One of the most powerful parts of Django is the automatic admin interface. It reads metadata from your models to provide a quick, model-centric interface where trusted users can manage content on your site. The admin’s recommended use is limited to an organization’s internal management tool. It’s not intended for building your entire front end around.
The admin has many hooks for customization, but beware of trying to use those hooks exclusively. If you need to provide a more process-centric interface that abstracts away the implementation details of database tables and fields, then it’s probably time to write your own views.
In this document we discuss how to activate, use, and customize Django’s admin interface.
The admin is enabled in the default project template used by
startproject
.
If you’re not using the default project template, here are the requirements:
Add 'django.contrib.admin'
and its dependencies -
django.contrib.auth
, django.contrib.contenttypes
,
django.contrib.messages
, and django.contrib.sessions
- to your
INSTALLED_APPS
setting.
Configure a DjangoTemplates
backend in your TEMPLATES
setting with
django.template.context_processors.request
,
django.contrib.auth.context_processors.auth
, and
django.contrib.messages.context_processors.messages
in
the 'context_processors'
option of OPTIONS
.
django.template.context_processors.request
was added as a
requirement in the 'context_processors'
option to support the new
AdminSite.enable_nav_sidebar
.
If you’ve customized the MIDDLEWARE
setting,
django.contrib.auth.middleware.AuthenticationMiddleware
and
django.contrib.messages.middleware.MessageMiddleware
must be
included.
After you’ve taken these steps, you’ll be able to use the admin site by
visiting the URL you hooked it into (/admin/
, by default).
If you need to create a user to login with, use the createsuperuser
command. By default, logging in to the admin requires that the user has the
is_staff
attribute set to True
.
Finally, determine which of your application’s models should be editable in the
admin interface. For each of those models, register them with the admin as
described in ModelAdmin
.
See also
For information about serving the static files (images, JavaScript, and CSS) associated with the admin in production, see Serving files.
Having problems? Try FAQ: The admin.
ModelAdmin
objects¶The ModelAdmin
class is the representation of a model in the admin
interface. Usually, these are stored in a file named admin.py
in your
application. Let’s take a look at an example of the ModelAdmin
:
from django.contrib import admin
from myapp.models import Author
class AuthorAdmin(admin.ModelAdmin):
pass
admin.site.register(Author, AuthorAdmin)
Do you need a ModelAdmin
object at all?
In the preceding example, the ModelAdmin
class doesn’t define any
custom values (yet). As a result, the default admin interface will be
provided. If you are happy with the default admin interface, you don’t
need to define a ModelAdmin
object at all – you can register the
model class without providing a ModelAdmin
description. The
preceding example could be simplified to:
from django.contrib import admin
from myapp.models import Author
admin.site.register(Author)
register
decorator¶There is also a decorator for registering your ModelAdmin
classes:
from django.contrib import admin
from .models import Author
@admin.register(Author)
class AuthorAdmin(admin.ModelAdmin):
pass
It’s given one or more model classes to register with the ModelAdmin
.
If you’re using a custom AdminSite
, pass it using the site
keyword
argument:
from django.contrib import admin
from .models import Author, Editor, Reader
from myproject.admin_site import custom_admin_site
@admin.register(Author, Reader, Editor, site=custom_admin_site)
class PersonAdmin(admin.ModelAdmin):
pass
You can’t use this decorator if you have to reference your model admin
class in its __init__()
method, e.g.
super(PersonAdmin, self).__init__(*args, **kwargs)
. You can use
super().__init__(*args, **kwargs)
.
When you put 'django.contrib.admin'
in your INSTALLED_APPS
setting, Django automatically looks for an admin
module in each
application and imports it.
This is the default AppConfig
class for the admin.
It calls autodiscover()
when Django starts.
This class works like AdminConfig
,
except it doesn’t call autodiscover()
.
A dotted import path to the default admin site’s class or to a callable
that returns a site instance. Defaults to
'django.contrib.admin.sites.AdminSite'
. See
Overriding the default admin site for usage.
This function attempts to import an admin
module in each installed
application. Such modules are expected to register models with the admin.
Typically you won’t need to call this function directly as
AdminConfig
calls it when Django starts.
If you are using a custom AdminSite
, it is common to import all of the
ModelAdmin
subclasses into your code and register them to the custom
AdminSite
. In that case, in order to disable auto-discovery, you should
put 'django.contrib.admin.apps.SimpleAdminConfig'
instead of
'django.contrib.admin'
in your INSTALLED_APPS
setting.
ModelAdmin
options¶The ModelAdmin
is very flexible. It has several options for dealing with
customizing the interface. All options are defined on the ModelAdmin
subclass:
from django.contrib import admin
class AuthorAdmin(admin.ModelAdmin):
date_hierarchy = 'pub_date'
A list of actions to make available on the change list page. See Admin actions for details.
Controls where on the page the actions bar appears. By default, the admin
changelist displays actions at the top of the page (actions_on_top = True;
actions_on_bottom = False
).
Controls whether a selection counter is displayed next to the action dropdown.
By default, the admin changelist will display it
(actions_selection_counter = True
).
Set date_hierarchy
to the name of a DateField
or DateTimeField
in your model, and the change list page will include a date-based drilldown
navigation by that field.
Example:
date_hierarchy = 'pub_date'
You can also specify a field on a related model using the __
lookup,
for example:
date_hierarchy = 'author__pub_date'
This will intelligently populate itself based on available data, e.g. if all the dates are in one month, it’ll show the day-level drill-down only.
Note
date_hierarchy
uses QuerySet.datetimes()
internally. Please refer
to its documentation for some caveats when time zone support is
enabled (USE_TZ = True
).
This attribute overrides the default display value for record’s fields that
are empty (None
, empty string, etc.). The default value is -
(a
dash). For example:
from django.contrib import admin
class AuthorAdmin(admin.ModelAdmin):
empty_value_display = '-empty-'
You can also override empty_value_display
for all admin pages with
AdminSite.empty_value_display
, or for specific fields like this:
from django.contrib import admin
class AuthorAdmin(admin.ModelAdmin):
fields = ('name', 'title', 'view_birth_date')
@admin.display(empty_value='???')
def view_birth_date(self, obj):
return obj.birth_date
The empty_value
argument to the
display()
decorator is equivalent to
setting the empty_value_display
attribute on the display function
directly in previous versions. Setting the attribute directly is still
supported for backward compatibility.
This attribute, if given, should be a list of field names to exclude from the form.
For example, let’s consider the following model:
from django.db import models
class Author(models.Model):
name = models.CharField(max_length=100)
title = models.CharField(max_length=3)
birth_date = models.DateField(blank=True, null=True)
If you want a form for the Author
model that includes only the name
and title
fields, you would specify fields
or exclude
like
this:
from django.contrib import admin
class AuthorAdmin(admin.ModelAdmin):
fields = ('name', 'title')
class AuthorAdmin(admin.ModelAdmin):
exclude = ('birth_date',)
Since the Author model only has three fields, name
, title
, and
birth_date
, the forms resulting from the above declarations will
contain exactly the same fields.
Use the fields
option to make simple layout changes in the forms on
the “add” and “change” pages such as showing only a subset of available
fields, modifying their order, or grouping them into rows. For example, you
could define a simpler version of the admin form for the
django.contrib.flatpages.models.FlatPage
model as follows:
class FlatPageAdmin(admin.ModelAdmin):
fields = ('url', 'title', 'content')
In the above example, only the fields url
, title
and content
will be displayed, sequentially, in the form. fields
can contain
values defined in ModelAdmin.readonly_fields
to be displayed as
read-only.
For more complex layout needs, see the fieldsets
option.
The fields
option accepts the same types of values as
list_display
, except that callables aren’t accepted.
Names of model and model admin methods will only be used if they’re listed
in readonly_fields
.
To display multiple fields on the same line, wrap those fields in their own
tuple. In this example, the url
and title
fields will display on the
same line and the content
field will be displayed below them on its
own line:
class FlatPageAdmin(admin.ModelAdmin):
fields = (('url', 'title'), 'content')
Note
This fields
option should not be confused with the fields
dictionary key that is within the fieldsets
option,
as described in the next section.
If neither fields
nor fieldsets
options are present,
Django will default to displaying each field that isn’t an AutoField
and
has editable=True
, in a single fieldset, in the same order as the fields
are defined in the model.
Set fieldsets
to control the layout of admin “add” and “change” pages.
fieldsets
is a list of two-tuples, in which each two-tuple represents a
<fieldset>
on the admin form page. (A <fieldset>
is a “section” of
the form.)
The two-tuples are in the format (name, field_options)
, where name
is a string representing the title of the fieldset and field_options
is
a dictionary of information about the fieldset, including a list of fields
to be displayed in it.
A full example, taken from the
django.contrib.flatpages.models.FlatPage
model:
from django.contrib import admin
class FlatPageAdmin(admin.ModelAdmin):
fieldsets = (
(None, {
'fields': ('url', 'title', 'content', 'sites')
}),
('Advanced options', {
'classes': ('collapse',),
'fields': ('registration_required', 'template_name'),
}),
)
This results in an admin page that looks like:
If neither fieldsets
nor fields
options are present,
Django will default to displaying each field that isn’t an AutoField
and
has editable=True
, in a single fieldset, in the same order as the fields
are defined in the model.
The field_options
dictionary can have the following keys:
fields
A tuple of field names to display in this fieldset. This key is required.
Example:
{
'fields': ('first_name', 'last_name', 'address', 'city', 'state'),
}
As with the fields
option, to display multiple
fields on the same line, wrap those fields in their own tuple. In this
example, the first_name
and last_name
fields will display on
the same line:
{
'fields': (('first_name', 'last_name'), 'address', 'city', 'state'),
}
fields
can contain values defined in
readonly_fields
to be displayed as read-only.
If you add the name of a callable to fields
, the same rule applies
as with the fields
option: the callable must be
listed in readonly_fields
.
classes
A list or tuple containing extra CSS classes to apply to the fieldset.
Example:
{
'classes': ('wide', 'extrapretty'),
}
Two useful classes defined by the default admin site stylesheet are
collapse
and wide
. Fieldsets with the collapse
style
will be initially collapsed in the admin and replaced with a small
“click to expand” link. Fieldsets with the wide
style will be
given extra horizontal space.
description
A string of optional extra text to be displayed at the top of each
fieldset, under the heading of the fieldset. This string is not
rendered for TabularInline
due to its
layout.
Note that this value is not HTML-escaped when it’s displayed in
the admin interface. This lets you include HTML if you so desire.
Alternatively you can use plain text and
django.utils.html.escape()
to escape any HTML special
characters.
By default, a ManyToManyField
is displayed in
the admin site with a <select multiple>
. However, multiple-select boxes
can be difficult to use when selecting many items. Adding a
ManyToManyField
to this list will instead use
a nifty unobtrusive JavaScript “filter” interface that allows searching
within the options. The unselected and selected options appear in two boxes
side by side. See filter_vertical
to use a vertical
interface.
