Admin actions
In these cases, Django’s admin lets you write and register “actions” – functions that get called with a list of objects selected on the change list page.
If you look at any change list in the admin, you’ll see this feature in action; Django ships with a “delete selected objects” action available to all models. For example, here’s the user module from Django’s built-in django.contrib.auth app:
Warning
The “delete selected objects” action uses for efficiency reasons, which has an important caveat: your model’s delete()
method will not be called.
If you wish to override this behavior, you can override ModelAdmin.delete_queryset() or write a custom action which does deletion in your preferred manner – for example, by calling Model.delete()
for each of the selected items.
For more background on bulk deletion, see the documentation on .
Read on to find out how to add your own actions to this list.
The easiest way to explain actions is by example, so let’s dive in.
A common use case for admin actions is the bulk updating of a model. Imagine a news application with an Article
model:
A common task we might perform with a model like this is to update an article’s status from “draft” to “published”. We could easily do this in the admin one article at a time, but if we wanted to bulk-publish a group of articles, it’d be tedious. So, let’s write an action that lets us change an article’s status to “published.”
First, we’ll need to write a function that gets called when the action is triggered from the admin. Action functions are regular functions that take three arguments:
- The current ModelAdmin
- An representing the current request,
- A QuerySet containing the set of objects selected by the user.
Our publish-these-articles function won’t need the or the request object, but we will use the queryset:
def make_published(modeladmin, request, queryset):
queryset.update(status='p')
Note
For the best performance, we’re using the queryset’s update method. Other types of actions might need to deal with each object individually; in these cases we’d iterate over the queryset:
for obj in queryset:
do_something_with(obj)
That’s actually all there is to writing an action! However, we’ll take one more optional-but-useful step and give the action a “nice” title in the admin. By default, this action would appear in the action list as “Make published” – the function name, with underscores replaced by spaces. That’s fine, but we can provide a better, more human-friendly name by using the decorator on the make_published
function:
from django.contrib import admin
...
@admin.action(description='Mark selected stories as published')
def make_published(modeladmin, request, queryset):
queryset.update(status='p')
Note
This might look familiar; the admin’s list_display option uses a similar technique with the decorator to provide human-readable descriptions for callback functions registered there, too.
Adding actions to the
Next, we’ll need to inform our ModelAdmin of the action. This works just like any other configuration option. So, the complete admin.py
with the action and its registration would look like:
from django.contrib import admin
from myapp.models import Article
@admin.action(description='Mark selected stories as published')
def make_published(modeladmin, request, queryset):
queryset.update(status='p')
class ArticleAdmin(admin.ModelAdmin):
list_display = ['title', 'status']
actions = [make_published]
admin.site.register(Article, ArticleAdmin)
That code will give us an admin change list that looks something like this:
That’s really all there is to it! If you’re itching to write your own actions, you now know enough to get started. The rest of this document covers more advanced techniques.
If there are foreseeable error conditions that may occur while running your action, you should gracefully inform the user of the problem. This means handling exceptions and using to display a user friendly description of the problem in the response.
There’s a couple of extra options and possibilities you can exploit for more advanced options.
Actions as methods
The example above shows the make_published
action defined as a function. That’s perfectly fine, but it’s not perfect from a code design point of view: since the action is tightly coupled to the Article
object, it makes sense to hook the action to the ArticleAdmin
object itself.
You can do it like this:
class ArticleAdmin(admin.ModelAdmin):
...
actions = ['make_published']
@admin.action(description='Mark selected stories as published')
def make_published(self, request, queryset):
queryset.update(status='p')
Notice first that we’ve moved make_published
into a method and renamed the parameter to self
, and second that we’ve now put the string 'make_published'
in actions
instead of a direct function reference. This tells the ModelAdmin to look up the action as a method.
Defining actions as methods gives the action more idiomatic access to the itself, allowing the action to call any of the methods provided by the admin.
For example, we can use self
to flash a message to the user informing them that the action was successful:
This make the action match what the admin itself does after successfully performing an action:
By default, after an action is performed the user is redirected back to the original change list page. However, some actions, especially more complex ones, will need to return intermediate pages. For example, the built-in delete action asks for confirmation before deleting the selected objects.
