A generic way to have post-deploy actions done.
Project description
Django Post Deploy
This module adds a way automate release-specific post-deploy/post-migrate actions to your Django project.
Features
- Allow actions to be scheduled with the deployment automation
- But also give the oppurtunity to keep special actions out of the automation and have those executed manually.
- Schedule the actions to be executed in Celery.
- The task scheduler is configurable, so you can write your own.
- Support for django_tenants.
Alternatives
Alternative to this module you can use:
- Management tasks. Used once and in the future confuse developers "Must we also maintain this code?"
- "Empty" migrations. That
- may or may not activate all custom expected code for it...
- may or may not depend on other migrations being completed.
Why use this module?
This module is of use for your application if you:
- want to keep management commands clean of one-time-used code.
- want to have release finishing tasks executed in a certain and known state of the application.
Example
# Inside a custom django module's post_deploy.py
from post_deploy import post_deploy_action
@post_deploy_action
def make_non_code_changes_to_complete_the_next_release():
pass
@post_deploy_action(auto=False)
def this_action_must_be_triggered_manually():
pass
# This line is added to your deployment automation script
python manage.py deploy --auto
# This line is executed when the time is right for specific actions
$ ./manage.py deploy --one core.this_action_must_be_triggered_manually
# Or like this: both auto and manual actions are scheduled:
$ ./manage.py deploy --all
# Inspect the status of the actions like so, to see if there are errors for any action.
$ ./manage.py deploy --report
Configuration
Out of the box the deploy management command runs the actions serially. However, if you use Celery you have to add this to your settings:
Celery
# inside your projects settings.py file:
POST_DEPLOY_CELERY_APP = 'module.path.to.your.projects.celery.app'
POST_DEPLOY_SCHEDULER_MANAGER = 'post_deploy.plugins.scheduler.celery.CeleryScheduler'
Custom scheduler manager
Below is a partial copy of othe Celery scheduler manager as an example on how to write one for your alternative task scheduler:
NOTICE: remember to configure your custom scheduler manager in your project settings.
from celery import Celery
from celery.result import AsyncResult
from post_deploy.plugins.scheduler import DefaultScheduler
class CeleryScheduler(DefaultScheduler):
...
def task_ready(self, id):
return AsyncResult(id=id, app=...).ready()
def schedule(self, action_ids, context_kwargs):
from post_deploy.tasks import deploy_task
result = deploy_task.delay(action_ids, context_kwargs)
return result.id
...
Django tenants
This module supports the django_tenants module. In order to make the post deploy actions tenant aware two things are different from normal operation. You have to (1) configure a context manager, and (2) the management command is a little different.
# inside your projects settings.py file:
POST_DEPLOY_CONTEXT_MANAGER = 'post_deploy.plugins.context.tenant.TenantContext'
# The tenant schema is transported to the celery task runner when the management
# command is executed in the given schema aware management commands. For example:
# all_tenants_command example:
$ ./manage.py all_tenants_command deploy --all
# tenant_command example:
$ ./manage.py tenant_command deploy --report --schema=public
Example on how to have actions behave different based on the selected schema:
# Inside a module's post_deploy.py
from django_tenants.utils import parse_tenant_config_path
from post_deploy import post_deploy_action
@post_deploy_action
def example_on_how_alter_operation_based_on_schema():
if parse_tenant_config_path("") == 'public':
# Do 'public' specific operations.
pass
# else, proceed as required.
...
Technical details
- This module provides a model, and therefore require a common relational database to be installed. There are however no relations between multiple models in this module, so it may be possible that it works with a non-relational database too. But it is not tested in non-relational database configurations.
License information
django_post_deploy (c) by Erlend ter Maat
django_post_deploy is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.
You should have received a copy of the license along with this work. If not, see http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/.
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