AdminPlus aims to be the smallest possible extension to the excellent Django admin component that lets you add admin views that are not tied to models.
There are packages out there, like Nexus and django-admin-tools that replace the entire admin. Nexus supports adding completely new "modules" (the Django model admin is a default module) but there seems to be a lot of boiler plate code to do it. django-admin-tools does not, as far as I can tell, support adding custom pages.
All AdminPlus does is allow you to add simple custom views (well, they can be as complex as you like!) without mucking about with hijacking URLs, and providing links to them right in the admin index.
Install from PyPI with pip:
pip install django-adminplus
Or get AdminPlus from GitHub with pip:
pip install -e git://github.com/jsocol/django-adminplus#egg=django-adminplus
And add adminplus
to your installed apps, and replace django.contrib.admin
with django.contrib.admin.apps.SimpleAdminConfig
:
INSTALLED_APPS = (
'django.contrib.admin.apps.SimpleAdminConfig',
# ...
'adminplus',
# ...
)
To use AdminPlus in your Django project, you'll need to replace django.contrib.admin.site
, which is an instance of django.contrib.admin.sites.AdminSite
. I recommend doing this in urls.py
right before calling admin.autodiscover()
:
# urls.py
from django.contrib import admin
from adminplus.sites import AdminSitePlus
admin.site = AdminSitePlus()
admin.autodiscover()
urlpatterns = [
# ...
# Include the admin URL conf as normal.
(r'^admin', include(admin.site.urls)),
# ...
]
Congratulations! You're now using AdminPlus.
So now that you've installed AdminPlus, you'll want to use it. AdminPlus is 100% compatible with the built in admin module, so if you've been using that, you shouldn't have to change anything.
AdminPlus offers a new function, admin.site.register_view
, to attach arbitrary views to the admin:
# someapp/admin.py
# Assuming you've replaced django.contrib.admin.site as above.
from django.contrib import admin
def my_view(request, *args, **kwargs):
pass
admin.site.register_view('somepath', view=my_view)
# And of course, this still works:
from someapp.models import MyModel
admin.site.register(MyModel)
Now my_view
will be accessible at admin/somepath
and there will be a
link to it in the Custom Views section of the admin index.
You can also use register_view
as a decorator:
@admin.site.register_view('somepath')
def my_view(request):
pass
register_view
takes some optional arguments:
name
: a friendly name for display in the list of custom views. For example:def my_view(request): """Does something fancy!""" admin.site.register_view('somepath', 'My Fancy Admin View!', view=my_view)
urlname
: give a name to the urlpattern so it can be called byredirect()
,reverse()
, etc. The view will be added to theadmin
namespace, so a urlname offoo
would be reversed withreverse("admin:foo")
.visible: a boolean or a callable returning one, that defines if the custom view is visible in the admin dashboard.
All registered views are wrapped in admin.site.admin_view
.
Note
Views with URLs that match auto-discovered URLs (e.g. those created via ModelAdmins) will override the auto-discovered URL.