django/docs/ref/contrib/staticfiles.txt

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=======================
The ``staticfiles`` app
=======================
.. module:: django.contrib.staticfiles
:synopsis: An app for handling static files.
``django.contrib.staticfiles`` collects static files from each of your
applications (and any other places you specify) into a single location that
can easily be served in production.
.. seealso::
For an introduction to the static files app and some usage examples, see
:doc:`/howto/static-files/index`. For guidelines on deploying static files,
see :doc:`/howto/static-files/deployment`.
.. _staticfiles-settings:
Settings
========
See :ref:`staticfiles settings <settings-staticfiles>` for details on the
following settings:
* :setting:`STORAGES`
* :setting:`STATIC_ROOT`
* :setting:`STATIC_URL`
* :setting:`STATICFILES_DIRS`
* :setting:`STATICFILES_FINDERS`
Management Commands
===================
``django.contrib.staticfiles`` exposes three management commands.
``collectstatic``
-----------------
.. django-admin:: collectstatic
Collects the static files into :setting:`STATIC_ROOT`.
Duplicate file names are by default resolved in a similar way to how template
resolution works: the file that is first found in one of the specified
locations will be used. If you're confused, the :djadmin:`findstatic` command
can help show you which files are found.
On subsequent ``collectstatic`` runs (if ``STATIC_ROOT`` isn't empty), files
are copied only if they have a modified timestamp greater than the timestamp of
the file in ``STATIC_ROOT``. Therefore if you remove an application from
:setting:`INSTALLED_APPS`, it's a good idea to use the :option:`collectstatic
--clear` option in order to remove stale static files.
Files are searched by using the :setting:`enabled finders
<STATICFILES_FINDERS>`. The default is to look in all locations defined in
:setting:`STATICFILES_DIRS` and in the ``'static'`` directory of apps
specified by the :setting:`INSTALLED_APPS` setting.
The :djadmin:`collectstatic` management command calls the
:meth:`~django.contrib.staticfiles.storage.StaticFilesStorage.post_process`
method of the ``staticfiles`` storage backend from :setting:`STORAGES` after
each run and passes a list of paths that have been found by the management
command. It also receives all command line options of :djadmin:`collectstatic`.
This is used by the
:class:`~django.contrib.staticfiles.storage.ManifestStaticFilesStorage` by
default.
By default, collected files receive permissions from
:setting:`FILE_UPLOAD_PERMISSIONS` and collected directories receive permissions
from :setting:`FILE_UPLOAD_DIRECTORY_PERMISSIONS`. If you would like different
permissions for these files and/or directories, you can subclass either of the
:ref:`static files storage classes <staticfiles-storages>` and specify the
``file_permissions_mode`` and/or ``directory_permissions_mode`` parameters,
respectively. For example::
from django.contrib.staticfiles import storage
class MyStaticFilesStorage(storage.StaticFilesStorage):
def __init__(self, *args, **kwargs):
kwargs["file_permissions_mode"] = 0o640
kwargs["directory_permissions_mode"] = 0o760
super().__init__(*args, **kwargs)
Then set the ``staticfiles`` storage backend in :setting:`STORAGES` setting to
``'path.to.MyStaticFilesStorage'``.
Some commonly used options are:
.. django-admin-option:: --noinput, --no-input
Do NOT prompt the user for input of any kind.
.. django-admin-option:: --ignore PATTERN, -i PATTERN
Ignore files, directories, or paths matching this glob-style pattern. Use
multiple times to ignore more. When specifying a path, always use forward
slashes, even on Windows.
.. django-admin-option:: --dry-run, -n
Do everything except modify the filesystem.
.. django-admin-option:: --clear, -c
Clear the existing files before trying to copy or link the original file.
.. django-admin-option:: --link, -l
Create a symbolic link to each file instead of copying.
.. django-admin-option:: --no-post-process
Don't call the
:meth:`~django.contrib.staticfiles.storage.StaticFilesStorage.post_process`
method of the configured ``staticfiles`` storage backend from
:setting:`STORAGES`.