Same as filter_horizontal
, but uses a vertical display
of the filter interface with the box of unselected options appearing above
the box of selected options.
By default a ModelForm
is dynamically created for your model. It is
used to create the form presented on both the add/change pages. You can
easily provide your own ModelForm
to override any default form behavior
on the add/change pages. Alternatively, you can customize the default
form rather than specifying an entirely new one by using the
ModelAdmin.get_form()
method.
For an example see the section Adding custom validation to the admin.
Note
If you define the Meta.model
attribute on a
ModelForm
, you must also define the
Meta.fields
attribute (or the Meta.exclude
attribute). However,
since the admin has its own way of defining fields, the Meta.fields
attribute will be ignored.
If the ModelForm
is only going to be used for the admin, the easiest
solution is to omit the Meta.model
attribute, since ModelAdmin
will provide the correct model to use. Alternatively, you can set
fields = []
in the Meta
class to satisfy the validation on the
ModelForm
.
Note
If your ModelForm
and ModelAdmin
both define an exclude
option then ModelAdmin
takes precedence:
from django import forms
from django.contrib import admin
from myapp.models import Person
class PersonForm(forms.ModelForm):
class Meta:
model = Person
exclude = ['name']
class PersonAdmin(admin.ModelAdmin):
exclude = ['age']
form = PersonForm
In the above example, the “age” field will be excluded but the “name” field will be included in the generated form.
This provides a quick-and-dirty way to override some of the
Field
options for use in the admin.
formfield_overrides
is a dictionary mapping a field class to a dict of
arguments to pass to the field at construction time.
Since that’s a bit abstract, let’s look at a concrete example. The most
common use of formfield_overrides
is to add a custom widget for a
certain type of field. So, imagine we’ve written a RichTextEditorWidget
that we’d like to use for large text fields instead of the default
<textarea>
. Here’s how we’d do that:
from django.contrib import admin
from django.db import models
# Import our custom widget and our model from where they're defined
from myapp.models import MyModel
from myapp.widgets import RichTextEditorWidget
class MyModelAdmin(admin.ModelAdmin):
formfield_overrides = {
models.TextField: {'widget': RichTextEditorWidget},
}
Note that the key in the dictionary is the actual field class, not a
string. The value is another dictionary; these arguments will be passed to
the form field’s __init__()
method. See The Forms API for
details.
Warning
If you want to use a custom widget with a relation field (i.e.
ForeignKey
or
ManyToManyField
), make sure you haven’t
included that field’s name in raw_id_fields
, radio_fields
, or
autocomplete_fields
.
formfield_overrides
won’t let you change the widget on relation
fields that have raw_id_fields
, radio_fields
, or
autocomplete_fields
set. That’s because raw_id_fields
,
radio_fields
, and autocomplete_fields
imply custom widgets of
their own.
See InlineModelAdmin
objects below as well as
ModelAdmin.get_formsets_with_inlines()
.
Set list_display
to control which fields are displayed on the change
list page of the admin.
Example:
list_display = ('first_name', 'last_name')
If you don’t set list_display
, the admin site will display a single
column that displays the __str__()
representation of each object.
There are four types of values that can be used in list_display
. All
but the simplest may use the display()
decorator is used to customize how the field is presented:
The name of a model field. For example:
class PersonAdmin(admin.ModelAdmin):
list_display = ('first_name', 'last_name')
A callable that accepts one argument, the model instance. For example:
@admin.display(description='Name')
def upper_case_name(obj):
return ("%s %s" % (obj.first_name, obj.last_name)).upper()
class PersonAdmin(admin.ModelAdmin):
list_display = (upper_case_name,)
A string representing a ModelAdmin
method that accepts one argument,
the model instance. For example:
class PersonAdmin(admin.ModelAdmin):
list_display = ('upper_case_name',)
@admin.display(description='Name')
def upper_case_name(self, obj):
return ("%s %s" % (obj.first_name, obj.last_name)).upper()
A string representing a model attribute or method (without any required arguments). For example:
from django.contrib import admin
from django.db import models
class Person(models.Model):
name = models.CharField(max_length=50)
birthday = models.DateField()
@admin.display(description='Birth decade')
def decade_born_in(self):
return '%d’s' % (self.birthday.year // 10 * 10)
class PersonAdmin(admin.ModelAdmin):
list_display = ('name', 'decade_born_in')
A few special cases to note about list_display
:
If the field is a ForeignKey
, Django will display the
__str__()
of the related object.
ManyToManyField
fields aren’t supported, because that would
entail executing a separate SQL statement for each row in the table.
If you want to do this nonetheless, give your model a custom method,
and add that method’s name to list_display
. (See below for more
on custom methods in list_display
.)
If the field is a BooleanField
, Django will display a pretty “yes”,
“no”, or “unknown” icon instead of True
, False
, or None
.
If the string given is a method of the model, ModelAdmin
or a
callable, Django will HTML-escape the output by default. To escape
user input and allow your own unescaped tags, use
format_html()
.
Here’s a full example model:
from django.contrib import admin
from django.db import models
from django.utils.html import format_html
class Person(models.Model):
first_name = models.CharField(max_length=50)
last_name = models.CharField(max_length=50)
color_code = models.CharField(max_length=6)
@admin.display
def colored_name(self):
return format_html(
'<span style="color: #{};">{} {}</span>',
self.color_code,
self.first_name,
self.last_name,
)
class PersonAdmin(admin.ModelAdmin):
list_display = ('first_name', 'last_name', 'colored_name')
As some examples have already demonstrated, when using a callable, a
model method, or a ModelAdmin
method, you can customize the column’s
title by wrapping the callable with the
display()
decorator and passing the
description
argument.
The description
argument to the
display()
decorator is equivalent to
setting the short_description
attribute on the display function
directly in previous versions. Setting the attribute directly is
still supported for backward compatibility.
If the value of a field is None
, an empty string, or an iterable
without elements, Django will display -
(a dash). You can override
this with AdminSite.empty_value_display
:
from django.contrib import admin
admin.site.empty_value_display = '(None)'
You can also use ModelAdmin.empty_value_display
:
class PersonAdmin(admin.ModelAdmin):
empty_value_display = 'unknown'
Or on a field level:
class PersonAdmin(admin.ModelAdmin):
list_display = ('name', 'birth_date_view')
@admin.display(empty_value='unknown')
def birth_date_view(self, obj):
return obj.birth_date
The empty_value
argument to the
display()
decorator is equivalent to
setting the empty_value_display
attribute on the display function
directly in previous versions. Setting the attribute directly is
still supported for backward compatibility.
If the string given is a method of the model, ModelAdmin
or a
callable that returns True
, False
, or None
, Django will
display a pretty “yes”, “no”, or “unknown” icon if you wrap the method
with the display()
decorator passing the
boolean
argument with the value set to True
:
from django.contrib import admin
from django.db import models
class Person(models.Model):
first_name = models.CharField(max_length=50)
birthday = models.DateField()
@admin.display(boolean=True)
def born_in_fifties(self):
return 1950 <= self.birthday.year < 1960
class PersonAdmin(admin.ModelAdmin):
list_display = ('name', 'born_in_fifties')
The boolean
argument to the
display()
decorator is equivalent to
setting the boolean
attribute on the display function directly in
previous versions. Setting the attribute directly is still supported
for backward compatibility.
The __str__()
method is just as valid in list_display
as any
other model method, so it’s perfectly OK to do this:
list_display = ('__str__', 'some_other_field')
Usually, elements of list_display
that aren’t actual database
fields can’t be used in sorting (because Django does all the sorting
at the database level).
However, if an element of list_display
represents a certain database
field, you can indicate this fact by using the
display()
decorator on the method, passing
the ordering
argument:
from django.contrib import admin
from django.db import models
from django.utils.html import format_html
class Person(models.Model):
first_name = models.CharField(max_length=50)
color_code = models.CharField(max_length=6)
@admin.display(ordering='first_name')
def colored_first_name(self):
return format_html(
'<span style="color: #{};">{}</span>',
self.color_code,
self.first_name,
)
class PersonAdmin(admin.ModelAdmin):
list_display = ('first_name', 'colored_first_name')
The above will tell Django to order by the first_name
field when
trying to sort by colored_first_name
in the admin.
To indicate descending order with the ordering
argument you can use a
hyphen prefix on the field name. Using the above example, this would look
like:
@admin.display(ordering='-first_name')
The ordering
argument supports query lookups to sort by values on
related models. This example includes an “author first name” column in
the list display and allows sorting it by first name:
class Blog(models.Model):
title = models.CharField(max_length=255)
author = models.ForeignKey(Person, on_delete=models.CASCADE)
class BlogAdmin(admin.ModelAdmin):
list_display = ('title', 'author', 'author_first_name')
@admin.display(ordering='author__first_name')
def author_first_name(self, obj):
return obj.author.first_name
Query expressions may be used with the
ordering
argument:
from django.db.models import Value
from django.db.models.functions import Concat
class Person(models.Model):
first_name = models.CharField(max_length=50)
last_name = models.CharField(max_length=50)
@admin.display(ordering=Concat('first_name', Value(' '), 'last_name'))
def full_name(self):
return self.first_name + ' ' + self.last_name
The ordering
argument to the
display()
decorator is equivalent to
setting the admin_order_field
attribute on the display function
directly in previous versions. Setting the attribute directly is
still supported for backward compatibility.
Elements of list_display
can also be properties:
class Person(models.Model):
first_name = models.CharField(max_length=50)
last_name = models.CharField(max_length=50)
@property
@admin.display(
ordering='last_name',
description='Full name of the person',
)
def full_name(self):
return self.first_name + ' ' + self.last_name
class PersonAdmin(admin.ModelAdmin):
list_display = ('full_name',)
Note that @property
must be above @display
. If you’re using the
old way – setting the display-related attributes directly rather than
using the display()
decorator – be aware
that the property()
function and not the @property
decorator
must be used:
def my_property(self):
return self.first_name + ' ' + self.last_name
my_property.short_description = "Full name of the person"
my_property.admin_order_field = 'last_name'
full_name = property(my_property)
The field names in list_display
will also appear as CSS classes in
the HTML output, in the form of column-<field_name>
on each <th>
element. This can be used to set column widths in a CSS file for example.
Django will try to interpret every element of list_display
in this
order:
A field of the model.
A callable.
A string representing a ModelAdmin
attribute.
A string representing a model attribute.
For example if you have first_name
as a model field and
as a ModelAdmin
attribute, the model field will be used.
Use list_display_links
to control if and which fields in
list_display
should be linked to the “change” page for an object.
By default, the change list page will link the first column – the first
field specified in list_display
– to the change page for each item.
But list_display_links
lets you change this:
Set it to None
to get no links at all.
Set it to a list or tuple of fields (in the same format as
list_display
) whose columns you want converted to links.
You can specify one or many fields. As long as the fields appear in
list_display
, Django doesn’t care how many (or how few) fields are
linked. The only requirement is that if you want to use
list_display_links
in this fashion, you must define list_display
.
