Skip to main content

Django friendly finite state machine support.

Project description

Django friendly finite state machine support

xstate-machine adds simple declarative state management for django models. Based on the django-fsm project by viewflow.

Instead of adding a state field to a django model and managing its values by hand, you use FSMField and mark model methods with the transition decorator. These methods could contain side-effects of the state change.

Nice introduction is available here: https://gist.github.com/Nagyman/9502133

You may also take a look at django-fsm-admin project containing a mixin and template tags to integrate xstate-machine state transitions into the django admin.

https://github.com/gadventures/django-fsm-admin

Transition logging support could be achieved with help of django-fsm-log package

https://github.com/gizmag/django-fsm-log

FSM really helps to structure the code, especially when a new developer comes to the project. FSM is most effective when you use it for some sequential steps.

Installation

pip install xstate-machine

Or, for the latest git version

pip install -e git://git@github.com:xpendit/xstate-machine.git#egg=xstate-machine

The library has full Python 3 support (from 3.10 or later) and Django

Usage

Add FSMState field to your model

from xstate_machine import FSMField, transition

class BlogPost(models.Model):
    state = FSMField(default='new')

Use the transition decorator to annotate model methods

@transition(field=state, source='new', target='published')
def publish(self):
    """
    This function may contain side-effects,
    like updating caches, notifying users, etc.
    The return value will be discarded.
    """

The field parameter accepts both a string attribute name or an actual field instance.

If calling publish() succeeds without raising an exception, the state field will be changed, but not written to the database.

from xstate_machine import can_proceed

def publish_view(request, post_id):
    post = get_object_or_404(BlogPost, pk=post_id)
    if not can_proceed(post.publish):
        raise PermissionDenied

    post.publish()
    post.save()
    return redirect('/')

If some conditions are required to be met before changing the state, use the conditions argument to transition. conditions must be a list of functions taking one argument, the model instance. The function must return either True or False or a value that evaluates to True or False. If all functions return True, all conditions are considered to be met and the transition is allowed to happen. If one of the functions returns False, the transition will not happen. These functions should not have any side effects.

You can use ordinary functions

def can_publish(instance):
    # No publishing after 17 hours
    if datetime.datetime.now().hour > 17:
        return False
    return True

Or model methods

def can_destroy(self):
    return self.is_under_investigation()

Use the conditions like this:

@transition(field=state, source='new', target='published', conditions=[can_publish])
def publish(self):
    """
    Side effects galore
    """

@transition(field=state, source='*', target='destroyed', conditions=[can_destroy])
def destroy(self):
    """
    Side effects galore
    """

You can instantiate a field with protected=True option to prevent direct state field modification.

class BlogPost(models.Model):
    state = FSMField(default='new', protected=True)

model = BlogPost()
model.state = 'invalid' # Raises AttributeError

Note that calling refresh_from_db on a model instance with a protected FSMField will cause an exception.

source state

source parameter accepts a list of states, or an individual state or xstate_machine.State implementation.

You can use * for source to allow switching to target from any state.

You can use + for source to allow switching to target from any state excluding target state.

target state

target state parameter could point to a specific state or xstate_machine.State implementation

from xstate_machine import FSMField, transition, RETURN_VALUE, GET_STATE
@transition(field=state,
            source='*',
            target=RETURN_VALUE('for_moderators', 'published'))
def publish(self, is_public=False):
    return 'for_moderators' if is_public else 'published'

@transition(
    field=state,
    source='for_moderators',
    target=GET_STATE(
        lambda self, allowed: 'published' if allowed else 'rejected',
        states=['published', 'rejected']))
def moderate(self, allowed):
    pass

@transition(
    field=state,
    source='for_moderators',
    target=GET_STATE(
        lambda self, **kwargs: 'published' if kwargs.get("allowed", True) else 'rejected',
        states=['published', 'rejected']))
def moderate(self, allowed=True):
    pass

custom properties

Custom properties can be added by providing a dictionary to the custom keyword on the transition decorator.

@transition(field=state,
            source='*',
            target='onhold',
            custom=dict(verbose='Hold for legal reasons'))
def legal_hold(self):
    """
    Side effects galore
    """

on_error state

If the transition method raises an exception, you can provide a specific target state

@transition(field=state, source='new', target='published', on_error='failed')
def publish(self):
   """
   Some exception could happen here
   """

state_choices

Instead of passing a two-item iterable choices you can instead use the three-element state_choices, the last element being a string reference to a model proxy class.

The base class instance would be dynamically changed to the corresponding Proxy class instance, depending on the state. Even for queryset results, you will get Proxy class instances, even if the QuerySet is executed on the base class.

Check the test case for example usage. Or read about implementation internals

Permissions

It is common to have permissions attached to each model transition. xstate-machine handles this with permission keyword on the transition decorator. permission accepts a permission string, or callable that expects instance and user arguments and returns True if the user can perform the transition.

