Welcome to Wagtail’s documentation

Wagtail is an open source CMS written in Python and built on the Django web framework.

Below are some useful links to help you get started with Wagtail.

If you’d like to get a quick feel for Wagtail, try spinning up a temporary developer environment in your browser (running on Gitpod - here’s how it works).

Index

Getting started

Note

These instructions assume familiarity with virtual environments and the Django web framework. For more detailed instructions, see Your first Wagtail site. To add Wagtail to an existing Django project, see Integrating Wagtail into a Django project.

Dependencies needed for installation

Quick install

Run the following in a virtual environment of your choice:

$ pip install wagtail

(Installing outside a virtual environment may require sudo.)

Once installed, Wagtail provides a command similar to Django’s django-admin startproject to generate a new site/project:

$ wagtail start mysite

This will create a new folder mysite, based on a template containing everything you need to get started. More information on that template is available in the project template reference.

Inside your mysite folder, run the setup steps necessary for any Django project:

$ pip install -r requirements.txt
$ ./manage.py migrate
$ ./manage.py createsuperuser
$ ./manage.py runserver

Your site is now accessible at http://localhost:8000, with the admin backend available at http://localhost:8000/admin/.

This will set you up with a new stand-alone Wagtail project. If you’d like to add Wagtail to an existing Django project instead, see Integrating Wagtail into a Django project.

There are a few optional packages which are not installed by default but are recommended to improve performance or add features to Wagtail, including:

Your first Wagtail site

Note

This tutorial covers setting up a brand new Wagtail project. If you’d like to add Wagtail to an existing Django project instead, see Integrating Wagtail into a Django project.

Install and run Wagtail
Install dependencies

Wagtail supports Python 3.6, 3.7, 3.8, 3.9 and 3.10.

To check whether you have an appropriate version of Python 3:

$ python3 --version

If this does not return a version number or returns a version lower than 3.6, you will need to install Python 3.

Important

Before installing Wagtail, it is necessary to install the libjpeg and zlib libraries, which provide support for working with JPEG, PNG and GIF images (via the Python Pillow library). The way to do this varies by platform—see Pillow’s platform-specific installation instructions.

Create and activate a virtual environment

We recommend using a virtual environment, which isolates installed dependencies from other projects. This tutorial uses venv, which is packaged with Python 3.

On Windows (cmd.exe):

> python3 -m venv mysite\env
> mysite\env\Scripts\activate.bat

On GNU/Linux or MacOS (bash):

$ python3 -m venv mysite/env
$ source mysite/env/bin/activate

For other shells see the venv documentation.

Note

If you’re using version control (e.g. git), mysite will be the directory for your project. The env directory inside of it should be excluded from any version control.

Install Wagtail

Use pip, which is packaged with Python, to install Wagtail and its dependencies:

$ pip install wagtail
Generate your site

Wagtail provides a start command similar to django-admin startproject. Running wagtail start mysite in your project will generate a new mysite folder with a few Wagtail-specific extras, including the required project settings, a “home” app with a blank HomePage model and basic templates, and a sample “search” app.

Because the folder mysite was already created by venv, run wagtail start with an additional argument to specify the destination directory:

$ wagtail start mysite mysite

Note

Generally, in Wagtail, each page type, or content type, is represented by a single app. However, different apps can be aware of each other and access each other’s data. All of the apps need to be registered within the INSTALLED_APPS section of the settings file. Look at this file to see how the start command has listed them in there.

Install project dependencies
$ cd mysite
$ pip install -r requirements.txt

This ensures that you have the relevant versions of Wagtail, Django, and any other dependencies for the project you have just created.

Create the database

If you haven’t updated the project settings, this will be a SQLite database file in the project directory.

$ python manage.py migrate

This command ensures that the tables in your database are matched to the models in your project. Every time you alter your model (eg. you may add a field to a model) you will need to run this command in order to update the database.

Create an admin user
$ python manage.py createsuperuser

When logged into the admin site, a superuser has full permissions and is able to view/create/manage the database.

Start the server
$ python manage.py runserver

If everything worked, http://127.0.0.1:8000 will show you a welcome page:

_images/tutorial_1.png

You can now access the administrative area at http://127.0.0.1:8000/admin

_images/tutorial_2.png

Extend the HomePage model

Out of the box, the “home” app defines a blank HomePage model in models.py, along with a migration that creates a homepage and configures Wagtail to use it.

Edit home/models.py as follows, to add a body field to the model:

from django.db import models

from wagtail.core.models import Page
from wagtail.core.fields import RichTextField
from wagtail.admin.edit_handlers import FieldPanel


class HomePage(Page):
    body = RichTextField(blank=True)

    content_panels = Page.content_panels + [
        FieldPanel('body', classname="full"),
    ]

body is defined as RichTextField, a special Wagtail field. When blank=True, it means that this field is not required and can be empty. You can use any of the Django core fields. content_panels define the capabilities and the layout of the editing interface. When you add fields to content_panels, it enables them to be edited on the Wagtail interface. More on creating Page models.

Run python manage.py makemigrations (this will create the migrations file), then python manage.py migrate (this executes the migrations and updates the database with your model changes). You must run the above commands each time you make changes to the model definition.

You can now edit the homepage within the Wagtail admin area (go to Pages, Homepage, then Edit) to see the new body field. Enter some text into the body field, and publish the page by selecting Publish at the bottom of the page editor, rather than Save Draft.

The page template now needs to be updated to reflect the changes made to the model. Wagtail uses normal Django templates to render each page type. By default, it will look for a template filename formed from the app and model name, separating capital letters with underscores (e.g. HomePage within the ‘home’ app becomes home/home_page.html). This template file can exist in any location recognised by Django’s template rules; conventionally it is placed under a templates folder within the app.

Edit home/templates/home/home_page.html to contain the following:

{% extends "base.html" %}

{% load wagtailcore_tags %}

{% block body_class %}template-homepage{% endblock %}

{% block content %}
    {{ page.body|richtext }}
{% endblock %}

base.html refers to a parent template and must always be the first template tag used in a template. Extending from this template saves you from rewriting code and allows pages across your app to share a similar frame (by using block tags in the child template, you are able to override specific content within the parent template).

wagtailcore_tags must also be loaded at the top of the template and provide additional tags to those provided by Django.

_images/tutorial_3.png

Wagtail template tags

In addition to Django’s template tags and filters, Wagtail provides a number of its own template tags & filters which can be loaded by including {% load wagtailcore_tags %} at the top of your template file.

In this tutorial, we use the richtext filter to escape and print the contents of a RichTextField:

{% load wagtailcore_tags %}
{{ page.body|richtext }}

Produces:

<p>
    <b>Welcome</b> to our new site!
</p>

Note: You’ll need to include {% load wagtailcore_tags %} in each template that uses Wagtail’s tags. Django will throw a TemplateSyntaxError if the tags aren’t loaded.

A basic blog

We are now ready to create a blog. To do so, run python manage.py startapp blog to create a new app in your Wagtail site.

Add the new blog app to INSTALLED_APPS in mysite/settings/base.py.

Blog Index and Posts

Lets start with a simple index page for our blog. In blog/models.py:

from wagtail.core.models import Page
from wagtail.core.fields import RichTextField
from wagtail.admin.edit_handlers import FieldPanel


class BlogIndexPage(Page):
    intro = RichTextField(blank=True)

    content_panels = Page.content_panels + [
        FieldPanel('intro', classname="full")
    ]

Run python manage.py makemigrations and python manage.py migrate.

Since the model is called BlogIndexPage, the default template name (unless we override it) will be blog/templates/blog/blog_index_page.html. Create this file with the following content:

{% extends "base.html" %}

{% load wagtailcore_tags %}

{% block body_class %}template-blogindexpage{% endblock %}

{% block content %}
    <h1>{{ page.title }}</h1>

    <div class="intro">{{ page.intro|richtext }}</div>

    {% for post in page.get_children %}
        <h2><a href="{% pageurl post %}">{{ post.title }}</a></h2>
        {{ post.specific.intro }}
        {{ post.specific.body|richtext }}
    {% endfor %}

{% endblock %}

Most of this should be familiar, but we’ll explain get_children a bit later. Note the pageurl tag, which is similar to Django’s url tag but takes a Wagtail Page object as an argument.

In the Wagtail admin, create a BlogIndexPage as a child of the Homepage, make sure it has the slug “blog” on the Promote tab, and publish it. You should now be able to access the url /blog on your site (note how the slug from the Promote tab defines the page URL).

Now we need a model and template for our blog posts. In blog/models.py:

from django.db import models

from wagtail.core.models import Page
from wagtail.core.fields import RichTextField
from wagtail.admin.edit_handlers import FieldPanel
from wagtail.search import index


# Keep the definition of BlogIndexPage, and add:


class BlogPage(Page):
    date = models.DateField("Post date")
    intro = models.CharField(max_length=250)
    body = RichTextField(blank=True)

    search_fields = Page.search_fields + [
        index.SearchField('intro'),
        index.SearchField('body'),
    ]

    content_panels = Page.content_panels + [
        FieldPanel('date'),
        FieldPanel('intro'),
        FieldPanel('body', classname="full"),
    ]

In the model above, we import index as this makes the model searchable. You can then list fields that you want to be searchable for the user.