In this example, the first_name
and last_name
fields will be
linked on the change list page:
class PersonAdmin(admin.ModelAdmin):
list_display = ('first_name', 'last_name', 'birthday')
list_display_links = ('first_name', 'last_name')
In this example, the change list page grid will have no links:
class AuditEntryAdmin(admin.ModelAdmin):
list_display = ('timestamp', 'message')
list_display_links = None
Set list_editable
to a list of field names on the model which will
allow editing on the change list page. That is, fields listed in
list_editable
will be displayed as form widgets on the change list
page, allowing users to edit and save multiple rows at once.
Note
list_editable
interacts with a couple of other options in
particular ways; you should note the following rules:
Any field in list_editable
must also be in list_display
.
You can’t edit a field that’s not displayed!
The same field can’t be listed in both list_editable
and
list_display_links
– a field can’t be both a form and
a link.
You’ll get a validation error if either of these rules are broken.
Set list_filter
to activate filters in the right sidebar of the change
list page of the admin, as illustrated in the following screenshot:
list_filter
should be a list or tuple of elements, where each element
should be of one of the following types:
a field name, where the specified field should be either a
BooleanField
, CharField
, DateField
, DateTimeField
,
IntegerField
, ForeignKey
or ManyToManyField
, for example:
class PersonAdmin(admin.ModelAdmin):
list_filter = ('is_staff', 'company')
Field names in list_filter
can also span relations
using the __
lookup, for example:
class PersonAdmin(admin.UserAdmin):
list_filter = ('company__name',)
a class inheriting from django.contrib.admin.SimpleListFilter
,
which you need to provide the title
and parameter_name
attributes to and override the lookups
and queryset
methods,
e.g.:
from datetime import date
from django.contrib import admin
from django.utils.translation import gettext_lazy as _
class DecadeBornListFilter(admin.SimpleListFilter):
# Human-readable title which will be displayed in the
# right admin sidebar just above the filter options.
title = _('decade born')
# Parameter for the filter that will be used in the URL query.
parameter_name = 'decade'
def lookups(self, request, model_admin):
"""
Returns a list of tuples. The first element in each
tuple is the coded value for the option that will
appear in the URL query. The second element is the
human-readable name for the option that will appear
in the right sidebar.
"""
return (
('80s', _('in the eighties')),
('90s', _('in the nineties')),
)
def queryset(self, request, queryset):
"""
Returns the filtered queryset based on the value
provided in the query string and retrievable via
`self.value()`.
"""
# Compare the requested value (either '80s' or '90s')
# to decide how to filter the queryset.
if self.value() == '80s':
return queryset.filter(birthday__gte=date(1980, 1, 1),
birthday__lte=date(1989, 12, 31))
if self.value() == '90s':
return queryset.filter(birthday__gte=date(1990, 1, 1),
birthday__lte=date(1999, 12, 31))
class PersonAdmin(admin.ModelAdmin):
list_filter = (DecadeBornListFilter,)
Note
As a convenience, the HttpRequest
object is passed to the
lookups
and queryset
methods, for example:
class AuthDecadeBornListFilter(DecadeBornListFilter):
def lookups(self, request, model_admin):
if request.user.is_superuser:
return super().lookups(request, model_admin)
def queryset(self, request, queryset):
if request.user.is_superuser:
return super().queryset(request, queryset)
Also as a convenience, the ModelAdmin
object is passed to
the lookups
method, for example if you want to base the
lookups on the available data:
class AdvancedDecadeBornListFilter(DecadeBornListFilter):
def lookups(self, request, model_admin):
"""
Only show the lookups if there actually is
anyone born in the corresponding decades.
"""
qs = model_admin.get_queryset(request)
if qs.filter(birthday__gte=date(1980, 1, 1),
birthday__lte=date(1989, 12, 31)).exists():
yield ('80s', _('in the eighties'))
if qs.filter(birthday__gte=date(1990, 1, 1),
birthday__lte=date(1999, 12, 31)).exists():
yield ('90s', _('in the nineties'))
a tuple, where the first element is a field name and the second
element is a class inheriting from
django.contrib.admin.FieldListFilter
, for example:
class PersonAdmin(admin.ModelAdmin):
list_filter = (
('is_staff', admin.BooleanFieldListFilter),
)
You can limit the choices of a related model to the objects involved in
that relation using RelatedOnlyFieldListFilter
:
class BookAdmin(admin.ModelAdmin):
list_filter = (
('author', admin.RelatedOnlyFieldListFilter),
)
Assuming author
is a ForeignKey
to a User
model, this will
limit the list_filter
choices to the users who have written a book
instead of listing all users.
You can filter empty values using EmptyFieldListFilter
, which can
filter on both empty strings and nulls, depending on what the field
allows to store:
class BookAdmin(admin.ModelAdmin):
list_filter = (
('title', admin.EmptyFieldListFilter),
)
Note
The FieldListFilter
API is considered internal and might be
changed.
Note
The GenericForeignKey
field is not supported.
The EmptyFieldListFilter
class was added.
List filter’s typically appear only if the filter has more than one choice.
A filter’s has_output()
method controls whether or not it appears.
It is possible to specify a custom template for rendering a list filter:
class FilterWithCustomTemplate(admin.SimpleListFilter):
template = "custom_template.html"
See the default template provided by Django (admin/filter.html
) for
a concrete example.
Set list_max_show_all
to control how many items can appear on a “Show
all” admin change list page. The admin will display a “Show all” link on the
change list only if the total result count is less than or equal to this
setting. By default, this is set to 200
.
Set list_per_page
to control how many items appear on each paginated
admin change list page. By default, this is set to 100
.
Set list_select_related
to tell Django to use
select_related()
in retrieving
the list of objects on the admin change list page. This can save you a
bunch of database queries.
The value should be either a boolean, a list or a tuple. Default is
False
.
When value is True
, select_related()
will always be called. When
value is set to False
, Django will look at list_display
and call
select_related()
if any ForeignKey
is present.
If you need more fine-grained control, use a tuple (or list) as value for
list_select_related
. Empty tuple will prevent Django from calling
select_related
at all. Any other tuple will be passed directly to
select_related
as parameters. For example:
class ArticleAdmin(admin.ModelAdmin):
list_select_related = ('author', 'category')
will call select_related('author', 'category')
.
If you need to specify a dynamic value based on the request, you can
implement a get_list_select_related()
method.
Note
ModelAdmin
ignores this attribute when
select_related()
was already
called on the changelist’s QuerySet
.
Set ordering
to specify how lists of objects should be ordered in the
Django admin views. This should be a list or tuple in the same format as a
model’s ordering
parameter.
If this isn’t provided, the Django admin will use the model’s default ordering.
If you need to specify a dynamic order (for example depending on user or
language) you can implement a get_ordering()
method.
Performance considerations with ordering and sorting
To ensure a deterministic ordering of results, the changelist adds
pk
to the ordering if it can’t find a single or unique together set
of fields that provide total ordering.
For example, if the default ordering is by a non-unique name
field,
then the changelist is sorted by name
and pk
. This could
perform poorly if you have a lot of rows and don’t have an index on
name
and pk
.
The paginator class to be used for pagination. By default,
django.core.paginator.Paginator
is used. If the custom paginator
class doesn’t have the same constructor interface as
django.core.paginator.Paginator
, you will also need to
provide an implementation for ModelAdmin.get_paginator()
.
Set prepopulated_fields
to a dictionary mapping field names to the
fields it should prepopulate from:
class ArticleAdmin(admin.ModelAdmin):
prepopulated_fields = {"slug": ("title",)}
When set, the given fields will use a bit of JavaScript to populate from
the fields assigned. The main use for this functionality is to
automatically generate the value for SlugField
fields from one or more
other fields. The generated value is produced by concatenating the values
of the source fields, and then by transforming that result into a valid
slug (e.g. substituting dashes for spaces and lowercasing ASCII letters).
Prepopulated fields aren’t modified by JavaScript after a value has been saved. It’s usually undesired that slugs change (which would cause an object’s URL to change if the slug is used in it).
prepopulated_fields
doesn’t accept DateTimeField
, ForeignKey
,
OneToOneField
, and ManyToManyField
fields.
In older versions, various English stop words are removed from generated values.
By default, applied filters are preserved on the list view after creating,
editing, or deleting an object. You can have filters cleared by setting
this attribute to False
.
By default, Django’s admin uses a select-box interface (<select>) for
fields that are ForeignKey
or have choices
set. If a field is
present in radio_fields
, Django will use a radio-button interface
instead. Assuming group
is a ForeignKey
on the Person
model:
class PersonAdmin(admin.ModelAdmin):
radio_fields = {"group": admin.VERTICAL}
You have the choice of using HORIZONTAL
or VERTICAL
from the
django.contrib.admin
module.
Don’t include a field in radio_fields
unless it’s a ForeignKey
or has
choices
set.
autocomplete_fields
is a list of ForeignKey
and/or
ManyToManyField
fields you would like to change to Select2 autocomplete inputs.
By default, the admin uses a select-box interface (<select>
) for
those fields. Sometimes you don’t want to incur the overhead of selecting
all the related instances to display in the dropdown.
The Select2 input looks similar to the default input but comes with a search feature that loads the options asynchronously. This is faster and more user-friendly if the related model has many instances.
You must define search_fields
on the related object’s
ModelAdmin
because the autocomplete search uses it.
To avoid unauthorized data disclosure, users must have the view
or
change
permission to the related object in order to use autocomplete.
Ordering and pagination of the results are controlled by the related
ModelAdmin
’s get_ordering()
and
get_paginator()
methods.
In the following example, ChoiceAdmin
has an autocomplete field for the
ForeignKey
to the Question
. The results are filtered by the
question_text
field and ordered by the date_created
field:
class QuestionAdmin(admin.ModelAdmin):
ordering = ['date_created']
search_fields = ['question_text']
class ChoiceAdmin(admin.ModelAdmin):
autocomplete_fields = ['question']
Performance considerations for large datasets
Ordering using ModelAdmin.ordering
may cause performance
problems as sorting on a large queryset will be slow.
Also, if your search fields include fields that aren’t indexed by the database, you might encounter poor performance on extremely large tables.
For those cases, it’s a good idea to write your own
ModelAdmin.get_search_results()
implementation using a
full-text indexed search.
You may also want to change the Paginator
on very large tables
as the default paginator always performs a count()
query.
For example, you could override the default implementation of the
Paginator.count
property.
