The Django management commands documentation shows all commands being created in an app/management/commands folder. Is it possible to put commands into subfolders, like app/management/commands/install and app/management/commands/maintenance? How would this be done?
问题:
回答1:
Unfortunatly, as of Django 1.4 there seems to be no way of doing that. The sources for django.core.management.__init__.py
have this method:
def find_commands(management_dir):
"""
Given a path to a management directory, returns a list of all the command
names that are available.
Returns an empty list if no commands are defined.
"""
command_dir = os.path.join(management_dir, 'commands')
try:
return [f[:-3] for f in os.listdir(command_dir)
if not f.startswith('_') and f.endswith('.py')]
except OSError:
return []
As you can see, it only considers files directly inside the commands
folder, ignoring any subfolders. However, if you "monkey patch" this function somehow, the rest of the code should work fine, since the code that actually creates the Command
instance is this:
def load_command_class(app_name, name):
"""
Given a command name and an application name, returns the Command
class instance. All errors raised by the import process
(ImportError, AttributeError) are allowed to propagate.
"""
module = import_module('%s.management.commands.%s' % (app_name, name))
return module.Command()
So, if you had a command named subfolder.command
it would load the right script and instantiate the right class.
From a practical standpoint, however, I see no use of doing that. Sure, having "namespace'd" commands would be nice, but you can always prefix all your commands with some name if you want, using something else as a separator (such as _
). The command name length - and the number of keystrokes needed to type them in the terminal - will be the same...