Retired: this project is no longer maintained. I (Adam Johnson) no longer have time to continue maintaining this. I was doing so to support gargoyle-yplan, a fork for my ex-employer YPlan. If you'd like to sponsor ongoing maintenance or take it over yourself, please contact [email protected].
Nexus is a pluggable admin application in Django. It's designed to give you a simple design and architecture for building admin applications.
It was originally created by Disqus, but due to the inactivity we at YPlan have taken over maintenance on this fork.
Tested with all combinations of:
- Python: 3.6
- Django: 1.11, 2.0, 2.1, 2.2
Python 3.4+ supported.
Install it with pip:
pip install nexus-yplan
Make sure you pip uninstall nexus
first if you're upgrading from the original to this fork - the packages clash.
You'll need to enable it much like you would django.contrib.admin
.
First, add it to your INSTALLED_APPS
setting:
INSTALLED_APPS = (
...
'nexus',
)
nexus
has three dependencies from core Django - django.contrib.admin
, django.contrib.auth
, and
django.contrib.sessions
. If these applications are not in your INSTALLED_APPS
, add them; or if you are using a
custom auth system you can skip these requirements by adding the line NEXUS_SKIP_INSTALLED_APPS_REQUIREMENTS = True
to your settings.
Second, include nexus at some url in your urls.py
:
import nexus
# urls.py
urlpatterns = patterns('',
('^nexus/', include(nexus.site.urls)),
)
Nexus has autodiscovery similar to Django Admin - it will look in each of your INSTALLED_APPS
for a
nexus_modules
submodule, and import that. This is where the app should declare a NexusModule
subclass and use
nexus.site.register
to add it to the main Nexus site. Thus to add functionality you should install some packages
with modules, or write your own.
The following modules are tested against nexus-yplan
:
There are also some older applications that provide Nexus modules, however these were only developed against Disqus' Nexus and not this fork; your mileage may vary:
If you want to write a module, there are a couple of example modules in tests/testapp/nexus_modules.py
, with
templates in tests/testapp/templates/nexus/example
. Also the source code shouldn't be too hard to understand.
Until Version 1.1, Nexus included a login/logout functionality. Unfortunately these were copied and adapted from an old version of the code in Django Admin, and were thus not up to date with security changes in newer Django versions. Since keeping them up to date would be a burden, and most sites use Django Admin for adminstrator login, the login/logout functions have been removed.
Nexus now relies on Django Admin login, or for users to visit it having logged in through another route.
Nexus' behaviour can be customized by adding some values to your Django settings.
By default Nexus serves its media files itself through Python, avoiding any configuration to integrate with your
project. This is convenient but can be slow. You can control where the media files are served from with the setting
NEXUS_MEDIA_PREFIX
, for example:
NEXUS_MEDIA_PREFIX = '/served/here/'
This will make Nexus write its media URLs using this prefix, where it assumes you have set up serving its files.