django1/docs/howto/custom-template-backend.txt

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==========================================
How to implement a custom template backend
==========================================
Custom backends
---------------
Here's how to implement a custom template backend in order to use another
template system. A template backend is a class that inherits
``django.template.backends.base.BaseEngine``. It must implement
``get_template()`` and optionally ``from_string()``. Here's an example for a
fictional ``foobar`` template library::
from django.template import TemplateDoesNotExist, TemplateSyntaxError
from django.template.backends.base import BaseEngine
from django.template.backends.utils import csrf_input_lazy, csrf_token_lazy
import foobar
class FooBar(BaseEngine):
# Name of the subdirectory containing the templates for this engine
# inside an installed application.
app_dirname = 'foobar'
def __init__(self, params):
params = params.copy()
options = params.pop('OPTIONS').copy()
super().__init__(params)
self.engine = foobar.Engine(**options)
def from_string(self, template_code):
try:
return Template(self.engine.from_string(template_code))
except foobar.TemplateCompilationFailed as exc:
raise TemplateSyntaxError(exc.args)
def get_template(self, template_name):
try:
return Template(self.engine.get_template(template_name))
except foobar.TemplateNotFound as exc:
raise TemplateDoesNotExist(exc.args, backend=self)
except foobar.TemplateCompilationFailed as exc:
raise TemplateSyntaxError(exc.args)
class Template:
def __init__(self, template):
self.template = template
def render(self, context=None, request=None):
if context is None:
context = {}
if request is not None:
context['request'] = request
context['csrf_input'] = csrf_input_lazy(request)
context['csrf_token'] = csrf_token_lazy(request)
return self.template.render(context)
See `DEP 182`_ for more information.
.. _template-debug-integration:
Debug integration for custom engines
------------------------------------
The Django debug page has hooks to provide detailed information when a template
error arises. Custom template engines can use these hooks to enhance the
traceback information that appears to users. The following hooks are available:
.. _template-postmortem:
Template postmortem
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The postmortem appears when :exc:`~django.template.TemplateDoesNotExist` is
raised. It lists the template engines and loaders that were used when trying to
find a given template. For example, if two Django engines are configured, the
postmortem will appear like:
.. image:: _images/postmortem.png
Custom engines can populate the postmortem by passing the ``backend`` and
``tried`` arguments when raising :exc:`~django.template.TemplateDoesNotExist`.
Backends that use the postmortem :ref:`should specify an origin
<template-origin-api>` on the template object.
Contextual line information
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
If an error happens during template parsing or rendering, Django can display
the line the error happened on. For example:
.. image:: _images/template-lines.png
Custom engines can populate this information by setting a ``template_debug``
attribute on exceptions raised during parsing and rendering. This attribute is
a :class:`dict` with the following values:
* ``'name'``: The name of the template in which the exception occurred.
* ``'message'``: The exception message.
* ``'source_lines'``: The lines before, after, and including the line the
exception occurred on. This is for context, so it shouldn't contain more than
20 lines or so.
* ``'line'``: The line number on which the exception occurred.
* ``'before'``: The content on the error line before the token that raised the
error.
* ``'during'``: The token that raised the error.
* ``'after'``: The content on the error line after the token that raised the
error.
* ``'total'``: The number of lines in ``source_lines``.
* ``'top'``: The line number where ``source_lines`` starts.
* ``'bottom'``: The line number where ``source_lines`` ends.
Given the above template error, ``template_debug`` would look like::
{
'name': '/path/to/template.html',
'message': "Invalid block tag: 'syntax'",
'source_lines': [
(1, 'some\n'),
(2, 'lines\n'),
(3, 'before\n'),
(4, 'Hello {% syntax error %} {{ world }}\n'),
(5, 'some\n'),
(6, 'lines\n'),
(7, 'after\n'),
(8, ''),
],
'line': 4,
'before': 'Hello ',
'during': '{% syntax error %}',
'after': ' {{ world }}\n',
'total': 9,
'bottom': 9,
'top': 1,
}
.. _template-origin-api:
Origin API and 3rd-party integration
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Django templates have an :class:`~django.template.base.Origin` object available
through the ``template.origin`` attribute. This enables debug information to be
displayed in the :ref:`template postmortem <template-postmortem>`, as well as
in 3rd-party libraries, like the `Django Debug Toolbar`_.
Custom engines can provide their own ``template.origin`` information by
creating an object that specifies the following attributes:
* ``'name'``: The full path to the template.
* ``'template_name'``: The relative path to the template as passed into the
template loading methods.
* ``'loader_name'``: An optional string identifying the function or class used
to load the template, e.g. ``django.template.loaders.filesystem.Loader``.
2021-02-26 00:20:14 +08:00
.. _DEP 182: https://github.com/django/deps/blob/main/final/0182-multiple-template-engines.rst
.. _Django Debug Toolbar: https://github.com/jazzband/django-debug-toolbar/