Skip to main content

Phoenix LiveView-style reactive components for Django with Rust-powered performance. Real-time UI updates over WebSocket, no JavaScript build step required.

Project description

djust

Blazing fast reactive server-side rendering for Django, powered by Rust

djust brings Phoenix LiveView-style reactive components to Django, with performance that feels native. Write server-side Python code with automatic, instant client updates—no JavaScript bundling, no build step, no complexity.

🌐 djust.org | 🚀 Quick Start | 📝 Examples

PyPI version CI MIT License Python 3.8+ Django 3.2+ PyPI Downloads

✨ Features

  • 10-100x Faster - Rust-powered template engine and Virtual DOM diffing
  • 🔄 Reactive Components - Phoenix LiveView-style server-side reactivity
  • 🔌 Django Compatible - Works with existing Django templates and components
  • 📦 Zero Build Step - ~29KB gzipped client JavaScript, no bundling needed
  • 🌐 WebSocket Updates - Real-time DOM patches over WebSocket (with HTTP fallback)
  • 🎯 Minimal Client Code - Smart diffing sends only what changed
  • 🔒 Type Safe - Rust guarantees for core performance-critical code
  • 🐞 Developer Debug Panel - Interactive debugging with event history and VDOM inspection
  • 💤 Lazy Hydration - Defer WebSocket connections for below-fold content (20-40% memory savings)
  • 🚀 TurboNav Compatible - Works seamlessly with Turbo-style client-side navigation
  • 📱 PWA Support - Offline-first Progressive Web Apps with automatic sync
  • 🏢 Multi-Tenant Ready - Production SaaS architecture with tenant isolation
  • 🔐 Authentication & Authorization - View-level and handler-level auth with Django permissions integration

🎯 Quick Example

from djust import LiveView, event_handler

class CounterView(LiveView):
    template_string = """
    <div>
        <h1>Count: {{ count }}</h1>
        <button dj-click="increment">+</button>
        <button dj-click="decrement">-</button>
    </div>
    """

    def mount(self, request, **kwargs):
        self.count = 0

    @event_handler
    def increment(self):
        self.count += 1  # Automatically updates client!

    @event_handler
    def decrement(self):
        self.count -= 1

That's it! No JavaScript needed. State changes automatically trigger minimal DOM updates.

🔄 How Reactivity Works

djust uses a Rust-powered Virtual DOM (VDOM) to diff server-rendered HTML and send only the changed patches over WebSocket. Understanding a few core attributes makes everything click.

Template Anatomy

{% load djust_tags %}
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html>
<head>
    {% djust_scripts %}              {# Loads ~5KB client JavaScript #}
</head>
<body dj-view="{{ dj_view_id }}">   {# Identifies the WebSocket session #}
    <div dj-root>                    {# Reactive boundary — only this is diffed #}
        <h1>Count: {{ count }}</h1>
        <button dj-click="increment">+</button>
    </div>
    {# Static content outside dj-root is never touched by VDOM patching #}
</body>
</html>
Attribute Where Purpose
{% djust_scripts %} <head> Injects client JavaScript
dj-view="{{ dj_view_id }}" <body> Connects page to WebSocket session
dj-root Inner <div> Marks the reactive region; only HTML inside is diffed and patched

Stable List Identity

For lists that can reorder or have items inserted/deleted, add data-key or dj-key on each item. djust uses this to emit MoveChild patches instead of remove-then-insert pairs — preserving DOM state (focus, scroll position, animations):

{% for item in items %}
<div data-key="{{ item.id }}">
    {{ item.name }}
    <button dj-click="delete" data-item-id="{{ item.id }}">Delete</button>
</div>
{% endfor %}

Without a key, djust diffs by position — correct, but produces more DOM mutations for reorders.

Common Pitfall: One-Sided {% if %} in Class Attributes

Using {% if %} without {% else %} inside an HTML attribute value can cause VDOM patching misalignment due to djust's branch-aware div-depth counting:

{# WRONG: one-sided if inside class attribute #}
<div class="card {% if active %}active{% endif %}">

{# CORRECT: use full if/else #}
<div class="card {% if active %}active{% else %}{% endif %}">

{# ALSO CORRECT: move conditional outside the tag #}
{% if active %}
<div class="card active">
{% else %}
<div class="card">
{% endif %}
    ...
</div>

This applies only to attribute values — {% if %} blocks in element content work fine.

See the VDOM Architecture guide and Template Cheat Sheet for full details.

🚀 Getting Started

Here's a complete walkthrough from zero to a working reactive counter in 5 steps.

