| ============== |
| FAQ: The admin |
| ============== |
|
|
| I can't log in. When I enter a valid username and password, it just brings up the login page again, with no error messages. |
| =========================================================================================================================== |
|
|
| The login cookie isn't being set correctly, because the domain of the cookie |
| sent out by Django doesn't match the domain in your browser. Try setting the |
| :setting:`SESSION_COOKIE_DOMAIN` setting to match your domain. For example, if |
| you're going to "https://www.example.com/admin/" in your browser, set |
| ``SESSION_COOKIE_DOMAIN = 'www.example.com'``. |
|
|
| I can't log in. When I enter a valid username and password, it brings up the login page again, with a "Please enter a correct username and password" error. |
| =========================================================================================================================================================== |
|
|
| If you're sure your username and password are correct, make sure your user |
| account has :attr:`~django.contrib.auth.models.User.is_active` and |
| :attr:`~django.contrib.auth.models.User.is_staff` set to True. The admin site |
| only allows access to users with those two fields both set to True. |
|
|
| How do I automatically set a field's value to the user who last edited the object in the admin? |
| =============================================================================================== |
|
|
| The :class:`~django.contrib.admin.ModelAdmin` class provides customization hooks |
| that allow you to transform an object as it saved, using details from the |
| request. By extracting the current user from the request, and customizing the |
| :meth:`~django.contrib.admin.ModelAdmin.save_model` hook, you can update an |
| object to reflect the user that edited it. See :ref:`the documentation on |
| ModelAdmin methods <model-admin-methods>` for an example. |
|
|
| How do I limit admin access so that objects can only be edited by the users who created them? |
| ============================================================================================= |
|
|
| The :class:`~django.contrib.admin.ModelAdmin` class also provides customization |
| hooks that allow you to control the visibility and editability of objects in the |
| admin. Using the same trick of extracting the user from the request, the |
| :meth:`~django.contrib.admin.ModelAdmin.get_queryset` and |
| :meth:`~django.contrib.admin.ModelAdmin.has_change_permission` can be used to |
| control the visibility and editability of objects in the admin. |
|
|
| My admin-site CSS and images showed up fine using the development server, but they're not displaying when using mod_wsgi. |
| ========================================================================================================================= |
|
|
| See :ref:`serving the admin files <serving-the-admin-files>` |
| in the "How to use Django with mod_wsgi" documentation. |
|
|
| My "list_filter" contains a ManyToManyField, but the filter doesn't display. |
| ============================================================================ |
|
|
| Django won't bother displaying the filter for a ``ManyToManyField`` if there |
| are no related objects. |
|
|
| For example, if your :attr:`~django.contrib.admin.ModelAdmin.list_filter` |
| includes :doc:`sites </ref/contrib/sites>`, and there are no sites in your |
| database, it won't display a "Site" filter. In that case, filtering by site |
| would be meaningless. |
|
|
| Some objects aren't appearing in the admin. |
| =========================================== |
|
|
| Inconsistent row counts may be caused by missing foreign key values or a |
| foreign key field incorrectly set to :attr:`null=False |
| <django.db.models.Field.null>`. If you have a record with a |
| :class:`~django.db.models.ForeignKey` pointing to a nonexistent object and |
| that foreign key is included is |
| :attr:`~django.contrib.admin.ModelAdmin.list_display`, the record will not be |
| shown in the admin changelist because the Django model is declaring an |
| integrity constraint that is not implemented at the database level. |
|
|
| How can I customize the functionality of the admin interface? |
| ============================================================= |
|
|
| You've got several options. If you want to piggyback on top of an add/change |
| form that Django automatically generates, you can attach arbitrary JavaScript |
| modules to the page via the model's class Admin :ref:`js parameter |
| <modeladmin-asset-definitions>`. That parameter is a list of URLs, as strings, |
| pointing to JavaScript modules that will be included within the admin form via |
| a ``<script>`` tag. |
|
|
| If you want more flexibility than is feasible by tweaking the auto-generated |
| forms, feel free to write custom views for the admin. The admin is powered by |
| Django itself, and you can write custom views that hook into the authentication |
| system, check permissions and do whatever else they need to do. |
|
|
| If you want to customize the look-and-feel of the admin interface, read the |
| next question. |
|
|
| The dynamically-generated admin site is ugly! How can I change it? |
| ================================================================== |
|
|
| We like it, but if you don't agree, you can modify the admin site's |
| presentation by editing the CSS stylesheet and/or associated image files. The |
| site is built using semantic HTML and plenty of CSS hooks, so any changes you'd |
| like to make should be possible by editing the stylesheet. |
|
|
| .. _admin-browser-support: |
|
|
| What browsers are supported for using the admin? |
| ================================================ |
|
|
| The admin provides a fully-functional experience to the recent versions of |
| modern, web standards compliant browsers. On desktop this means Chrome, Edge, |
| Firefox, Opera, Safari, and others. |
|
|
| On mobile and tablet devices, the admin provides a responsive experience for |
| web standards compliant browsers. This includes the major browsers on both |
| Android and iOS. |
|
|
| Depending on feature support, there *may* be minor stylistic differences |
| between browsers. These are considered acceptable variations in rendering. |
|
|