.. django-admin-option:: --no-default-ignore
Don't ignore the common private glob-style patterns ``'CVS'``, ``'.*'``
and ``'*~'``.
For a full list of options, refer to the commands own help by running:
.. console::
$ python manage.py collectstatic --help
.. _customize-staticfiles-ignore-patterns:
Customizing the ignored pattern list
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The default ignored pattern list, ``['CVS', '.*', '*~']``, can be customized in
a more persistent way than providing the ``--ignore`` command option at each
``collectstatic`` invocation. Provide a custom :class:`~django.apps.AppConfig`
class, override the ``ignore_patterns`` attribute of this class and replace
``'django.contrib.staticfiles'`` with that class path in your
:setting:`INSTALLED_APPS` setting::
from django.contrib.staticfiles.apps import StaticFilesConfig
class MyStaticFilesConfig(StaticFilesConfig):
ignore_patterns = [...] # your custom ignore list
``findstatic``
--------------
.. django-admin:: findstatic staticfile [staticfile ...]
Searches for one or more relative paths with the enabled finders.
For example:
.. console::
$ python manage.py findstatic css/base.css admin/js/core.js
Found 'css/base.css' here:
/home/special.polls.com/core/static/css/base.css
/home/polls.com/core/static/css/base.css
Found 'admin/js/core.js' here:
/home/polls.com/src/django/contrib/admin/media/js/core.js
.. django-admin-option:: findstatic --first
By default, all matching locations are found. To only return the first match
for each relative path, use the ``--first`` option:
.. console::
$ python manage.py findstatic css/base.css --first
Found 'css/base.css' here:
/home/special.polls.com/core/static/css/base.css
This is a debugging aid; it'll show you exactly which static file will be
collected for a given path.
By setting the ``--verbosity`` flag to 0, you can suppress the extra output and
just get the path names:
.. console::
$ python manage.py findstatic css/base.css --verbosity 0
/home/special.polls.com/core/static/css/base.css
/home/polls.com/core/static/css/base.css
On the other hand, by setting the ``--verbosity`` flag to 2, you can get all
the directories which were searched:
.. console::
$ python manage.py findstatic css/base.css --verbosity 2
Found 'css/base.css' here:
/home/special.polls.com/core/static/css/base.css
/home/polls.com/core/static/css/base.css
Looking in the following locations:
/home/special.polls.com/core/static
/home/polls.com/core/static
/some/other/path/static
.. _staticfiles-runserver:
``runserver``
-------------
.. django-admin:: runserver [addrport]
:noindex:
Overrides the core :djadmin:`runserver` command if the ``staticfiles`` app
is :setting:`installed<INSTALLED_APPS>` and adds automatic serving of static
files. File serving doesn't run through :setting:`MIDDLEWARE`.
The command adds these options:
.. django-admin-option:: --nostatic
Use the ``--nostatic`` option to disable serving of static files with the
:doc:`staticfiles </ref/contrib/staticfiles>` app entirely. This option is
only available if the :doc:`staticfiles </ref/contrib/staticfiles>` app is
in your project's :setting:`INSTALLED_APPS` setting.
Example usage:
.. console::
$ django-admin runserver --nostatic
.. django-admin-option:: --insecure
Use the ``--insecure`` option to force serving of static files with the
:doc:`staticfiles </ref/contrib/staticfiles>` app even if the :setting:`DEBUG`
setting is ``False``. By using this you acknowledge the fact that it's
**grossly inefficient** and probably **insecure**. This is only intended for
local development, should **never be used in production** and is only
available if the :doc:`staticfiles </ref/contrib/staticfiles>` app is
in your project's :setting:`INSTALLED_APPS` setting.
``--insecure`` doesn't work with :class:`~.storage.ManifestStaticFilesStorage`.