Step 1 — Install

pip install djust django-channels

Step 2 — Add to INSTALLED_APPS and configure settings

In myproject/settings.py:

INSTALLED_APPS = [
    # ... your existing apps ...
    'channels',   # WebSocket support
    'djust',
]

ASGI_APPLICATION = 'myproject.asgi.application'

CHANNEL_LAYERS = {
    'default': {
        'BACKEND': 'channels.layers.InMemoryChannelLayer',
    }
}

Step 3 — Configure asgi.py

Replace myproject/asgi.py with:

import os
from django.core.asgi import get_asgi_application
from channels.routing import ProtocolTypeRouter, URLRouter
from channels.auth import AuthMiddlewareStack
from djust.websocket import LiveViewConsumer
from django.urls import path

os.environ.setdefault('DJANGO_SETTINGS_MODULE', 'myproject.settings')

application = ProtocolTypeRouter({
    "http": get_asgi_application(),
    "websocket": AuthMiddlewareStack(
        URLRouter([
            path('ws/live/', LiveViewConsumer.as_asgi()),
        ])
    ),
})

Step 4 — Add the URL route

In myproject/urls.py:

from django.urls import path
from myapp.views import CounterView

urlpatterns = [
    path('counter/', CounterView.as_live_view(), name='counter'),
]

Step 5 — Write the view and template

myapp/views.py:

from djust import LiveView, event_handler

class CounterView(LiveView):
    template_name = 'counter.html'

    def mount(self, request, **kwargs):
        self.count = 0

    @event_handler
    def increment(self):
        self.count += 1

    @event_handler
    def decrement(self):
        self.count -= 1

myapp/templates/counter.html:

{% load djust_tags %}
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html>
<head>
    <title>Counter</title>
    {% djust_scripts %}
</head>
<body dj-view="{{ dj_view_id }}">
    <div dj-root>
        <h1>Count: {{ count }}</h1>
        <button dj-click="increment">+</button>
        <button dj-click="decrement">-</button>
    </div>
</body>
</html>

Run with uvicorn myproject.asgi:application --reload and open /counter/. Clicking the buttons updates the count without a page reload — no JavaScript written, no build step.

Next steps:


📊 Performance

Benchmarked on M1 MacBook Pro (2021):

Operation Django djust Speedup
Template Rendering (100 items) 2.5 ms 0.15 ms 16.7x
Large List (10k items) 450 ms 12 ms 37.5x
Virtual DOM Diff N/A 0.08 ms Sub-ms
Round-trip Update 50 ms 5 ms 10x

Run benchmarks yourself:

cd benchmarks
python benchmark.py

🚀 Installation

Prerequisites

  • Python 3.8+
  • Rust 1.70+ (for building from source)
  • Django 3.2+

Install from PyPI

pip install djust

Build from Source

Using Make (Easiest - Recommended for Development)

# Clone the repository
git clone https://github.com/djust-org/djust.git
cd djust

# Install Rust (if needed)
curl --proto '=https' --tlsv1.2 -sSf https://sh.rustup.rs | sh

# Install everything and build
make install

# Start the development server
make start

# See all available commands
make help

Common Make Commands:

  • make start - Start development server with hot reload
  • make stop - Stop the development server
  • make status - Check if server is running
  • make test - Run all tests
  • make clean - Clean build artifacts
  • make help - Show all available commands

Using uv (Fast)

# Clone the repository
git clone https://github.com/djust-org/djust.git
cd djust

# Install Rust (if needed)
curl --proto '=https' --tlsv1.2 -sSf https://sh.rustup.rs | sh

# Install uv (if needed)
curl -LsSf https://astral.sh/uv/install.sh | sh

# Create virtual environment and install dependencies
uv venv
source .venv/bin/activate  # On Windows: .venv\Scripts\activate

# Install maturin and build
uv pip install maturin
maturin develop --release

Using pip

# Clone the repository
git clone https://github.com/djust-org/djust.git
cd djust

# Install Rust (if needed)
curl --proto '=https' --tlsv1.2 -sSf https://sh.rustup.rs | sh

# Create virtual environment
python -m venv venv
source venv/bin/activate  # On Windows: venv\Scripts\activate

# Install maturin
pip install maturin

# Build and install
maturin develop --release

# Or build wheel
maturin build --release
pip install target/wheels/djust-*.whl

📖 Documentation

Setup

  1. Add to INSTALLED_APPS:
INSTALLED_APPS = [
    # ...
    'channels',  # Required for WebSocket support
    'djust',
    # ...
]
  1. Configure ASGI application (asgi.py):
import os
from django.core.asgi import get_asgi_application
from channels.routing import ProtocolTypeRouter, URLRouter
from channels.auth import AuthMiddlewareStack
from djust.websocket import LiveViewConsumer
from django.urls import path

os.environ.setdefault('DJANGO_SETTINGS_MODULE', 'myproject.settings')

application = ProtocolTypeRouter({
    "http": get_asgi_application(),
    "websocket": AuthMiddlewareStack(
        URLRouter([
            path('ws/live/', LiveViewConsumer.as_asgi()),
        ])
    ),
})
  1. Add to settings.py:
ASGI_APPLICATION = 'myproject.asgi.application'

CHANNEL_LAYERS = {
    'default': {
        'BACKEND': 'channels.layers.InMemoryChannelLayer'
    }
}

Creating LiveViews

Class-Based LiveView

from djust import LiveView, event_handler

class TodoListView(LiveView):
    template_name = 'todos.html'  # Or use template_string

    def mount(self, request, **kwargs):
        """Called when view is first loaded"""
        self.todos = []

