Version 13 (modified by 15 years ago) ( diff ) | ,
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Full History Tracking
Current status
(2009-07-13) django-modelhistory doesn't appear to be maintained anymore. Perhaps try fullhistory or django-reversion
(2008-11-02) Note: The django-modelhistory project in Google Code seems to be more up-to-date while implementing the same functionality as an external app –akaihola 2008-11-02
Features: almost there (15.03.2007)
Last trunk merge from 4724.
At the moment the contrib.history is quite useful. Examples below should work.
NOTE: Comparing and merging should be done by user and is not automated (yet).
WARNING!!! Names of functions may change. Please check this page for any changes.
Get the code
You can grab the current code from the "full-history" branch:
svn co http://code.djangoproject.com/svn/django/branches/full-history/
TODO
This is a general list of tasks, details are managed in a Basecamp project. If you want access drop me an email at urosDOTtrebecATgmailDOTcom.
Task | Status |
Getting the code to work generically (on every given model) | DONE |
Getting the code to a working state | DONE |
Getting the API to work as described below | DONE |
Unit tests | (under way) |
Author handling (default Anonymous) | |
Admin UI integration | (later) |
Decoupled App (can be used outside the branch) | DONE |
Discussion
The ability to keep previous states of a table accessible is well described in Richard T. Snodgrass's (http://www.cs.arizona.edu/~rts/) "Developing Time-Oriented Database Applications in SQL" (http://www.cs.arizona.edu/people/rts/tdbbook.pdf). Adding the ability to designate a particular model as a transaction-time state table, with suitable methods added to the model's API, and with all queries defaulting to using either the current time or the latest time.
Introduction
The problem
The changelog-type of history in its current implementation, would write log only when using Admin and log would include only information about the change but not the content that was changed. This is not very useful when you would like to revert a change or even see what was changed.
The main idea
I am trying to write a different implementation that will be independent of Admin and will store the content as well. This way developers will be able to save, compare and revert any changes made in any particular model.
Usage
How to enable history tracking?
Settings
You need to add the following to settings.py:
INSTALLED_APPS = ( 'django.contrib.history', )
Models
Enabling history tracking for a particular model is just like adding Admin functionality - add an inner class as shown below:
class Post(models.Model): author = models.CharField(maxlength=100) title = models.CharField(maxlength=100) content = models.TextField() date = models.DateField(auto_now=True) class History: pass
When this is done every "Post" object will be saved to a "django_history_log" table when created, changed or deleted.
API
For this functionality to be really useful I need to create some listing, reverting and other functions.
List of all revisions of an object:
from django.contrib.history.models import ChangeLog post = Post(author="Mort", title="Discworld is down!", content="Well, it's rather complicated...") post.save() rev_list = ChangeLog.objects.list_history(post) # Returns a complete list of versions for this object
List of latest 3 revisions of an object:
rev_list = ChangeLog.objects.list_history(post, offset=3) # Returns a list of latest 3 versions for this object
Get a date-specific list of revisions:
rev_list = ChangeLog.objects.version_by_date(post, datetime(2006, 07, 08))
Get a revision that is 3 revisions back:
rev_list = ChangeLog.objects.get_version(post, offset=3)
Get a specific revision (for example, 222):
rev_list = ChangeLog.objects.get_version(poll, revision=222)
Revert to a specific revision:
# NOT IMPLEMENTED!!! User should do the merging, comparing and reverting manually.