| ============== |
| URL dispatcher |
| ============== |
|
|
| A clean, elegant URL scheme is an important detail in a high-quality web |
| application. Django lets you design URLs however you want, with no framework |
| limitations. |
|
|
| See `Cool URIs don't change`_, by World Wide Web creator Tim Berners-Lee, for |
| excellent arguments on why URLs should be clean and usable. |
|
|
| .. _Cool URIs don't change: https://www.w3.org/Provider/Style/URI |
|
|
| Overview |
| ======== |
|
|
| To design URLs for an app, you create a Python module informally called a |
| **URLconf** (URL configuration). This module is pure Python code and is a |
| mapping between URL path expressions to Python functions (your views). |
|
|
| This mapping can be as short or as long as needed. It can reference other |
| mappings. And, because it's pure Python code, it can be constructed |
| dynamically. |
|
|
| Django also provides a way to translate URLs according to the active |
| language. See the :ref:`internationalization documentation |
| <url-internationalization>` for more information. |
|
|
| .. _how-django-processes-a-request: |
|
|
| How Django processes a request |
| ============================== |
|
|
| When a user requests a page from your Django-powered site, this is the |
| algorithm the system follows to determine which Python code to execute: |
|
|
| #. Django determines the root URLconf module to use. Ordinarily, |
| this is the value of the :setting:`ROOT_URLCONF` setting, but if the incoming |
| ``HttpRequest`` object has a :attr:`~django.http.HttpRequest.urlconf` |
| attribute (set by middleware), its value will be used in place of the |
| :setting:`ROOT_URLCONF` setting. |
|
|
| #. Django loads that Python module and looks for the variable |
| ``urlpatterns``. This should be a :term:`sequence` of |
| :func:`django.urls.path` and/or :func:`django.urls.re_path` instances. |
|
|
| #. Django runs through each URL pattern, in order, and stops at the first |
| one that matches the requested URL, matching against |
| :attr:`~django.http.HttpRequest.path_info`. |
|
|
| #. Once one of the URL patterns matches, Django imports and calls the given |
| view, which is a Python function (or a :doc:`class-based view |
| </topics/class-based-views/index>`). The view gets passed the following |
| arguments: |
|
|
| * An instance of :class:`~django.http.HttpRequest`. |
| * If the matched URL pattern contained no named groups, then the |
| matches from the regular expression are provided as positional arguments. |
| * The keyword arguments are made up of any named parts matched by the |
| path expression that are provided, overridden by any arguments specified |
| in the optional ``kwargs`` argument to :func:`django.urls.path` or |
| :func:`django.urls.re_path`. |
|
|
| #. If no URL pattern matches, or if an exception is raised during any |
| point in this process, Django invokes an appropriate |
| error-handling view. See `Error handling`_ below. |
|
|
| Example |
| ======= |
|
|
| Here's a sample URLconf:: |
|
|
| from django.urls import path |
|
|
| from . import views |
|
|
| urlpatterns = [ |
| path("articles/2003/", views.special_case_2003), |
| path("articles/<int:year>/", views.year_archive), |
| path("articles/<int:year>/<int:month>/", views.month_archive), |
| path("articles/<int:year>/<int:month>/<slug:slug>/", views.article_detail), |
| ] |
|
|
| Notes: |
|
|
| * To capture a value from the URL, use angle brackets. |
|
|
| * Captured values can optionally include a converter type. For example, use |
| ``<int:name>`` to capture an integer parameter. If a converter isn't included, |
| any string, excluding a ``/`` character, is matched. |
|
|
| * There's no need to add a leading slash, because every URL has that. For |
| example, it's ``articles``, not ``/articles``. |
|
|
| Example requests: |
|
|
| * A request to ``/articles/2005/03/`` would match the third entry in the |
| list. Django would call the function |
| ``views.month_archive(request, year=2005, month=3)``. |
|
|
| * ``/articles/2003/`` would match the first pattern in the list, not the |
| second one, because the patterns are tested in order, and the first one |
| is the first test to pass. Feel free to exploit the ordering to insert |
| special cases like this. Here, Django would call the function |
| ``views.special_case_2003(request)`` |
|
|
