Welcome to django-versioning’s documentation!¶
django-revisions
is a Django app that allows you to keep a version history for model instances. It has a simple API, but is also integrated with the Django admin interface. django-revisions
doesn’t add any tables to your database, nor does it work by serializing old revisions – making this app very natural to work with and migration-friendly, as opposed to other solutions out there. (See The basic design of django-revisions.)
- Access and revert to any previous model save with a convenient and minimally intrusive API.
- An optional trash bin for deleted content.
- Admin integration: restore trash, revert content to an older revision.
- Works flawlessly with migration tools like South
django-revisions
takes care of model instance version history. If you found this page while looking for asset versioning of media files, like javascript or CSS, take a look at django-css
and related apps instead.
Getting Started¶
Installation¶
Models¶
django-revisions works by adding models.VersionedModel as a base class to your model as well as — if you prefer — shortcuts.VersionedModel. You can enable a trash function by adding models.TrashableModel as a base class to your model and adding the class decorator decorators.trash_aware to any model for which you want to enable trash (that is, soft deletes).
All three classes are independent, so you’ll have to add them in separately.
The models and API work with both single-table models and joined tables (that is, concrete inheritance).
django-revisions makes no effort to be a drop-in for existing models. It adds fields to your models, which means you’ll have to run a South migration to get you started, and you’ll have to run a small script to generate bundle IDs (they can just equal the object PK).
See Caveats when working with VersionedModel for more detail.
Admin integration¶
Deleting and trashing versioned content¶
This application also includes a simple abstract model that will put deleted objects into a trash bin, rather than outright deleting them from the database. TrashableModel
works with any model, versioned or not. It adds a single is_trash
field to the database table, so make sure to add that in manually or remember to execute a migration.
Note that, for design reasons, you can’t trash individual revisions. If you want to undo a revision, obj.revert_to(obj.get_revisions().prev)
or obj.get_revisions().prev.make_current_revision()
are the preferred methods. That way, the version history is kept intact.
Hard deleting indidual revisions is possible for administration purposes, using obj.delete_revision()
, but is highly discouraged.
API¶
django-revisions is still sorely lacking in documentation, though early adopters can get started by browsing through the methods available on models.TrashableModel, models.VersionedModel and the shortcuts in shortcuts.VersionedModel.
Some examples¶
# models.py
from django.db import models
import revisions
class Story(revisions.models.VersionedModel, revisions.shortcuts.VersionedModel):
title = models.CharField(max_length=200)
date = models.DateTimeField(auto_now=True)
log = models.CharField(max_length=200)
def __unicode__(self):
return self.title
class Versioning:
publication_date = 'date'
clear_each_revision = ['log']
# interactive session
>>> story = Story(title="a story (v1)")
>>> story.save()
>>> story.pk
1
>>> story.title = "a story (v2)"
>>> story.save()
>>> story.pk
2
>>> story.get_revisions()
[<Story: a story (v1)>, <Story: a story (v2)>]
>>> story.get_revisions()[0].make_current_revision()
>>> story.pk
3
>>> story.get_revisions()
[<Story: a story (v1)>, <Story: a story (v2)>, <Story: a story (v1)>]
>>> old_story = story.get_revisions()[0]
>>> # revert to a story
>>> story.revert_to(old_story)
>>> # or a primary key
>>> story.revert_to(2)
>>> # dates work as well
>>> story.revert_to(old_story.date)
>>> story.log = "Changed some stuff"
>>> story.save()
>>> # the Django admin clears out fields that have to be empty on each rev for you:
>>> story.prepare_for_writing()
>>> story.log
''
Learn more¶
Development: reporting bugs, helping out, running the test suite¶
Development takes place on GitHub. Feel free to fork, and please report any bugs or feature requests over there. Run the test suite simply by adding revisions
and revisions.tests
to your apps, and subsequently running python manage.py test revisions
. django-versioning
has been known to work on Django 1.2 but only undergoes frequent testing on Django 1.3. That said, it will probably work on any 1.x installation.
Roadmap¶
The first priority is better documentation. After that, there are some features that may or may not get added to the app:
- view version history and do diffs in the admin
- a view wrapper or query shortcut that can handle redirecting to the latest revision when users stumble on outdated content (e.g. when a new revision has a different slug)
- try to follow the django-reversion API wherever it makes sense, perhaps creating a
shortcuts.ReversionModel
model.
Changelog¶
- 0.4: Added a
VersionedModelBase
and removed all explicit references tovid
as the primary key, to be able to support models regardless of whether their AutoField is namedvid
and regardless of whether it works with regular IDs, UUIDs et cetera. Changed the way you add in shortcuts. Useshortcuts.VersionedModel
to get a versioned model _with_ shortcuts, or use bothmodels.VersionedModel
andshortcuts.VersionedModelShortcuts
to stick to the old ways of doing things. - 0.3: Improved docs and added support for versioning on models with concrete inheritance.
- 0.2: First public release. Added a lot of unit tests.
- 0.1: First release.