By default, Django’s admin uses a select-box interface (<select>) for
fields that are ForeignKey
. Sometimes you don’t want to incur the
overhead of having to select all the related instances to display in the
drop-down.
raw_id_fields
is a list of fields you would like to change
into an Input
widget for either a ForeignKey
or
ManyToManyField
:
class ArticleAdmin(admin.ModelAdmin):
raw_id_fields = ("newspaper",)
The raw_id_fields
Input
widget should contain a primary key if the
field is a ForeignKey
or a comma separated list of values if the field
is a ManyToManyField
. The raw_id_fields
widget shows a magnifying
glass button next to the field which allows users to search for and select
a value:
By default the admin shows all fields as editable. Any fields in this
option (which should be a list
or tuple
) will display its data
as-is and non-editable; they are also excluded from the
ModelForm
used for creating and editing. Note that
when specifying ModelAdmin.fields
or ModelAdmin.fieldsets
the read-only fields must be present to be shown (they are ignored
otherwise).
If readonly_fields
is used without defining explicit ordering through
ModelAdmin.fields
or ModelAdmin.fieldsets
they will be
added last after all editable fields.
A read-only field can not only display data from a model’s field, it can
also display the output of a model’s method or a method of the
ModelAdmin
class itself. This is very similar to the way
ModelAdmin.list_display
behaves. This provides a way to use the
admin interface to provide feedback on the status of the objects being
edited, for example:
from django.contrib import admin
from django.utils.html import format_html_join
from django.utils.safestring import mark_safe
class PersonAdmin(admin.ModelAdmin):
readonly_fields = ('address_report',)
# description functions like a model field's verbose_name
@admin.display(description='Address')
def address_report(self, instance):
# assuming get_full_address() returns a list of strings
# for each line of the address and you want to separate each
# line by a linebreak
return format_html_join(
mark_safe('<br>'),
'{}',
((line,) for line in instance.get_full_address()),
) or mark_safe("<span class='errors'>I can't determine this address.</span>")
Set save_as
to enable a “save as new” feature on admin change forms.
Normally, objects have three save options: “Save”, “Save and continue
editing”, and “Save and add another”. If save_as
is True
, “Save
and add another” will be replaced by a “Save as new” button that creates a
new object (with a new ID) rather than updating the existing object.
By default, save_as
is set to False
.
When save_as=True
, the default redirect after saving the
new object is to the change view for that object. If you set
save_as_continue=False
, the redirect will be to the changelist view.
By default, save_as_continue
is set to True
.
Set save_on_top
to add save buttons across the top of your admin change
forms.
Normally, the save buttons appear only at the bottom of the forms. If you
set save_on_top
, the buttons will appear both on the top and the
bottom.
By default, save_on_top
is set to False
.
Set search_fields
to enable a search box on the admin change list page.
This should be set to a list of field names that will be searched whenever
somebody submits a search query in that text box.
These fields should be some kind of text field, such as CharField
or
TextField
. You can also perform a related lookup on a ForeignKey
or
ManyToManyField
with the lookup API “follow” notation:
search_fields = ['foreign_key__related_fieldname']
For example, if you have a blog entry with an author, the following definition would enable searching blog entries by the email address of the author:
search_fields = ['user__email']
When somebody does a search in the admin search box, Django splits the
search query into words and returns all objects that contain each of the
words, case-insensitive (using the icontains
lookup), where each
word must be in at least one of search_fields
. For example, if
search_fields
is set to ['first_name', 'last_name']
and a user
searches for john lennon
, Django will do the equivalent of this SQL
WHERE
clause:
WHERE (first_name ILIKE '%john%' OR last_name ILIKE '%john%')
AND (first_name ILIKE '%lennon%' OR last_name ILIKE '%lennon%')
The search query can contain quoted phrases with spaces. For example, if a
user searches for "john winston"
or 'john winston'
, Django will do
the equivalent of this SQL WHERE
clause:
WHERE (first_name ILIKE '%john winston%' OR last_name ILIKE '%john winston%')
If you don’t want to use icontains
as the lookup, you can use any
lookup by appending it the field. For example, you could use exact
by setting search_fields
to ['first_name__exact']
.
Some (older) shortcuts for specifying a field lookup are also available.
You can prefix a field in search_fields
with the following characters
and it’s equivalent to adding __<lookup>
to the field:
Prefix |
Lookup |
---|---|
^ |
|
= |
|
@ |
|
None |
If you need to customize search you can use
ModelAdmin.get_search_results()
to provide additional or alternate
search behavior.
Support for searching against quoted phrases with spaces was added.
Set show_full_result_count
to control whether the full count of objects
should be displayed on a filtered admin page (e.g. 99 results (103 total)
).
If this option is set to False
, a text like 99 results (Show all)
is displayed instead.
The default of show_full_result_count=True
generates a query to perform
a full count on the table which can be expensive if the table contains a
large number of rows.
By default, the change list page allows sorting by all model fields (and
callables that use the ordering
argument to the
display()
decorator or have the
admin_order_field
attribute) specified in list_display
.
If you want to disable sorting for some columns, set sortable_by
to
a collection (e.g. list
, tuple
, or set
) of the subset of
list_display
that you want to be sortable. An empty collection
disables sorting for all columns.
If you need to specify this list dynamically, implement a
get_sortable_by()
method instead.
Set view_on_site
to control whether or not to display the “View on site” link.
This link should bring you to a URL where you can display the saved object.
This value can be either a boolean flag or a callable. If True
(the
default), the object’s get_absolute_url()
method will be used to generate the url.
If your model has a get_absolute_url()
method
but you don’t want the “View on site” button to appear, you only need to set
view_on_site
to False
:
from django.contrib import admin
class PersonAdmin(admin.ModelAdmin):
view_on_site = False
In case it is a callable, it accepts the model instance as a parameter. For example:
from django.contrib import admin
from django.urls import reverse
class PersonAdmin(admin.ModelAdmin):
def view_on_site(self, obj):
url = reverse('person-detail', kwargs={'slug': obj.slug})
return 'https://example.com' + url
The Overriding admin templates section describes how to override or extend
the default admin templates. Use the following options to override the default
templates used by the ModelAdmin
views:
Path to a custom template, used by add_view()
.
Path to a custom template, used by change_view()
.
Path to a custom template, used by changelist_view()
.
Path to a custom template, used by delete_view()
for displaying a
confirmation page when deleting one or more objects.
Path to a custom template, used by the delete_selected
action method
for displaying a confirmation page when deleting one or more objects. See
the actions documentation.
Path to a custom template, used by history_view()
.
Path to a custom template, used by response_add()
,
response_change()
, and response_delete()
.
ModelAdmin
methods¶Warning
When overriding ModelAdmin.save_model()
and
ModelAdmin.delete_model()
, your code must save/delete the
object. They aren’t meant for veto purposes, rather they allow you to
perform extra operations.
The save_model
method is given the HttpRequest
, a model instance,
a ModelForm
instance, and a boolean value based on whether it is adding
or changing the object. Overriding this method allows doing pre- or
post-save operations. Call super().save_model()
to save the object
using Model.save()
.
For example to attach request.user
to the object prior to saving:
from django.contrib import admin
class ArticleAdmin(admin.ModelAdmin):
def save_model(self, request, obj, form, change):
obj.user = request.user
super().save_model(request, obj, form, change)
The delete_model
method is given the HttpRequest
and a model
instance. Overriding this method allows doing pre- or post-delete
operations. Call super().delete_model()
to delete the object using
Model.delete()
.
The delete_queryset()
method is given the HttpRequest
and a
QuerySet
of objects to be deleted. Override this method to customize
the deletion process for the “delete selected objects” action.
The save_formset
method is given the HttpRequest
, the parent
ModelForm
instance and a boolean value based on whether it is adding or
changing the parent object.
For example, to attach request.user
to each changed formset
model instance:
class ArticleAdmin(admin.ModelAdmin):
def save_formset(self, request, form, formset, change):
instances = formset.save(commit=False)
for obj in formset.deleted_objects:
obj.delete()
for instance in instances:
instance.user = request.user
instance.save()
formset.save_m2m()
See also Saving objects in the formset.
The get_ordering
method takes a request
as parameter and
is expected to return a list
or tuple
for ordering similar
to the ordering
attribute. For example:
class PersonAdmin(admin.ModelAdmin):
def get_ordering(self, request):
if request.user.is_superuser:
return ['name', 'rank']
else:
return ['name']
The get_search_results
method modifies the list of objects displayed
into those that match the provided search term. It accepts the request, a
queryset that applies the current filters, and the user-provided search term.
It returns a tuple containing a queryset modified to implement the search, and
a boolean indicating if the results may contain duplicates.
The default implementation searches the fields named in ModelAdmin.search_fields
.
This method may be overridden with your own custom search method. For
example, you might wish to search by an integer field, or use an external
tool such as Solr or Haystack. You must establish if the queryset changes
implemented by your search method may introduce duplicates into the results,
and return True
in the second element of the return value.
For example, to search by name
and age
, you could use:
class PersonAdmin(admin.ModelAdmin):
list_display = ('name', 'age')
search_fields = ('name',)
def get_search_results(self, request, queryset, search_term):
queryset, may_have_duplicates = super().get_search_results(
request, queryset, search_term,
)
try:
search_term_as_int = int(search_term)
except ValueError:
pass
else:
queryset |= self.model.objects.filter(age=search_term_as_int)
return queryset, may_have_duplicates
This implementation is more efficient than search_fields =
('name', '=age')
which results in a string comparison for the numeric
field, for example ... OR UPPER("polls_choice"."votes"::text) = UPPER('4')
on PostgreSQL.
The save_related
method is given the HttpRequest
, the parent
ModelForm
instance, the list of inline formsets and a boolean value
based on whether the parent is being added or changed. Here you can do any
pre- or post-save operations for objects related to the parent. Note
that at this point the parent object and its form have already been saved.
The get_autocomplete_fields()
method is given the HttpRequest
and is
expected to return a list
or tuple
of field names that will be
displayed with an autocomplete widget as described above in the
ModelAdmin.autocomplete_fields
section.
The get_readonly_fields
method is given the HttpRequest
and the
obj
being edited (or None
on an add form) and is expected to return
a list
or tuple
of field names that will be displayed as read-only,
as described above in the ModelAdmin.readonly_fields
section.
The get_prepopulated_fields
method is given the HttpRequest
and the
obj
being edited (or None
on an add form) and is expected to return
a dictionary
, as described above in the ModelAdmin.prepopulated_fields
section.
The get_list_display
method is given the HttpRequest
and is
expected to return a list
or tuple
of field names that will be
displayed on the changelist view as described above in the
ModelAdmin.list_display
section.
The get_list_display_links
method is given the HttpRequest
and
the list
or tuple
returned by ModelAdmin.get_list_display()
.
It is expected to return either None
or a list
or tuple
of field
names on the changelist that will be linked to the change view, as described
in the ModelAdmin.list_display_links
section.
The get_exclude
method is given the HttpRequest
and the obj
being edited (or None
on an add form) and is expected to return a list
of fields, as described in ModelAdmin.exclude
.
The get_fields
method is given the HttpRequest
and the obj
being edited (or None
on an add form) and is expected to return a list
of fields, as described above in the ModelAdmin.fields
section.
The get_fieldsets
method is given the HttpRequest
and the obj
being edited (or None
on an add form) and is expected to return a list
of two-tuples, in which each two-tuple represents a <fieldset>
on the
admin form page, as described above in the ModelAdmin.fieldsets
section.