| * ``/articles/2003`` would not match any of these patterns, because each |
| pattern requires that the URL end with a slash. |
|
|
| * ``/articles/2003/03/building-a-django-site/`` would match the final |
| pattern. Django would call the function |
| ``views.article_detail(request, year=2003, month=3, slug="building-a-django-site")``. |
|
|
| Path converters |
| =============== |
|
|
| The following path converters are available by default: |
|
|
| * ``str`` - Matches any non-empty string, excluding the path separator, ``'/'``. |
| This is the default if a converter isn't included in the expression. |
|
|
| * ``int`` - Matches zero or any positive integer. Returns an ``int``. |
|
|
| * ``slug`` - Matches any slug string consisting of ASCII letters or numbers, |
| plus the hyphen and underscore characters. For example, |
| ``building-your-1st-django-site``. |
|
|
| * ``uuid`` - Matches a formatted UUID. To prevent multiple URLs from mapping to |
| the same page, dashes must be included and letters must be lowercase. For |
| example, ``075194d3-6885-417e-a8a8-6c931e272f00``. Returns a |
| :class:`~uuid.UUID` instance. |
|
|
| * ``path`` - Matches any non-empty string, including the path separator, |
| ``'/'``. This allows you to match against a complete URL path rather than |
| a segment of a URL path as with ``str``. |
|
|
| .. _registering-custom-path-converters: |
|
|
| Registering custom path converters |
| ================================== |
|
|
| For more complex matching requirements, you can define your own path converters. |
|
|
| A converter is a class that includes the following: |
|
|
| * A ``regex`` class attribute, as a string. |
|
|
| * A ``to_python(self, value)`` method, which handles converting the matched |
| string into the type that should be passed to the view function. It should |
| raise ``ValueError`` if it can't convert the given value. A ``ValueError`` is |
| interpreted as no match and as a consequence a 404 response is sent to the |
| user unless another URL pattern matches. |
|
|
| * A ``to_url(self, value)`` method, which handles converting the Python type |
| into a string to be used in the URL. It should raise ``ValueError`` if it |
| can't convert the given value. A ``ValueError`` is interpreted as no match |
| and as a consequence :func:`~django.urls.reverse` will raise |
| :class:`~django.urls.NoReverseMatch` unless another URL pattern matches. |
|
|
| For example:: |
|
|
| class FourDigitYearConverter: |
| regex = "[0-9]{4}" |
|
|
| def to_python(self, value): |
| return int(value) |
|
|
| def to_url(self, value): |
| return "%04d" % value |
|
|
| Register custom converter classes in your URLconf using |
| :func:`~django.urls.register_converter`:: |
|
|
| from django.urls import path, register_converter |
|
|
| from . import converters, views |
|
|
| register_converter(converters.FourDigitYearConverter, "yyyy") |
|
|
| urlpatterns = [ |
| path("articles/2003/", views.special_case_2003), |
| path("articles/<yyyy:year>/", views.year_archive), |
| ..., |
| ] |
|
|
| Using regular expressions |
| ========================= |
|
|
| If the paths and converters syntax isn't sufficient for defining your URL |
| patterns, you can also use regular expressions. To do so, use |
| :func:`~django.urls.re_path` instead of :func:`~django.urls.path`. |
|
|
| In Python regular expressions, the syntax for named regular expression groups |
| is ``(?P<name>pattern)``, where ``name`` is the name of the group and |
| ``pattern`` is some pattern to match. |
|
|
| Here's the example URLconf from earlier, rewritten using regular expressions:: |
|
|
| from django.urls import path, re_path |
|
|
| from . import views |
|
|
| urlpatterns = [ |
| path("articles/2003/", views.special_case_2003), |
| re_path(r"^articles/(?P<year>[0-9]{4})/$", views.year_archive), |
| re_path(r"^articles/(?P<year>[0-9]{4})/(?P<month>[0-9]{2})/$", views.month_archive), |
| re_path( |
| r"^articles/(?P<year>[0-9]{4})/(?P<month>[0-9]{2})/(?P<slug>[\w-]+)/$", |
| views.article_detail, |
| ), |
| ] |
|
|
| This accomplishes roughly the same thing as the previous example, except: |
|
|
| * The exact URLs that will match are slightly more constrained. For example, |
| the year 10000 will no longer match since the year integers are constrained |
| to be exactly four digits long. |
|
|
| * Each captured argument is sent to the view as a string, regardless of what |
| sort of match the regular expression makes. |
