django-admin
commands¶Applications can register their own actions with manage.py
. For example,
you might want to add a manage.py
action for a Django app that you’re
distributing. In this document, we will be building a custom closepoll
command for the polls
application from the
tutorial.
To do this, just add a management/commands
directory to the application.
Django will register a manage.py
command for each Python module in that
directory whose name doesn’t begin with an underscore. For example:
polls/
__init__.py
models.py
management/
commands/
_private.py
closepoll.py
tests.py
views.py
In this example, the closepoll
command will be made available to any project
that includes the polls
application in INSTALLED_APPS
.
The _private.py
module will not be available as a management command.
The closepoll.py
module has only one requirement – it must define a class
Command
that extends BaseCommand
or one of its
subclasses.
Standalone scripts
Custom management commands are especially useful for running standalone scripts or for scripts that are periodically executed from the UNIX crontab or from Windows scheduled tasks control panel.
To implement the command, edit polls/management/commands/closepoll.py
to
look like this:
from django.core.management.base import BaseCommand, CommandError
from polls.models import Question as Poll
class Command(BaseCommand):
help = 'Closes the specified poll for voting'
def add_arguments(self, parser):
parser.add_argument('poll_id', nargs='+', type=int)
def handle(self, *args, **options):
for poll_id in options['poll_id']:
try:
poll = Poll.objects.get(pk=poll_id)
except Poll.DoesNotExist:
raise CommandError('Poll "%s" does not exist' % poll_id)
poll.opened = False
poll.save()
self.stdout.write(self.style.SUCCESS('Successfully closed poll "%s"' % poll_id))
Note
When you are using management commands and wish to provide console
output, you should write to self.stdout
and self.stderr
,
instead of printing to stdout
and stderr
directly. By
using these proxies, it becomes much easier to test your custom
command. Note also that you don’t need to end messages with a newline
character, it will be added automatically, unless you specify the ending
parameter:
self.stdout.write("Unterminated line", ending='')
The new custom command can be called using python manage.py closepoll
<poll_id>
.
The handle()
method takes one or more poll_ids
and sets poll.opened
to False
for each one. If the user referenced any nonexistent polls, a
CommandError
is raised. The poll.opened
attribute does not exist in
the tutorial and was added to
polls.models.Question
for this example.
The same closepoll
could be easily modified to delete a given poll instead
of closing it by accepting additional command line options. These custom
options can be added in the add_arguments()
method like this:
class Command(BaseCommand):
def add_arguments(self, parser):
# Positional arguments
parser.add_argument('poll_id', nargs='+', type=int)
# Named (optional) arguments
parser.add_argument(
'--delete',
action='store_true',
dest='delete',
help='Delete poll instead of closing it',
)
def handle(self, *args, **options):
# ...
if options['delete']:
poll.delete()
# ...
The option (delete
in our example) is available in the options dict
parameter of the handle method. See the argparse
Python documentation
for more about add_argument
usage.
In addition to being able to add custom command line options, all
management commands can accept some default options
such as --verbosity
and --traceback
.
By default, management commands are executed with the current active locale.
If, for some reason, your custom management command must run without an active
locale (for example, to prevent translated content from being inserted into
the database), deactivate translations using the @no_translations
decorator on your handle()
method:
from django.core.management.base import BaseCommand, no_translations
class Command(BaseCommand):
...
@no_translations
def handle(self, *args, **options):
...
Since translation deactivation requires access to configured settings, the decorator can’t be used for commands that work without configured settings.
The @no_translations
decorator is new. In older versions, translations
are deactivated before running a command unless the command’s
leave_locale_alone
attribute (now removed) is set to True
.
Information on how to test custom management commands can be found in the testing docs.
Django registers the built-in commands and then searches for commands in
INSTALLED_APPS
in reverse. During the search, if a command name
duplicates an already registered command, the newly discovered command
overrides the first.
In other words, to override a command, the new command must have the same name
and its app must be before the overridden command’s app in
INSTALLED_APPS
.
Management commands from third-party apps that have been unintentionally
overridden can be made available under a new name by creating a new command in
one of your project’s apps (ordered before the third-party app in
INSTALLED_APPS
) which imports the Command
of the overridden
command.
The base class from which all management commands ultimately derive.
Use this class if you want access to all of the mechanisms which parse the command-line arguments and work out what code to call in response; if you don’t need to change any of that behavior, consider using one of its subclasses.