Example usage:
.. console::
$ django-admin runserver --insecure
.. _staticfiles-storages:
Storages
========
``StaticFilesStorage``
----------------------
.. class:: storage.StaticFilesStorage
A subclass of the :class:`~django.core.files.storage.FileSystemStorage`
storage backend that uses the :setting:`STATIC_ROOT` setting as the base
file system location and the :setting:`STATIC_URL` setting respectively
as the base URL.
.. method:: storage.StaticFilesStorage.post_process(paths, **options)
If this method is defined on a storage, it's called by the
:djadmin:`collectstatic` management command after each run and gets passed the
local storages and paths of found files as a dictionary, as well as the command
line options. It yields tuples of three values:
``original_path, processed_path, processed``. The path values are strings and
``processed`` is a boolean indicating whether or not the value was
post-processed, or an exception if post-processing failed.
The :class:`~django.contrib.staticfiles.storage.ManifestStaticFilesStorage`
uses this behind the scenes to replace the paths with their hashed
counterparts and update the cache appropriately.
``ManifestStaticFilesStorage``
------------------------------
.. class:: storage.ManifestStaticFilesStorage
A subclass of the :class:`~django.contrib.staticfiles.storage.StaticFilesStorage`
storage backend which stores the file names it handles by appending the MD5
hash of the file's content to the filename. For example, the file
``css/styles.css`` would also be saved as ``css/styles.55e7cbb9ba48.css``.
The purpose of this storage is to keep serving the old files in case some
pages still refer to those files, e.g. because they are cached by you or
a 3rd party proxy server. Additionally, it's very helpful if you want to
apply `far future Expires headers`_ to the deployed files to speed up the
load time for subsequent page visits.
The storage backend automatically replaces the paths found in the saved
files matching other saved files with the path of the cached copy (using
the :meth:`~django.contrib.staticfiles.storage.StaticFilesStorage.post_process`
method). The regular expressions used to find those paths
(``django.contrib.staticfiles.storage.HashedFilesMixin.patterns``) cover:
* The `@import`_ rule and `url()`_ statement of `Cascading Style Sheets`_.
* `Source map`_ comments in CSS and JavaScript files.
Subclass ``ManifestStaticFilesStorage`` and set the
``support_js_module_import_aggregation`` attribute to ``True``, if you want to
use the experimental regular expressions to cover:
* The `modules import`_ in JavaScript.
* The `modules aggregation`_ in JavaScript.
For example, the ``'css/styles.css'`` file with this content:
.. code-block:: css
@import url("../admin/css/base.css");
...would be replaced by calling the
:meth:`~django.core.files.storage.Storage.url` method of the
``ManifestStaticFilesStorage`` storage backend, ultimately saving a
``'css/styles.55e7cbb9ba48.css'`` file with the following content:
.. code-block:: css
@import url("../admin/css/base.27e20196a850.css");
.. admonition:: Usage of the ``integrity`` HTML attribute with local files
When using the optional ``integrity`` attribute within tags like
``<script>`` or ``<link>``, its value should be calculated based on the
files as they are served, not as stored in the filesystem. This is
particularly important because depending on how static files are collected,
their checksum may have changed (for example when using
:djadmin:`collectstatic`). At the moment, there is no out-of-the-box
tooling available for this.
You can change the location of the manifest file by using a custom
``ManifestStaticFilesStorage`` subclass that sets the ``manifest_storage``
argument. For example::
from django.conf import settings
from django.contrib.staticfiles.storage import (
ManifestStaticFilesStorage,
StaticFilesStorage,
)
class MyManifestStaticFilesStorage(ManifestStaticFilesStorage):
def __init__(self, *args, **kwargs):
manifest_storage = StaticFilesStorage(location=settings.BASE_DIR)
super().__init__(*args, manifest_storage=manifest_storage, **kwargs)
.. admonition:: References in comments
``ManifestStaticFilesStorage`` doesn't ignore paths in statements that are
commented out. This :ticket:`may crash on the nonexistent paths <21080>`.
You should check and eventually strip comments.