|
|
| When switching from using :func:`~django.urls.path` to |
| :func:`~django.urls.re_path` or vice versa, it's particularly important to be |
| aware that the type of the view arguments may change, and so you may need to |
| adapt your views. |
|
|
| Using unnamed regular expression groups |
| --------------------------------------- |
|
|
| As well as the named group syntax, e.g. ``(?P<year>[0-9]{4})``, you can |
| also use the shorter unnamed group, e.g. ``([0-9]{4})``. |
|
|
| This usage isn't particularly recommended as it makes it easier to accidentally |
| introduce errors between the intended meaning of a match and the arguments |
| of the view. |
|
|
| In either case, using only one style within a given regex is recommended. When |
| both styles are mixed, any unnamed groups are ignored and only named groups are |
| passed to the view function. |
|
|
| Nested arguments |
| ---------------- |
|
|
| Regular expressions allow nested arguments, and Django will resolve them and |
| pass them to the view. When reversing, Django will try to fill in all outer |
| captured arguments, ignoring any nested captured arguments. Consider the |
| following URL patterns which optionally take a page argument:: |
|
|
| from django.urls import re_path |
|
|
| urlpatterns = [ |
| re_path(r"^blog/(page-([0-9]+)/)?$", blog_articles), # bad |
| re_path(r"^comments/(?:page-(?P<page_number>[0-9]+)/)?$", comments), # good |
| ] |
|
|
| Both patterns use nested arguments and will resolve: for example, |
| ``blog/page-2/`` will result in a match to ``blog_articles`` with two |
| positional arguments: ``page-2/`` and ``2``. The second pattern for |
| ``comments`` will match ``comments/page-2/`` with keyword argument |
| ``page_number`` set to 2. The outer argument in this case is a non-capturing |
| argument ``(?:...)``. |
|
|
| The ``blog_articles`` view needs the outermost captured argument to be reversed, |
| ``page-2/`` or no arguments in this case, while ``comments`` can be reversed |
| with either no arguments or a value for ``page_number``. |
|
|
| Nested captured arguments create a strong coupling between the view arguments |
| and the URL as illustrated by ``blog_articles``: the view receives part of the |
| URL (``page-2/``) instead of only the value the view is interested in. This |
| coupling is even more pronounced when reversing, since to reverse the view we |
| need to pass the piece of URL instead of the page number. |
|
|
| As a rule of thumb, only capture the values the view needs to work with and |
| use non-capturing arguments when the regular expression needs an argument but |
| the view ignores it. |
|
|
| What the URLconf searches against |
| ================================= |
|
|
| The URLconf searches against the requested URL, as a normal Python string. This |
| does not include GET or POST parameters, or the domain name. |
|
|
| For example, in a request to ``https://www.example.com/myapp/``, the URLconf |
| will look for ``myapp/``. |
|
|
| In a request to ``https://www.example.com/myapp/?page=3``, the URLconf will look |
| for ``myapp/``. |
|
|
| The URLconf doesn't look at the request method. In other words, all request |
| methods -- ``POST``, ``GET``, ``HEAD``, etc. -- will be routed to the same |
| function for the same URL. |
|
|
| Specifying defaults for view arguments |
| ====================================== |
|
|
| A convenient trick is to specify default parameters for your views' arguments. |
| Here's an example URLconf and view:: |
|
|
| # URLconf |
| from django.urls import path |
|
|
| from . import views |
|
|
| urlpatterns = [ |
| path("blog/", views.page), |
| path("blog/page<int:num>/", views.page), |
| ] |
|
|
|
|
| # View (in blog/views.py) |
| def page(request, num=1): |
| # Output the appropriate page of blog entries, according to num. |
| ... |
|
|
| In the above example, both URL patterns point to the same view -- |
| ``views.page`` -- but the first pattern doesn't capture anything from the |
| URL. If the first pattern matches, the ``page()`` function will use its |
| default argument for ``num``, ``1``. If the second pattern matches, |
| ``page()`` will use whatever ``num`` value was captured. |
|
|
| Performance |
| =========== |
|
|
| Django processes regular expressions in the ``urlpatterns`` list which is |
| compiled the first time it's accessed. Subsequent requests use the cached |