    @event_handler
    def add_todo(self, text):
        """Event handler - called from client"""
        self.todos.append({'text': text, 'done': False})

    @event_handler
    def toggle_todo(self, index):
        self.todos[index]['done'] = not self.todos[index]['done']

Function-Based LiveView

from djust import live_view

@live_view(template_name='counter.html')
def counter_view(request):
    count = 0

    def increment():
        nonlocal count
        count += 1

    return locals()  # Returns all local variables as context

Template Syntax

djust supports Django template syntax with event binding:

<!-- Variables -->
<h1>{{ title }}</h1>

<!-- Filters (all 57 Django built-in filters supported) -->
<p>{{ text|upper }}</p>
<p>{{ description|truncatewords:20 }}</p>
<a href="?q={{ query|urlencode }}">Search</a>
{{ body|urlize }}  {# No |safe needed — djust's Rust engine auto-marks urlize output as safe via safe_output_filters. Unlike standard Django where you'd add |safe, djust handles this automatically. #}

<!-- Control flow -->
{% if show %}
    <div>Visible</div>
{% endif %}

{% if count > 10 %}
    <div>Many items!</div>
{% endif %}

{% for item in items %}
    <li>{{ item }}</li>
{% endfor %}

<!-- URL resolution -->
<a href="{% url 'myapp:detail' pk=item.id %}">View</a>

<!-- Template includes -->
{% include "partials/header.html" %}

<!-- Event binding -->
<button dj-click="increment">Click me</button>
<input dj-input="on_search" type="text" />
<form dj-submit="submit_form">
    <input name="email" />
    <button type="submit">Submit</button>
</form>

Django migration note: In standard Django, urlize requires |safe to render its HTML output. djust's Rust template engine automatically marks urlize, urlizetrunc, and unordered_list as safe (via safe_output_filters in the renderer) because these filters handle their own HTML escaping internally. Adding |safe after them is unnecessary.

Supported Events

  • dj-click - Click events
  • dj-input - Input events (passes value)
  • dj-change - Change events (passes value)
  • dj-submit - Form submission (passes form data as dict)

Reusable Components

djust provides a powerful component system with automatic state management and stable component IDs.

Basic Component Example

from djust.components import AlertComponent

class MyView(LiveView):
    def mount(self, request):
        # Components get automatic IDs based on attribute names
        self.alert_success = AlertComponent(
            message="Operation successful!",
            type="success",
            dismissible=True
        )
        # component_id automatically becomes "alert_success"

Component ID Management

Components automatically receive a stable component_id based on their attribute name in your view. This eliminates manual ID management:

# When you write:
self.alert_success = AlertComponent(message="Success!")

# The framework automatically:
# 1. Sets component.component_id = "alert_success"
# 2. Persists this ID across renders and events
# 3. Uses it in HTML: data-component-id="alert_success"
# 4. Routes events back to the correct component

Why it works:

  • The attribute name (alert_success) is already unique within your view
  • It's stable across re-renders and WebSocket reconnections
  • Event handlers can reference components by their attribute names
  • No manual ID strings to keep in sync

Event Routing Example:

class MyView(LiveView):
    def mount(self, request):
        self.alert_warning = AlertComponent(
            message="Warning message",
            dismissible=True
        )

    @event_handler
    def dismiss(self, component_id: str = None):
        """Handle dismissal - automatically routes to correct component"""
        if component_id and hasattr(self, component_id):
            component = getattr(self, component_id)
            if hasattr(component, 'dismiss'):
                component.dismiss()  # component_id="alert_warning"

When the dismiss button is clicked, the client sends component_id="alert_warning", and the handler uses getattr(self, "alert_warning") to find the component.

Creating Custom Components

from djust import Component, register_component, event_handler

@register_component('my-button')
class Button(Component):
    template = '<button dj-click="on_click">{{ label }}</button>'

    def __init__(self, label="Click"):
        super().__init__()
        self.label = label
        self.clicks = 0

    @event_handler
    def on_click(self):
        self.clicks += 1
        print(f"Clicked {self.clicks} times!")

Decorators

from djust import LiveView, event_handler, reactive

class MyView(LiveView):
    @event_handler
    def handle_click(self):
        """Marks method as event handler"""
        pass

    @reactive
    def count(self):
        """Reactive property - auto-triggers updates"""
        return self._count

    @count.setter
    def count(self, value):
        self._count = value

Configuration

Configure djust in your Django settings.py:

LIVEVIEW_CONFIG = {
    # Transport mode
    'use_websocket': True,  # Set to False for HTTP-only mode (no WebSocket dependency)

    # Debug settings
    'debug_vdom': False,  # Enable detailed VDOM patch logging (for troubleshooting)

    # Serialization (issue #292)
    'strict_serialization': False,  # Raise TypeError for non-serializable state values (recommended in development)

    # CSS Framework
    'css_framework': 'bootstrap5',  # Options: 'bootstrap5', 'tailwind', None
}

Common Configuration Options:

Option Default Description
use_websocket True Use WebSocket transport (requires Django Channels)
debug_vdom False Enable detailed VDOM debugging logs
strict_serialization False Raise TypeError for non-serializable state (recommended in dev)
css_framework 'bootstrap5' CSS framework for components

CSS Framework Setup:

For Tailwind CSS (recommended), use the one-command setup:

python manage.py djust_setup_css tailwind

This auto-detects template directories, creates config files, and builds your CSS. For production:

python manage.py djust_setup_css tailwind --minify

See the CSS Framework Guide for detailed setup instructions, Bootstrap configuration, and CI/CD integration.