The get_list_filter
method is given the HttpRequest
and is expected
to return the same kind of sequence type as for the
list_filter
attribute.
The get_list_select_related
method is given the HttpRequest
and
should return a boolean or list as ModelAdmin.list_select_related
does.
The get_search_fields
method is given the HttpRequest
and is expected
to return the same kind of sequence type as for the
search_fields
attribute.
The get_sortable_by()
method is passed the HttpRequest
and is
expected to return a collection (e.g. list
, tuple
, or set
) of
field names that will be sortable in the change list page.
Its default implementation returns sortable_by
if it’s set,
otherwise it defers to get_list_display()
.
For example, to prevent one or more columns from being sortable:
class PersonAdmin(admin.ModelAdmin):
def get_sortable_by(self, request):
return {*self.get_list_display(request)} - {'rank'}
The get_inline_instances
method is given the HttpRequest
and the
obj
being edited (or None
on an add form) and is expected to return
a list
or tuple
of InlineModelAdmin
objects, as described below in the InlineModelAdmin
section. For example, the following would return inlines without the default
filtering based on add, change, delete, and view permissions:
class MyModelAdmin(admin.ModelAdmin):
inlines = (MyInline,)
def get_inline_instances(self, request, obj=None):
return [inline(self.model, self.admin_site) for inline in self.inlines]
If you override this method, make sure that the returned inlines are
instances of the classes defined in inlines
or you might encounter
a “Bad Request” error when adding related objects.
The get_inlines
method is given the HttpRequest
and the
obj
being edited (or None
on an add form) and is expected to return
an iterable of inlines. You can override this method to dynamically add
inlines based on the request or model instance instead of specifying them
in ModelAdmin.inlines
.
The get_urls
method on a ModelAdmin
returns the URLs to be used for
that ModelAdmin in the same way as a URLconf. Therefore you can extend
them as documented in URL dispatcher:
from django.contrib import admin
from django.template.response import TemplateResponse
from django.urls import path
class MyModelAdmin(admin.ModelAdmin):
def get_urls(self):
urls = super().get_urls()
my_urls = [
path('my_view/', self.my_view),
]
return my_urls + urls
def my_view(self, request):
# ...
context = dict(
# Include common variables for rendering the admin template.
self.admin_site.each_context(request),
# Anything else you want in the context...
key=value,
)
return TemplateResponse(request, "sometemplate.html", context)
If you want to use the admin layout, extend from admin/base_site.html
:
{% extends "admin/base_site.html" %}
{% block content %}
...
{% endblock %}
Note
Notice that the custom patterns are included before the regular admin URLs: the admin URL patterns are very permissive and will match nearly anything, so you’ll usually want to prepend your custom URLs to the built-in ones.
In this example, my_view
will be accessed at
/admin/myapp/mymodel/my_view/
(assuming the admin URLs are included
at /admin/
.)
However, the self.my_view
function registered above suffers from two
problems:
It will not perform any permission checks, so it will be accessible to the general public.
It will not provide any header details to prevent caching. This means if the page retrieves data from the database, and caching middleware is active, the page could show outdated information.
Since this is usually not what you want, Django provides a convenience
wrapper to check permissions and mark the view as non-cacheable. This
wrapper is AdminSite.admin_view()
(i.e. self.admin_site.admin_view
inside a ModelAdmin
instance); use it like so:
class MyModelAdmin(admin.ModelAdmin):
def get_urls(self):
urls = super().get_urls()
my_urls = [
path('my_view/', self.admin_site.admin_view(self.my_view))
]
return my_urls + urls
Notice the wrapped view in the fifth line above:
path('my_view/', self.admin_site.admin_view(self.my_view))
This wrapping will protect self.my_view
from unauthorized access and
will apply the django.views.decorators.cache.never_cache()
decorator to
make sure it is not cached if the cache middleware is active.
If the page is cacheable, but you still want the permission check to be
performed, you can pass a cacheable=True
argument to
AdminSite.admin_view()
:
path('my_view/', self.admin_site.admin_view(self.my_view, cacheable=True))
ModelAdmin
views have model_admin
attributes. Other
AdminSite
views have admin_site
attributes.
Returns a ModelForm
class for use in the admin add
and change views, see add_view()
and change_view()
.
The base implementation uses modelform_factory()
to subclass form
, modified by attributes such as fields
and exclude
. So, for example, if you wanted to offer additional
fields to superusers, you could swap in a different base form like so:
class MyModelAdmin(admin.ModelAdmin):
def get_form(self, request, obj=None, **kwargs):
if request.user.is_superuser:
kwargs['form'] = MySuperuserForm
return super().get_form(request, obj, **kwargs)
You may also return a custom ModelForm
class
directly.
Yields (FormSet
, InlineModelAdmin
) pairs for use in admin add
and change views.
For example if you wanted to display a particular inline only in the change
view, you could override get_formsets_with_inlines
as follows:
class MyModelAdmin(admin.ModelAdmin):
inlines = [MyInline, SomeOtherInline]
def get_formsets_with_inlines(self, request, obj=None):
for inline in self.get_inline_instances(request, obj):
# hide MyInline in the add view
if not isinstance(inline, MyInline) or obj is not None:
yield inline.get_formset(request, obj), inline
The formfield_for_foreignkey
method on a ModelAdmin
allows you to
override the default formfield for a foreign keys field. For example, to
return a subset of objects for this foreign key field based on the user:
class MyModelAdmin(admin.ModelAdmin):
def formfield_for_foreignkey(self, db_field, request, **kwargs):
if db_field.name == "car":
kwargs["queryset"] = Car.objects.filter(owner=request.user)
return super().formfield_for_foreignkey(db_field, request, **kwargs)
This uses the HttpRequest
instance to filter the Car
foreign key
field to only display the cars owned by the User
instance.
For more complex filters, you can use ModelForm.__init__()
method to
filter based on an instance
of your model (see
Fields which handle relationships). For example:
class CountryAdminForm(forms.ModelForm):
def __init__(self, *args, **kwargs):
super().__init__(*args, **kwargs)
self.fields['capital'].queryset = self.instance.cities.all()
class CountryAdmin(admin.ModelAdmin):
form = CountryAdminForm
Like the formfield_for_foreignkey
method, the
formfield_for_manytomany
method can be overridden to change the
default formfield for a many to many field. For example, if an owner can
own multiple cars and cars can belong to multiple owners – a many to
many relationship – you could filter the Car
foreign key field to
only display the cars owned by the User
:
class MyModelAdmin(admin.ModelAdmin):
def formfield_for_manytomany(self, db_field, request, **kwargs):
if db_field.name == "cars":
kwargs["queryset"] = Car.objects.filter(owner=request.user)
return super().formfield_for_manytomany(db_field, request, **kwargs)
Like the formfield_for_foreignkey
and formfield_for_manytomany
methods, the formfield_for_choice_field
method can be overridden to
change the default formfield for a field that has declared choices. For
example, if the choices available to a superuser should be different than
those available to regular staff, you could proceed as follows:
class MyModelAdmin(admin.ModelAdmin):
def formfield_for_choice_field(self, db_field, request, **kwargs):
if db_field.name == "status":
kwargs['choices'] = (
('accepted', 'Accepted'),
('denied', 'Denied'),
)
if request.user.is_superuser:
kwargs['choices'] += (('ready', 'Ready for deployment'),)
return super().formfield_for_choice_field(db_field, request, **kwargs)
Note
Any choices
attribute set on the formfield will be limited to the
form field only. If the corresponding field on the model has choices
set, the choices provided to the form must be a valid subset of those
choices, otherwise the form submission will fail with
a ValidationError
when the model itself
is validated before saving.
Returns the Changelist
class to be used for listing. By default,
django.contrib.admin.views.main.ChangeList
is used. By inheriting this
class you can change the behavior of the listing.
Returns a ModelForm
class for use in the Formset
on the changelist page. To use a custom form, for example:
from django import forms
class MyForm(forms.ModelForm):
pass
class MyModelAdmin(admin.ModelAdmin):
def get_changelist_form(self, request, **kwargs):
return MyForm
Note
If you define the Meta.model
attribute on a
ModelForm
, you must also define the
Meta.fields
attribute (or the Meta.exclude
attribute). However,
ModelAdmin
ignores this value, overriding it with the
ModelAdmin.list_editable
attribute. The easiest solution is to
omit the Meta.model
attribute, since ModelAdmin
will provide the
correct model to use.
Returns a ModelFormSet class for use on the
changelist page if list_editable
is used. To use a
custom formset, for example:
from django.forms import BaseModelFormSet
class MyAdminFormSet(BaseModelFormSet):
pass
class MyModelAdmin(admin.ModelAdmin):
def get_changelist_formset(self, request, **kwargs):
kwargs['formset'] = MyAdminFormSet
return super().get_changelist_formset(request, **kwargs)
The objects in the changelist page can be filtered with lookups from the
URL’s query string. This is how list_filter
works, for example. The
lookups are similar to what’s used in QuerySet.filter()
(e.g.
user__email=user@example.com
). Since the lookups in the query string
can be manipulated by the user, they must be sanitized to prevent
unauthorized data exposure.
The lookup_allowed()
method is given a lookup path from the query string
(e.g. 'user__email'
) and the corresponding value
(e.g. 'user@example.com'
), and returns a boolean indicating whether
filtering the changelist’s QuerySet
using the parameters is permitted.
If lookup_allowed()
returns False
, DisallowedModelAdminLookup
(subclass of SuspiciousOperation
) is raised.
By default, lookup_allowed()
allows access to a model’s local fields,
field paths used in list_filter
(but not paths from
get_list_filter()
), and lookups required for
limit_choices_to
to function
correctly in raw_id_fields
.
Override this method to customize the lookups permitted for your
ModelAdmin
subclass.
Should return True
if viewing obj
is permitted, False
otherwise.
If obj is None
, should return True
or False
to indicate whether
viewing of objects of this type is permitted in general (e.g., False
will be interpreted as meaning that the current user is not permitted to
view any object of this type).
The default implementation returns True
if the user has either the
“change” or “view” permission.
Should return True
if adding an object is permitted, False
otherwise.
Should return True
if editing obj
is permitted, False
otherwise. If obj
is None
, should return True
or False
to
indicate whether editing of objects of this type is permitted in general
(e.g., False
will be interpreted as meaning that the current user is
not permitted to edit any object of this type).
Should return True
if deleting obj
is permitted, False
otherwise. If obj
is None
, should return True
or False
to
indicate whether deleting objects of this type is permitted in general
(e.g., False
will be interpreted as meaning that the current user is
not permitted to delete any object of this type).
Should return True
if displaying the module on the admin index page and
accessing the module’s index page is permitted, False
otherwise.
Uses User.has_module_perms()
by default. Overriding
it does not restrict access to the view, add, change, or delete views,
has_view_permission()
,
has_add_permission()
,
has_change_permission()
, and
has_delete_permission()
should be used for that.
