Packaging Stand-Alone Django Apps
Directory structure
The app goes in a directory outside of any Django web project. If the app is addresses, structure it littled-addresses/addresses/.[1]
Try to avoid naming conflicts, of course. (Check resources like PyPI.)
- Create
README.md- In the package root, e.g.
littled-addresses/README.md. - Sample contents at How to Write Reusable Apps—Packaging your app
- In the package root, e.g.
- Create
LICENSEfile in the package root.- Django itself uses the BSD license.
- Create
setup.pyin the project root.- Sample at How to Write Reusable Apps—Packaging your app
- More complete documentation at setuptools docs.
- Create
MANIFEST.inin the project root.- This includes files other than Python modules and packages.
- Create a
docsdirectory- Include it in
MANIFEST.inwithrecursive-include docs *
- Include it in
Building the package
|
+- [package_root]
|
+- [package_dir]
| |
| +- __init__.py > __version__
|
+- [...]
|
+- setup.py > setup.version
Command to build the package:
$ python setup.py sdist
- Run from the package root directory.
- Creates a
distdirectory which contains the (zipped) package.
Using the package
Installing the package
Push the package distribution to GitHub.
Add the package and version to requirements.txt in the project's root directory:
-e git://github.com/account_name/package_repo.git#egg=package_name
Replacing account_name, package_repo, and package_name in the URL with the appropriate values.
Install the package with pip. (Make sure that the project's virtual environment has been activated first.)
$ pip install -r requirements.txt
Upgrading the package
Update the version number in requirements.txt.
Run pip install -r requirements.txt
Using the package in a project
Assuming that the package is
|- django-addresses | | | |- addresses | | | | | `-- [...] | | | `-- [...] | `-- [...]
In the project's settings.py:
INSTALLED_APPS = (
...
'addresses',
)
Then from the web project root:
$ python manage.py makemigrations addresses $ python manage.py migrate addresses
To reference the objects in a model within the web project:
class Person(models.Model):
address = models.ForeignKey('addresses.Address')
# ...
Resetting migrations
In the case that migrations have been made, and you want to rebuild the database objects from scratch:
$ python manage.py migrate --fake addresses zero $ python manage.py migrate addresses
- The first command sets the migration counter to before the initial (
0001) migration. - The 2nd command migrates the models at the state of the latest migration.[2]
Uninstalling the package
$ pip uninstall django-addresses
Uninstalling a stand-along package will remove the migrations for that package. Without the migrations, Django projects won't be able to sync to any changes to the app's models. It's better to upgrade than to uninstall and install.[3]
Notes
- ↑ How to Write Reusable Apps (Django documentation)
- ↑ How to reset migrations in Django 1.7? (Stackoverflow)
- ↑ Migrations (Django documentation)