| configuration via the URL resolver. |
|
|
| Syntax of the ``urlpatterns`` variable |
| ====================================== |
|
|
| ``urlpatterns`` should be a :term:`sequence` of :func:`~django.urls.path` |
| and/or :func:`~django.urls.re_path` instances. |
|
|
| Error handling |
| ============== |
|
|
| When Django can't find a match for the requested URL, or when an exception is |
| raised, Django invokes an error-handling view. |
|
|
| The views to use for these cases are specified by four variables. Their |
| default values should suffice for most projects, but further customization is |
| possible by overriding their default values. |
|
|
| See the documentation on :ref:`customizing error views |
| <customizing-error-views>` for the full details. |
|
|
| Such values can be set in your root URLconf. Setting these variables in any |
| other URLconf will have no effect. |
|
|
| Values must be callables, or strings representing the full Python import path |
| to the view that should be called to handle the error condition at hand. |
|
|
| The variables are: |
|
|
| * ``handler400`` -- See :data:`django.conf.urls.handler400`. |
| * ``handler403`` -- See :data:`django.conf.urls.handler403`. |
| * ``handler404`` -- See :data:`django.conf.urls.handler404`. |
| * ``handler500`` -- See :data:`django.conf.urls.handler500`. |
|
|
| .. _including-other-urlconfs: |
|
|
| Including other URLconfs |
| ======================== |
|
|
| At any point, your ``urlpatterns`` can "include" other URLconf modules. This |
| essentially "roots" a set of URLs below other ones. |
|
|
| For example, here's an excerpt of the URLconf for the `Django website`_ |
| itself. It includes a number of other URLconfs:: |
|
|
| from django.urls import include, path |
|
|
| urlpatterns = [ |
| # ... snip ... |
| path("community/", include("aggregator.urls")), |
| path("contact/", include("contact.urls")), |
| # ... snip ... |
| ] |
|
|
| Whenever Django encounters :func:`~django.urls.include()`, it chops off |
| whatever part of the URL matched up to that point and sends the remaining |
| string to the included URLconf for further processing. |
|
|
| Another possibility is to include additional URL patterns by using a list of |
| :func:`~django.urls.path` instances. For example, consider this URLconf:: |
|
|
| from django.urls import include, path |
|
|
| from apps.main import views as main_views |
| from credit import views as credit_views |
|
|
| extra_patterns = [ |
| path("reports/", credit_views.report), |
| path("reports/<int:id>/", credit_views.report), |
| path("charge/", credit_views.charge), |
| ] |
|
|
| urlpatterns = [ |
| path("", main_views.homepage), |
| path("help/", include("apps.help.urls")), |
| path("credit/", include(extra_patterns)), |
| ] |
|
|
| In this example, the ``/credit/reports/`` URL will be handled by the |
| ``credit_views.report()`` Django view. |
|
|
| This can be used to remove redundancy from URLconfs where a single pattern |
| prefix is used repeatedly. For example, consider this URLconf:: |
|
|
| from django.urls import path |
| from . import views |
|
|
| urlpatterns = [ |
| path("<page_slug>-<page_id>/history/", views.history), |
| path("<page_slug>-<page_id>/edit/", views.edit), |
| path("<page_slug>-<page_id>/discuss/", views.discuss), |
| path("<page_slug>-<page_id>/permissions/", views.permissions), |
| ] |
|
|
| We can improve this by stating the common path prefix only once and grouping |
| the suffixes that differ:: |
|
|
| from django.urls import include, path |
| from . import views |
|
|
| urlpatterns = [ |
| path( |
| "<page_slug>-<page_id>/", |
| include( |
| [ |
| path("history/", views.history), |
| path("edit/", views.edit), |
| path("discuss/", views.discuss), |
| path("permissions/", views.permissions), |
| ] |
| ), |
| ), |
| ] |
|
|
| .. _`Django website`: https://www.djangoproject.com/ |
|
|
| Captured parameters |
| ------------------- |
|
|
| An included URLconf receives any captured parameters from parent URLconfs, so |
| the following example is valid:: |
|
|
| # In settings/urls/main.py |
| from django.urls import include, path |
|
|
| urlpatterns = [ |
| path("<username>/blog/", include("foo.urls.blog")), |
| ] |
|
|
| # In foo/urls/blog.py |
| from django.urls import path |
| from . import views |
|
|
| urlpatterns = [ |
| path("", views.blog.index), |
| path("archive/", views.blog.archive), |