The get_queryset
method on a ModelAdmin
returns a
QuerySet
of all model instances that
can be edited by the admin site. One use case for overriding this method
is to show objects owned by the logged-in user:
class MyModelAdmin(admin.ModelAdmin):
def get_queryset(self, request):
qs = super().get_queryset(request)
if request.user.is_superuser:
return qs
return qs.filter(author=request.user)
Sends a message to the user using the django.contrib.messages
backend. See the custom ModelAdmin example.
Keyword arguments allow you to change the message level, add extra CSS
tags, or fail silently if the contrib.messages
framework is not
installed. These keyword arguments match those for
django.contrib.messages.add_message()
, see that function’s
documentation for more details. One difference is that the level may be
passed as a string label in addition to integer/constant.
Returns an instance of the paginator to use for this view. By default,
instantiates an instance of paginator
.
Determines the HttpResponse
for the
add_view()
stage.
response_add
is called after the admin form is submitted and
just after the object and all the related instances have
been created and saved. You can override it to change the default behavior
after the object has been created.
Determines the HttpResponse
for the
change_view()
stage.
response_change
is called after the admin form is submitted and
just after the object and all the related instances have
been saved. You can override it to change the default
behavior after the object has been changed.
Determines the HttpResponse
for the
delete_view()
stage.
response_delete
is called after the object has been
deleted. You can override it to change the default
behavior after the object has been deleted.
obj_display
is a string with the name of the deleted
object.
obj_id
is the serialized identifier used to retrieve the object to be
deleted.
A hook for the initial data on admin change forms. By default, fields are
given initial values from GET
parameters. For instance,
?name=initial_value
will set the name
field’s initial value to be
initial_value
.
This method should return a dictionary in the form
{'fieldname': 'fieldval'}
:
def get_changeform_initial_data(self, request):
return {'name': 'custom_initial_value'}
A hook for customizing the deletion process of the delete_view()
and
the “delete selected” action.
The objs
argument is a homogeneous iterable of objects (a QuerySet
or a list of model instances) to be deleted, and request
is the
HttpRequest
.
This method must return a 4-tuple of
(deleted_objects, model_count, perms_needed, protected)
.
deleted_objects
is a list of strings representing all the objects that
will be deleted. If there are any related objects to be deleted, the list
is nested and includes those related objects. The list is formatted in the
template using the unordered_list
filter.
model_count
is a dictionary mapping each model’s
verbose_name_plural
to the number of
objects that will be deleted.
perms_needed
is a set of verbose_name
s
of the models that the user doesn’t have permission to delete.
protected
is a list of strings representing of all the protected
related objects that can’t be deleted. The list is displayed in the
template.
Django view for the model instance addition page. See note below.
Django view for the model instance editing page. See note below.
Django view for the model instances change list/actions page. See note below.
Django view for the model instance(s) deletion confirmation page. See note below.
Django view for the page that shows the modification history for a given model instance.
Unlike the hook-type ModelAdmin
methods detailed in the previous section,
these five methods are in reality designed to be invoked as Django views from
the admin application URL dispatching handler to render the pages that deal
with model instances CRUD operations. As a result, completely overriding these
methods will significantly change the behavior of the admin application.
One common reason for overriding these methods is to augment the context data that is provided to the template that renders the view. In the following example, the change view is overridden so that the rendered template is provided some extra mapping data that would not otherwise be available:
class MyModelAdmin(admin.ModelAdmin):
# A template for a very customized change view:
change_form_template = 'admin/myapp/extras/openstreetmap_change_form.html'
def get_osm_info(self):
# ...
pass
def change_view(self, request, object_id, form_url='', extra_context=None):
extra_context = extra_context or {}
extra_context['osm_data'] = self.get_osm_info()
return super().change_view(
request, object_id, form_url, extra_context=extra_context,
)
These views return TemplateResponse
instances which allow you to easily customize the response data before
rendering. For more details, see the TemplateResponse documentation.
ModelAdmin
asset definitions¶There are times where you would like add a bit of CSS and/or JavaScript to
the add/change views. This can be accomplished by using a Media
inner class
on your ModelAdmin
:
class ArticleAdmin(admin.ModelAdmin):
class Media:
css = {
"all": ("my_styles.css",)
}
js = ("my_code.js",)
The staticfiles app prepends
STATIC_URL
(or MEDIA_URL
if STATIC_URL
is
None
) to any asset paths. The same rules apply as regular asset
definitions on forms.
Django admin JavaScript makes use of the jQuery library.
To avoid conflicts with user-supplied scripts or libraries, Django’s jQuery
(version 3.5.1) is namespaced as django.jQuery
. If you want to use jQuery
in your own admin JavaScript without including a second copy, you can use the
django.jQuery
object on changelist and add/edit views. Also, your own admin
forms or widgets depending on django.jQuery
must specify
js=['admin/js/jquery.init.js', …]
when declaring form media assets.
jQuery was upgraded from 3.4.1 to 3.5.1.
The ModelAdmin
class requires jQuery by default, so there is no need
to add jQuery to your ModelAdmin
’s list of media resources unless you have
a specific need. For example, if you require the jQuery library to be in the
global namespace (for example when using third-party jQuery plugins) or if you
need a newer version of jQuery, you will have to include your own copy.
Django provides both uncompressed and ‘minified’ versions of jQuery, as
jquery.js
and jquery.min.js
respectively.
ModelAdmin
and InlineModelAdmin
have a media
property
that returns a list of Media
objects which store paths to the JavaScript
files for the forms and/or formsets. If DEBUG
is True
it will
return the uncompressed versions of the various JavaScript files, including
jquery.js
; if not, it will return the ‘minified’ versions.
You can also add custom validation of data in the admin. The automatic admin
interface reuses django.forms
, and the ModelAdmin
class gives you
the ability to define your own form:
class ArticleAdmin(admin.ModelAdmin):
form = MyArticleAdminForm
MyArticleAdminForm
can be defined anywhere as long as you import where
needed. Now within your form you can add your own custom validation for
any field:
class MyArticleAdminForm(forms.ModelForm):
def clean_name(self):
# do something that validates your data
return self.cleaned_data["name"]
It is important you use a ModelForm
here otherwise things can break. See
the forms documentation on custom validation and, more specifically, the
model form validation notes for more
information.
InlineModelAdmin
objects¶The admin interface has the ability to edit models on the same page as a parent model. These are called inlines. Suppose you have these two models:
from django.db import models
class Author(models.Model):
name = models.CharField(max_length=100)
class Book(models.Model):
author = models.ForeignKey(Author, on_delete=models.CASCADE)
title = models.CharField(max_length=100)
You can edit the books authored by an author on the author page. You add
inlines to a model by specifying them in a ModelAdmin.inlines
:
from django.contrib import admin
class BookInline(admin.TabularInline):
model = Book
class AuthorAdmin(admin.ModelAdmin):
inlines = [
BookInline,
]
Django provides two subclasses of InlineModelAdmin
and they are:
The difference between these two is merely the template used to render them.
InlineModelAdmin
options¶InlineModelAdmin
shares many of the same features as ModelAdmin
, and
adds some of its own (the shared features are actually defined in the
BaseModelAdmin
superclass). The shared features are:
The InlineModelAdmin
class adds or customizes:
The model which the inline is using. This is required.
The name of the foreign key on the model. In most cases this will be dealt
with automatically, but fk_name
must be specified explicitly if there
are more than one foreign key to the same parent model.
This defaults to BaseInlineFormSet
. Using
your own formset can give you many possibilities of customization. Inlines
are built around model formsets.
The value for form
defaults to ModelForm
. This is what is passed
through to inlineformset_factory()
when
creating the formset for this inline.
Warning
When writing custom validation for InlineModelAdmin
forms, be cautious
of writing validation that relies on features of the parent model. If the
parent model fails to validate, it may be left in an inconsistent state as
described in the warning in Validation on a ModelForm.
A list or tuple containing extra CSS classes to apply to the fieldset that
is rendered for the inlines. Defaults to None
. As with classes
configured in fieldsets
, inlines with a collapse
class will be initially collapsed and their header will have a small “show”
link.
This controls the number of extra forms the formset will display in addition to the initial forms. Defaults to 3. See the formsets documentation for more information.
For users with JavaScript-enabled browsers, an “Add another” link is
provided to enable any number of additional inlines to be added in addition
to those provided as a result of the extra
argument.
The dynamic link will not appear if the number of currently displayed forms
exceeds max_num
, or if the user does not have JavaScript enabled.
InlineModelAdmin.get_extra()
also allows you to customize the number
of extra forms.
This controls the maximum number of forms to show in the inline. This doesn’t directly correlate to the number of objects, but can if the value is small enough. See Limiting the number of editable objects for more information.
InlineModelAdmin.get_max_num()
also allows you to customize the
maximum number of extra forms.
This controls the minimum number of forms to show in the inline.
See modelformset_factory()
for more information.
InlineModelAdmin.get_min_num()
also allows you to customize the
minimum number of displayed forms.
By default, Django’s admin uses a select-box interface (<select>) for
fields that are ForeignKey
. Sometimes you don’t want to incur the
overhead of having to select all the related instances to display in the
drop-down.
raw_id_fields
is a list of fields you would like to change into an
Input
widget for either a ForeignKey
or ManyToManyField
:
class BookInline(admin.TabularInline):
model = Book
raw_id_fields = ("pages",)
The template used to render the inline on the page.
An override to the verbose_name
found in the model’s inner Meta
class.
An override to the verbose_name_plural
found in the model’s inner
Meta
class.
Specifies whether or not inline objects can be deleted in the inline.
Defaults to True
.
Specifies whether or not inline objects that can be changed in the
admin have a link to the change form. Defaults to False
.
Returns a BaseInlineFormSet
class for use in
admin add/change views. obj
is the parent object being edited or
None
when adding a new parent. See the example for
ModelAdmin.get_formsets_with_inlines
.
Returns the number of extra inline forms to use. By default, returns the
InlineModelAdmin.extra
attribute.
Override this method to programmatically determine the number of extra
inline forms. For example, this may be based on the model instance
(passed as the keyword argument obj
):
class BinaryTreeAdmin(admin.TabularInline):
model = BinaryTree
def get_extra(self, request, obj=None, **kwargs):
extra = 2
if obj:
return extra - obj.binarytree_set.count()
return extra
Returns the maximum number of extra inline forms to use. By default,
returns the InlineModelAdmin.max_num
attribute.
Override this method to programmatically determine the maximum number of
inline forms. For example, this may be based on the model instance
(passed as the keyword argument obj
):
class BinaryTreeAdmin(admin.TabularInline):
model = BinaryTree
def get_max_num(self, request, obj=None, **kwargs):
max_num = 10
if obj and obj.parent:
return max_num - 5
return max_num
Returns the minimum number of inline forms to use. By default,
returns the InlineModelAdmin.min_num
attribute.