Run python manage.py makemigrations and python manage.py migrate.

Create a template at blog/templates/blog/blog_page.html:

{% extends "base.html" %}

{% load wagtailcore_tags %}

{% block body_class %}template-blogpage{% endblock %}

{% block content %}
    <h1>{{ page.title }}</h1>
    <p class="meta">{{ page.date }}</p>

    <div class="intro">{{ page.intro }}</div>

    {{ page.body|richtext }}

    <p><a href="{{ page.get_parent.url }}">Return to blog</a></p>

{% endblock %}

Note the use of Wagtail’s built-in get_parent() method to obtain the URL of the blog this post is a part of.

Now create a few blog posts as children of BlogIndexPage. Be sure to select type “Blog Page” when creating your posts.

_images/tutorial_4a.png

_images/tutorial_4b.png

Wagtail gives you full control over what kinds of content can be created under various parent content types. By default, any page type can be a child of any other page type.

_images/tutorial_5.png

Publish each blog post when you are done editing.

You should now have the very beginnings of a working blog. Access the /blog URL and you should see something like this:

_images/tutorial_7.png

Titles should link to post pages, and a link back to the blog’s homepage should appear in the footer of each post page.

Parents and Children

Much of the work you’ll be doing in Wagtail revolves around the concept of hierarchical “tree” structures consisting of nodes and leaves (see Theory). In this case, the BlogIndexPage is a “node” and individual BlogPage instances are the “leaves”.

Take another look at the guts of blog_index_page.html:

{% for post in page.get_children %}
    <h2><a href="{% pageurl post %}">{{ post.title }}</a></h2>
    {{ post.specific.intro }}
    {{ post.specific.body|richtext }}
{% endfor %}

Every “page” in Wagtail can call out to its parent or children from its own position in the hierarchy. But why do we have to specify post.specific.intro rather than post.intro? This has to do with the way we defined our model:

class BlogPage(Page):

The get_children() method gets us a list of instances of the Page base class. When we want to reference properties of the instances that inherit from the base class, Wagtail provides the specific method that retrieves the actual BlogPage record. While the “title” field is present on the base Page model, “intro” is only present on the BlogPage model, so we need .specific to access it.

To tighten up template code like this, we could use Django’s with tag:

{% for post in page.get_children %}
    {% with post=post.specific %}
        <h2><a href="{% pageurl post %}">{{ post.title }}</a></h2>
        <p>{{ post.intro }}</p>
        {{ post.body|richtext }}
    {% endwith %}
{% endfor %}

When you start writing more customized Wagtail code, you’ll find a whole set of QuerySet modifiers to help you navigate the hierarchy.

# Given a page object 'somepage':
MyModel.objects.descendant_of(somepage)
child_of(page) / not_child_of(somepage)
ancestor_of(somepage) / not_ancestor_of(somepage)
parent_of(somepage) / not_parent_of(somepage)
sibling_of(somepage) / not_sibling_of(somepage)
# ... and ...
somepage.get_children()
somepage.get_ancestors()
somepage.get_descendants()
somepage.get_siblings()

For more information, see: Page QuerySet reference

Overriding Context

There are a couple of problems with our blog index view:

  1. Blogs generally display content in reverse chronological order
  2. We want to make sure we’re only displaying published content.

To accomplish these things, we need to do more than just grab the index page’s children in the template. Instead, we’ll want to modify the QuerySet in the model definition. Wagtail makes this possible via the overridable get_context() method. Modify your BlogIndexPage model like this:

class BlogIndexPage(Page):
    intro = RichTextField(blank=True)

    def get_context(self, request):
        # Update context to include only published posts, ordered by reverse-chron
        context = super().get_context(request)
        blogpages = self.get_children().live().order_by('-first_published_at')
        context['blogpages'] = blogpages
        return context

All we’ve done here is retrieve the original context, create a custom QuerySet, add it to the retrieved context, and return the modified context back to the view. You’ll also need to modify your blog_index_page.html template slightly. Change:

{% for post in page.get_children %} to {% for post in blogpages %}

Now try unpublishing one of your posts - it should disappear from the blog index page. The remaining posts should now be sorted with the most recently published posts first.

Images

Let’s add the ability to attach an image gallery to our blog posts. While it’s possible to simply insert images into the body rich text field, there are several advantages to setting up our gallery images as a new dedicated object type within the database - this way, you have full control of the layout and styling of the images on the template, rather than having to lay them out in a particular way within the rich text field. It also makes it possible for the images to be used elsewhere, independently of the blog text - for example, displaying a thumbnail on the blog index page.

Add a new BlogPageGalleryImage model to models.py:

from django.db import models

# New imports added for ParentalKey, Orderable, InlinePanel, ImageChooserPanel

from modelcluster.fields import ParentalKey

from wagtail.core.models import Page, Orderable
from wagtail.core.fields import RichTextField
from wagtail.admin.edit_handlers import FieldPanel, InlinePanel
from wagtail.images.edit_handlers import ImageChooserPanel
from wagtail.search import index


# ... (Keep the definition of BlogIndexPage, and update BlogPage:)


class BlogPage(Page):
    date = models.DateField("Post date")
    intro = models.CharField(max_length=250)
    body = RichTextField(blank=True)

    search_fields = Page.search_fields + [
        index.SearchField('intro'),
        index.SearchField('body'),
    ]

    content_panels = Page.content_panels + [
        FieldPanel('date'),
        FieldPanel('intro'),
        FieldPanel('body', classname="full"),
        InlinePanel('gallery_images', label="Gallery images"),
    ]


class BlogPageGalleryImage(Orderable):
    page = ParentalKey(BlogPage, on_delete=models.CASCADE, related_name='gallery_images')
    image = models.ForeignKey(
        'wagtailimages.Image', on_delete=models.CASCADE, related_name='+'
    )
    caption = models.CharField(blank=True, max_length=250)

    panels = [
        ImageChooserPanel('image'),
        FieldPanel('caption'),
    ]

Run python manage.py makemigrations and python manage.py migrate.

There are a few new concepts here, so let’s take them one at a time:

Inheriting from Orderable adds a sort_order field to the model, to keep track of the ordering of images in the gallery.

The ParentalKey to BlogPage is what attaches the gallery images to a specific page. A ParentalKey works similarly to a ForeignKey, but also defines BlogPageGalleryImage as a “child” of the BlogPage model, so that it’s treated as a fundamental part of the page in operations like submitting for moderation, and tracking revision history.

image is a ForeignKey to Wagtail’s built-in Image model, where the images themselves are stored. This comes with a dedicated panel type, ImageChooserPanel, which provides a pop-up interface for choosing an existing image or uploading a new one. This way, we allow an image to exist in multiple galleries - effectively, we’ve created a many-to-many relationship between pages and images.

Specifying on_delete=models.CASCADE on the foreign key means that if the image is deleted from the system, the gallery entry is deleted as well. (In other situations, it might be appropriate to leave the entry in place - for example, if an “our staff” page included a list of people with headshots, and one of those photos was deleted, we’d rather leave the person in place on the page without a photo. In this case, we’d set the foreign key to blank=True, null=True, on_delete=models.SET_NULL.)

Finally, adding the InlinePanel to BlogPage.content_panels makes the gallery images available on the editing interface for BlogPage.

Adjust your blog page template to include the images:

{% extends "base.html" %}

{% load wagtailcore_tags wagtailimages_tags %}

{% block body_class %}template-blogpage{% endblock %}

{% block content %}
    <h1>{{ page.title }}</h1>
    <p class="meta">{{ page.date }}</p>

    <div class="intro">{{ page.intro }}</div>

    {{ page.body|richtext }}

    {% for item in page.gallery_images.all %}
        <div style="float: left; margin: 10px">
            {% image item.image fill-320x240 %}
            <p>{{ item.caption }}</p>
        </div>
    {% endfor %}

    <p><a href="{{ page.get_parent.url }}">Return to blog</a></p>

{% endblock %}

Here we use the {% image %} tag (which exists in the wagtailimages_tags library, imported at the top of the template) to insert an <img> element, with a fill-320x240 parameter to indicate that the image should be resized and cropped to fill a 320x240 rectangle. You can read more about using images in templates in the docs.

_images/tutorial_6.jpg

Since our gallery images are database objects in their own right, we can now query and re-use them independently of the blog post body. Let’s define a main_image method, which returns the image from the first gallery item (or None if no gallery items exist):

class BlogPage(Page):
    date = models.DateField("Post date")
    intro = models.CharField(max_length=250)
    body = RichTextField(blank=True)

    def main_image(self):
        gallery_item = self.gallery_images.first()
        if gallery_item:
            return gallery_item.image
        else:
            return None

    search_fields = Page.search_fields + [
        index.SearchField('intro'),
        index.SearchField('body'),
    ]

    content_panels = Page.content_panels + [
        FieldPanel('date'),
        FieldPanel('intro'),
        FieldPanel('body', classname="full"),
        InlinePanel('gallery_images', label="Gallery images"),
    ]

This method is now available from our templates. Update blog_index_page.html to include the main image as a thumbnail alongside each post:

{% load wagtailcore_tags wagtailimages_tags %}

...

