
One approach to address this is to use the --stdout argument of
South’s schemamigration command, and create your own migration file
located somewhere in your project or app:
$ python manage.py schemamigration blog --auto --stdout >> myapp/migrations/0001_blog_customization.py
$ python manage.py migrate myapp
Be warned that over time this approach will almost certainly require some manual intervention by way of editing migrations, or modifying the database manually to create the correct state. Ultimately there is a trade-off involved here.
Admin Fields¶
Whether using the above approach to inject fields onto models, or
taking the more traditional approach of subclassing models, most
often you will also want to expose new fields to the admin interface.
This can be achieve by simply unregistering the relevant admin class,
subclassing it, and re-registering your new admin class for the
associated model. Continuing on from the first example, the code below
takes a copy of the fieldsets definition for the original
BlogPostAdmin, and injects our custom field’s name into the
desired position.:
# In myapp/admin.py
from copy import deepcopy
from django.contrib import admin
from mezzanine.blog.admin import BlogPostAdmin
from mezzanine.blog.models import BlogPost
blog_fieldsets = deepcopy(BlogPostAdmin.fieldsets)
blog_fieldsets[0][1]["fields"].insert(-2, "image")
class MyBlogPostAdmin(BlogPostAdmin):
fieldsets = blog_fieldsets
admin.site.unregister(BlogPost)
admin.site.register(BlogPost, MyBlogPostAdmin)