Debug Mode:

When troubleshooting VDOM issues, enable debug logging:

# In settings.py
LIVEVIEW_CONFIG = {
    'debug_vdom': True,
}

# Or programmatically
from djust.config import config
config.set('debug_vdom', True)

This will log:

  • Server-side: Patch generation details (stderr)
  • Client-side: Patch application and DOM traversal (browser console)

State Management

djust provides Python-only state management decorators that eliminate the need for manual JavaScript.

🚀 Quick Start (5 minutes)

Build a debounced search in 8 lines of Python (no JavaScript):

from djust import LiveView
from djust.decorators import debounce

class ProductSearchView(LiveView):
    template_string = """
    <input dj-input="search" placeholder="Search products..." />
    <div>{% for p in results %}<div>{{ p.name }}</div>{% endfor %}</div>
    """

    def mount(self, request):
        self.results = []

    @debounce(wait=0.5)  # Wait 500ms after typing stops
    def search(self, query: str = "", **kwargs):
        self.results = Product.objects.filter(name__icontains=query)[:10]

That's it! Server only queries after you stop typing. Add @optimistic for instant UI updates, @cache(ttl=300) to cache responses for 5 minutes.

👉 Full Quick Start Guide (5 min)


Key Features

  • Zero JavaScript Required - Common patterns work without writing any JS
  • 87% Code Reduction - Decorators replace hundreds of lines of manual JavaScript
  • Lightweight Bundle - ~29KB gzipped client.js (vs Livewire ~50KB)
  • Competitive DX - Matches Phoenix LiveView and Laravel Livewire developer experience

Available Decorators

Decorator Use When Example
@debounce(wait) User is typing Search, autosave
@throttle(interval) Rapid events Scroll, resize
@optimistic Instant feedback Counter, toggle
@cache(ttl, key_params) Repeated queries Autocomplete
@client_state(keys) Multi-component Dashboard filters
@background Long operations AI generation, file processing
DraftModeMixin Auto-save forms Contact form

Quick Decision Matrix:

  • Typing in input? → @debounce(0.5)
  • Scrolling/resizing? → @throttle(0.1)
  • Need instant UI update? → @optimistic
  • Same query multiple times? → @cache(ttl)
  • Multiple components? → @client_state([keys])
  • Long-running work? → @background or self.start_async(callback)
  • Auto-save forms? → DraftModeMixin

Learn More

🧭 Navigation Patterns

djust provides three navigation mechanisms for building multi-view applications without full page reloads:

When to Use What

Scenario Use Why
Filter/sort/paginate within same view dj-patch / live_patch() No remount, URL stays bookmarkable
Navigate to a different LiveView dj-navigate / live_redirect() Same WebSocket, no page reload
Link to non-LiveView page Standard <a href> Full page load needed

Quick Decision Tree

Use this flowchart when choosing a navigation method:

Is this a direct user click on a link?
├─ Yes → Is it the same view (filter/sort)?
│   ├─ Yes → Use dj-patch
│   └─ No → Use dj-navigate
│
└─ No → Is navigation conditional on server logic?
    ├─ Yes → Use live_redirect() in @event_handler
    │   Examples: form validation, auth checks, async operations
    └─ No → You probably need dj-navigate (see anti-pattern below)

⚠️ Anti-Pattern: Don't Use dj-click for Navigation

This is the most common mistake when building multi-view djust apps. Using dj-click to trigger a handler that immediately calls live_redirect() creates an unnecessary round-trip.

❌ Wrong — using dj-click to trigger a handler that calls live_redirect():

# Anti-pattern: Handler does nothing but navigate
@event_handler()
def go_to_item(self, item_id, **kwargs):
    self.live_redirect(f"/items/{item_id}/")  # Wasteful round-trip!
<!-- Wrong: Forces WebSocket round-trip just to navigate -->
<button dj-click="go_to_item" dj-value-item_id="{{ item.id }}">View</button>

What actually happens:

  1. User clicks button → Client sends WebSocket message (50-100ms)
  2. Server receives message, processes handler (10-50ms)
  3. Server responds with live_redirect command (50-100ms)
  4. Client finally navigates to new view Total: 110-250ms + handler processing time

✅ Right — using dj-navigate directly:

<!-- Right: Client navigates immediately, no server round-trip -->
<a dj-navigate="/items/{{ item.id }}/">View Item</a>

What happens:

  1. User clicks link → Client navigates directly Total: ~10ms (just DOM updates)

Why it matters:

