A role based admin UI for Django that produces a user friendly and beautiful UI.
Project description
Django cradmin
Django custom role based admin UI.
Django cradmin is in BETA. The system is fairly stable, but:
- We do not have getting started guides.
- We should have better tests before release. Some parts have been prototyped a lot while we tested out different concepts, and they need a complexity review and better tests.
- Works with Django 4 and python >=3.8,<3.11
Develop
Requires:
Use conventional commits for GIT commit messages
See https://www.conventionalcommits.org/en/v1.0.0/. You can use this git commit message format in many different ways, but the easiest is:
- Use commitizen: https://commitizen-tools.github.io/commitizen/commit/
- Use an editor extension, like https://marketplace.visualstudio.com/items?itemName=vivaxy.vscode-conventional-commits for VScode.
- Just learn to write the format by hand (can be error prone to begin with, but it is fairly easy to learn).
Install hatch and commitizen
NOTE: You only need hatch if you need to build releases, and you only need commitizen for releases OR to make it easy to follow conventional commits for your commit messages (see Use conventional commits for GIT commit messages above).
First install pipx with:
$ brew install pipx
$ pipx ensurepath
Then install hatch and commitizen:
$ pipx install hatch
$ pipx install commitizen
See https://github.com/pypa/pipx, https://hatch.pypa.io/latest/install/ and https://commitizen-tools.github.io/commitizen/ for more install alternatives if needed, but we really recommend using pipx since that is isolated.
Install development dependencies
Install a local python version with pyenv:
$ pyenv install 3.10
$ pyenv local 3.10
Create virtualenv
$ ./recreate-virtualenv.sh
Alternatively, create virtualenv manually (this does the same as recreate-virtualenv.sh):
$ python -m venv .venv
the ./recreate-virtualenv.sh script is just here to make creating virtualenvs more uniform across different repos because some repos will require extra setup in the virtualenv for package authentication etc.
Install dependencies
$ python -m venv .venv
$ source .venv/bin/activate
$ pip install -e ".[dev, test]"
Run dev server
$ source .venv/bin/activate # enable virtualenv
$ ievv devrun
Run tests
$ source .venv/bin/activate # enable virtualenv
$ pytest django_cradmin
Docs
http://django-cradmin.readthedocs.org
License
3-clause BSD license. See the LICENSE file in the same directory as this readme file.
How to release django_cradmin
First make sure you have NO UNCOMITTED CHANGES!
Buildstatic
Remove the previous built static files:
$ git rm -r django_cradmin/apps/django_cradmin_js/static/django_cradmin_js/ django_cradmin/apps/django_cradmin_styles/static/django_cradmin_styles/
Bump only files
$ cz bump --files-only
Build static files
Create new production static files
$ ievv buildstatic --production
Commit static files
$ git add django_cradmin/apps/django_cradmin_js/static/django_cradmin_js/ django_cradmin/apps/django_cradmin_styles/static/django_cradmin_styles/
Commit with the message refactor(buildstatic): new version
Make tag
Create tag with the current version
$ git tag $(cz version --project)
Bump and push
$ cz bump $(cz version --project) --changelog
$ git push && git push --tags
NOTE:
cz bump
automatically updates CHANGELOG.md, updates version file(s), commits the change and tags the release commit.- If you are unsure about what
cz bump
will do, run it with--dry-run
. You can use options to force a specific version instead of the one it automatically selects from the git log if needed, BUT if this is needed, it is a sign that someone has messed up with their conventional commits.- When you push, the Azure devops pipeline will take care of the rest. It will see the
bump: version ...
commit, and release the python package to the artifact registry.cz bump
only works if conventional commits (see section about that above) is used.cz bump
can take a specific version etc, but it automatically select the correct version if conventional commits has been used correctly. See https://commitizen-tools.github.io/commitizen/.- If you need to add more to CHANGELOG.md (migration guide, etc), you can just edit CHANGELOG.md after the release, and commit the change with a
docs: some useful message
commit.- The
cz
command comes fromcommitizen
(install documented above).
What if the release fails?
See How to revert a bump in the commitizen FAQ.
Release to pypi:
$ hatch build -t sdist
$ hatch publish
$ rm dist/* # optional cleanup
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