{% for post in blogpages %}
    {% with post=post.specific %}
        <h2><a href="{% pageurl post %}">{{ post.title }}</a></h2>

        {% with post.main_image as main_image %}
            {% if main_image %}{% image main_image fill-160x100 %}{% endif %}
        {% endwith %}

        <p>{{ post.intro }}</p>
        {{ post.body|richtext }}
    {% endwith %}
{% endfor %}
Tagging Posts

Let’s say we want to let editors “tag” their posts, so that readers can, e.g., view all bicycle-related content together. For this, we’ll need to invoke the tagging system bundled with Wagtail, attach it to the BlogPage model and content panels, and render linked tags on the blog post template. Of course, we’ll need a working tag-specific URL view as well.

First, alter models.py once more:

from django.db import models

# New imports added for ClusterTaggableManager, TaggedItemBase, MultiFieldPanel

from modelcluster.fields import ParentalKey
from modelcluster.contrib.taggit import ClusterTaggableManager
from taggit.models import TaggedItemBase

from wagtail.core.models import Page, Orderable
from wagtail.core.fields import RichTextField
from wagtail.admin.edit_handlers import FieldPanel, InlinePanel, MultiFieldPanel
from wagtail.images.edit_handlers import ImageChooserPanel
from wagtail.search import index


# ... (Keep the definition of BlogIndexPage)


class BlogPageTag(TaggedItemBase):
    content_object = ParentalKey(
        'BlogPage',
        related_name='tagged_items',
        on_delete=models.CASCADE
    )


class BlogPage(Page):
    date = models.DateField("Post date")
    intro = models.CharField(max_length=250)
    body = RichTextField(blank=True)
    tags = ClusterTaggableManager(through=BlogPageTag, blank=True)

    # ... (Keep the main_image method and search_fields definition)

    content_panels = Page.content_panels + [
        MultiFieldPanel([
            FieldPanel('date'),
            FieldPanel('tags'),
        ], heading="Blog information"),
        FieldPanel('intro'),
        FieldPanel('body'),
        InlinePanel('gallery_images', label="Gallery images"),
    ]

Run python manage.py makemigrations and python manage.py migrate.

Note the new modelcluster and taggit imports, the addition of a new BlogPageTag model, and the addition of a tags field on BlogPage. We’ve also taken the opportunity to use a MultiFieldPanel in content_panels to group the date and tags fields together for readability.

Edit one of your BlogPage instances, and you should now be able to tag posts:

_images/tutorial_8.png

To render tags on a BlogPage, add this to blog_page.html:

{% if page.tags.all.count %}
    <div class="tags">
        <h3>Tags</h3>
        {% for tag in page.tags.all %}
            <a href="{% slugurl 'tags' %}?tag={{ tag }}"><button type="button">{{ tag }}</button></a>
        {% endfor %}
    </div>
{% endif %}

Notice that we’re linking to pages here with the builtin slugurl tag rather than pageurl, which we used earlier. The difference is that slugurl takes a Page slug (from the Promote tab) as an argument. pageurl is more commonly used because it is unambiguous and avoids extra database lookups. But in the case of this loop, the Page object isn’t readily available, so we fall back on the less-preferred slugurl tag.

Visiting a blog post with tags should now show a set of linked buttons at the bottom - one for each tag. However, clicking a button will get you a 404, since we haven’t yet defined a “tags” view. Add to models.py:

class BlogTagIndexPage(Page):

    def get_context(self, request):

        # Filter by tag
        tag = request.GET.get('tag')
        blogpages = BlogPage.objects.filter(tags__name=tag)

        # Update template context
        context = super().get_context(request)
        context['blogpages'] = blogpages
        return context

Note that this Page-based model defines no fields of its own. Even without fields, subclassing Page makes it a part of the Wagtail ecosystem, so that you can give it a title and URL in the admin, and so that you can manipulate its contents by returning a QuerySet from its get_context() method.

Migrate this in, then create a new BlogTagIndexPage in the admin. You’ll probably want to create the new page/view as a child of Homepage, parallel to your Blog index. Give it the slug “tags” on the Promote tab.

Access /tags and Django will tell you what you probably already knew: you need to create a template blog/blog_tag_index_page.html:

{% extends "base.html" %}
{% load wagtailcore_tags %}

{% block content %}

    {% if request.GET.tag %}
        <h4>Showing pages tagged "{{ request.GET.tag }}"</h4>
    {% endif %}

    {% for blogpage in blogpages %}

          <p>
              <strong><a href="{% pageurl blogpage %}">{{ blogpage.title }}</a></strong><br />
              <small>Revised: {{ blogpage.latest_revision_created_at }}</small><br />
              {% if blogpage.author %}
                <p>By {{ blogpage.author.profile }}</p>
              {% endif %}
          </p>

    {% empty %}
        No pages found with that tag.
    {% endfor %}

{% endblock %}

We’re calling the built-in latest_revision_created_at field on the Page model - handy to know this is always available.

We haven’t yet added an “author” field to our BlogPage model, nor do we have a Profile model for authors - we’ll leave those as an exercise for the reader.

Clicking the tag button at the bottom of a BlogPost should now render a page something like this:

_images/tutorial_9.png

Categories

Let’s add a category system to our blog. Unlike tags, where a page author can bring a tag into existence simply by using it on a page, our categories will be a fixed list, managed by the site owner through a separate area of the admin interface.

First, we define a BlogCategory model. A category is not a page in its own right, and so we define it as a standard Django models.Model rather than inheriting from Page. Wagtail introduces the concept of “snippets” for reusable pieces of content that need to be managed through the admin interface, but do not exist as part of the page tree themselves; a model can be registered as a snippet by adding the @register_snippet decorator. All the field types we’ve used so far on pages can be used on snippets too - here we’ll give each category an icon image as well as a name. Add to blog/models.py:

from wagtail.snippets.models import register_snippet


@register_snippet
class BlogCategory(models.Model):
    name = models.CharField(max_length=255)
    icon = models.ForeignKey(
        'wagtailimages.Image', null=True, blank=True,
        on_delete=models.SET_NULL, related_name='+'
    )

    panels = [
        FieldPanel('name'),
        ImageChooserPanel('icon'),
    ]

    def __str__(self):
        return self.name

    class Meta:
        verbose_name_plural = 'blog categories'

Note

Note that we are using panels rather than content_panels here - since snippets generally have no need for fields such as slug or publish date, the editing interface for them is not split into separate ‘content’ / ‘promote’ / ‘settings’ tabs as standard, and so there is no need to distinguish between ‘content panels’ and ‘promote panels’.

Migrate this change in, and create a few categories through the Snippets area which now appears in the admin menu.

We can now add categories to the BlogPage model, as a many-to-many field. The field type we use for this is ParentalManyToManyField - this is a variant of the standard Django ManyToManyField which ensures that the chosen objects are correctly stored against the page record in the revision history, in much the same way that ParentalKey replaces ForeignKey for one-to-many relations.

# New imports added for forms and ParentalManyToManyField
from django import forms
from django.db import models

from modelcluster.fields import ParentalKey, ParentalManyToManyField
from modelcluster.contrib.taggit import ClusterTaggableManager
from taggit.models import TaggedItemBase

# ...

class BlogPage(Page):
    date = models.DateField("Post date")
    intro = models.CharField(max_length=250)
    body = RichTextField(blank=True)
    tags = ClusterTaggableManager(through=BlogPageTag, blank=True)
    categories = ParentalManyToManyField('blog.BlogCategory', blank=True)

    # ... (Keep the main_image method and search_fields definition)

    content_panels = Page.content_panels + [
        MultiFieldPanel([
            FieldPanel('date'),
            FieldPanel('tags'),
            FieldPanel('categories', widget=forms.CheckboxSelectMultiple),
        ], heading="Blog information"),
        FieldPanel('intro'),
        FieldPanel('body'),
        InlinePanel('gallery_images', label="Gallery images"),
    ]

Here we’re making use of the widget keyword argument on the FieldPanel definition to specify a checkbox-based widget instead of the default multiple select box, as this is often considered more user-friendly.

Finally, we can update the blog_page.html template to display the categories:

<h1>{{ page.title }}</h1>
<p class="meta">{{ page.date }}</p>

{% with categories=page.categories.all %}
    {% if categories %}
        <h3>Posted in:</h3>
        <ul>
            {% for category in categories %}
                <li style="display: inline">
                    {% image category.icon fill-32x32 style="vertical-align: middle" %}
                    {{ category.name }}
                </li>
            {% endfor %}
        </ul>
    {% endif %}
{% endwith %}

_images/tutorial_10.jpg

Where next
Demo site

To create a new site on Wagtail we recommend the wagtail start command in Getting started. We also have a demo site, The Wagtail Bakery, which contains example page types and models. We recommend you use the demo site for testing during development of Wagtail itself.

The source code and installation instructions can be found at https://github.com/wagtail/bakerydemo

Integrating Wagtail into a Django project

Wagtail provides the wagtail start command and project template to get you started with a new Wagtail project as quickly as possible, but it’s easy to integrate Wagtail into an existing Django project too.