  • Performance: 10-20x faster navigation
  • Network efficiency: Saves WebSocket bandwidth
  • User experience: Instant response, no loading indicators needed
  • Simplicity: Less code, fewer moving parts

When to Use live_redirect() in Handlers

Use handlers for navigation only when navigation depends on server-side logic or validation:

✅ Conditional navigation after form validation:

@event_handler()
def submit_form(self, **kwargs):
    if self.form.is_valid():
        self.form.save()
        self.live_redirect("/success/")  # OK: Conditional on validation
    else:
        # Stay on form to show errors
        pass

✅ Navigation based on auth/permissions:

@event_handler()
def view_sensitive_data(self, **kwargs):
    if not self.request.user.has_perm('app.view_sensitive'):
        self.live_redirect("/access-denied/")  # OK: Auth check required
        return
    self.show_sensitive = True

✅ Navigation after async operations:

@event_handler()
async def create_and_view_item(self, name, **kwargs):
    item = await Item.objects.acreate(name=name, owner=self.request.user)
    self.live_redirect(f"/items/{item.id}/")  # OK: Navigate to newly created item

✅ Multi-step wizard logic:

@event_handler()
def next_step(self, **kwargs):
    if self.current_step == "payment" and not self.payment_valid:
        # Stay on payment step if invalid
        return
    self.current_step = self.get_next_step()
    self.live_patch(params={"step": self.current_step})  # OK: Conditional flow

Common theme: The handler does meaningful work before navigating. If your handler only calls live_redirect(), use dj-navigate instead.

Quick Example: Multi-View App

from djust import LiveView
from djust.mixins.navigation import NavigationMixin
from djust.decorators import event_handler

class ProductListView(NavigationMixin, LiveView):
    template_string = """
    <!-- Filter within same view: use dj-patch -->
    <a dj-patch="?category=electronics">Electronics</a>
    <a dj-patch="?category=books">Books</a>

    <div>
        {% for product in products %}
            <!-- Navigate to different view: use dj-navigate -->
            <a dj-navigate="/products/{{ product.id }}/">{{ product.name }}</a>
        {% endfor %}
    </div>
    """

    def mount(self, request, **kwargs):
        self.category = "all"
        self.products = []

    def handle_params(self, params, uri):
        """Called when URL changes via dj-patch or browser back/forward"""
        self.category = params.get("category", "all")
        self.products = Product.objects.filter(category=self.category)

Learn More:

  • 📖 Navigation Guide - Complete API reference (live_patch(), live_redirect(), handle_params())

Developer Tooling

Debug Panel

Interactive debugging tool for LiveView development (DEBUG mode only):

# In settings.py
DEBUG = True  # Debug panel automatically enabled

Open: Press Ctrl+Shift+D (Windows/Linux) or Cmd+Shift+D (Mac), or click the 🐞 floating button

Features:

  • 🔍 Event Handlers - Discover all handlers with parameters, types, and descriptions
  • 📊 Event History - Real-time log with timing metrics (e.g., search • 45.2ms)
  • VDOM Patches - Monitor DOM updates with sub-millisecond precision
  • 🔬 Variables - Inspect current view state

Learn More:

Event Handlers

Always use @event_handler decorator for auto-discovery and validation:

from djust.decorators import event_handler

@event_handler()
def search(self, value: str = "", **kwargs):
    """Search handler - description shown in debug panel"""
    self.search_query = value

Parameter Convention: Use value for form inputs (dj-input, dj-change events):

# ✅ Correct - matches what form events send
@event_handler()
def search(self, value: str = "", **kwargs):
    self.search_query = value

# ❌ Wrong - won't receive input value
@event_handler()
def search(self, query: str = "", **kwargs):
    self.search_query = query  # Always "" (default)

🏗️ Architecture

┌─────────────────────────────────────────────┐
│  Browser                                    │
│  ├── Client.js (~29KB gz) - Events & DOM   │
│  └── WebSocket Connection                   │
└─────────────────────────────────────────────┘
           ↕️ WebSocket (Binary/JSON)
┌─────────────────────────────────────────────┐
│  Django + Channels (Python)                 │
│  ├── LiveView Classes                       │
│  ├── Event Handlers                         │
│  └── State Management                       │
└─────────────────────────────────────────────┘
           ↕️ Python/Rust FFI (PyO3)
┌─────────────────────────────────────────────┐
│  Rust Core (Native Speed)                   │
│  ├── Template Engine (<1ms)                │
│  ├── Virtual DOM Diffing (<100μs)          │
│  ├── HTML Parser                            │
│  └── Binary Serialization (MessagePack)    │
└─────────────────────────────────────────────┘

🎨 Examples

See the examples/demo_project directory for complete working examples:

  • Counter - Simple reactive counter
  • Todo List - CRUD operations with lists
  • Chat - Real-time messaging

Run the demo:

cd examples/demo_project
pip install -r requirements.txt
python manage.py migrate
python manage.py runserver