| ] |
|
|
| In the above example, the captured ``"username"`` variable is passed to the |
| included URLconf, as expected. |
|
|
| .. _views-extra-options: |
|
|
| Passing extra options to view functions |
| ======================================= |
|
|
| URLconfs have a hook that lets you pass extra arguments to your view functions, |
| as a Python dictionary. |
|
|
| The :func:`~django.urls.path` function can take an optional third argument |
| which should be a dictionary of extra keyword arguments to pass to the view |
| function. |
|
|
| For example:: |
|
|
| from django.urls import path |
| from . import views |
|
|
| urlpatterns = [ |
| path("blog/<int:year>/", views.year_archive, {"foo": "bar"}), |
| ] |
|
|
| In this example, for a request to ``/blog/2005/``, Django will call |
| ``views.year_archive(request, year=2005, foo='bar')``. |
|
|
| This technique is used in the |
| :doc:`syndication framework </ref/contrib/syndication>` to pass metadata and |
| options to views. |
|
|
| .. admonition:: Dealing with conflicts |
|
|
| It's possible to have a URL pattern which captures named keyword arguments, |
| and also passes arguments with the same names in its dictionary of extra |
| arguments. When this happens, the arguments in the dictionary will be used |
| instead of the arguments captured in the URL. |
|
|
| Passing extra options to ``include()`` |
| -------------------------------------- |
|
|
| Similarly, you can pass extra options to :func:`~django.urls.include` and |
| each line in the included URLconf will be passed the extra options. |
|
|
| For example, these two URLconf sets are functionally identical: |
|
|
| Set one:: |
|
|
| # main.py |
| from django.urls import include, path |
|
|
| urlpatterns = [ |
| path("blog/", include("inner"), {"blog_id": 3}), |
| ] |
|
|
| # inner.py |
| from django.urls import path |
| from mysite import views |
|
|
| urlpatterns = [ |
| path("archive/", views.archive), |
| path("about/", views.about), |
| ] |
|
|
| Set two:: |
|
|
| # main.py |
| from django.urls import include, path |
| from mysite import views |
|
|
| urlpatterns = [ |
| path("blog/", include("inner")), |
| ] |
|
|
| # inner.py |
| from django.urls import path |
|
|
| urlpatterns = [ |
| path("archive/", views.archive, {"blog_id": 3}), |
| path("about/", views.about, {"blog_id": 3}), |
| ] |
|
|
| Note that extra options will *always* be passed to *every* line in the included |
| URLconf, regardless of whether the line's view actually accepts those options |
| as valid. For this reason, this technique is only useful if you're certain that |
| every view in the included URLconf accepts the extra options you're passing. |
|
|
| Reverse resolution of URLs |
| ========================== |
|
|
| A common need when working on a Django project is the possibility to obtain URLs |
| in their final forms either for embedding in generated content (views and assets |
| URLs, URLs shown to the user, etc.) or for handling of the navigation flow on |
| the server side (redirections, etc.) |
|
|
| It is strongly desirable to avoid hard-coding these URLs (a laborious, |
| non-scalable and error-prone strategy). Equally dangerous is devising ad-hoc |
| mechanisms to generate URLs that are parallel to the design described by the |
| URLconf, which can result in the production of URLs that become stale over time. |
|
|
| In other words, what's needed is a DRY mechanism. Among other advantages it |
| would allow evolution of the URL design without having to go over all the |
| project source code to search and replace outdated URLs. |
|
|
| The primary piece of information we have available to get a URL is an |
| identification (e.g. the name) of the view in charge of handling it. Other |
| pieces of information that necessarily must participate in the lookup of the |
| right URL are the types (positional, keyword) and values of the view arguments. |
|
|
| Django provides a solution such that the URL mapper is the only repository of |
| the URL design. You feed it with your URLconf and then it can be used in both |
| directions: |
|
|
| * Starting with a URL requested by the user/browser, it calls the right Django |
| view providing any arguments it might need with their values as extracted from |
| the URL. |
|
|
| * Starting with the identification of the corresponding Django view plus the |