Wagtail is currently compatible with Django 3.0, 3.1 and 3.2. First, install the wagtail package from PyPI:

$ pip install wagtail

or add the package to your existing requirements file. This will also install the Pillow library as a dependency, which requires libjpeg and zlib - see Pillow’s platform-specific installation instructions.

Settings

In your settings file, add the following apps to INSTALLED_APPS:

'wagtail.contrib.forms',
'wagtail.contrib.redirects',
'wagtail.embeds',
'wagtail.sites',
'wagtail.users',
'wagtail.snippets',
'wagtail.documents',
'wagtail.images',
'wagtail.search',
'wagtail.admin',
'wagtail.core',

'modelcluster',
'taggit',

Add the following entry to MIDDLEWARE:

'wagtail.contrib.redirects.middleware.RedirectMiddleware',

Add a STATIC_ROOT setting, if your project does not have one already:

STATIC_ROOT = os.path.join(BASE_DIR, 'static')

Add MEDIA_ROOT and MEDIA_URL settings, if your project does not have these already:

MEDIA_ROOT = os.path.join(BASE_DIR, 'media')
MEDIA_URL = '/media/'

Add a WAGTAIL_SITE_NAME - this will be displayed on the main dashboard of the Wagtail admin backend:

WAGTAIL_SITE_NAME = 'My Example Site'

Add the WAGTAILSEARCH_BACKENDS setting to enable full-text searching:

WAGTAILSEARCH_BACKENDS = {
    'default': {
        'BACKEND': 'wagtail.search.backends.database',
    }
}

Various other settings are available to configure Wagtail’s behaviour - see Settings.

URL configuration

Now make the following additions to your urls.py file:

from django.urls import path, include

from wagtail.admin import urls as wagtailadmin_urls
from wagtail.core import urls as wagtail_urls
from wagtail.documents import urls as wagtaildocs_urls

urlpatterns = [
    ...
    path('cms/', include(wagtailadmin_urls)),
    path('documents/', include(wagtaildocs_urls)),
    path('pages/', include(wagtail_urls)),
    ...
]

The URL paths here can be altered as necessary to fit your project’s URL scheme.

wagtailadmin_urls provides the admin interface for Wagtail. This is separate from the Django admin interface (django.contrib.admin); Wagtail-only projects typically host the Wagtail admin at /admin/, but if this would clash with your project’s existing admin backend then an alternative path can be used, such as /cms/ here.

wagtaildocs_urls is the location from where document files will be served. This can be omitted if you do not intend to use Wagtail’s document management features.

wagtail_urls is the base location from where the pages of your Wagtail site will be served. In the above example, Wagtail will handle URLs under /pages/, leaving the root URL and other paths to be handled as normal by your Django project. If you want Wagtail to handle the entire URL space including the root URL, this can be replaced with:

path('', include(wagtail_urls)),

In this case, this should be placed at the end of the urlpatterns list, so that it does not override more specific URL patterns.

Finally, your project needs to be set up to serve user-uploaded files from MEDIA_ROOT. Your Django project may already have this in place, but if not, add the following snippet to urls.py:

from django.conf import settings
from django.conf.urls.static import static

urlpatterns = [
    # ... the rest of your URLconf goes here ...
] + static(settings.MEDIA_URL, document_root=settings.MEDIA_ROOT)

Note that this only works in development mode (DEBUG = True); in production, you will need to configure your web server to serve files from MEDIA_ROOT. For further details, see the Django documentation: Serving files uploaded by a user during development and Deploying static files.

With this configuration in place, you are ready to run ./manage.py migrate to create the database tables used by Wagtail.

User accounts

Superuser accounts receive automatic access to the Wagtail admin interface; use ./manage.py createsuperuser if you don’t already have one. Custom user models are supported, with some restrictions; Wagtail uses an extension of Django’s permissions framework, so your user model must at minimum inherit from AbstractBaseUser and PermissionsMixin.

Start developing

You’re now ready to add a new app to your Django project (via ./manage.py startapp - remember to add it to INSTALLED_APPS) and set up page models, as described in Your first Wagtail site.

Note that there’s one small difference when not using the Wagtail project template: Wagtail creates an initial homepage of the basic type Page, which does not include any content fields beyond the title. You’ll probably want to replace this with your own HomePage class - when you do so, ensure that you set up a site record (under Settings / Sites in the Wagtail admin) to point to the new homepage.

The Zen of Wagtail

Wagtail has been born out of many years of experience building websites, learning approaches that work and ones that don’t, and striking a balance between power and simplicity, structure and flexibility. We hope you’ll find that Wagtail is in that sweet spot. However, as a piece of software, Wagtail can only take that mission so far - it’s now up to you to create a site that’s beautiful and a joy to work with. So, while it’s tempting to rush ahead and start building, it’s worth taking a moment to understand the design principles that Wagtail is built on.

In the spirit of “The Zen of Python”, The Zen of Wagtail is a set of guiding principles, both for building websites in Wagtail, and for the ongoing development of Wagtail itself.

Wagtail is not an instant website in a box.

You can’t make a beautiful website by plugging off-the-shelf modules together - expect to write code.

Always wear the right hat.

The key to using Wagtail effectively is to recognise that there are multiple roles involved in creating a website: the content author, site administrator, developer and designer. These may well be different people, but they don’t have to be - if you’re using Wagtail to build your personal blog, you’ll probably find yourself hopping between those different roles. Either way, it’s important to be aware of which of those hats you’re wearing at any moment, and to use the right tools for that job. A content author or site administrator will do the bulk of their work through the Wagtail admin interface; a developer or designer will spend most of their time writing Python, HTML or CSS code. This is a good thing: Wagtail isn’t designed to replace the job of programming. Maybe one day someone will come up with a drag-and-drop UI for building websites that’s as powerful as writing code, but Wagtail is not that tool, and does not try to be.

A common mistake is to push too much power and responsibility into the hands of the content author and site administrator - indeed, if those people are your clients, they’ll probably be loudly clamouring for exactly that. The success of your site depends on your ability to say no. The real power of content management comes not from handing control over to CMS users, but from setting clear boundaries between the different roles. Amongst other things, this means not having editors doing design and layout within the content editing interface, and not having site administrators building complex interaction workflows that would be better achieved in code.

A CMS should get information out of an editor’s head and into a database, as efficiently and directly as possible.

Whether your site is about cars, cats, cakes or conveyancing, your content authors will be arriving at the Wagtail admin interface with some domain-specific information they want to put up on the website. Your aim as a site builder is to extract and store this information in its raw form - not one particular author’s idea of how that information should look.

Keeping design concerns out of page content has numerous advantages. It ensures that the design remains consistent across the whole site, not subject to the whims of editors from one day to the next. It allows you to make full use of the informational content of the pages - for example, if your pages are about events, then having a dedicated “Event” page type with data fields for the event date and location will let you present the events in a calendar view or filtered listing, which wouldn’t be possible if those were just implemented as different styles of heading on a generic page. Finally, if you redesign the site at some point in the future, or move it to a different platform entirely, you can be confident that the site content will work in its new setting, and not be reliant on being formatted a particular way.

Suppose a content author comes to you with a request: “We need this text to be in bright pink Comic Sans”. Your question to them should be “Why? What’s special about this particular bit of text?” If the reply is “I just like the look of it”, then you’ll have to gently persuade them that it’s not up to them to make design choices. (Sorry.) But if the answer is “it’s for our Children’s section”, then that gives you a way to divide the editorial and design concerns: give your editors the ability to designate certain pages as being “the Children’s section” (through tagging, different page models, or the site hierarchy) and let designers decide how to apply styles based on that.

The best user interface for a programmer is usually a programming language.

A common sight in content management systems is a point-and-click interface to let you define the data model that makes up a page:

_images/drupal_content_type.png

It looks nice in the sales pitch, but in reality, no CMS end-user can realistically make that kind of fundamental change - on a live site, no less - unless they have a programmer’s insight into how the site is built, and what impact the change will have. As such, it will always be the programmer’s job to negotiate that point-and-click interface - all you’ve done is taken them away from the comfortable world of writing code, where they have a whole ecosystem of tools, from text editors to version control systems, to help them develop, test and deploy their code changes.

Wagtail recognises that most programming tasks are best done by writing code, and does not try to turn them into box-filling exercises when there’s no good reason to. Likewise, when building functionality for your site, you should keep in mind that some features are destined to be maintained by the programmer rather than a content editor, and consider whether making them configurable through the Wagtail admin is going to be more of a hindrance than a convenience. For example, Wagtail provides a form builder to allow content authors to create general-purpose data collection forms. You might be tempted to use this as the basis for more complex forms that integrate with (for example) a CRM system or payment processor - however, in this case there’s no way to edit the form fields without rewriting the backend logic, so making them editable through Wagtail has limited value. More likely, you’d be better off building these using Django’s form framework, where the form fields are defined entirely in code.

Usage guide

Page models

Each page type (a.k.a. content type) in Wagtail is represented by a Django model. All page models must inherit from the wagtail.core.models.Page class.

As all page types are Django models, you can use any field type that Django provides. See Model field reference for a complete list of field types you can use. Wagtail also provides wagtail.core.fields.RichTextField which provides a WYSIWYG editor for editing rich-text content.