@transition(field=state, source='*', target='published',
            permission=lambda instance, user: not user.has_perm('myapp.can_make_mistakes'))
def publish(self):
    pass

@transition(field=state, source='*', target='removed',
            permission='myapp.can_remove_post')
def remove(self):
    pass

You can check permission with has_transition_permission method

from xstate_machine import has_transition_perm
def publish_view(request, post_id):
    post = get_object_or_404(BlogPost, pk=post_id)
    if not has_transition_perm(post.publish, request.user):
        raise PermissionDenied

    post.publish()
    post.save()
    return redirect('/')

Model methods

get_all_FIELD_transitions Enumerates all declared transitions

get_available_FIELD_transitions Returns all transitions data available in current state

get_available_user_FIELD_transitions Enumerates all transitions data available in current state for provided user

Foreign Key constraints support

If you store the states in the db table you could use FSMKeyField to ensure Foreign Key database integrity.

In your model :

class DbState(models.Model):
    id = models.CharField(primary_key=True, max_length=50)
    label = models.CharField(max_length=255)

    def __unicode__(self):
        return self.label


class BlogPost(models.Model):
    state = FSMKeyField(DbState, default='new')

    @transition(field=state, source='new', target='published')
    def publish(self):
        pass

In your fixtures/initial_data.json :

[
    {
        "pk": "new",
        "model": "myapp.dbstate",
        "fields": {
            "label": "_NEW_"
        }
    },
    {
        "pk": "published",
        "model": "myapp.dbstate",
        "fields": {
            "label": "_PUBLISHED_"
        }
    }
]

Note : source and target parameters in @transition decorator use pk values of DBState model as names, even if field "real" name is used, without _id postfix, as field parameter.

Integer Field support

You can also use FSMIntegerField. This is handy when you want to use enum style constants.

class BlogPostStateEnum(object):
    NEW = 10
    PUBLISHED = 20
    HIDDEN = 30

class BlogPostWithIntegerField(models.Model):
    state = FSMIntegerField(default=BlogPostStateEnum.NEW)

    @transition(field=state, source=BlogPostStateEnum.NEW, target=BlogPostStateEnum.PUBLISHED)
    def publish(self):
        pass

Signals

xstate_machine.signals.pre_transition and xstate_machine.signals.post_transition are called before and after allowed transition. No signals on invalid transition are called.

Arguments sent with these signals:

sender The model class.

instance The actual instance being processed

name Transition name

source Source model state

target Target model state

Optimistic locking

xstate-machine provides optimistic locking mixin, to avoid concurrent model state changes. If model state was changed in database xstate_machine.ConcurrentTransition exception would be raised on model.save()

from xstate_machine import FSMField, ConcurrentTransitionMixin

class BlogPost(ConcurrentTransitionMixin, models.Model):
    state = FSMField(default='new')

For guaranteed protection against race conditions caused by concurrently executed transitions, make sure:

  • Your transitions do not have any side effects except for changes in the database,
  • You always run the save() method on the object within django.db.transaction.atomic() block.

Following these recommendations, you can rely on ConcurrentTransitionMixin to cause a rollback of all the changes that have been executed in an inconsistent (out of sync) state, thus practically negating their effect.

Drawing transitions

Renders a graphical overview of your models states transitions

You need pip install "graphviz>=0.4" library and add xstate_machine to your INSTALLED_APPS:

INSTALLED_APPS = (
    ...
    'xstate_machine',
    ...
)
# Create a dot file
$ ./manage.py graph_transitions > transitions.dot

# Create a PNG image file only for specific model
$ ./manage.py graph_transitions -o blog_transitions.png myapp.Blog

Changelog

xstate-machine 2.8.2 2024-04-09

  • Fix graph_transitions commnad for Django>=4.0
  • Preserve chosen "using" DB in ConcurentTransitionMixin
  • Fix error message in GET_STATE
  • Implement Transition __hash__ and __eq__ for 'in' operator

Download files

Download the file for your platform. If you're not sure which to choose, learn more about installing packages.

Source Distribution

xstate_machine-3.1.1.tar.gz (21.1 kB view details)

Uploaded Source

Built Distribution

xstate_machine-3.1.1-py3-none-any.whl (23.1 kB view details)

Uploaded Python 3

File details

Details for the file xstate_machine-3.1.1.tar.gz.

File metadata

  • Download URL: xstate_machine-3.1.1.tar.gz
  • Upload date:
  • Size: 21.1 kB
  • Tags: Source
  • Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? No
  • Uploaded via: poetry/1.8.2 CPython/3.11.7 Darwin/23.4.0

File hashes

Hashes for xstate_machine-3.1.1.tar.gz
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 fe1f07656617526e0c17ae786522b7cb8dc7bb157ea8c7b97ab28ca61a4730f3
MD5 551678450d5d78407eb1c959ede8c9c9
BLAKE2b-256 28811225608f956fd136592848607aa97ec073f3d1b8fc42904ae698492f781d

See more details on using hashes here.

File details

Details for the file xstate_machine-3.1.1-py3-none-any.whl.

File metadata

  • Download URL: xstate_machine-3.1.1-py3-none-any.whl
  • Upload date:
  • Size: 23.1 kB
  • Tags: Python 3
  • Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? No
  • Uploaded via: poetry/1.8.2 CPython/3.11.7 Darwin/23.4.0

File hashes

Hashes for xstate_machine-3.1.1-py3-none-any.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 10039258a23275fa880583fed8829c893d4ea833580f04588ffe99c3c6e1d996
MD5 99a18afbf34f282a93a78de24dfab49f
BLAKE2b-256 42e039e10272ac0dee348620861b9884c30e869f1d4636194040f2a0a7f06373

See more details on using hashes here.

Supported by

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