Opened 11 years ago
Last modified 11 years ago
#24150 closed Uncategorized
collectstatic -- using django.conf.settings — at Version 1
| Reported by: | Aryeh Hillman | Owned by: | nobody |
|---|---|---|---|
| Component: | Core (Management commands) | Version: | 1.7 |
| Severity: | Normal | Keywords: | |
| Cc: | Triage Stage: | Unreviewed | |
| Has patch: | no | Needs documentation: | no |
| Needs tests: | no | Patch needs improvement: | no |
| Easy pickings: | no | UI/UX: | no |
Description (last modified by )
Here is the help text for the collectstatic command:
$ ./manage.py collectstatic --help
Usage: ./manage.py collectstatic [options]
Collect static files in a single location.
Options:
-v VERBOSITY, --verbosity=VERBOSITY
Verbosity level; 0=minimal output, 1=normal output,
2=verbose output, 3=very verbose output
--settings=SETTINGS The Python path to a settings module, e.g.
"myproject.settings.main". If this isn't provided, the
DJANGO_SETTINGS_MODULE environment variable will be
used.
--pythonpath=PYTHONPATH
A directory to add to the Python path, e.g.
"/home/djangoprojects/myproject".
--traceback Raise on exception
--no-color Don't colorize the command output.
--noinput Do NOT prompt the user for input of any kind.
--no-post-process Do NOT post process collected files.
-i PATTERN, --ignore=PATTERN
Ignore files or directories matching this glob-style
pattern. Use multiple times to ignore more.
-n, --dry-run Do everything except modify the filesystem.
-c, --clear Clear the existing files using the storage before
trying to copy or link the original file.
-l, --link Create a symbolic link to each file instead of
copying.
--no-default-ignore Don't ignore the common private glob-style patterns
'CVS', '.*' and '*~'.
--version show program's version number and exit
-h, --help show this help message and exit
Clearly mentioned is a --settings flag, which takes a path to a django settings file. Supposing, however, that we want to run collectstatic from a script and want to dynamically modify our settings file. For example, something like
from django.conf import settings from django.core.management import ManagementUtility settings.USE_S3 = False m = ManagementUtility(['', 'collectstatic']) m.execute()
The command instead uses the settings specified at the shell variable DJANGO_SETTINGS_MODULE instead of the dynamic settings. Kind of pesky to have to create a separate settings file to get control of this sort of thing.