Note

If you’re not yet familiar with Django models, have a quick look at the following links to get you started:

An example Wagtail page model

This example represents a typical blog post:

from django.db import models

from modelcluster.fields import ParentalKey

from wagtail.core.models import Page, Orderable
from wagtail.core.fields import RichTextField
from wagtail.admin.edit_handlers import FieldPanel, MultiFieldPanel, InlinePanel
from wagtail.images.edit_handlers import ImageChooserPanel
from wagtail.search import index


class BlogPage(Page):

    # Database fields

    body = RichTextField()
    date = models.DateField("Post date")
    feed_image = models.ForeignKey(
        'wagtailimages.Image',
        null=True,
        blank=True,
        on_delete=models.SET_NULL,
        related_name='+'
    )


    # Search index configuration

    search_fields = Page.search_fields + [
        index.SearchField('body'),
        index.FilterField('date'),
    ]


    # Editor panels configuration

    content_panels = Page.content_panels + [
        FieldPanel('date'),
        FieldPanel('body', classname="full"),
        InlinePanel('related_links', label="Related links"),
    ]

    promote_panels = [
        MultiFieldPanel(Page.promote_panels, "Common page configuration"),
        ImageChooserPanel('feed_image'),
    ]


    # Parent page / subpage type rules

    parent_page_types = ['blog.BlogIndex']
    subpage_types = []


class BlogPageRelatedLink(Orderable):
    page = ParentalKey(BlogPage, on_delete=models.CASCADE, related_name='related_links')
    name = models.CharField(max_length=255)
    url = models.URLField()

    panels = [
        FieldPanel('name'),
        FieldPanel('url'),
    ]

Note

Ensure that none of your field names are the same as your class names. This will cause errors due to the way Django handles relations (read more). In our examples we have avoided this by appending “Page” to each model name.

Writing page models

Here we’ll describe each section of the above example to help you create your own page models.

Database fields

Each Wagtail page type is a Django model, represented in the database as a separate table.

Each page type can have its own set of fields. For example, a news article may have body text and a published date, whereas an event page may need separate fields for venue and start/finish times.

In Wagtail, you can use any Django field class. Most field classes provided by third party apps should work as well.

Wagtail also provides a couple of field classes of its own:

For tagging, Wagtail fully supports django-taggit so we recommend using that.

Editor panels

There are a few attributes for defining how the page’s fields will be arranged in the page editor interface:

  • content_panels - For content, such as main body text
  • promote_panels - For metadata, such as tags, thumbnail image and SEO title
  • settings_panels - For settings, such as publish date

Each of these attributes is set to a list of EditHandler objects, which defines which fields appear on which tabs and how they are structured on each tab.

Here’s a summary of the EditHandler classes that Wagtail provides out of the box. See Panel types for full descriptions.

Basic

These allow editing of model fields. The FieldPanel class will choose the correct widget based on the type of the field, though StreamField fields need to use a specialised panel class.

Structural

These are used for structuring fields in the interface.

Chooser

ForeignKey fields to certain models can use one of the below ChooserPanel classes. These add a nice modal chooser interface, and the image/document choosers also allow uploading new files without leaving the page editor.

Note

In order to use one of these choosers, the model being linked to must either be a page, image, document or snippet.

Linking to any other model type is currently unsupported, you will need to use FieldPanel which will create a dropdown box.

Customising the page editor interface

The page editor can be customised further. See Customising the editing interface.

Parent page / subpage type rules

These two attributes allow you to control where page types may be used in your site. It allows you to define rules like “blog entries may only be created under a blog index”.

Both take a list of model classes or model names. Model names are of the format app_label.ModelName. If the app_label is omitted, the same app is assumed.

  • parent_page_types limits which page types this type can be created under
  • subpage_types limits which page types can be created under this type

By default, any page type can be created under any page type and it is not necessary to set these attributes if that’s the desired behaviour.

Setting parent_page_types to an empty list is a good way of preventing a particular page type from being created in the editor interface.

Page URLs

The most common method of retrieving page URLs is by using the {% pageurl %} template tag. Since it’s called from a template, pageurl automatically includes the optimizations mentioned below. For more information, see pageurl.

Page models also include several low-level methods for overriding or accessing page URLs.

Customising URL patterns for a page model

The Page.get_url_parts(request) method will not typically be called directly, but may be overridden to define custom URL routing for a given page model. It should return a tuple of (site_id, root_url, page_path), which are used by get_url and get_full_url (see below) to construct the given type of page URL.

When overriding get_url_parts(), you should accept *args, **kwargs:

def get_url_parts(self, *args, **kwargs):

and pass those through at the point where you are calling get_url_parts on super (if applicable), e.g.:

super().get_url_parts(*args, **kwargs)

While you could pass only the request keyword argument, passing all arguments as-is ensures compatibility with any future changes to these method signatures.

For more information, please see wagtail.core.models.Page.get_url_parts().

Obtaining URLs for page instances

The Page.get_url(request) method can be called whenever a page URL is needed. It defaults to returning local URLs (not including the protocol or domain) if it determines that the page is on the current site (via the hostname in request); otherwise, a full URL including the protocol and domain is returned. Whenever possible, the optional request argument should be included to enable per-request caching of site-level URL information and facilitate the generation of local URLs.

A common use case for get_url(request) is in any custom template tag your project may include for generating navigation menus. When writing such a custom template tag, ensure that it includes takes_context=True and use context.get('request') to safely pass the request or None if no request exists in the context.

For more information, please see wagtail.core.models.Page.get_url().

In the event a full URL (including the protocol and domain) is needed, Page.get_full_url(request) can be used instead. Whenever possible, the optional request argument should be included to enable per-request caching of site-level URL information.

For more information, please see wagtail.core.models.Page.get_full_url().

Template rendering

Each page model can be given an HTML template which is rendered when a user browses to a page on the site frontend. This is the simplest and most common way to get Wagtail content to end users (but not the only way).

Adding a template for a page model

Wagtail automatically chooses a name for the template based on the app label and model class name.

Format: <app_label>/<model_name (snake cased)>.html

For example, the template for the above blog page will be: blog/blog_page.html

You just need to create a template in a location where it can be accessed with this name.

Template context

Wagtail renders templates with the page variable bound to the page instance being rendered. Use this to access the content of the page. For example, to get the title of the current page, use {{ page.title }}. All variables provided by context processors are also available.

Customising template context

All pages have a get_context method that is called whenever the template is rendered and returns a dictionary of variables to bind into the template.

To add more variables to the template context, you can override this method:

class BlogIndexPage(Page):
    ...

    def get_context(self, request, *args, **kwargs):
        context = super().get_context(request, *args, **kwargs)

        # Add extra variables and return the updated context
        context['blog_entries'] = BlogPage.objects.child_of(self).live()
        return context

The variables can then be used in the template:

{{ page.title }}

{% for entry in blog_entries %}
    {{ entry.title }}
{% endfor %}
Changing the template

Set the template attribute on the class to use a different template file:

class BlogPage(Page):
    ...

    template = 'other_template.html'
Dynamically choosing the template

The template can be changed on a per-instance basis by defining a get_template method on the page class. This method is called every time the page is rendered:

class BlogPage(Page):
    ...

    use_other_template = models.BooleanField()

    def get_template(self, request, *args, **kwargs):
        if self.use_other_template:
            return 'blog/other_blog_page.html'

        return 'blog/blog_page.html'

In this example, pages that have the use_other_template boolean field set will use the blog/other_blog_page.html template. All other pages will use the default blog/blog_page.html.

Ajax Templates

If you want to add AJAX functionality to a page, such as a paginated listing that updates in-place on the page rather than triggering a full page reload, you can set the ajax_template attribute to specify an alternative template to be used when the page is requested via an AJAX call (as indicated by the X-Requested-With: XMLHttpRequest HTTP header):

class BlogPage(Page):
    ...

    ajax_template = 'other_template_fragment.html'
    template = 'other_template.html'
More control over page rendering

All page classes have a serve() method that internally calls the get_context and get_template methods and renders the template. This method is similar to a Django view function, taking a Django Request object and returning a Django Response object.

This method can also be overridden for complete control over page rendering.

For example, here’s a way to make a page respond with a JSON representation of itself:

from django.http import JsonResponse


class BlogPage(Page):
    ...

    def serve(self, request):
        return JsonResponse({
            'title': self.title,
            'body': self.body,
            'date': self.date,

            # Resizes the image to 300px width and gets a URL to it
            'feed_image': self.feed_image.get_rendition('width-300').url,
        })
Inline models

Wagtail can nest the content of other models within the page. This is useful for creating repeated fields, such as related links or items to display in a carousel. Inline model content is also versioned with the rest of the page content.

Each inline model requires the following:

Note

django-modelcluster and ParentalKey

The model inlining feature is provided by django-modelcluster and the ParentalKey field type must be imported from there:

from modelcluster.fields import ParentalKey

ParentalKey is a subclass of Django’s ForeignKey, and takes the same arguments.