To provide an intermediary page, return an HttpResponse (or subclass) from your action. For example, you might write an export function that uses Django’s to dump some selected objects as JSON:
from django.core import serializers
from django.http import HttpResponse
def export_as_json(modeladmin, request, queryset):
response = HttpResponse(content_type="application/json")
serializers.serialize("json", queryset, stream=response)
return response
Generally, something like the above isn’t considered a great idea. Most of the time, the best practice will be to return an HttpResponseRedirect and redirect the user to a view you’ve written, passing the list of selected objects in the GET query string. This allows you to provide complex interaction logic on the intermediary pages. For example, if you wanted to provide a more complete export function, you’d want to let the user choose a format, and possibly a list of fields to include in the export. The best thing to do would be to write a small action that redirects to your custom export view:
from django.contrib.contenttypes.models import ContentType
from django.http import HttpResponseRedirect
def export_selected_objects(modeladmin, request, queryset):
selected = queryset.values_list('pk', flat=True)
ct = ContentType.objects.get_for_model(queryset.model)
return HttpResponseRedirect('/export/?ct=%s&ids=%s' % (
ct.pk,
','.join(str(pk) for pk in selected),
))
As you can see, the action is rather short; all the complex logic would belong in your export view. This would need to deal with objects of any type, hence the business with the ContentType
.
Writing this view is left as an exercise to the reader.
Making actions available site-wide
AdminSite.add_action
(action, name=None)
Some actions are best if they’re made available to any object in the admin site – the export action defined above would be a good candidate. You can make an action globally available using AdminSite.add_action(). For example:
from django.contrib import admin
admin.site.add_action(export_selected_objects)
This makes the export_selected_objects
action globally available as an action named “export_selected_objects”. You can explicitly give the action a name – good if you later want to programmatically – by passing a second argument to AdminSite.add_action():
admin.site.add_action(export_selected_objects, 'export_selected')
Sometimes you need to disable certain actions – especially those – for particular objects. There’s a few ways you can disable actions:
Disabling a site-wide action
AdminSite.disable_action
(name)
For example, you can use this method to remove the built-in “delete selected objects” action:
admin.site.disable_action('delete_selected')
Once you’ve done the above, that action will no longer be available site-wide.
If, however, you need to reenable a globally-disabled action for one particular model, list it explicitly in your ModelAdmin.actions
list:
Disabling all actions for a particular ModelAdmin
If you want no bulk actions available for a given , set ModelAdmin.actions to None
:
class MyModelAdmin(admin.ModelAdmin):
actions = None
This tells the to not display or allow any actions, including any site-wide actions.
Conditionally enabling or disabling actions
ModelAdmin.get_actions
(request)
Finally, you can conditionally enable or disable actions on a per-request (and hence per-user basis) by overriding ModelAdmin.get_actions().
This returns a dictionary of actions allowed. The keys are action names, and the values are (function, name, short_description)
tuples.
For example, if you only want users whose names begin with ‘J’ to be able to delete objects in bulk:
class MyModelAdmin(admin.ModelAdmin):
...
def get_actions(self, request):
actions = super().get_actions(request)
if 'delete_selected' in actions:
del actions['delete_selected']
return actions
Setting permissions for actions
Actions may limit their availability to users with specific permissions by wrapping the action function with the action() decorator and passing the permissions
argument:
@admin.action(permissions=['change'])
def make_published(modeladmin, request, queryset):
queryset.update(status='p')
The make_published()
action will only be available to users that pass the check.
If permissions
has more than one permission, the action will be available as long as the user passes at least one of the checks.
Available values for permissions
and the corresponding method checks are:
'add'
: ModelAdmin.has_add_permission()'change'
:'delete'
: ModelAdmin.has_delete_permission()'view'
:
You can specify any other value as long as you implement a corresponding has_<value>_permission(self, request)
method on the ModelAdmin
.
For example:
from django.contrib import admin
from django.contrib.auth import get_permission_codename
class ArticleAdmin(admin.ModelAdmin):
actions = ['make_published']
@admin.action(permissions=['publish'])
def make_published(self, request, queryset):
queryset.update(status='p')
def has_publish_permission(self, request):
"""Does the user have the publish permission?"""
opts = self.opts
codename = get_permission_codename('publish', opts)
return request.user.has_perm('%s.%s' % (opts.app_label, codename))
action
(**, permissions=None, description=None*)
This decorator can be used for setting specific attributes on custom action functions that can be used with actions:
@admin.action(
permissions=['publish'],
description='Mark selected stories as published',
)
def make_published(self, request, queryset):
queryset.update(status='p')
This is equivalent to setting some attributes (with the original, longer names) on the function directly:
Use of this decorator is not compulsory to make an action function, but it can be useful to use it without arguments as a marker in your source to identify the purpose of the function:
@admin.action
def make_inactive(self, request, queryset):
In this case it will add no attributes to the function.