Visit http://localhost:8000

🔧 Development

Project Structure

djust/
├── crates/
│   ├── djust_core/        # Core types & utilities
│   ├── djust_templates/   # Template engine
│   ├── djust_vdom/        # Virtual DOM & diffing
│   ├── djust_components/  # Reusable component library
│   └── djust_live/        # Main PyO3 bindings
├── python/
│   └── djust/             # Python package
│       ├── live_view.py         # LiveView base class
│       ├── component.py         # Component system
│       ├── websocket.py         # WebSocket consumer
│       └── static/
│           └── client.js        # Client runtime
├── branding/                    # Logo and brand assets
├── examples/                    # Example projects
├── benchmarks/                  # Performance benchmarks
└── tests/                       # Tests

Running Tests

# All tests (Python + Rust + JavaScript)
make test

# Individual test suites
make test-python       # Python tests
make test-rust         # Rust tests
make test-js           # JavaScript tests

# Specific tests
pytest tests/unit/test_live_view.py
cargo test --workspace --exclude djust_live

For comprehensive testing documentation, see Testing Guide.

Building Documentation

cargo doc --open

💰 Supporting djust

djust is open source (MIT licensed) and free forever. If you're using djust in production or want to support development:

  • Star this repo - Help others discover djust
  • 💜 GitHub Sponsors - Monthly support from $5/month

Your support helps us maintain and improve djust for everyone!

🤝 Contributing

Contributions welcome! Please read CONTRIBUTING.md first.

Areas we'd love help with:

  • More example applications
  • Performance optimizations
  • Documentation improvements
  • Browser compatibility testing

📝 Roadmap

  • Template inheritance ({% extends %})
  • {% url %} and {% include %} tags
  • Comparison operators in {% if %} tags
  • All 57 Django built-in template filters
  • Security hardening (WebSocket origin validation, HMAC signing, rate limiting)
  • Developer debug panel with event history and VDOM inspection
  • Reusable component library (djust_components crate)
  • JIT pipeline improvements and stale-closure fixes
  • Authentication & authorization (view-level + handler-level)
  • File upload handling
  • Server-sent events (SSE) fallback
  • React/Vue component compatibility
  • TypeScript definitions (djust.d.ts shipped with the package)
  • Redis-backed session storage
  • Horizontal scaling support

🔒 Security

  • CSRF protection via Django middleware
  • XSS protection via automatic template escaping (Rust engine escapes all variables by default)
  • HTML-producing filters (urlize, urlizetrunc, unordered_list) handle their own escaping internally — the Rust engine's safe_output_filters whitelist prevents double-escaping, so |safe is never needed with these filters
  • WebSocket authentication via Django sessions
  • WebSocket origin validation and HMAC message signing (v0.2.1)
  • Per-view and global rate limiting support
  • Configurable allowed origins for WebSocket connections
  • View-level auth enforcement (login_required, permission_required) before mount()
  • Handler-level @permission_required for protecting individual event handlers
  • djust_audit command and djust.S005 system check for auth posture visibility

Report security issues to: security@djust.org

📄 License

MIT License - see LICENSE file for details.

🙏 Acknowledgments

  • Inspired by Phoenix LiveView
  • Built with PyO3 for Python/Rust interop
  • Uses html5ever for HTML parsing
  • Powered by the amazing Rust and Django communities

💬 Community & Support


djust.org — Made with ❤️ by the djust community

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.

Source Distribution

djust-0.4.2rc2.tar.gz (2.9 MB view details)

Uploaded Source

Built Distributions

If you're not sure about the file name format, learn more about wheel file names.

djust-0.4.2rc2-cp312-cp312-win_amd64.whl (5.0 MB view details)

Uploaded CPython 3.12Windows x86-64

djust-0.4.2rc2-cp312-cp312-manylinux_2_34_x86_64.whl (4.9 MB view details)

Uploaded CPython 3.12manylinux: glibc 2.34+ x86-64

djust-0.4.2rc2-cp312-cp312-macosx_11_0_arm64.whl (4.7 MB view details)

Uploaded CPython 3.12macOS 11.0+ ARM64

djust-0.4.2rc2-cp312-cp312-macosx_10_12_x86_64.whl (4.8 MB view details)

Uploaded CPython 3.12macOS 10.12+ x86-64

djust-0.4.2rc2-cp311-cp311-win_amd64.whl (4.9 MB view details)

Uploaded CPython 3.11Windows x86-64

djust-0.4.2rc2-cp311-cp311-manylinux_2_34_x86_64.whl (4.9 MB view details)

Uploaded CPython 3.11manylinux: glibc 2.34+ x86-64

djust-0.4.2rc2-cp311-cp311-macosx_11_0_arm64.whl (4.7 MB view details)

Uploaded CPython 3.11macOS 11.0+ ARM64

djust-0.4.2rc2-cp311-cp311-macosx_10_12_x86_64.whl (4.8 MB view details)

Uploaded CPython 3.11macOS 10.12+ x86-64

djust-0.4.2rc2-cp310-cp310-manylinux_2_34_x86_64.whl (4.9 MB view details)

Uploaded CPython 3.10manylinux: glibc 2.34+ x86-64

djust-0.4.2rc2-cp39-cp39-manylinux_2_34_x86_64.whl (4.9 MB view details)

Uploaded CPython 3.9manylinux: glibc 2.34+ x86-64

File details

Details for the file djust-0.4.2rc2.tar.gz.