For example, the following inline model can be used to add related links (a list of name, url pairs) to the BlogPage model:

from django.db import models
from modelcluster.fields import ParentalKey
from wagtail.core.models import Orderable


class BlogPageRelatedLink(Orderable):
    page = ParentalKey(BlogPage, on_delete=models.CASCADE, related_name='related_links')
    name = models.CharField(max_length=255)
    url = models.URLField()

    panels = [
        FieldPanel('name'),
        FieldPanel('url'),
    ]

To add this to the admin interface, use the InlinePanel edit panel class:

content_panels = [
    ...

    InlinePanel('related_links', label="Related links"),
]

The first argument must match the value of the related_name attribute of the ParentalKey.

Working with pages

Wagtail uses Django’s multi-table inheritance feature to allow multiple page models to be used in the same tree.

Each page is added to both Wagtail’s builtin Page model as well as its user-defined model (such as the BlogPage model created earlier).

Pages can exist in Python code in two forms, an instance of Page or an instance of the page model.

When working with multiple page types together, you will typically use instances of Wagtail’s Page model, which don’t give you access to any fields specific to their type.

# Get all pages in the database
>>> from wagtail.core.models import Page
>>> Page.objects.all()
[<Page: Homepage>, <Page: About us>, <Page: Blog>, <Page: A Blog post>, <Page: Another Blog post>]

When working with a single page type, you can work with instances of the user-defined model. These give access to all the fields available in Page, along with any user-defined fields for that type.

# Get all blog entries in the database
>>> BlogPage.objects.all()
[<BlogPage: A Blog post>, <BlogPage: Another Blog post>]

You can convert a Page object to its more specific user-defined equivalent using the .specific property. This may cause an additional database lookup.

>>> page = Page.objects.get(title="A Blog post")
>>> page
<Page: A Blog post>

# Note: the blog post is an instance of Page so we cannot access body, date or feed_image

>>> page.specific
<BlogPage: A Blog post>
Tips
Friendly model names

You can make your model names more friendly to users of Wagtail by using Django’s internal Meta class with a verbose_name, e.g.:

class HomePage(Page):
    ...

    class Meta:
        verbose_name = "homepage"

When users are given a choice of pages to create, the list of page types is generated by splitting your model names on each of their capital letters. Thus a HomePage model would be named “Home Page” which is a little clumsy. Defining verbose_name as in the example above would change this to read “Homepage”, which is slightly more conventional.

Page QuerySet ordering

Page-derived models cannot be given a default ordering by using the standard Django approach of adding an ordering attribute to the internal Meta class.

class NewsItemPage(Page):
    publication_date = models.DateField()
    ...

    class Meta:
        ordering = ('-publication_date', )  # will not work

This is because Page enforces ordering QuerySets by path. Instead, you must apply the ordering explicitly when constructing a QuerySet:

news_items = NewsItemPage.objects.live().order_by('-publication_date')
Custom Page managers

You can add a custom Manager to your Page class. Any custom Managers should inherit from wagtail.core.models.PageManager:

from django.db import models
from wagtail.core.models import Page, PageManager

class EventPageManager(PageManager):
    """ Custom manager for Event pages """

class EventPage(Page):
    start_date = models.DateField()

    objects = EventPageManager()

Alternately, if you only need to add extra QuerySet methods, you can inherit from wagtail.core.models.PageQuerySet to build a custom Manager:

from django.db import models
from django.utils import timezone
from wagtail.core.models import Page, PageManager, PageQuerySet

class EventPageQuerySet(PageQuerySet):
    def future(self):
        today = timezone.localtime(timezone.now()).date()
        return self.filter(start_date__gte=today)

EventPageManager = PageManager.from_queryset(EventPageQuerySet)

class EventPage(Page):
    start_date = models.DateField()

    objects = EventPageManager()

Writing templates

Wagtail uses Django’s templating language. For developers new to Django, start with Django’s own template documentation: Templates

Python programmers new to Django/Wagtail may prefer more technical documentation: The Django template language: for Python programmers

You should be familiar with Django templating basics before continuing with this documentation.

Templates

Every type of page or “content type” in Wagtail is defined as a “model” in a file called models.py. If your site has a blog, you might have a BlogPage model and another called BlogPageListing. The names of the models are up to the Django developer.

For each page model in models.py, Wagtail assumes an HTML template file exists of (almost) the same name. The Front End developer may need to create these templates themselves by referring to models.py to infer template names from the models defined therein.

To find a suitable template, Wagtail converts CamelCase names to snake_case. So for a BlogPage, a template blog_page.html will be expected. The name of the template file can be overridden per model if necessary.

Template files are assumed to exist here:

name_of_project/
    name_of_app/
        templates/
            name_of_app/
                blog_page.html
        models.py

For more information, see the Django documentation for the application directories template loader.

Page content

The data/content entered into each page is accessed/output through Django’s {{ double-brace }} notation. Each field from the model must be accessed by prefixing page.. e.g the page title {{ page.title }} or another field {{ page.author }}.

A custom variable name can be configured on the page model. If a custom name is defined, page is still available for use in shared templates.

Additionally request. is available and contains Django’s request object.

Static assets

Static files e.g CSS, JS and images are typically stored here:

name_of_project/
    name_of_app/
        static/
            name_of_app/
                css/
                js/
                images/
        models.py

(The names “css”, “js” etc aren’t important, only their position within the tree.)

Any file within the static folder should be inserted into your HTML using the {% static %} tag. More about it: Static files (tag).

User images

Images uploaded to a Wagtail site by its users (as opposed to a developer’s static files, mentioned above) go into the image library and from there are added to pages via the page editor interface.

Unlike other CMSs, adding images to a page does not involve choosing a “version” of the image to use. Wagtail has no predefined image “formats” or “sizes”. Instead the template developer defines image manipulation to occur on the fly when the image is requested, via a special syntax within the template.

Images from the library must be requested using this syntax, but a developer’s static images can be added via conventional means e.g img tags. Only images from the library can be manipulated on the fly.

Read more about the image manipulation syntax here How to use images in templates.

Template tags & filters

In addition to Django’s standard tags and filters, Wagtail provides some of its own, which can be load-ed just like any other.

Images (tag)

The image tag inserts an XHTML-compatible img element into the page, setting its src, width, height and alt. See also More control over the img tag.

The syntax for the image tag is thus:

{% image [image] [resize-rule] %}

For example:

{% load wagtailimages_tags %}
...

{% image page.photo width-400 %}

<!-- or a square thumbnail: -->
{% image page.photo fill-80x80 %}

See How to use images in templates for full documentation.

Rich text (filter)

This filter takes a chunk of HTML content and renders it as safe HTML in the page. Importantly, it also expands internal shorthand references to embedded images, and links made in the Wagtail editor, into fully-baked HTML ready for display.

Only fields using RichTextField need this applied in the template.

{% load wagtailcore_tags %}
...
{{ page.body|richtext }}
Responsive Embeds

As Wagtail does not impose any styling of its own on templates, images and embedded media will be displayed at a fixed width as determined by the HTML. Images can be made to resize to fit their container using a CSS rule such as the following:

.body img {
    max-width: 100%;
    height: auto;
}

where body is a container element in your template surrounding the images.

Making embedded media resizable is also possible, but typically requires custom style rules matching the media’s aspect ratio. To assist in this, Wagtail provides built-in support for responsive embeds, which can be enabled by setting WAGTAILEMBEDS_RESPONSIVE_HTML = True in your project settings. This adds a CSS class of responsive-object and an inline padding-bottom style to the embed, to be used in conjunction with the following CSS:

.responsive-object {
    position: relative;
}

.responsive-object iframe,
.responsive-object object,
.responsive-object embed {
    position: absolute;
    top: 0;
    left: 0;
    width: 100%;
    height: 100%;
}
Static files (tag)

Used to load anything from your static files directory. Use of this tag avoids rewriting all static paths if hosting arrangements change, as they might between development and live environments.

{% load static %}
...
<img src="{% static "name_of_app/myimage.jpg" %}" alt="My image"/>

Notice that the full path name is not required and the path snippet you enter only need begin with the parent app’s directory name.

Multi-site support
wagtail_site

Returns the Site object corresponding to the current request.

{% load wagtailcore_tags %}

{% wagtail_site as current_site %}
Wagtail User Bar

This tag provides a contextual flyout menu for logged-in users. The menu gives editors the ability to edit the current page or add a child page, besides the options to show the page in the Wagtail page explorer or jump to the Wagtail admin dashboard. Moderators are also given the ability to accept or reject a page being previewed as part of content moderation.

This tag may be used on standard Django views, without page object. The user bar will contain one item pointing to the admin.

We recommend putting the tag near the top of the <body> element so keyboard users can reach it. You should consider putting the tag after any skip links but before the navigation and main content of your page.

{% load wagtailuserbar %}
...
<body>
  <a id="#content">Skip to content</a>
  {% wagtailuserbar %} {# This is a good place for the userbar #}
  <nav>
  ...
  </nav>
  <main id="content">
  ...
  </main>
</body>

By default the User Bar appears in the bottom right of the browser window, inset from the edge. If this conflicts with your design it can be moved by passing a parameter to the template tag. These examples show you how to position the userbar in each corner of the screen:

...
{% wagtailuserbar 'top-left' %}
{% wagtailuserbar 'top-right' %}
{% wagtailuserbar 'bottom-left' %}
{% wagtailuserbar 'bottom-right' %}
...

