Django comes with an optional redirects application. It lets you store
redirects in a database and handles the redirecting for you. It uses the HTTP
response status code 301 Moved Permanently
by default.
To install the redirects app, follow these steps:
Ensure that the django.contrib.sites
framework
is installed.
Add 'django.contrib.redirects'
to your INSTALLED_APPS
setting.
Add 'django.contrib.redirects.middleware.RedirectFallbackMiddleware'
to your MIDDLEWARE
setting.
Run the command manage.py migrate
.
manage.py migrate
creates a django_redirect
table in your database. This
is a lookup table with site_id
, old_path
and new_path
fields.
The RedirectFallbackMiddleware
does all of the work. Each time any Django application raises a 404
error, this middleware checks the redirects database for the requested
URL as a last resort. Specifically, it checks for a redirect with the
given old_path
with a site ID that corresponds to the
SITE_ID
setting.
If it finds a match, and new_path
is not empty, it redirects to
new_path
using a 301 (“Moved Permanently”) redirect. You can subclass
RedirectFallbackMiddleware
and set
response_redirect_class
to django.http.HttpResponseRedirect
to use a
302 Moved Temporarily
redirect instead.
If it finds a match, and new_path
is empty, it sends a 410 (“Gone”)
HTTP header and empty (content-less) response.
If it doesn’t find a match, the request continues to be processed as usual.
The middleware only gets activated for 404s – not for 500s or responses of any other status code.
Note that the order of MIDDLEWARE
matters. Generally, you can put
RedirectFallbackMiddleware
at the
end of the list, because it’s a last resort.
For more on middleware, read the middleware docs.
If you’ve activated the automatic Django admin interface, you should see a “Redirects” section on the admin index page. Edit redirects as you edit any other object in the system.
Redirects are represented by a standard Django model, which lives in django/contrib/redirects/models.py. You can access redirect objects via the Django database API. For example:
>>> from django.conf import settings
>>> from django.contrib.redirects.models import Redirect
>>> # Add a new redirect.
>>> redirect = Redirect.objects.create(
... site_id=1,
... old_path='/contact-us/',
... new_path='/contact/',
... )
>>> # Change a redirect.
>>> redirect.new_path = '/contact-details/'
>>> redirect.save()
>>> redirect
<Redirect: /contact-us/ ---> /contact-details/>
>>> # Delete a redirect.
>>> Redirect.objects.filter(site_id=1, old_path='/contact-us/').delete()
(1, {'redirects.Redirect': 1})
You can change the HttpResponse
classes used
by the middleware by creating a subclass of
RedirectFallbackMiddleware
and overriding response_gone_class
and/or response_redirect_class
.
The HttpResponse
class used when a
Redirect
is not found for the
requested path or has a blank new_path
value.
Defaults to HttpResponseGone
.
The HttpResponse
class that handles the redirect.
Defaults to HttpResponsePermanentRedirect
.
Dec 25, 2023