| values of arguments that would be passed to it, obtain the associated URL. |
|
|
| The first one is the usage we've been discussing in the previous sections. The |
| second one is what is known as *reverse resolution of URLs*, *reverse URL |
| matching*, *reverse URL lookup*, or simply *URL reversing*. |
|
|
| Django provides tools for performing URL reversing that match the different |
| layers where URLs are needed: |
|
|
| * In templates: Using the :ttag:`url` template tag. |
|
|
| * In Python code: Using the :func:`~django.urls.reverse` function. |
|
|
| * In higher level code related to handling of URLs of Django model instances: |
| The :meth:`~django.db.models.Model.get_absolute_url` method. |
|
|
| Examples |
| -------- |
|
|
| Consider again this URLconf entry:: |
|
|
| from django.urls import path |
|
|
| from . import views |
|
|
| urlpatterns = [ |
| # ... |
| path("articles/<int:year>/", views.year_archive, name="news-year-archive"), |
| # ... |
| ] |
|
|
| According to this design, the URL for the archive corresponding to year *nnnn* |
| is ``/articles/<nnnn>/``. |
|
|
| You can obtain these in template code by using: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: html+django |
|
|
| <a href="{% url 'news-year-archive' 2012 %}">2012 Archive</a> |
| {# Or with the year in a template context variable: #} |
| <ul> |
| {% for yearvar in year_list %} |
| <li><a href="{% url 'news-year-archive' yearvar %}">{{ yearvar }} Archive</a></li> |
| {% endfor %} |
| </ul> |
|
|
| Or in Python code:: |
|
|
| from django.http import HttpResponseRedirect |
| from django.urls import reverse |
|
|
|
|
| def redirect_to_year(request): |
| # ... |
| year = 2006 |
| # ... |
| return HttpResponseRedirect(reverse("news-year-archive", args=(year,))) |
|
|
| If, for some reason, it was decided that the URLs where content for yearly |
| article archives are published at should be changed then you would only need to |
| change the entry in the URLconf. |
|
|
| In some scenarios where views are of a generic nature, a many-to-one |
| relationship might exist between URLs and views. For these cases the view name |
| isn't a good enough identifier for it when comes the time of reversing |
| URLs. Read the next section to know about the solution Django provides for this. |
|
|
| .. _naming-url-patterns: |
|
|
| Naming URL patterns |
| =================== |
|
|
| In order to perform URL reversing, you'll need to use **named URL patterns** |
| as done in the examples above. The string used for the URL name can contain any |
| characters you like. You are not restricted to valid Python names. |
|
|
| When naming URL patterns, choose names that are unlikely to clash with other |
| applications' choice of names. If you call your URL pattern ``comment`` |
| and another application does the same thing, the URL that |
| :func:`~django.urls.reverse()` finds depends on whichever pattern is last in |
| your project's ``urlpatterns`` list. |
|
|
| Putting a prefix on your URL names, perhaps derived from the application |
| name (such as ``myapp-comment`` instead of ``comment``), decreases the chance |
| of collision. |
|
|
| You can deliberately choose the *same URL name* as another application if you |
| want to override a view. For example, a common use case is to override the |
| :class:`~django.contrib.auth.views.LoginView`. Parts of Django and most |
| third-party apps assume that this view has a URL pattern with the name |
| ``login``. If you have a custom login view and give its URL the name ``login``, |
| :func:`~django.urls.reverse()` will find your custom view as long as it's in |
| ``urlpatterns`` after ``django.contrib.auth.urls`` is included (if that's |
| included at all). |
|
|
| You may also use the same name for multiple URL patterns if they differ in |
| their arguments. In addition to the URL name, :func:`~django.urls.reverse()` |
| matches the number of arguments and the names of the keyword arguments. Path |
| converters can also raise ``ValueError`` to indicate no match, see |
| :ref:`registering-custom-path-converters` for details. |
|
|
| .. _topics-http-defining-url-namespaces: |
|
|
| URL namespaces |
| ============== |
|
|
| Introduction |
| ------------ |
|
|
| URL namespaces allow you to uniquely reverse :ref:`named URL patterns |
| <naming-url-patterns>` even if different applications use the same URL names. |
| It's a good practice for third-party apps to always use namespaced URLs (as we |