The userbar can be positioned where it works best with your design. Alternatively, you can position it with a CSS rule in your own CSS files, for example:

.wagtail-userbar {
     top: 200px !important;
     left: 10px !important;
}
Varying output between preview and live

Sometimes you may wish to vary the template output depending on whether the page is being previewed or viewed live. For example, if you have visitor tracking code such as Google Analytics in place on your site, it’s a good idea to leave this out when previewing, so that editor activity doesn’t appear in your analytics reports. Wagtail provides a request.is_preview variable to distinguish between preview and live:

{% if not request.is_preview %}
    <script>
      (function(i,s,o,g,r,a,m){i['GoogleAnalyticsObject']=r;i[r]=i[r]||function(){
      ...
    </script>
{% endif %}

If the page is being previewed, request.preview_mode can be used to determine the specific preview mode being used, if the page supports multiple preview modes.

How to use images in templates

The image tag inserts an XHTML-compatible img element into the page, setting its src, width, height and alt. See also More control over the img tag.

The syntax for the tag is thus:

{% image [image] [resize-rule] %}

Both the image and resize rule must be passed to the template tag.

For example:

{% load wagtailimages_tags %}
...

<!-- Display the image scaled to a width of 400 pixels: -->
{% image page.photo width-400 %}

<!-- Display it again, but this time as a square thumbnail: -->
{% image page.photo fill-80x80 %}

In the above syntax example [image] is the Django object referring to the image. If your page model defined a field called “photo” then [image] would probably be page.photo. The [resize-rule] defines how the image is to be resized when inserted into the page. Various resizing methods are supported, to cater to different use cases (e.g. lead images that span the whole width of the page, or thumbnails to be cropped to a fixed size).

Note that a space separates [image] and [resize-rule], but the resize rule must not contain spaces. The width is always specified before the height. Resized images will maintain their original aspect ratio unless the fill rule is used, which may result in some pixels being cropped.

The available resizing methods are as follows:

max

(takes two dimensions)

{% image page.photo max-1000x500 %}

Fit within the given dimensions.

The longest edge will be reduced to the matching dimension specified. For example, a portrait image of width 1000 and height 2000, treated with the max-1000x500 rule (a landscape layout) would result in the image being shrunk so the height was 500 pixels and the width was 250.

Example of max filter on an image.

Example: The image will keep its proportions but fit within the max (green line) dimensions provided.

min

(takes two dimensions)

{% image page.photo min-500x200 %}

Cover the given dimensions.

This may result in an image slightly larger than the dimensions you specify. A square image of width 2000 and height 2000, treated with the min-500x200 rule would have its height and width changed to 500, i.e matching the width of the resize-rule, but greater than the height.

Example of min filter on an image.

Example: The image will keep its proportions while filling at least the min (green line) dimensions provided.

width

(takes one dimension)

{% image page.photo width-640 %}

Reduces the width of the image to the dimension specified.

height

(takes one dimension)

{% image page.photo height-480 %}

Reduces the height of the image to the dimension specified.

scale

(takes percentage)

{% image page.photo scale-50 %}

Resize the image to the percentage specified.

fill

(takes two dimensions and an optional -c parameter)

{% image page.photo fill-200x200 %}

Resize and crop to fill the exact dimensions specified.

This can be particularly useful for websites requiring square thumbnails of arbitrary images. For example, a landscape image of width 2000 and height 1000 treated with the fill-200x200 rule would have its height reduced to 200, then its width (ordinarily 400) cropped to 200.

This resize-rule will crop to the image’s focal point if it has been set. If not, it will crop to the centre of the image.

Example of fill filter on an image.

Example: The image is scaled and also cropped (red line) to fit as much of the image as possible within the provided dimensions.

On images that won’t upscale

It’s possible to request an image with fill dimensions that the image can’t support without upscaling. e.g. an image of width 400 and height 200 requested with fill-400x400. In this situation the ratio of the requested fill will be matched, but the dimension will not. So that example 400x200 image (a 2:1 ratio) could become 200x200 (a 1:1 ratio, matching the resize-rule).

Cropping closer to the focal point

By default, Wagtail will only crop enough to change the aspect ratio of the image to match the ratio in the resize-rule.

In some cases (e.g. thumbnails), it may be preferable to crop closer to the focal point, so that the subject of the image is more prominent.

You can do this by appending -c<percentage> at the end of the resize-rule. For example, if you would like the image to be cropped as closely as possible to its focal point, add -c100:

{% image page.photo fill-200x200-c100 %}

This will crop the image as much as it can, without cropping into the focal point.

If you find that -c100 is too close, you can try -c75 or -c50. Any whole number from 0 to 100 is accepted.

Example of fill filter on an image with a focal point set.

Example: The focal point is set off centre so the image is scaled and also cropped like fill, however the center point of the crop is positioned closer the focal point.

Example of fill and closeness filter on an image with a focal point set.

Example: With -c75 set, the final crop will be closer to the focal point.

original

(takes no dimensions)

{% image page.photo original %}

Renders the image at its original size.

Note

Wagtail does not allow deforming or stretching images. Image dimension ratios will always be kept. Wagtail also does not support upscaling. Small images forced to appear at larger sizes will “max out” at their native dimensions.

More control over the img tag

Wagtail provides two shortcuts to give greater control over the img element:

1. Adding attributes to the {% image %} tag

Extra attributes can be specified with the syntax attribute="value":

{% image page.photo width-400 class="foo" id="bar" %}

You can set a more relevant alt attribute this way, overriding the one automatically generated from the title of the image. The src, width, and height attributes can also be overridden, if necessary.

2. Generating the image “as foo” to access individual properties

Wagtail can assign the image data to another variable using Django’s as syntax:

{% image page.photo width-400 as tmp_photo %}

<img src="{{ tmp_photo.url }}" width="{{ tmp_photo.width }}"
    height="{{ tmp_photo.height }}" alt="{{ tmp_photo.alt }}" class="my-custom-class" />

Note

The image property used for the src attribute is image.url, not image.src.

This syntax exposes the underlying image Rendition (tmp_photo) to the developer. A “Rendition” contains the information specific to the way you’ve requested to format the image using the resize-rule, i.e. dimensions and source URL. The following properties are available:

url

URL to the resized version of the image. This may be a local URL (such as /static/images/example.jpg) or a full URL (such as https://assets.example.com/images/example.jpg), depending on how static files are configured.

width

Image width after resizing.

height

Image height after resizing.

alt

Alternative text for the image, typically taken from the image title.

attrs

A shorthand for outputting the attributes src, width, height and alt in one go:

<img {{ tmp_photo.attrs }} class="my-custom-class" />
full_url

Same as url, but always returns a full absolute URL. This requires BASE_URL to be set in the project settings.

This is useful for images that will be re-used outside of the current site, such as social share images:

<meta name="twitter:image" content="{{ tmp_photo.full_url }}">

If your site defines a custom image model using AbstractImage, any additional fields you add to an image (e.g. a copyright holder) are not included in the rendition.

Therefore, if you’d added the field author to your AbstractImage in the above example, you’d access it using {{ page.photo.author }} rather than {{ tmp_photo.author }}.

(Due to the links in the database between renditions and their parent image, you could access it as {{ tmp_photo.image.author }}, but that has reduced readability.)

The attrs shortcut

You can also use the attrs property as a shorthand to output the attributes src, width, height and alt in one go:

<img {{ tmp_photo.attrs }} class="my-custom-class" />
Alternative HTML tags

The as keyword allows alternative HTML image tags (such as <picture> or <amp-img>) to be used. For example, to use the <picture> tag:

<picture>
    {% image page.photo width-800 as wide_photo %}
    <source srcset="{{ wide_photo.url }}" media="(min-width: 800px)">
    {% image page.photo width-400 %}
</picture>

And to use the <amp-img> tag (based on the Mountains example from the AMP docs):

{% image image width-550 format-webp as webp_image %}
{% image image width-550 format-jpeg as jpeg_image %}

<amp-img alt="{{ image.alt }}"
    width="{{ webp_image.width }}"
    height="{{ webp_image.height }}"
    src="{{ webp_image.url }}">
    <amp-img alt="{{ image.alt }}"
        fallback
        width="{{ jpeg_image.width }}"
        height="{{ jpeg_image.height }}"
        src="{{ jpeg_image.url }}"></amp-img>
</amp-img>
Images embedded in rich text

The information above relates to images defined via image-specific fields in your model. However, images can also be embedded arbitrarily in Rich Text fields by the page editor (see Rich Text (HTML)).

Images embedded in Rich Text fields can’t be controlled by the template developer as easily. There are no image objects to work with, so the {% image %} template tag can’t be used. Instead, editors can choose from one of a number of image “Formats” at the point of inserting images into their text.

Wagtail comes with three pre-defined image formats, but more can be defined in Python by the developer. These formats are:

Full width
Creates an image rendition using width-800, giving the <img> tag the CSS class full-width.
Left-aligned
Creates an image rendition using width-500, giving the <img> tag the CSS class left.
Right-aligned
Creates an image rendition using width-500, giving the <img> tag the CSS class right.

