Plugins

In this tutorial we’re going to take a basic Django opinion poll application and integrate it into the CMS.

Install the polls application

Install the application from its GitHub repository using pip -e - this also places it in your virtualenv’s src directory as a cloned Git repository:

  1. pip install -e git+http://git@github.com/divio/django-polls.git#egg=polls

You should end up with a folder structure similar to this:

  1. env/
  2. src/
  3. polls/
  4. polls/
  5. __init__.py
  6. admin.py
  7. models.py
  8. templates/
  9. tests.py
  10. urls.py
  11. views.py

Let’s add it this application to our project. Add 'polls' to the end of INSTALLED_APPS in your project’s settings.py (see the note on The INSTALLED_APPS setting about ordering ).

Add the following line to urlpatterns in the project’s urls.py:

  1. url(r'^polls/', include('polls.urls', namespace='polls')),

Make sure this line is included before the line for the django-cms urls:

  1. url(r'^', include('cms.urls')),

django CMS’s URL pattern needs to be last, because it “swallows up” anything that hasn’t already been matched by a previous pattern.

Now run the application’s migrations:

  1. python manage.py migrate polls

At this point you should be able to log in to the Django admin - localhost:8000/admin/ - and find the Polls application.

the polls application admin

Create a new Poll, for example:

  • Question: Which browser do you prefer?

    Choices:

    • Safari
    • Firefox
    • Chrome

Now if you visit http://localhost:8000/en/polls/, you should be able to see the published poll and submit a response.

the polls application

Set up a base template for the application

However, in pages of the Polls application we only have minimal templates, and no navigation or styling.

Let’s improve this by overriding the polls application’s base template.

In mysite/templates, add polls/base.html, containing:

  1. {% extends 'base.html' %}
  2. {% block content %}
  3. {% block polls_content %}
  4. {% endblock %}
  5. {% endblock %}

Refresh the /polls/ page again, which should now be properly integrated into the site.

the polls application, integrated

So now we have integrated the standard polls application into our project.

Create a new polls_cms_integration application

So far, however, the polls application has been integrated into the project, but not into django CMS itself.

If you’re already familiar with the CMS for a little, you’ll have encountered django CMS Plugins - the objects you can place into placeholders on your pages: “Text”, “Image” and so forth.

We’re now going to extend the Django poll application so we can embed a poll easily into any CMS page. We’ll put this integration code in a separate package, a Polls/CMS Integration application in our project.

Note

Why not build the plugin code into the polls application package?

This would certainly be possible, and in fact, if you were developing your own application it’s what we would recommend. For a third-party application such as Polls however, placing the plugin code into a separate package means we don’t have to modify or fork the original.

Create a new package at the project root called polls_cms_integration:

  1. python manage.py startapp polls_cms_integration

So our workspace looks like this:

  1. env/
  2. src/ # the django polls application is in here
  3. polls_cms_integration/ # the newly-created application
  4. __init__.py
  5. admin.py
  6. models.py
  7. migrations.py
  8. tests.py
  9. views.py
  10. mysite/
  11. static/
  12. project.db
  13. requirements.txt

The Plugin Model

In your poll application’s models.py add the following:

  1. from django.db import models
  2. from cms.models import CMSPlugin
  3. from polls.models import Poll
  4. class PollPluginModel(CMSPlugin):
  5. poll = models.ForeignKey(Poll)
  6. def __unicode__(self):
  7. return self.poll.question

Note

django CMS plugins inherit from cms.models.pluginmodel.CMSPlugin (or a sub-class thereof) and not models.Model.

PollPluginModel might seem an odd choice for a model name (that is, with model in the name) but it helps distinguish it from the next class, PollPluginPublisher, that we need to create.

The Plugin Class

Now create a new file cms_plugins.py in the same folder your models.py is in. The plugin class is responsible for providing django CMS with the necessary information to render your plugin.

For our poll plugin, we’re going to write the following plugin class:

  1. from cms.plugin_base import CMSPluginBase
  2. from cms.plugin_pool import plugin_pool
  3. from polls_cms_integration.models import PollPluginModel
  4. from django.utils.translation import ugettext as _
  5. @plugin_pool.register_plugin # register the plugin
  6. class PollPluginPublisher(CMSPluginBase):
  7. model = PollPluginModel # model where plugin data are saved
  8. module = _("Polls")
  9. name = _("Poll Plugin") # name of the plugin in the interface
  10. render_template = "polls_cms_integration/poll_plugin.html"
  11. def render(self, context, instance, placeholder):
  12. context.update({'instance': instance})
  13. return context

Note

All plugin classes must inherit from cms.plugin_base.CMSPluginBase and must register themselves with the plugin_pool.

A reasonable convention for plugin naming is:

  • PollPluginModel: the model class
  • PollPluginPublisher: the plugin class

You don’t need to follow this convention, but choose one that makes sense and stick to it.

The template

The render_template attribute in the plugin class is required, and tells the plugin which render_template to use when rendering.

In this case the template needs to be at polls_cms_integration/templates/polls_cms_integration/poll_plugin.html and should look something like this:

  1. <h1>{{ instance.poll.question }}</h1>
  2. <form action="{% url 'polls:vote' instance.poll.id %}" method="post">
  3. {% csrf_token %}
  4. <div class="form-group">
  5. {% for choice in instance.poll.choice_set.all %}
  6. <div class="radio">
  7. <label>
  8. <input type="radio" name="choice" value="{{ choice.id }}">
  9. {{ choice.choice_text }}
  10. </label>
  11. </div>
  12. {% endfor %}
  13. </div>
  14. <input type="submit" value="Vote" />
  15. </form>

Integrate the polls_cms_integration application

The final step is to integrate the polls_cms_integration application into the project.

Add polls_cms_integration to INSTALLED_APPS in settings.py and create a database migration to add the plugin table:

  1. python manage.py makemigrations polls_cms_integration
  2. python manage.py migrate polls_cms_integration

Finally, start the runserver and visit http://localhost:8000/.

You can now drop the Poll Plugin into any placeholder on any page, just as you would any other plugin.

the 'Poll plugin' in the plugin selector

Next we’ll integrate the Polls application more fully into our django CMS project.