Override this method to programmatically determine the minimum number of
inline forms. For example, this may be based on the model instance
(passed as the keyword argument obj
).
Should return True
if adding an inline object is permitted, False
otherwise. obj
is the parent object being edited or None
when
adding a new parent.
Should return True
if editing an inline object is permitted, False
otherwise. obj
is the parent object being edited.
Should return True
if deleting an inline object is permitted, False
otherwise. obj
is the parent object being edited.
Note
The obj
argument passed to InlineModelAdmin
methods is the parent
object being edited or None
when adding a new parent.
It is sometimes possible to have more than one foreign key to the same model. Take this model for instance:
from django.db import models
class Friendship(models.Model):
to_person = models.ForeignKey(Person, on_delete=models.CASCADE, related_name="friends")
from_person = models.ForeignKey(Person, on_delete=models.CASCADE, related_name="from_friends")
If you wanted to display an inline on the Person
admin add/change pages
you need to explicitly define the foreign key since it is unable to do so
automatically:
from django.contrib import admin
from myapp.models import Friendship
class FriendshipInline(admin.TabularInline):
model = Friendship
fk_name = "to_person"
class PersonAdmin(admin.ModelAdmin):
inlines = [
FriendshipInline,
]
By default, admin widgets for many-to-many relations will be displayed
on whichever model contains the actual reference to the
ManyToManyField
. Depending on your ModelAdmin
definition, each many-to-many field in your model will be represented by a
standard HTML <select multiple>
, a horizontal or vertical filter, or a
raw_id_fields
widget. However, it is also possible to replace these
widgets with inlines.
Suppose we have the following models:
from django.db import models
class Person(models.Model):
name = models.CharField(max_length=128)
class Group(models.Model):
name = models.CharField(max_length=128)
members = models.ManyToManyField(Person, related_name='groups')
If you want to display many-to-many relations using an inline, you can do
so by defining an InlineModelAdmin
object for the relationship:
from django.contrib import admin
class MembershipInline(admin.TabularInline):
model = Group.members.through
class PersonAdmin(admin.ModelAdmin):
inlines = [
MembershipInline,
]
class GroupAdmin(admin.ModelAdmin):
inlines = [
MembershipInline,
]
exclude = ('members',)
There are two features worth noting in this example.
Firstly - the MembershipInline
class references Group.members.through
.
The through
attribute is a reference to the model that manages the
many-to-many relation. This model is automatically created by Django when you
define a many-to-many field.
Secondly, the GroupAdmin
must manually exclude the members
field.
Django displays an admin widget for a many-to-many field on the model that
defines the relation (in this case, Group
). If you want to use an inline
model to represent the many-to-many relationship, you must tell Django’s admin
to not display this widget - otherwise you will end up with two widgets on
your admin page for managing the relation.
Note that when using this technique the
m2m_changed
signals aren’t triggered. This
is because as far as the admin is concerned, through
is just a model with
two foreign key fields rather than a many-to-many relation.
In all other respects, the InlineModelAdmin
is exactly the same as any
other. You can customize the appearance using any of the normal
ModelAdmin
properties.
When you specify an intermediary model using the through
argument to a
ManyToManyField
, the admin will not display a
widget by default. This is because each instance of that intermediary model
requires more information than could be displayed in a single widget, and the
layout required for multiple widgets will vary depending on the intermediate
model.
However, we still want to be able to edit that information inline. Fortunately, we can do this with inline admin models. Suppose we have the following models:
from django.db import models
class Person(models.Model):
name = models.CharField(max_length=128)
class Group(models.Model):
name = models.CharField(max_length=128)
members = models.ManyToManyField(Person, through='Membership')
class Membership(models.Model):
person = models.ForeignKey(Person, on_delete=models.CASCADE)
group = models.ForeignKey(Group, on_delete=models.CASCADE)
date_joined = models.DateField()
invite_reason = models.CharField(max_length=64)
The first step in displaying this intermediate model in the admin is to
define an inline class for the Membership
model:
class MembershipInline(admin.TabularInline):
model = Membership
extra = 1
This example uses the default InlineModelAdmin
values for the
Membership
model, and limits the extra add forms to one. This could be
customized using any of the options available to InlineModelAdmin
classes.
Now create admin views for the Person
and Group
models:
class PersonAdmin(admin.ModelAdmin):
inlines = (MembershipInline,)
class GroupAdmin(admin.ModelAdmin):
inlines = (MembershipInline,)
Finally, register your Person
and Group
models with the admin site:
admin.site.register(Person, PersonAdmin)
admin.site.register(Group, GroupAdmin)
Now your admin site is set up to edit Membership
objects inline from
either the Person
or the Group
detail pages.
It is possible to use an inline with generically related objects. Let’s say you have the following models:
from django.contrib.contenttypes.fields import GenericForeignKey
from django.db import models
class Image(models.Model):
image = models.ImageField(upload_to="images")
content_type = models.ForeignKey(ContentType, on_delete=models.CASCADE)
object_id = models.PositiveIntegerField()
content_object = GenericForeignKey("content_type", "object_id")
class Product(models.Model):
name = models.CharField(max_length=100)
If you want to allow editing and creating an Image
instance on the
Product
, add/change views you can use
GenericTabularInline
or GenericStackedInline
(both
subclasses of GenericInlineModelAdmin
)
provided by admin
. They implement tabular
and stacked visual layouts for the forms representing the inline objects,
respectively, just like their non-generic counterparts. They behave just like
any other inline. In your admin.py
for this example app:
from django.contrib import admin
from django.contrib.contenttypes.admin import GenericTabularInline
from myapp.models import Image, Product
class ImageInline(GenericTabularInline):
model = Image
class ProductAdmin(admin.ModelAdmin):
inlines = [
ImageInline,
]
admin.site.register(Product, ProductAdmin)
See the contenttypes documentation for more specific information.
You can override many of the templates which the admin module uses to generate the various pages of an admin site. You can even override a few of these templates for a specific app, or a specific model.
The admin template files are located in the contrib/admin/templates/admin
directory.
In order to override one or more of them, first create an admin
directory
in your project’s templates
directory. This can be any of the directories
you specified in the DIRS
option of the
DjangoTemplates
backend in the TEMPLATES
setting. If you have
customized the 'loaders'
option, be sure
'django.template.loaders.filesystem.Loader'
appears before
'django.template.loaders.app_directories.Loader'
so that your custom
templates will be found by the template loading system before those that are
included with django.contrib.admin
.
Within this admin
directory, create sub-directories named after your app.
Within these app subdirectories create sub-directories named after your models.
Note, that the admin app will lowercase the model name when looking for the
directory, so make sure you name the directory in all lowercase if you are
going to run your app on a case-sensitive filesystem.
To override an admin template for a specific app, copy and edit the template
from the django/contrib/admin/templates/admin
directory, and save it to one
of the directories you just created.
For example, if we wanted to add a tool to the change list view for all the
models in an app named my_app
, we would copy
contrib/admin/templates/admin/change_list.html
to the
templates/admin/my_app/
directory of our project, and make any necessary
changes.
If we wanted to add a tool to the change list view for only a specific model
named ‘Page’, we would copy that same file to the
templates/admin/my_app/page
directory of our project.
Because of the modular design of the admin templates, it is usually neither necessary nor advisable to replace an entire template. It is almost always better to override only the section of the template which you need to change.
To continue the example above, we want to add a new link next to the
History
tool for the Page
model. After looking at change_form.html
we determine that we only need to override the object-tools-items
block.
Therefore here is our new change_form.html
:
{% extends "admin/change_form.html" %}
{% load i18n admin_urls %}
{% block object-tools-items %}
<li>
<a href="{% url opts|admin_urlname:'history' original.pk|admin_urlquote %}" class="historylink">{% translate "History" %}</a>
</li>
<li>
<a href="mylink/" class="historylink">My Link</a>
</li>
{% if has_absolute_url %}
<li>
<a href="{% url 'admin:view_on_site' content_type_id original.pk %}" class="viewsitelink">{% translate "View on site" %}</a>
</li>
{% endif %}
{% endblock %}
And that’s it! If we placed this file in the templates/admin/my_app
directory, our link would appear on the change form for all models within
my_app.
Not every template in contrib/admin/templates/admin
may be overridden per
app or per model. The following can:
actions.html
app_index.html
change_form.html
change_form_object_tools.html
change_list.html
change_list_object_tools.html
change_list_results.html
date_hierarchy.html
delete_confirmation.html
object_history.html
pagination.html
popup_response.html
prepopulated_fields_js.html
search_form.html
submit_line.html
For those templates that cannot be overridden in this way, you may still
override them for your entire project by placing the new version in your
templates/admin
directory. This is particularly useful to create custom 404
and 500 pages.
Note
Some of the admin templates, such as change_list_results.html
are used
to render custom inclusion tags. These may be overridden, but in such cases
you are probably better off creating your own version of the tag in
question and giving it a different name. That way you can use it
selectively.
If you wish to change the index, login or logout templates, you are better off
creating your own AdminSite
instance (see below), and changing the
AdminSite.index_template
, AdminSite.login_template
or
AdminSite.logout_template
properties.
The admin uses CSS variables to define colors. This allows changing colors
without having to override many individual CSS rules. For example, if you
preferred purple instead of blue you could add a admin/base.html
template
override to your project:
{% extends 'admin/base.html' %}
{% block extrastyle %}{{ block.super }}
<style>
:root {
--primary: #9774d5;
--secondary: #785cab;
--link-fg: #7c449b;
--link-selected-fg: #8f5bb2;
}
</style>
{% endblock %}
A dark theme is defined, and applied respecting the prefers-color-scheme media query.
The list of CSS variables are defined at
django/contrib/admin/static/admin/css/base.css
.
AdminSite
objects¶A Django administrative site is represented by an instance of
django.contrib.admin.sites.AdminSite
; by default, an instance of
this class is created as django.contrib.admin.site
and you can
register your models and ModelAdmin
instances with it.
If you want to customize the default admin site, you can override it.
When constructing an instance of an AdminSite
, you can provide
a unique instance name using the name
argument to the constructor. This
instance name is used to identify the instance, especially when
reversing admin URLs. If no instance name is
provided, a default instance name of admin
will be used.
See Customizing the AdminSite class for an example of customizing the
AdminSite
class.
AdminSite
attributes¶Templates can override or extend base admin templates as described in Overriding admin templates.
The text to put at the top of each admin page, as an <h1>
(a string).
By default, this is “Django administration”.
The text to put at the end of each admin page’s <title>
(a string). By
default, this is “Django site admin”.
The URL for the “View site” link at the top of each admin page. By default,
site_url
is /
. Set it to None
to remove the link.
For sites running on a subpath, the each_context()
method checks if
the current request has request.META['SCRIPT_NAME']
set and uses that
value if site_url
isn’t set to something other than /
.
The text to put at the top of the admin index page (a string). By default, this is “Site administration”.
Path to a custom template that will be used by the admin site main index view.
Path to a custom template that will be used by the admin site app index view.