File metadata

  • Download URL: djust-0.4.2rc2.tar.gz
  • Upload date:
  • Size: 2.9 MB
  • Tags: Source
  • Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? Yes
  • Uploaded via: twine/6.1.0 CPython/3.13.12

File hashes

Hashes for djust-0.4.2rc2.tar.gz
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 f9e8badf17fd385fc3ab0c79873b5164685ea19a88243268e3db6502c20ac0e7
MD5 5fe6d51f63dd0b78c669a49c3742dfb6
BLAKE2b-256 9c859f451e21c8db63bad06d9aaf9b1b8f66f0f9e7d00e36652f608b2d3e70de

See more details on using hashes here.

Provenance

The following attestation bundles were made for djust-0.4.2rc2.tar.gz:

Publisher: release.yml on djust-org/djust

Attestations: Values shown here reflect the state when the release was signed and may no longer be current.

File details

Details for the file djust-0.4.2rc2-cp312-cp312-win_amd64.whl.

File metadata

  • Download URL: djust-0.4.2rc2-cp312-cp312-win_amd64.whl
  • Upload date:
  • Size: 5.0 MB
  • Tags: CPython 3.12, Windows x86-64
  • Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? Yes
  • Uploaded via: twine/6.1.0 CPython/3.13.12

File hashes

Hashes for djust-0.4.2rc2-cp312-cp312-win_amd64.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 7d5024075258cfed1532516dfb21c73ea1021671c6d88528e58a186a0af43ed2
MD5 d05c0da3e99d14c021b89460330f9c91
BLAKE2b-256 4697d7501440eb28fbdfd41daf25bf94a2e9a3ca6e8cf89f37efe06b6651ebe0

See more details on using hashes here.

Provenance

The following attestation bundles were made for djust-0.4.2rc2-cp312-cp312-win_amd64.whl:

Publisher: release.yml on djust-org/djust

Attestations: Values shown here reflect the state when the release was signed and may no longer be current.

File details

Details for the file djust-0.4.2rc2-cp312-cp312-manylinux_2_34_x86_64.whl.

File metadata

File hashes

Hashes for djust-0.4.2rc2-cp312-cp312-manylinux_2_34_x86_64.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 544b62e5c8de48941361adb0ef97a04dd0d4bccc882bfa78c822d8b7c30d7476
MD5 cb2df2a5284868a5dd837cec31e14ee7
BLAKE2b-256 155a3df093b4ed9013615f2d47b2efca49dd2c20a80b52bec4d604cc7d0a7de9

See more details on using hashes here.

Provenance

The following attestation bundles were made for djust-0.4.2rc2-cp312-cp312-manylinux_2_34_x86_64.whl:

Publisher: release.yml on djust-org/djust

Attestations: Values shown here reflect the state when the release was signed and may no longer be current.

File details

Details for the file djust-0.4.2rc2-cp312-cp312-macosx_11_0_arm64.whl.

File metadata

File hashes

Hashes for djust-0.4.2rc2-cp312-cp312-macosx_11_0_arm64.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 f63a50abb7b3ed46c3b0e536f1e65cc152c0855c2b485f500e95d3faa57bf380
MD5 3b680dd5fd57c9e6ef20b74aad46d3e7
BLAKE2b-256 883cf85d6ced63ea6437a90f52770eba317a04482a1518da6688cd9d797256a4

See more details on using hashes here.

Provenance

The following attestation bundles were made for djust-0.4.2rc2-cp312-cp312-macosx_11_0_arm64.whl:

Publisher: release.yml on djust-org/djust

Attestations: Values shown here reflect the state when the release was signed and may no longer be current.

File details

Details for the file djust-0.4.2rc2-cp312-cp312-macosx_10_12_x86_64.whl.

File metadata

File hashes

Hashes for djust-0.4.2rc2-cp312-cp312-macosx_10_12_x86_64.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 ecd85256c2fdbf83ad8d460e7bba15f28624d54dfb93d2e790b157ea380f0c8a
MD5 04ddb955d48bdb17288c0db6efb5112e
BLAKE2b-256 50b9db326018713062da02a49a917b3690586240e8ae2b96d9766e51ab05f9be

See more details on using hashes here.

Provenance

The following attestation bundles were made for djust-0.4.2rc2-cp312-cp312-macosx_10_12_x86_64.whl:

Publisher: release.yml on djust-org/djust

Attestations: Values shown here reflect the state when the release was signed and may no longer be current.

File details

Details for the file djust-0.4.2rc2-cp311-cp311-win_amd64.whl.

