Static site renderer and publisher for Django.
Project description
django-distill
django-distill
is a minimal configuration static site generator and publisher
for Django. Most Django versions are supported, however up to date versions are
advised including the Django 3.x releases. django-distill
as of the 1.7 release
only supports Python 3. Python 2 support has been dropped. If you require Python 2
support please pin django-distill
to version 1.6 in your requirements.txt or
Pipfile. Python 3.6 or above is advised.
django-distill
extends existing Django sites with the ability to export
fully functional static sites. It is suitable for sites such as blogs that have
a mostly static front end but you still want to use a CMS to manage the
content.
django-distill
iterates over URLs in your Django project using easy to write
iterable functions to yield the parameters for whatever pages you want to save
as static HTML. These static files can be automatically uploaded to a bucket-style
remote container such as Amazon S3 or Googe Cloud Files, or, written to a local
directory as a fully working local static version of your project. The site
generation, or distillation process, can be easily integrated into CI/CD workflows
to auto-deploy static sites on commit. django-distill
can be defined as an
extension to Django to make Django projects compatible with "Jamstack"-style site
architecture.
django-distill
plugs directly into the existing Django framework without the
need to write custom renderers or other more verbose code. You can also integrate
django-distill
with existing dynamic sites and just generate static pages for
a small subsection of pages rather than the entire site.
For static files on CDNs you can use the following 'cache buster' library to allow for fast static media updates when pushing changes:
https://github.com/meeb/django-cachekiller
There is a complete example site that creates a static blog and uses
django-distill
with django-cachekiller
via continuous deployment on Netlify
available here:
https://github.com/meeb/django-distill-example
Installation
Install from pip:
$ pip install django-distill
Add django_distill
to your INSTALLED_APPS
in your settings.py
:
INSTALLED_APPS = [
# ... other apps here ...
'django_distill',
]
That's it.
Limitations
django-distill
generates static pages and therefore only views which allow
GET
requests that return an HTTP 200
status code are supported.
It is assumed you are using URI parameters such as /blog/123-abc
and not
querystring parameters such as /blog?post_id=123&title=abc
. Querystring
parameters do not make sense for static page generation for obvious reasons.
Additionally With one-off static pages dynamic internationalisation won't work
so all files are generated using the LANGUAGE_CODE
value in your
settings.py
.
Static media files such as images and style sheets are copied from your static
media directory defined in STATIC_ROOT
. This means that you will want to run
./manage.py collectstatic
before you run ./manage.py distill-local
if you have made changes to static media. django-distill
doesn't chain this
request by design, however you can enable it with the --collectstatic
argument.
Usage
Assuming you have an existing Django project, edit a urls.py
to include the
distill_path
function which replaces Django's standard path
function and
supports the new keyword arguments distill_func
and distill_file
. The
distill_func
argument should be provided with a function or callable class
that returns an iterable or None. The distill_file
argument is entirely
optional and allows you to override the URL that would otherwise be generated
from the reverse of the URL regex. This allows you to rename URLs like
/example
to any other name like example.html
. As of v0.8 any URIs ending
in a slash /
are automatically modified to end in /index.html
. An example
distill setup for a theoretical blogging app would be:
# Replaces the standard django.conf.path, identical syntax
from django_distill import distill_path
# Views and models from a theoretical blogging app
from blog.views import PostIndex, PostView, PostYear
from blog.models import Post
def get_index():
# The index URI path, '', contains no parameters, named or otherwise.
# You can simply just return nothing here.
return None
def get_all_blogposts():
# This function needs to return an iterable of dictionaries. Dictionaries
# are required as the URL this distill function is for has named parameters.
# You can just export a small subset of values here if you wish to
# limit what pages will be generated.
for post in Post.objects.all():
yield {'blog_id': post_id, 'blog_title': post.title}
def get_years():
# You can also just return an iterable containing static strings if the
# URL only has one argument and you are using positional URL parameters:
return (2014, 2015)
# This is really just shorthand for ((2014,), (2015,))
urlpatterns = (
# e.g. / the blog index
distill_path('',
PostIndex.as_view(),
name='blog-index',
distill_func=get_index,
# / is not a valid file name! override it to index.html
distill_file='index.html'),
# e.g. /post/123-some-post-title using named parameters
distill_path('post/<int:blog_id>-<slug:blog_title>',
PostView.as_view(),
name='blog-post',
distill_func=get_all_blogposts),
# e.g. /posts-by-year/2015 using positional parameters
distill_path('posts-by-year/<int:year>',
PostYear.as_view(),
name='blog-year',
distill_func=get_years),
)
Your site will still function identically with the above changes. Internally
the distill_func
and distill_file
parameters are removed and the URL is
passed back to Django for normal processing. This has no runtime performance
impact as this happens only once upon starting the application.
You can use the distill_re_path
function as well, which replaces the default
django.urls.re_path
function. Its usage is identical to the above:
from django_distill import distill_re_path
urlpatterns = (
distill_re_path(r'some/regex'
SomeOtherView.as_view(),
name='url-other-view',
distill_func=some_other_func),
)
If you are using an older version of Django in the 1.x series you can use the
distill_url
function instead which replaces the django.conf.urls.url
or
django.urls.url
functions. Its usage is identical to the above:
from django_distill import distill_url
urlpatterns = (
distill_url(r'some/regex'
SomeView.as_view(),
name='url-view',
distill_func=some_func),
)
Non-standard status codes
All views rendered by django-distill
into static pages must return an HTTP 200 status
code. If for any reason you need to render a view which does not return an HTTP 200
status code, for example you also want to statically generate a 404 page which has a
view which (correctly) returns an HTTP 404 status code you can use the
distill_status_codes
optional argument to a view. For example:
from django_distill import distill_url
urlpatterns = (
distill_url(r'some/regex'
SomeView.as_view(),
name='url-view',
distill_status_codes=(200, 404),
distill_func=some_func),
)
The optional distill_status_codes
argument accepts a tuple of status codes as integers
which are permitted for the view to return without raising an error. By default this is
set to (200,)
but you can override it if you need to for your site.
