3. Configuration
The django CMS has a lot of settings you can use to customize your installation so that it is exactly as you’d like it to be.
3.1. Required Settings
3.1.1. CMS_TEMPLATES
Default: ()
(Not a valid setting!)
A list of templates you can select for a page.
Example:
CMS_TEMPLATES = (
('base.html', gettext('default')),
('2col.html', gettext('2 Column')),
('3col.html', gettext('3 Column')),
('extra.html', gettext('Some extra fancy template')),
)
Note
All templates defined in CMS_TEMPLATES
must contain at least the js
and css
sekizai namespaces, for more information, see Static files handling with sekizai.
Warning
django CMS internally relies on a number of templates to function correctly. These exist beneath cms
within the templates directory. As such, it is highly recommended you avoid using the same directory name for your own project templates.
3.2. Basic Customization
3.2.1. CMS_TEMPLATE_INHERITANCE
Default: True
Optional Enables the inheritance of templates from parent pages.
If this is enabled, pages have the additional template option to inherit their template from the nearest ancestor. New pages default to this setting if the new page is not a root page.
3.2.2. CMS_PLACEHOLDER_CONF
Default: {}
Optional
Used to configure placeholders. If not given, all plugins are available in all placeholders.
Example:
CMS_PLACEHOLDER_CONF = {
'content': {
'plugins': ['TextPlugin', 'PicturePlugin'],
'text_only_plugins': ['LinkPlugin']
'extra_context': {"width":640},
'name':gettext("Content"),
},
'right-column': {
"plugins": ['TeaserPlugin', 'LinkPlugin'],
"extra_context": {"width":280},
'name':gettext("Right Column"),
'limits': {
'global': 2,
'TeaserPlugin': 1,
'LinkPlugin': 1,
},
},
'base.html content': {
"plugins": ['TextPlugin', 'PicturePlugin', 'TeaserPlugin']
},
}
You can combine template names and placeholder names to granularly define plugins, as shown above with ‘’base.html content’‘.
plugins
A list of plugins that can be added to this placeholder. If not supplied, all plugins can be selected.
text_only_plugins
A list of additional plugins available only in the TextPlugin, these plugins can’t be added directly to this placeholder.
extra_context
Extra context that plugins in this placeholder receive.
name
The name displayed in the Django admin. With the gettext stub, the name can be internationalized.
limits
Limit the number of plugins that can be placed inside this placeholder. Dictionary keys are plugin names and the values are their respective limits. Special case: “global” - Limit the absolute number of plugins in this placeholder regardless of type (takes precedence over the type-specific limits).
3.2.3. CMS_PLUGIN_CONTEXT_PROCESSORS
Default: []
A list of plugin context processors. Plugin context processors are callables that modify all plugins’ context before rendering. See Custom Plugins for more information.
3.2.4. CMS_PLUGIN_PROCESSORS
Default: []
A list of plugin processors. Plugin processors are callables that modify all plugin’s output after rendering. See Custom Plugins for more information.
3.2.5. CMS_APPHOOKS
Default: ()
A list of import paths for cms.app_base.CMSApp
subclasses.
Defaults to an empty list which means CMS applications are auto-discovered in all INSTALLED_APPS
by trying to import their cms_app
module.
If this setting is set, the auto-discovery is disabled.
Example:
CMS_APPHOOKS = (
'myapp.cms_app.MyApp',
'otherapp.cms_app.MyFancyApp',
'sampleapp.cms_app.SampleApp',
)
3.2.6. PLACEHOLDER_FRONTEND_EDITING
Default: True
If set to False
, frontend editing is not available for models using cms.models.fields.PlaceholderField
.
3.3. Editor configuration
The Wymeditor from cms.plugins.text
plugin can take the same configuration as vanilla Wymeditor. Therefore you will need to learn how to configure that. The best thing to do is to head over to the Wymeditor examples page in order to understand how Wymeditor works.
The cms.plugins.text
plugin exposes several variables named WYM_* that correspond to the wym configuration. The simplest way to get started with this is to go to cms/plugins/text/settings.py
and copy over the WYM_* variables and you will realize they match one to one to Wymeditor’s.
Currently the following variables are available:
WYM_TOOLS
WYM_CONTAINERS
WYM_CLASSES
WYM_STYLES
WYM_STYLESHEET
3.4. I18N and L10N
3.4.1. CMS_HIDE_UNTRANSLATED
Default: True
By default django CMS hides menu items that are not yet translated into the current language. With this setting set to False they will show up anyway.
3.4.2. CMS_LANGUAGES
Default: Value of LANGUAGES
Defines the languages available in django CMS.
Example:
CMS_LANGUAGES = (
('fr', gettext('French')),
('de', gettext('German')),
('en', gettext('English')),
)
Note
Make sure you only define languages which are also in LANGUAGES
.
3.4.3. CMS_LANGUAGE_FALLBACK
Default: True
This will redirect the browser to the same page in another language if the page is not available in the current language.
3.4.4. CMS_LANGUAGE_CONF
Default: {}
Language fallback ordering for each language.
Example:
CMS_LANGUAGE_CONF = {
'de': ['en', 'fr'],
'en': ['de'],
}
3.4.5. CMS_SITE_LANGUAGES
Default: {}
If you have more than one site and CMS_LANGUAGES
differs between the sites, you may want to fill this out so that when you switch between sites in the admin you only get the languages available to that particular site.