Subclassing the BaseCommand
class requires that you implement the
handle()
method.
All attributes can be set in your derived class and can be used in
BaseCommand
’s subclasses.
BaseCommand.
help
¶A short description of the command, which will be printed in the
help message when the user runs the command
python manage.py help <command>
.
BaseCommand.
missing_args_message
¶If your command defines mandatory positional arguments, you can customize
the message error returned in the case of missing arguments. The default is
output by argparse
(“too few arguments”).
BaseCommand.
output_transaction
¶A boolean indicating whether the command outputs SQL statements; if
True
, the output will automatically be wrapped with BEGIN;
and
COMMIT;
. Default value is False
.
BaseCommand.
requires_migrations_checks
¶A boolean; if True
, the command prints a warning if the set of
migrations on disk don’t match the migrations in the database. A warning
doesn’t prevent the command from executing. Default value is False
.
BaseCommand.
requires_system_checks
¶A boolean; if True
, the entire Django project will be checked for
potential problems prior to executing the command. Default value is True
.
BaseCommand.
style
¶An instance attribute that helps create colored output when writing to
stdout
or stderr
. For example:
self.stdout.write(self.style.SUCCESS('...'))
See Syntax coloring to learn how to modify the color palette and to see the available styles (use uppercased versions of the “roles” described in that section).
If you pass the --no-color
option when running your command, all
self.style()
calls will return the original string uncolored.
BaseCommand
has a few methods that can be overridden but only
the handle()
method must be implemented.
Implementing a constructor in a subclass
If you implement __init__
in your subclass of BaseCommand
,
you must call BaseCommand
’s __init__
:
class Command(BaseCommand):
def __init__(self, *args, **kwargs):
super().__init__(*args, **kwargs)
# ...
BaseCommand.
add_arguments
(parser)[source]¶Entry point to add parser arguments to handle command line arguments passed
to the command. Custom commands should override this method to add both
positional and optional arguments accepted by the command. Calling
super()
is not needed when directly subclassing BaseCommand
.
BaseCommand.
get_version
()[source]¶Returns the Django version, which should be correct for all built-in Django commands. User-supplied commands can override this method to return their own version.
BaseCommand.
execute
(*args, **options)[source]¶Tries to execute this command, performing system checks if needed (as
controlled by the requires_system_checks
attribute). If the command
raises a CommandError
, it’s intercepted and printed to stderr.
Calling a management command in your code
execute()
should not be called directly from your code to execute a
command. Use call_command()
instead.
BaseCommand.
handle
(*args, **options)[source]¶The actual logic of the command. Subclasses must implement this method.
It may return a string which will be printed to stdout
(wrapped
by BEGIN;
and COMMIT;
if output_transaction
is True
).
BaseCommand.
check
(app_configs=None, tags=None, display_num_errors=False)[source]¶Uses the system check framework to inspect the entire Django project for
potential problems. Serious problems are raised as a CommandError
;
warnings are output to stderr; minor notifications are output to stdout.
If app_configs
and tags
are both None
, all system checks are
performed. tags
can be a list of check tags, like compatibility
or
models
.
BaseCommand
subclasses¶AppCommand
¶A management command which takes one or more installed application labels as arguments, and does something with each of them.
Rather than implementing handle()
, subclasses must
implement handle_app_config()
, which will be called once for
each application.
AppCommand.
handle_app_config
(app_config, **options)¶Perform the command’s actions for app_config
, which will be an
AppConfig
instance corresponding to an application
label given on the command line.
LabelCommand
¶A management command which takes one or more arbitrary arguments (labels) on the command line, and does something with each of them.
Rather than implementing handle()
, subclasses must implement
handle_label()
, which will be called once for each label.
LabelCommand.
label
¶A string describing the arbitrary arguments passed to the command. The
string is used in the usage text and error messages of the command.
Defaults to 'label'
.
LabelCommand.
handle_label
(label, **options)¶Perform the command’s actions for label
, which will be the string as
given on the command line.
Exception class indicating a problem while executing a management command.
If this exception is raised during the execution of a management command from a command line console, it will be caught and turned into a nicely-printed error message to the appropriate output stream (i.e., stderr); as a result, raising this exception (with a sensible description of the error) is the preferred way to indicate that something has gone wrong in the execution of a command.
If a management command is called from code through
call_command()
, it’s up to you to catch the
exception when needed.
Oct 31, 2018