File metadata

  • Download URL: djust-0.4.2rc2-cp311-cp311-win_amd64.whl
  • Upload date:
  • Size: 4.9 MB
  • Tags: CPython 3.11, Windows x86-64
  • Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? Yes
  • Uploaded via: twine/6.1.0 CPython/3.13.12

File hashes

Hashes for djust-0.4.2rc2-cp311-cp311-win_amd64.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 4fc00e95ad787c3b3f6d8b8fbb32d36b0ef31922ab2fa8f4a95b619d0e2472dc
MD5 9e39d6fee1d96f2836b8450ba3c0262e
BLAKE2b-256 0fe557bce78727cdf9d0e1980716cc5ec3ea7c55062bf822aa2a5e9f5053752c

See more details on using hashes here.

Provenance

The following attestation bundles were made for djust-0.4.2rc2-cp311-cp311-win_amd64.whl:

Publisher: release.yml on djust-org/djust

Attestations: Values shown here reflect the state when the release was signed and may no longer be current.

File details

Details for the file djust-0.4.2rc2-cp311-cp311-manylinux_2_34_x86_64.whl.

File metadata

File hashes

Hashes for djust-0.4.2rc2-cp311-cp311-manylinux_2_34_x86_64.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 44f415ac43328b770d688395c61f460ec37b2f96a5ae40c0947f1bfad6cf3801
MD5 5165928222f092cd556a277dc29c4891
BLAKE2b-256 c89723601d8d327845eeabf9dbb1638fcd6c60630ce16bb71c0b8a10fb6d6446

See more details on using hashes here.

Provenance

The following attestation bundles were made for djust-0.4.2rc2-cp311-cp311-manylinux_2_34_x86_64.whl:

Publisher: release.yml on djust-org/djust

Attestations: Values shown here reflect the state when the release was signed and may no longer be current.

File details

Details for the file djust-0.4.2rc2-cp311-cp311-macosx_11_0_arm64.whl.

File metadata

File hashes

Hashes for djust-0.4.2rc2-cp311-cp311-macosx_11_0_arm64.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 551006f65b3489afc430e4b53ccd8f05609efa1ee2e9d69329e749b8b35467d2
MD5 36534de4a4b098c21cdc8380abef8471
BLAKE2b-256 0ab4b6db13a5c380462c7ac726f8e6957d03b5b0bd767bc4325fedb4d97cc631

See more details on using hashes here.

Provenance

The following attestation bundles were made for djust-0.4.2rc2-cp311-cp311-macosx_11_0_arm64.whl:

Publisher: release.yml on djust-org/djust

Attestations: Values shown here reflect the state when the release was signed and may no longer be current.

File details

Details for the file djust-0.4.2rc2-cp311-cp311-macosx_10_12_x86_64.whl.

File metadata

File hashes

Hashes for djust-0.4.2rc2-cp311-cp311-macosx_10_12_x86_64.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 61d3a71d7721d444411b0d241f65cffa1a72f5586e7ff92c86aa9fae548da908
MD5 062643e30fd709981689c8ccd8494b02
BLAKE2b-256 0851f2ed152186a3e986dbe7850169c691280c60120272ded9431abaed64b86c

See more details on using hashes here.

Provenance

The following attestation bundles were made for djust-0.4.2rc2-cp311-cp311-macosx_10_12_x86_64.whl:

Publisher: release.yml on djust-org/djust

Attestations: Values shown here reflect the state when the release was signed and may no longer be current.

File details

Details for the file djust-0.4.2rc2-cp310-cp310-manylinux_2_34_x86_64.whl.

File metadata

File hashes

Hashes for djust-0.4.2rc2-cp310-cp310-manylinux_2_34_x86_64.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 5aae510121ac63ed9d956d979a07527c9d24faa6c80840106d0d1f3252dc0bfd
MD5 14c5110050aa680a2084287b575e56cb
BLAKE2b-256 0509602385842f5b8689100467dd7e92774a0b7119837acf6dfd5dfd7f86c6e0

See more details on using hashes here.

Provenance

The following attestation bundles were made for djust-0.4.2rc2-cp310-cp310-manylinux_2_34_x86_64.whl:

Publisher: release.yml on djust-org/djust

Attestations: Values shown here reflect the state when the release was signed and may no longer be current.

File details

Details for the file djust-0.4.2rc2-cp39-cp39-manylinux_2_34_x86_64.whl.

File metadata

File hashes

Hashes for djust-0.4.2rc2-cp39-cp39-manylinux_2_34_x86_64.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 aa73a1542e30eb52de0f102dff7c70f1464584f5570cf08109ca58925a42c8e9
MD5 ef82d59f5a14f47d5fc8408dd2c187c2
BLAKE2b-256 445a08f34a061a8d42e350597b97758c15d2ca65010cfd45be4c7a7d83782ac2

See more details on using hashes here.

Provenance

The following attestation bundles were made for djust-0.4.2rc2-cp39-cp39-manylinux_2_34_x86_64.whl:

Publisher: release.yml on djust-org/djust

Attestations: Values shown here reflect the state when the release was signed and may no longer be current.

Supported by

AWS Cloud computing and Security Sponsor Datadog Monitoring Depot Continuous Integration Fastly CDN Google Download Analytics Pingdom Monitoring Sentry Error logging StatusPage Status page