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A Django app to track changes to a model field.

Project description

====================
django-field-history
====================

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A Django app to track changes to a model field. For Python 2.7/3.2+ and Django 1.7+.

Documentation
-------------

The full documentation is at https://django-field-history.readthedocs.org.

Features
--------

* Keeps a history of all changes to a particular model's field.
* Stores the field's name, value, date and time of change, and the user that changed it.
* Works with all model field types (except ``ManyToManyField``).

Quickstart
----------

Install django-field-history::

pip install django-field-history

Be sure to put it in INSTALLED_APPS.

.. code-block:: python

INSTALLED_APPS = [
# other apps...
'field_history',
]

Then add it to your models.

.. code-block:: python

from field_history.tracker import FieldHistoryTracker

class PizzaOrder(models.Model):
STATUS_CHOICES = (
('ORDERED', 'Ordered'),
('COOKING', 'Cooking'),
('COMPLETE', 'Complete'),
)
status = models.CharField(max_length=64, choices=STATUS_CHOICES)

field_history = FieldHistoryTracker(['status'])

Now each time you change the order's status field information about that change will be stored in the database.

.. code-block:: python

from field_history.models import FieldHistory

# No FieldHistory objects yet
assert FieldHistory.objects.count() == 0

# Creating an object will make one
pizza_order = PizzaOrder.objects.create(status='ORDERED')
assert FieldHistory.objects.count() == 1

# This object has some fields on it
history = FieldHistory.objects.get()
assert history.object == pizza_order
assert history.field_name == 'status'
assert history.field_value == 'ORDERED'
assert history.date_created is not None

# You can query FieldHistory using the get_{field_name}_history()
# method added to your model
histories = pizza_order.get_status_history()
assert list(FieldHistory.objects.all()) == list(histories)

# Or using the custom FieldHistory manager
histories2 = FieldHistory.objects.get_for_model_and_field(pizza_order, 'status')
assert list(histories) == list(histories2)

# Updating that particular field creates a new FieldHistory
pizza_order.status = 'COOKING'
pizza_order.save()
assert FieldHistory.objects.count() == 2

updated_history = histories.latest()
assert updated_history.object == pizza_order
assert updated_history.field_name == 'status'
assert updated_history.field_value == 'COOKING'
assert updated_history.date_created is not None

Management Commands
-------------------

django-field-history comes with a few management commands.

createinitialfieldhistory
+++++++++++++++++++++++++

This command will inspect all of the models in your application and create ``FieldHistory`` objects for the models that have a ``FieldHistoryTracker``. Run this the first time you install django-field-history.

::

python manage.py createinitialfieldhistory

renamefieldhistory
++++++++++++++++++

Use this command after changing a model field name of a field you track with ``FieldHistoryTracker``::

python manage.py renamefieldhistory --model=app_label.model_name --from_field=old_field_name --to_field=new_field_name

For instance, if you have this model:

.. code-block:: python

class Person(models.Model):
username = models.CharField(max_length=255)

field_history = FieldHistoryTracker(['username'])

And you change the ``username`` field name to ``handle``:

.. code-block:: python

class Person(models.Model):
handle = models.CharField(max_length=255)

field_history = FieldHistoryTracker(['handle'])

You will need to also update the ``field_name`` value in all ``FieldHistory`` objects that point to this model::

python manage.py renamefieldhistory --model=myapp.Person --from_field=username --to_field=handle

Storing Which User Changed the Field
------------------------------------

There are two ways to store the user that changed your model field. The simplest way is to use **the logged in user** that made the request. To do this, add the ``FieldHistoryMiddleware`` class to your ``MIDDLEWARE`` setting (in Django 1.10+) or your ``MIDDLEWARE_CLASSES`` setting (in Django 1.7-1.9).

.. code-block:: python

MIDDLEWARE = [
'django.contrib.sessions.middleware.SessionMiddleware',
'django.middleware.common.CommonMiddleware',
'django.contrib.auth.middleware.AuthenticationMiddleware',
'field_history.middleware.FieldHistoryMiddleware',
]

Alternatively, you can add a ``_field_history_user`` property to the model that has fields you are tracking. This property should return the user you would like stored on ``FieldHistory`` when your field is updated.

.. code-block:: python

class Pizza(models.Model):
name = models.CharField(max_length=255)
updated_by = models.ForeignKey('auth.User')

field_history = FieldHistoryTracker(['name'])

@property
def _field_history_user(self):
return self.updated_by

Working with MySQL
------------------

If you're using MySQL, the default configuration will throw an exception when you run migrations. (By default, ``FieldHistory.object_id`` is implemented as a ``TextField`` for flexibility, but indexed columns in MySQL InnoDB tables may be a maximum of 767 bytes.) To fix this, you can set ``FIELD_HISTORY_OBJECT_ID_TYPE`` in settings.py to override the default field type with one that meets MySQL's constraints. ``FIELD_HISTORY_OBJECT_ID_TYPE`` may be set to either:

1. the Django model field class you wish to use, or
2. a tuple ``(field_class, kwargs)``, where ``field_class`` is a Django model field class and ``kwargs`` is a dict of arguments to pass to the field class constructor.

To approximate the default behavior for Postgres when using MySQL, configure ``object_id`` to use a ``CharField`` by adding the following to settings.py:

.. code-block:: python

from django.db import models
FIELD_HISTORY_OBJECT_ID_TYPE = (models.CharField, {'max_length': 100})

``FIELD_HISTORY_OBJECT_ID_TYPE`` also allows you to use a field type that's more efficient for your use case, even if you're using Postgres (or a similarly unconstrained database). For example, if you always let Django auto-create an ``id`` field (implemented internally as an ``AutoField``), setting ``FIELD_HISTORY_OBJECT_ID_TYPE`` to ``IntegerField`` will result in efficiency gains (both in time and space). This would look like:

.. code-block:: python

from django.db import models
FIELD_HISTORY_OBJECT_ID_TYPE = models.IntegerField

Running Tests
-------------

Does the code actually work?

::

source <YOURVIRTUALENV>/bin/activate
(myenv) $ pip install -r requirements-test.txt
(myenv) $ python runtests.py




History
-------

0.6.0 (December 22, 2016)
++++++++++++++++++++++
* Added Django 1.10 compatibility.
* Added MySQL compatibility.
* Fixed issue that would duplicate tracked fields.

0.5.0 (April 16, 2016)
++++++++++++++++++++++
* Added the ability to track field history of parent models.
* Added Django 1.7 compatibility.

0.4.0 (February 24, 2016)
+++++++++++++++++++++++++
* Added a way to automatically store the logged in user on ``FieldHistory.user``.

0.3.0 (February 20, 2016)
+++++++++++++++++++++++++

* ``FieldHistory`` objects are now created using ``bulk_create``, which means only one query will be executed, even when changing multiple fields at the same time.
* Added a way to store which user updated a field.
* Added ``get_latest_by`` to ``FieldHistory`` Meta options so ``.latest()`` and ``.earliest()`` can be used.
* Added ``createinitialfieldhistory`` management command.
* Added ``renamefieldhistory`` management command.

0.2.0 (February 17, 2016)
+++++++++++++++++++++++++

* First release on PyPI.

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