.. attribute:: storage.ManifestStaticFilesStorage.manifest_hash
This attribute provides a single hash that changes whenever a file in the
manifest changes. This can be useful to communicate to SPAs that the assets on
the server have changed (due to a new deployment).
.. attribute:: storage.ManifestStaticFilesStorage.max_post_process_passes
Since static files might reference other static files that need to have their
paths replaced, multiple passes of replacing paths may be needed until the file
hashes converge. To prevent an infinite loop due to hashes not converging (for
example, if ``'foo.css'`` references ``'bar.css'`` which references
``'foo.css'``) there is a maximum number of passes before post-processing is
abandoned. In cases with a large number of references, a higher number of
passes might be needed. Increase the maximum number of passes by subclassing
``ManifestStaticFilesStorage`` and setting the ``max_post_process_passes``
attribute. It defaults to 5.
To enable the ``ManifestStaticFilesStorage`` you have to make sure the
following requirements are met:
* the ``staticfiles`` storage backend in :setting:`STORAGES` setting is set to
``'django.contrib.staticfiles.storage.ManifestStaticFilesStorage'``
* the :setting:`DEBUG` setting is set to ``False``
* you've collected all your static files by using the
:djadmin:`collectstatic` management command
Since creating the MD5 hash can be a performance burden to your website
during runtime, ``staticfiles`` will automatically store the mapping with
hashed names for all processed files in a file called ``staticfiles.json``.
This happens once when you run the :djadmin:`collectstatic` management
command.
.. attribute:: storage.ManifestStaticFilesStorage.manifest_strict
If a file isn't found in the ``staticfiles.json`` manifest at runtime, a
``ValueError`` is raised. This behavior can be disabled by subclassing
``ManifestStaticFilesStorage`` and setting the ``manifest_strict`` attribute to
``False`` -- nonexistent paths will remain unchanged.
Due to the requirement of running :djadmin:`collectstatic`, this storage
typically shouldn't be used when running tests as ``collectstatic`` isn't run
as part of the normal test setup. During testing, ensure that ``staticfiles``
storage backend in the :setting:`STORAGES` setting is set to something else
like ``'django.contrib.staticfiles.storage.StaticFilesStorage'`` (the default).
.. method:: storage.ManifestStaticFilesStorage.file_hash(name, content=None)
The method that is used when creating the hashed name of a file.
Needs to return a hash for the given file name and content.
By default it calculates a MD5 hash from the content's chunks as
mentioned above. Feel free to override this method to use your own
hashing algorithm.
.. _`far future Expires headers`: https://developer.yahoo.com/performance/rules.html#expires
.. _`@import`: https://www.w3.org/TR/CSS2/cascade.html#at-import
.. _`url()`: https://www.w3.org/TR/CSS2/syndata.html#uri
.. _`Cascading Style Sheets`: https://www.w3.org/Style/CSS/
.. _`source map`: https://firefox-source-docs.mozilla.org/devtools-user/debugger/how_to/use_a_source_map/
.. _`modules import`: https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Guide/Modules#importing_features_into_your_script
.. _`modules aggregation`: https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Guide/Modules#aggregating_modules
``ManifestFilesMixin``
----------------------
.. class:: storage.ManifestFilesMixin
Use this mixin with a custom storage to append the MD5 hash of the file's
content to the filename as :class:`~storage.ManifestStaticFilesStorage` does.
Finders Module
==============
``staticfiles`` finders has a ``searched_locations`` attribute which is a list
of directory paths in which the finders searched. Example usage::
from django.contrib.staticfiles import finders
result = finders.find("css/base.css")
searched_locations = finders.searched_locations
Other Helpers
=============
There are a few other helpers outside of the
:mod:`staticfiles <django.contrib.staticfiles>` app to work with static
files:
- The :func:`django.template.context_processors.static` context processor
which adds :setting:`STATIC_URL` to every template context rendered
with :class:`~django.template.RequestContext` contexts.