The string to use for displaying empty values in the admin site’s change
list. Defaults to a dash. The value can also be overridden on a per
ModelAdmin
basis and on a custom field within a ModelAdmin
by
setting an empty_value_display
attribute on the field. See
ModelAdmin.empty_value_display
for examples.
A boolean value that determines whether to show the navigation sidebar
on larger screens. By default, it is set to True
.
A boolean value that determines whether to add a final catch-all view to
the admin that redirects unauthenticated users to the login page. By
default, it is set to True
.
Warning
Setting this to False
is not recommended as the view protects
against a potential model enumeration privacy issue.
Path to a custom template that will be used by the admin site login view.
Subclass of AuthenticationForm
that
will be used by the admin site login view.
Path to a custom template that will be used by the admin site logout view.
Path to a custom template that will be used by the admin site password change view.
Path to a custom template that will be used by the admin site password change done view.
AdminSite
methods¶Returns a dictionary of variables to put in the template context for every page in the admin site.
Includes the following variables and values by default:
site_header
: AdminSite.site_header
site_title
: AdminSite.site_title
site_url
: AdminSite.site_url
has_permission
: AdminSite.has_permission()
available_apps
: a list of applications from the application registry available for the current user. Each entry in the
list is a dict representing an application with the following keys:
app_label
: the application label
app_url
: the URL of the application index in the admin
has_module_perms
: a boolean indicating if displaying and accessing of
the module’s index page is permitted for the current user
models
: a list of the models available in the application
Each model is a dict with the following keys:
object_name
: class name of the model
name
: plural name of the model
perms
: a dict
tracking add
, change
, delete
, and
view
permissions
admin_url
: admin changelist URL for the model
add_url
: admin URL to add a new model instance
Returns True
if the user for the given HttpRequest
has permission
to view at least one page in the admin site. Defaults to requiring both
User.is_active
and
User.is_staff
to be
True
.
Registers the given model class (or iterable of classes) with the given
admin_class
. admin_class
defaults to
ModelAdmin
(the default admin options). If
keyword arguments are given – e.g. list_display
– they’ll be applied
as options to the admin class.
Raises ImproperlyConfigured
if a model is
abstract. and django.contrib.admin.sites.AlreadyRegistered
if a model
is already registered.
Unregisters the given model class (or iterable of classes).
Raises django.contrib.admin.sites.NotRegistered
if a model isn’t
already registered.
AdminSite
instances into your URLconf¶The last step in setting up the Django admin is to hook your AdminSite
instance into your URLconf. Do this by pointing a given URL at the
AdminSite.urls
method. It is not necessary to use
include()
.
In this example, we register the default AdminSite
instance
django.contrib.admin.site
at the URL /admin/
# urls.py
from django.contrib import admin
from django.urls import path
urlpatterns = [
path('admin/', admin.site.urls),
]
AdminSite
class¶If you’d like to set up your own admin site with custom behavior, you’re free
to subclass AdminSite
and override or add anything you like. Then, create
an instance of your AdminSite
subclass (the same way you’d instantiate any
other Python class) and register your models and ModelAdmin
subclasses with
it instead of with the default site. Finally, update myproject/urls.py
to reference your AdminSite
subclass.
from django.contrib.admin import AdminSite
from .models import MyModel
class MyAdminSite(AdminSite):
site_header = 'Monty Python administration'
admin_site = MyAdminSite(name='myadmin')
admin_site.register(MyModel)
from django.urls import path
from myapp.admin import admin_site
urlpatterns = [
path('myadmin/', admin_site.urls),
]
Note that you may not want autodiscovery of admin
modules when using your
own AdminSite
instance since you will likely be importing all the per-app
admin
modules in your myproject.admin
module. This means you need to
put 'django.contrib.admin.apps.SimpleAdminConfig'
instead of
'django.contrib.admin'
in your INSTALLED_APPS
setting.
You can override the default django.contrib.admin.site
by setting the
default_site
attribute of a custom AppConfig
to the dotted import path of either a AdminSite
subclass or a callable that
returns a site instance.
from django.contrib import admin
class MyAdminSite(admin.AdminSite):
...
from django.contrib.admin.apps import AdminConfig
class MyAdminConfig(AdminConfig):
default_site = 'myproject.admin.MyAdminSite'
INSTALLED_APPS = [
...
'myproject.apps.MyAdminConfig', # replaces 'django.contrib.admin'
...
]
You can create multiple instances of the admin site on the same Django-powered
website. Create multiple instances of AdminSite
and place each one at a
different URL.
In this example, the URLs /basic-admin/
and /advanced-admin/
feature
separate versions of the admin site – using the AdminSite
instances
myproject.admin.basic_site
and myproject.admin.advanced_site
,
respectively:
# urls.py
from django.urls import path
from myproject.admin import advanced_site, basic_site
urlpatterns = [
path('basic-admin/', basic_site.urls),
path('advanced-admin/', advanced_site.urls),
]
AdminSite
instances take a single argument to their constructor, their
name, which can be anything you like. This argument becomes the prefix to the
URL names for the purposes of reversing them. This
is only necessary if you are using more than one AdminSite
.
Just like ModelAdmin
, AdminSite
provides a
get_urls()
method
that can be overridden to define additional views for the site. To add
a new view to your admin site, extend the base
get_urls()
method to include
a pattern for your new view.
Note
Any view you render that uses the admin templates, or extends the base
admin template, should set request.current_app
before rendering the
template. It should be set to either self.name
if your view is on an
AdminSite
or self.admin_site.name
if your view is on a
ModelAdmin
.
You can add a password reset feature to the admin site by adding a few lines to your URLconf. Specifically, add these four patterns:
from django.contrib.auth import views as auth_views
path(
'admin/password_reset/',
auth_views.PasswordResetView.as_view(),
name='admin_password_reset',
),
path(
'admin/password_reset/done/',
auth_views.PasswordResetDoneView.as_view(),
name='password_reset_done',
),
path(
'reset/<uidb64>/<token>/',
auth_views.PasswordResetConfirmView.as_view(),
name='password_reset_confirm',
),
path(
'reset/done/',
auth_views.PasswordResetCompleteView.as_view(),
name='password_reset_complete',
),
(This assumes you’ve added the admin at admin/
and requires that you put
the URLs starting with ^admin/
before the line that includes the admin app
itself).
The presence of the admin_password_reset
named URL will cause a “forgotten
your password?” link to appear on the default admin log-in page under the
password box.
LogEntry
objects¶The LogEntry
class tracks additions, changes, and deletions of objects
done through the admin interface.
LogEntry
attributes¶The date and time of the action.
The user (an AUTH_USER_MODEL
instance) who performed the
action.
The ContentType
of the
modified object.
The textual representation of the modified object’s primary key.
The object`s repr()
after the modification.
The type of action logged: ADDITION
, CHANGE
, DELETION
.
For example, to get a list of all additions done through the admin:
from django.contrib.admin.models import ADDITION, LogEntry
LogEntry.objects.filter(action_flag=ADDITION)
The detailed description of the modification. In the case of an edit, for
example, the message contains a list of the edited fields. The Django admin
site formats this content as a JSON structure, so that
get_change_message()
can recompose a message translated in the current
user language. Custom code might set this as a plain string though. You are
advised to use the get_change_message()
method to retrieve this value
instead of accessing it directly.
LogEntry
methods¶A shortcut that returns the referenced object.
Formats and translates change_message
into the current user
language. Messages created before Django 1.10 will always be displayed in
the language in which they were logged.
When an AdminSite
is deployed, the views provided by that site are
accessible using Django’s URL reversing system.
The AdminSite
provides the following named URL patterns:
Page |
URL name |
Parameters |
---|---|---|
Index |
|
|
Login |
|
|
Logout |
|
|
Password change |
|
|
Password change done |
|
|
i18n JavaScript |
|
|
Application index page |
|
|
Redirect to object’s page |
|
|
Each ModelAdmin
instance provides an additional set of named URLs:
Page |
URL name |
Parameters |
---|---|---|
Changelist |
|
|
Add |
|
|
History |
|
|
Delete |
|
|
Change |
|
|
The UserAdmin
provides a named URL:
Page |
URL name |
Parameters |
---|---|---|
Password change |
|
|
These named URLs are registered with the application namespace admin
, and
with an instance namespace corresponding to the name of the Site instance.
So - if you wanted to get a reference to the Change view for a particular
Choice
object (from the polls application) in the default admin, you would
call:
>>> from django.urls import reverse
>>> c = Choice.objects.get(...)
>>> change_url = reverse('admin:polls_choice_change', args=(c.id,))
This will find the first registered instance of the admin application
(whatever the instance name), and resolve to the view for changing
poll.Choice
instances in that instance.
If you want to find a URL in a specific admin instance, provide the name of
that instance as a current_app
hint to the reverse call. For example,
if you specifically wanted the admin view from the admin instance named
custom
, you would need to call:
>>> change_url = reverse('admin:polls_choice_change', args=(c.id,), current_app='custom')
For more details, see the documentation on reversing namespaced URLs.
To allow easier reversing of the admin urls in templates, Django provides an
admin_urlname
filter which takes an action as argument:
{% load admin_urls %}
<a href="{% url opts|admin_urlname:'add' %}">Add user</a>
<a href="{% url opts|admin_urlname:'delete' user.pk %}">Delete this user</a>
The action in the examples above match the last part of the URL names for
ModelAdmin
instances described above. The opts
variable can be any
object which has an app_label
and model_name
attributes and is usually
supplied by the admin views for the current model.
display
decorator¶This decorator can be used for setting specific attributes on custom
display functions that can be used with
list_display
or
readonly_fields
:
@admin.display(
boolean=True,
ordering='-publish_date',
description='Is Published?',
)
def is_published(self, obj):
return obj.publish_date is not None
This is equivalent to setting some attributes (with the original, longer names) on the function directly:
def is_published(self, obj):
return obj.publish_date is not None
is_published.boolean = True
is_published.admin_order_field = '-publish_date'
is_published.short_description = 'Is Published?'
Also note that the empty_value
decorator parameter maps to the
empty_value_display
attribute assigned directly to the function. It
cannot be used in conjunction with boolean
– they are mutually
exclusive.
Use of this decorator is not compulsory to make a display function, but it can be useful to use it without arguments as a marker in your source to identify the purpose of the function:
@admin.display
def published_year(self, obj):
return obj.publish_date.year
In this case it will add no attributes to the function.
staff_member_required
decorator¶This decorator is used on the admin views that require authorization. A view decorated with this function will have the following behavior:
If the user is logged in, is a staff member (User.is_staff=True
), and
is active (User.is_active=True
), execute the view normally.
Otherwise, the request will be redirected to the URL specified by the
login_url
parameter, with the originally requested path in a query
string variable specified by redirect_field_name
. For example:
/admin/login/?next=/admin/polls/question/3/
.
Example usage:
from django.contrib.admin.views.decorators import staff_member_required
@staff_member_required
def my_view(request):
...
Dec 25, 2023