| did in the tutorial). Similarly, it also allows you to reverse URLs if multiple |
| instances of an application are deployed. In other words, since multiple |
| instances of a single application will share named URLs, namespaces provide a |
| way to tell these named URLs apart. |
|
|
| Django applications that make proper use of URL namespacing can be deployed |
| more than once for a particular site. For example :mod:`django.contrib.admin` |
| has an :class:`~django.contrib.admin.AdminSite` class which allows you to |
| :ref:`deploy more than one instance of the admin <multiple-admin-sites>`. In a |
| later example, we'll discuss the idea of deploying the polls application from |
| the tutorial in two different locations so we can serve the same functionality |
| to two different audiences (authors and publishers). |
|
|
| A URL namespace comes in two parts, both of which are strings: |
|
|
| .. glossary:: |
|
|
| application namespace |
| This describes the name of the application that is being deployed. Every |
| instance of a single application will have the same application namespace. |
| For example, Django's admin application has the somewhat predictable |
| application namespace of ``'admin'``. |
|
|
| instance namespace |
| This identifies a specific instance of an application. Instance namespaces |
| should be unique across your entire project. However, an instance namespace |
| can be the same as the application namespace. This is used to specify a |
| default instance of an application. For example, the default Django admin |
| instance has an instance namespace of ``'admin'``. |
|
|
| Namespaced URLs are specified using the ``':'`` operator. For example, the main |
| index page of the admin application is referenced using ``'admin:index'``. This |
| indicates a namespace of ``'admin'``, and a named URL of ``'index'``. |
|
|
| Namespaces can also be nested. The named URL ``'sports:polls:index'`` would |
| look for a pattern named ``'index'`` in the namespace ``'polls'`` that is itself |
| defined within the top-level namespace ``'sports'``. |
|
|
| .. _topics-http-reversing-url-namespaces: |
|
|
| Reversing namespaced URLs |
| ------------------------- |
|
|
| When given a namespaced URL (e.g. ``'polls:index'``) to resolve, Django splits |
| the fully qualified name into parts and then tries the following lookup: |
|
|
| #. First, Django looks for a matching :term:`application namespace` (in this |
| example, ``'polls'``). This will yield a list of instances of that |
| application. |
|
|
| #. If there is a current application defined, Django finds and returns the URL |
| resolver for that instance. The current application can be specified with |
| the ``current_app`` argument to the :func:`~django.urls.reverse()` |
| function. |
|
|
| The :ttag:`url` template tag uses the namespace of the currently resolved |
| view as the current application in a |
| :class:`~django.template.RequestContext`. You can override this default by |
| setting the current application on the :attr:`request.current_app |
| <django.http.HttpRequest.current_app>` attribute. |
|
|
| #. If there is no current application, Django looks for a default |
| application instance. The default application instance is the instance |
| that has an :term:`instance namespace` matching the :term:`application |
| namespace` (in this example, an instance of ``polls`` called ``'polls'``). |
|
|
| #. If there is no default application instance, Django will pick the last |
| deployed instance of the application, whatever its instance name may be. |
|
|
| #. If the provided namespace doesn't match an :term:`application namespace` in |
| step 1, Django will attempt a direct lookup of the namespace as an |
| :term:`instance namespace`. |
|
|
| If there are nested namespaces, these steps are repeated for each part of the |
| namespace until only the view name is unresolved. The view name will then be |
| resolved into a URL in the namespace that has been found. |
|
|
| Example |
| ~~~~~~~ |
|
|
| To show this resolution strategy in action, consider an example of two instances |
| of the ``polls`` application from the tutorial: one called ``'author-polls'`` |
| and one called ``'publisher-polls'``. Assume we have enhanced that application |
| so that it takes the instance namespace into consideration when creating and |
| displaying polls. |