- The builtin template tag :ttag:`static` which takes a path and urljoins it
with the static prefix :setting:`STATIC_URL`. If
``django.contrib.staticfiles`` is installed, the tag uses the ``url()``
method of the ``staticfiles`` storage backend from :setting:`STORAGES`
instead.
- The builtin template tag :ttag:`get_static_prefix` which populates a
template variable with the static prefix :setting:`STATIC_URL` to be
used as a variable or directly.
- The similar template tag :ttag:`get_media_prefix` which works like
:ttag:`get_static_prefix` but uses :setting:`MEDIA_URL`.
- The ``staticfiles`` key in :data:`django.core.files.storage.storages`
contains a ready-to-use instance of the staticfiles storage backend.
.. _staticfiles-development-view:
Static file development view
----------------------------
.. currentmodule:: django.contrib.staticfiles
The static files tools are mostly designed to help with getting static files
successfully deployed into production. This usually means a separate,
dedicated static file server, which is a lot of overhead to mess with when
developing locally. Thus, the ``staticfiles`` app ships with a
**quick and dirty helper view** that you can use to serve files locally in
development.
.. function:: views.serve(request, path)
This view function serves static files in development.
.. warning::
This view will only work if :setting:`DEBUG` is ``True``.
That's because this view is **grossly inefficient** and probably
**insecure**. This is only intended for local development, and should
**never be used in production**.
.. note::
To guess the served files' content types, this view relies on the
:py:mod:`mimetypes` module from the Python standard library, which itself
relies on the underlying platform's map files. If you find that this view
doesn't return proper content types for certain files, it is most likely
that the platform's map files are incorrect or need to be updated. This can
be achieved, for example, by installing or updating the ``mailcap`` package
on a Red Hat distribution, ``mime-support`` on a Debian distribution, or by
editing the keys under ``HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT`` in the Windows registry.
This view is automatically enabled by :djadmin:`runserver` (with a
:setting:`DEBUG` setting set to ``True``). To use the view with a different
local development server, add the following snippet to the end of your
primary URL configuration::
from django.conf import settings
from django.contrib.staticfiles import views
from django.urls import re_path
if settings.DEBUG:
urlpatterns += [
re_path(r"^static/(?P<path>.*)$", views.serve),
]
Note, the beginning of the pattern (``r'^static/'``) should be your
:setting:`STATIC_URL` setting.
Since this is a bit finicky, there's also a helper function that'll do this for
you:
.. function:: urls.staticfiles_urlpatterns()
This will return the proper URL pattern for serving static files to your
already defined pattern list. Use it like this::
from django.contrib.staticfiles.urls import staticfiles_urlpatterns
# ... the rest of your URLconf here ...
urlpatterns += staticfiles_urlpatterns()
This will inspect your :setting:`STATIC_URL` setting and wire up the view
to serve static files accordingly. Don't forget to set the
:setting:`STATICFILES_DIRS` setting appropriately to let
``django.contrib.staticfiles`` know where to look for files in addition to
files in app directories.
.. warning::
This helper function will only work if :setting:`DEBUG` is ``True``
and your :setting:`STATIC_URL` setting is neither empty nor a full
URL such as ``http://static.example.com/``.
That's because this view is **grossly inefficient** and probably
**insecure**. This is only intended for local development, and should
**never be used in production**.
Specialized test case to support 'live testing'
-----------------------------------------------
.. class:: testing.StaticLiveServerTestCase
This unittest TestCase subclass extends :class:`django.test.LiveServerTestCase`.
Just like its parent, you can use it to write tests that involve running the
code under test and consuming it with testing tools through HTTP (e.g. Selenium,
PhantomJS, etc.), because of which it's needed that the static assets are also
published.
But given the fact that it makes use of the
:func:`django.contrib.staticfiles.views.serve` view described above, it can
transparently overlay at test execution-time the assets provided by the
``staticfiles`` finders. This means you don't need to run
:djadmin:`collectstatic` before or as a part of your tests setup.