Tracking Django's URL function support
django-distill
will mirror whatever your installed version of Django supports,
therefore at some point the distill_url
function will cease working in the future
when Django 2.x itself depreciates the django.conf.urls.url
and django.urls.url
functions. You can use distill_re_path
as a drop-in replacement. It is advisable to
use distill_path
or distill_re_path
if you're building a new site now.
The distill-local
command
Once you have wrapped the URLs you want to generate statically you can now generate a complete functioning static site with:
$ ./manage.py distill-local [optional /path/to/export/directory]
Under the hood this simply iterates all URLs registered with distill_url
and
generates the pages for them using parts of the Django testing framework to
spoof requests. Once the site pages have been rendered then files from the
STATIC_ROOT
are copied over. Existing files with the same name are replaced in
the target directory and orphan files are deleted.
distill-local
supports the following optional arguments:
--collectstatic
: Automatically run collectstatic
on your site before
rendering, this is just a shortcut to save you typing an extra command.
--quiet
: Disable all output other than asking confirmation questions.
--force
: Assume 'yes' to all confirmation questions.
--exclude-staticfiles
: Do not copy any static files at all, only render output from
Django views.
Note If any of your views contain a Python error then rendering will fail then the stack trace will be printed to the terminal and the rendering command will exit with a status code of 1.
The distill-publish
command
$ ./manage.py distill-publish [optional destination here]
If you have configured at least once publishing destination (see below) you can
use the distill-publish
command to publish the site to a remote location.
This will perform a full synchronisation, removing any remote files that are no
longer present in the generated static site and uploading any new or changed
files. The site will be built into a temporary directory locally first when
publishing which is deleted once the site has been published. Each file will be
checked that it has been published correctly by requesting it via the
PUBLIC_URL
.
distill-publish
supports the following optional arguments:
--collectstatic
: Automatically run collectstatic
on your site before
rendering, this is just a shortcut to save you typing an extra command.
--quiet
: Disable all output other than asking confirmation questions.
--force
: Assume 'yes' to all confirmation questions.
--exclude-staticfiles
: Do not copy any static files at all, only render output from
Django views.
Note that this means if you use --force
and --quiet
that the output
directory will have all files not part of the site export deleted without any
confirmation.
Note If any of your views contain a Python error then rendering will fail then the stack trace will be printed to the terminal and the rendering command will exit with a status code of 1.
The distill-test-publish
command
$ ./manage.py distill-test-publish [optional destination here]
This will connect to your publishing target, authenticate to it, upload a
randomly named file, verify it exists on the PUBLIC_URL
and then delete it
again. Use this to check your publishing settings are correct.
distill-test-publish
has no arguments.
Optional configuration settings
You can set the following optional settings.py
variables:
DISTILL_DIR: string, default directory to export to:
DISTILL_DIR = '/path/to/export/directory'
DISTILL_PUBLISH: dictionary, like Django's settings.DATABASES
, supports
default
:
DISTILL_PUBLISH = {
'default': {
... options ...
},
'some-other-target': {
... options ...
},
}
DISTILL_SKIP_ADMIN_DIRS: bool, defaults to True
DISTILL_SKIP_ADMIN_DIRS = True
Set DISTILL_SKIP_ADMIN_DIRS
to False
if you want django-distill
to also copy over
static files in the static/admin
directory. Usually, these are not required or
desired for statically generated sites. The default behaviour is to skip static admin
files.
Publishing targets
You can automatically publish sites to various supported remote targets through
backends just like how you can use MySQL, SQLite, PostgreSQL etc. with
Django by changing the backend database engine. Currently the engines supported
by django-distill
are:
django_distill.backends.amazon_s3: Publish to an Amazon S3 bucket. Requires
the Python library boto3
($ pip install boto3
). The bucket must already
exist (use the AWS control panel). Options:
'some-s3-container': {
'ENGINE': 'django_distill.backends.amazon_s3',
'PUBLIC_URL': 'http://.../',
'ACCESS_KEY_ID': '...',
'SECRET_ACCESS_KEY': '...',
'BUCKET': '...',
},
django_distill.backends.google_storage: Publish to a Google Cloud Storage
bucket. Requires the Python libraries google-api-python-client
and
google-cloud-storage
($ pip install google-api-python-client google-cloud-storage
). The bucket
must already exist and be set up to host a public static website (use the
Google Cloud control panel). Options:
'some-google-storage-bucket': {
'ENGINE': 'django_distill.backends.google_storage',
'PUBLIC_URL': 'https://storage.googleapis.com/[bucket.name.here]/',
'JSON_CREDENTIALS': '/path/to/some/credentials.json',
'BUCKET': '[bucket.name.here]',
},
Tests
There is a minimal test suite, you can run it by cloing this repository,
installing the required dependancies in requirements.txt
then execuiting:
# ./run-tests.py
Contributing
All properly formatted and sensible pull requests, issues and comments are welcome.
Project details
Release history Release notifications | RSS feed
Download files
Download the file for your platform. If you're not sure which to choose, learn more about installing packages.