|
|
| .. code-block:: python |
| :caption: ``urls.py`` |
|
|
| from django.urls import include, path |
|
|
| urlpatterns = [ |
| path("author-polls/", include("polls.urls", namespace="author-polls")), |
| path("publisher-polls/", include("polls.urls", namespace="publisher-polls")), |
| ] |
|
|
| .. code-block:: python |
| :caption: ``polls/urls.py`` |
|
|
| from django.urls import path |
|
|
| from . import views |
|
|
| app_name = "polls" |
| urlpatterns = [ |
| path("", views.IndexView.as_view(), name="index"), |
| path("<int:pk>/", views.DetailView.as_view(), name="detail"), |
| ..., |
| ] |
|
|
| Using this setup, the following lookups are possible: |
|
|
| * If one of the instances is current - say, if we were rendering the detail page |
| in the instance ``'author-polls'`` - ``'polls:index'`` will resolve to the |
| index page of the ``'author-polls'`` instance; i.e. both of the following will |
| result in ``"/author-polls/"``. |
|
|
| In the method of a class-based view:: |
|
|
| reverse("polls:index", current_app=self.request.resolver_match.namespace) |
|
|
| and in the template: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: html+django |
|
|
| {% url 'polls:index' %} |
|
|
| * If there is no current instance - say, if we were rendering a page |
| somewhere else on the site - ``'polls:index'`` will resolve to the last |
| registered instance of ``polls``. Since there is no default instance |
| (instance namespace of ``'polls'``), the last instance of ``polls`` that is |
| registered will be used. This would be ``'publisher-polls'`` since it's |
| declared last in the ``urlpatterns``. |
|
|
| * ``'author-polls:index'`` will always resolve to the index page of the instance |
| ``'author-polls'`` (and likewise for ``'publisher-polls'``) . |
|
|
| If there were also a default instance - i.e., an instance named ``'polls'`` - |
| the only change from above would be in the case where there is no current |
| instance (the second item in the list above). In this case ``'polls:index'`` |
| would resolve to the index page of the default instance instead of the instance |
| declared last in ``urlpatterns``. |
|
|
| .. _namespaces-and-include: |
|
|
| URL namespaces and included URLconfs |
| ------------------------------------ |
|
|
| Application namespaces of included URLconfs can be specified in two ways. |
|
|
| Firstly, you can set an ``app_name`` attribute in the included URLconf module, |
| at the same level as the ``urlpatterns`` attribute. You have to pass the actual |
| module, or a string reference to the module, to :func:`~django.urls.include`, |
| not the list of ``urlpatterns`` itself. |
|
|
| .. code-block:: python |
| :caption: ``polls/urls.py`` |
|
|
| from django.urls import path |
|
|
| from . import views |
|
|
| app_name = "polls" |
| urlpatterns = [ |
| path("", views.IndexView.as_view(), name="index"), |
| path("<int:pk>/", views.DetailView.as_view(), name="detail"), |
| ..., |
| ] |
|
|
| .. code-block:: python |
| :caption: ``urls.py`` |
|
|
| from django.urls import include, path |
|
|
| urlpatterns = [ |
| path("polls/", include("polls.urls")), |
| ] |
|
|
| The URLs defined in ``polls.urls`` will have an application namespace ``polls``. |
|
|
| Secondly, you can include an object that contains embedded namespace data. If |
| you ``include()`` a list of :func:`~django.urls.path` or |
| :func:`~django.urls.re_path` instances, the URLs contained in that object |
| will be added to the global namespace. However, you can also ``include()`` a |
| 2-tuple containing: |
|
|
| .. code-block:: text |
|
|
| (<list of path()/re_path() instances>, <application namespace>) |
|
|
| For example:: |
|
|
| from django.urls import include, path |
|
|
| from . import views |
|
|
| polls_patterns = ( |
| [ |
| path("", views.IndexView.as_view(), name="index"), |
| path("<int:pk>/", views.DetailView.as_view(), name="detail"), |
| ], |
| "polls", |
| ) |
|
|
| urlpatterns = [ |
| path("polls/", include(polls_patterns)), |
| ] |
|
|
| This will include the nominated URL patterns into the given application |
| namespace. |
|
|
| The instance namespace can be specified using the ``namespace`` argument to |
| :func:`~django.urls.include`. If the instance namespace is not specified, |
| it will default to the included URLconf's application namespace. This means |
| it will also be the default instance for that namespace. |
|
|