A Django app to log management commands
Project description
Django CommandLog adds the feature of logging the django management commands into the database so it’s available in the admin interface.
We’ve been using this to check the result of scheduled management commands directly through the admin interface. It works by copying the stream of stdout and stderr.
The decorator also adds some helper methods, see below.
Quick start
Add “django_commandlog” to your INSTALLED_APPS settings like this:
INSTALLED_APPS = [
...
'django_commandlog',
]
Run python manage.py migrate to add the tables of django_commandlog to your database.
3. To log an admin command, add the @command_log decorator above the class (see example below). Thus, it currently supports only custom management commands. If you wish to add this to default django manage commands you’ll have to create a child class with the decorator. Pull/Merge requests are welcome with a fix for this.
@command_log
class SampleCommand(BaseCommand):
def handle(self, *args, **options):
...
Configuration
There are currently no configuration values.
Helper methods
When your class is decorated with @command_log, you have access to additional methods.
CommandLog includes counters for basic CRUD operations (Create, Read, Update, Delete) which can be used through helper methods provided:
add_log_created(10)
add_log_read(30)
add_log_updated(20)
add_log_deleted(30)
add_log_errors(14)
There are two fields used to track the commands or runs: reference and user. Reference is any number you want to track in your manage commands.
You can also add a user to the tracking by using the add_log_user(user) method. user can be a string which will be kept as-is or you can use a settings.AUTH_USER_MODEL object.
add_log_reference("C1235342321")
add_log_user("user:ldap:username")
# or
add_log_user(user_instance)
Requirements
python 2.7, 3.4, 3.5
django 1.10
Tested on Django 1.10.3
Project details
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