Getting started quick guide¶
Installation¶
$ pip install django-moderation
Or download source code from http://github.com/dominno/django-moderation and run installation script:
$ python setup.py install
Configuration¶
django-moderation
will autodiscover moderation classes in <app>/moderator.py
files by default. So the simplest moderation configuration is to simply add moderation
(or moderation.apps.ModerationConfig
) to INSTALLED_APPS
in your settings.py
:
INSTALLED_APPS = [
# ...
'moderation', # or 'moderation.apps.ModerationConfig',
# ...
]
Then add all of your moderation classes to a moderator.py
file in an app and register them with moderation:
from moderation import moderation
from moderation.moderator import GenericModerator
from yourapp.models import YourModel, AnotherModel
class AnotherModelModerator(GenericModerator):
# Add your moderator settings for AnotherModel here
moderation.register(YourModel) # Uses default moderation settings
moderation.register(AnotherModel, AnotherModelModerator) # Uses custom moderation settings
This is exactly how Django’s contributed admin app registers models.
Alternative Configuration¶
If you don’t want django-moderation
to autodiscover your moderation classes, you will add moderation.apps.SimpleModerationConfig
to INSTALLED_APPS
in your settings.py
:
INSTALLED_APPS = [
# ...
'moderation.apps.SimpleModerationConfig',
# ...
]
Then you will need to subclass your models from moderation.db.ModeratedModel
and add moderation classes to each moderated model in models.py
:
from django.db import models
from moderation.db import ModeratedModel
class MyModel(ModeratedModel):
my_field = models.TextField()
class Moderator:
notify_user = False
Admin integration¶
- If you want to enable integration with Django Admin, then register admin class with your model:
from django.contrib import admin
from moderation.admin import ModerationAdmin
class YourModelAdmin(ModerationAdmin):
"""Admin settings go here."""
admin.site.register(YourModel, YourModelAdmin)
If admin_integration_enabled
is enabled then when saving object in admin, data
will not be saved in model instance but it will be stored in moderation queue.
Also data in the change form will not display data from the original model
instance but data from the ModeratedObject instance instead.
How django-moderation works¶
When you change existing object or create new one, it will not be publicly available until moderator approves it. It will be stored in ModeratedObject model.:
your_model = YourModel(description='test')
your_model.save()
YourModel.objects.get(pk=your_model.pk)
Traceback (most recent call last):
DoesNotExist: YourModel matching query does not exist.
When you will approve object, then it will be publicly available.:
your_model.moderated_object.approve(by=user, reason='Reason for approve')
YourModel.objects.get(pk=1)
<YourModel: YourModel object>
Please note that you can also access objects that are not approved by using unmoderated_objects manager, this manager will bypass the moderation system
YourModel.unmoderated_objects.get(pk=your_model.pk)
You can access changed object by calling changed_object on moderated_object:
your_model.moderated_object.changed_object
<YourModel: YourModel object>
This is deserialized version of object that was changed.
Now when you will change an object, old version of it will be available publicly, new version will be saved in moderated_object:
your_model.description = 'New description'
your_model.save()
your_model = YourModel.objects.get(pk=1)
your_model.__dict__
{'id': 1, 'description': 'test'}
your_model.moderated_object.changed_object.__dict__
{'id': 1, 'description': 'New description'}
your_model.moderated_object.approve(by=user, reason='Reason for approve')
your_model = YourModel.objects.get(pk=1)
your_model.__dict__
{'id': 1, 'description': 'New description'}