Example:
CMS_SITE_LANGUAGES = {
1:['en','de'],
2:['en','fr'],
3:['en'],
}
3.4.6. CMS_FRONTEND_LANGUAGES
Default: Value of CMS_LANGUAGES
A list of languages django CMS uses in the frontend. For example, if you decide you want to add a new language to your page but don’t want to show it to the world yet.
Example:
CMS_FRONTEND_LANGUAGES = ("de", "en", "pt-BR")
3.5. Media Settings
3.5.1. CMS_MEDIA_PATH
default: cms/
The path from MEDIA_ROOT
to the media files located in cms/media/
3.5.2. CMS_MEDIA_ROOT
Default: MEDIA_ROOT
+ CMS_MEDIA_PATH
The path to the media root of the cms media files.
3.5.3. CMS_MEDIA_URL
default: MEDIA_URL
+ CMS_MEDIA_PATH
The location of the media files that are located in cms/media/cms/
3.5.4. CMS_PAGE_MEDIA_PATH
Default: 'cms_page_media/'
By default, django CMS creates a folder called cms_page_media
in your static files folder where all uploaded media files are stored. The media files are stored in subfolders numbered with the id of the page.
You should take care that the directory to which it points is writable by the user under which Django will be running.
3.6. URLs
3.6.1. CMS_URL_OVERWRITE
Default: True
This adds a new field “url overwrite” to the “advanced settings” tab of your page. With this field you can overwrite the whole relative url of the page.
3.6.2. CMS_MENU_TITLE_OVERWRITE
Default: False
This adds a new “menu title” field beside the title field.
With this field you can overwrite the title that is displayed in the menu.
To access the menu title in the template, use:
{{ page.get_menu_title }}
3.6.3. CMS_REDIRECTS
Default: False
This adds a new “redirect” field to the “advanced settings” tab of the page.
You can set a url here to which visitors will be redirected when the page is accessed.
Note: Don’t use this too much. django.contrib.redirects
is much more flexible, handy, and is designed exactly for this purpose.
3.6.4. CMS_FLAT_URLS
Deprecated since version 2.4: CMS_FLAT_URLS
will be removed in 2.4.
Default: False
If this is enabled the slugs are not nested in the urls.
So a page with a “world” slug will have a “/world” url, even it is a child of the “hello” page. If disabled the page would have the url: “/hello/world/”
3.6.5. CMS_SOFTROOT
Default: False
This adds a new “softroot” field to the “advanced settings” tab of the page. If a page is marked as softroot the menu will only display items until it finds the softroot.
If you have a huge site you can easily partition the menu with this.
3.7. Advanced Settings
3.7.1. CMS_PERMISSION
Default: False
If this is enabled you get 3 new models in Admin:
- Pages global permissions
- User groups - page
- Users - page
In the edit-view of the pages you can now assign users to pages and grant them permissions. In the global permissions you can set the permissions for users globally.
If a user has the right to create new users he can now do so in the “Users - page”. But he will only see the users he created. The users he created can also only inherit the rights he has. So if he only has been granted the right to edit a certain page all users he creates can, in turn, only edit this page. Naturally he can limit the rights of the users he creates even further, allowing them to see only a subset of the pages to which he is allowed access.
3.7.2. CMS_PUBLIC_FOR
Default: all
Decides if pages without any view restrictions are public by default or staff only. Possible values are all
and staff
.
3.7.3. CMS_MODERATOR
Default: False
If set to True
, gives you a new “moderation” column in the tree view.
You can select to moderate pages or whole trees. If a page is under moderation you will receive an email if somebody changes a page and you will be asked to approve the changes. Only after you approve the changes will they be updated on the “live” site. If you make changes to a page you moderate yourself, you will need to approve it anyway. This allows you to change a lot of pages for a new version of the site, for example, and go live with all the changes at the same time.
Note
When switching this value to True
on an existing site, you have to run the cms moderator on
command to make the required database changes.
3.7.4. CMS_SHOW_START_DATE & CMS_SHOW_END_DATE
Default: False
for both
This adds two new DateTimeField
fields in the “advanced settings” tab of the page. With this option you can limit the time a page is published.
3.7.5. CMS_SEO_FIELDS
Default: False
This adds a new “SEO Fields” fieldset to the page admin. You can set the Page Title, Meta Keywords and Meta Description in there.
To access these fields in the template use:
{% load cms_tags %}
<head>
<title>{% page_attribute page_title %}</title>
<meta name="description" content="{% page_attribute meta_description %}"/>
<meta name="keywords" content="{% page_attribute meta_keywords %}"/>
...
...
</head>
3.7.6. CMS_CACHE_DURATIONS
This dictionary carries the various cache duration settings.
3.7.6.1. 'content'
Default: 60
Cache expiration (in seconds) for show_placeholder
and page_url
template tags.
Note
This settings was previously called CMS_CONTENT_CACHE_DURATION
3.7.6.2. 'menus'
Default: 3600
Cache expiration (in seconds) for the menu tree.
Note
This settings was previously called MENU_CACHE_DURATION
3.7.6.3. 'permissions'
Default: 3600
Cache expiration (in seconds) for view and other permissions.
3.7.7. CMS_CACHE_PREFIX
Default: cms-
The CMS will prepend the value associated with this key to every cache access (set and get). This is useful when you have several django CMS installations, and you don’t want them to share cache objects.
Example:
CMS_CACHE_PREFIX = 'mysite-live'
Note
Django 1.3 introduced a site-wide cache key prefix. See Django’s own docs on cache key prefixing