Note

The CSS classes added to images do not come with any accompanying stylesheets, or inline styles. e.g. the left class will do nothing, by default. The developer is expected to add these classes to their front end CSS files, to define exactly what they want left, right or full-width to mean.

For more information about image formats, including creating your own, see Image Formats in the Rich Text Editor

Output image format

Wagtail may automatically change the format of some images when they are resized:

  • PNG and JPEG images don’t change format
  • GIF images without animation are converted to PNGs
  • BMP images are converted to PNGs
  • WebP images are converted to PNGs

It is also possible to override the output format on a per-tag basis by using the format filter after the resize rule.

For example, to make the tag always convert the image to a JPEG, use format-jpeg:

{% image page.photo width-400 format-jpeg %}

You may also use format-png or format-gif.

Lossless WebP

You can encode the image into lossless WebP format by using the format-webp-lossless filter:

{% image page.photo width-400 format-webp-lossless %}
Background color

The PNG and GIF image formats both support transparency, but if you want to convert images to JPEG format, the transparency will need to be replaced with a solid background color.

By default, Wagtail will set the background to white. But if a white background doesn’t fit your design, you can specify a color using the bgcolor filter.

This filter takes a single argument, which is a CSS 3 or 6 digit hex code representing the color you would like to use:

{# Sets the image background to black #}
{% image page.photo width-400 bgcolor-000 format-jpeg %}
Image quality

Wagtail’s JPEG and WebP image quality settings default to 85 (which is quite high). This can be changed either globally or on a per-tag basis.

Changing globally

Use the WAGTAILIMAGES_JPEG_QUALITY and WAGTAILIMAGES_WEBP_QUALITY settings to change the global defaults of JPEG and WebP quality:

# settings.py

# Make low-quality but small images
WAGTAILIMAGES_JPEG_QUALITY = 40
WAGTAILIMAGES_WEBP_QUALITY = 45

Note that this won’t affect any previously generated images so you may want to delete all renditions so they can regenerate with the new setting. This can be done from the Django shell:

# Replace this with your custom rendition model if you use one
>>> from wagtail.images.models import Rendition
>>> Rendition.objects.all().delete()
Changing per-tag

It’s also possible to have different JPEG and WebP qualities on individual tags by using jpegquality and webpquality filters. This will always override the default setting:

{% image page.photo_jpeg width-400 jpegquality-40 %}
{% image page.photo_webp width-400 webpquality-50 %}

Note that this will have no effect on PNG or GIF files. If you want all images to be low quality, you can use this filter with format-jpeg or format-webp (which forces all images to output in JPEG or WebP format):

{% image page.photo width-400 format-jpeg jpegquality-40 %}
{% image page.photo width-400 format-webp webpquality-50 %}
Generating image renditions in Python

All of the image transformations mentioned above can also be used directly in Python code. See Generating renditions in Python.

Snippets

Snippets are pieces of content which do not necessitate a full webpage to render. They could be used for making secondary content, such as headers, footers, and sidebars, editable in the Wagtail admin. Snippets are Django models which do not inherit the Page class and are thus not organized into the Wagtail tree. However, they can still be made editable by assigning panels and identifying the model as a snippet with the register_snippet class decorator.

Snippets lack many of the features of pages, such as being orderable in the Wagtail admin or having a defined URL. Decide carefully if the content type you would want to build into a snippet might be more suited to a page.

Snippet Models

Here’s an example snippet model:

from django.db import models

from wagtail.admin.edit_handlers import FieldPanel
from wagtail.snippets.models import register_snippet

...

@register_snippet
class Advert(models.Model):
    url = models.URLField(null=True, blank=True)
    text = models.CharField(max_length=255)

    panels = [
        FieldPanel('url'),
        FieldPanel('text'),
    ]

    def __str__(self):
        return self.text

The Advert model uses the basic Django model class and defines two properties: text and URL. The editing interface is very close to that provided for Page-derived models, with fields assigned in the panels property. Snippets do not use multiple tabs of fields, nor do they provide the “save as draft” or “submit for moderation” features.

@register_snippet tells Wagtail to treat the model as a snippet. The panels list defines the fields to show on the snippet editing page. It’s also important to provide a string representation of the class through def __str__(self): so that the snippet objects make sense when listed in the Wagtail admin.

Including Snippets in Template Tags

The simplest way to make your snippets available to templates is with a template tag. This is mostly done with vanilla Django, so perhaps reviewing Django’s documentation for django custom template tags will be more helpful. We’ll go over the basics, though, and point out any considerations to make for Wagtail.

First, add a new python file to a templatetags folder within your app - for example, myproject/demo/templatetags/demo_tags.py. We’ll need to load some Django modules and our app’s models, and ready the register decorator:

from django import template
from demo.models import Advert

register = template.Library()

...

# Advert snippets
@register.inclusion_tag('demo/tags/adverts.html', takes_context=True)
def adverts(context):
    return {
        'adverts': Advert.objects.all(),
        'request': context['request'],
    }

@register.inclusion_tag() takes two variables: a template and a boolean on whether that template should be passed a request context. It’s a good idea to include request contexts in your custom template tags, since some Wagtail-specific template tags like pageurl need the context to work properly. The template tag function could take arguments and filter the adverts to return a specific instance of the model, but for brevity we’ll just use Advert.objects.all().

Here’s what’s in the template used by this template tag:

{% for advert in adverts %}
    <p>
        <a href="{{ advert.url }}">
            {{ advert.text }}
        </a>
    </p>
{% endfor %}

Then, in your own page templates, you can include your snippet template tag with:

{% load wagtailcore_tags demo_tags %}

...

{% block content %}

    ...

    {% adverts %}

{% endblock %}
Binding Pages to Snippets

In the above example, the list of adverts is a fixed list that is displayed via the custom template tag independent of any other content on the page. This might be what you want for a common panel in a sidebar, but, in another scenario, you might wish to display just one specific instance of a snippet on a particular page. This can be accomplished by defining a foreign key to the snippet model within your page model and adding a SnippetChooserPanel to the page’s content_panels list. For example, if you wanted to display a specific advert on a BookPage instance:

from wagtail.snippets.edit_handlers import SnippetChooserPanel
# ...
class BookPage(Page):
    advert = models.ForeignKey(
        'demo.Advert',
        null=True,
        blank=True,
        on_delete=models.SET_NULL,
        related_name='+'
    )

    content_panels = Page.content_panels + [
        SnippetChooserPanel('advert'),
        # ...
    ]

The snippet could then be accessed within your template as page.advert.

To attach multiple adverts to a page, the SnippetChooserPanel can be placed on an inline child object of BookPage rather than on BookPage itself. Here, this child model is named BookPageAdvertPlacement (so called because there is one such object for each time that an advert is placed on a BookPage):

from django.db import models

from wagtail.core.models import Page, Orderable
from wagtail.snippets.edit_handlers import SnippetChooserPanel

from modelcluster.fields import ParentalKey

...

class BookPageAdvertPlacement(Orderable, models.Model):
    page = ParentalKey('demo.BookPage', on_delete=models.CASCADE, related_name='advert_placements')
    advert = models.ForeignKey('demo.Advert', on_delete=models.CASCADE, related_name='+')

    class Meta(Orderable.Meta):
        verbose_name = "advert placement"
        verbose_name_plural = "advert placements"

    panels = [
        SnippetChooserPanel('advert'),
    ]

    def __str__(self):
        return self.page.title + " -> " + self.advert.text


class BookPage(Page):
    ...

    content_panels = Page.content_panels + [
        InlinePanel('advert_placements', label="Adverts"),
        # ...
    ]

These child objects are now accessible through the page’s advert_placements property, and from there we can access the linked Advert snippet as advert. In the template for BookPage, we could include the following:

{% for advert_placement in page.advert_placements.all %}
    <p>
        <a href="{{ advert_placement.advert.url }}">
            {{ advert_placement.advert.text }}
        </a>
    </p>
{% endfor %}
Making Snippets Searchable

If a snippet model inherits from wagtail.search.index.Indexed, as described in Indexing custom models, Wagtail will automatically add a search box to the chooser interface for that snippet type. For example, the Advert snippet could be made searchable as follows:

...

from wagtail.search import index

...

@register_snippet
class Advert(index.Indexed, models.Model):
    url = models.URLField(null=True, blank=True)
    text = models.CharField(max_length=255)

    panels = [
        FieldPanel('url'),
        FieldPanel('text'),
    ]

    search_fields = [
        index.SearchField('text', partial_match=True),
    ]
Tagging snippets

Adding tags to snippets is very similar to adding tags to pages. The only difference is that taggit.manager.TaggableManager should be used in the place of ClusterTaggableManager.

from modelcluster.fields import ParentalKey
from modelcluster.models import ClusterableModel
from taggit.models import TaggedItemBase
from taggit.managers import TaggableManager

class AdvertTag(TaggedItemBase):
    content_object = ParentalKey('demo.Advert', on_delete=models.CASCADE, related_name='tagged_items')

@register_snippet
class Advert(ClusterableModel):
    ...
    tags = TaggableManager(through=AdvertTag, blank=True)

    panels = [
        ...
        FieldPanel('tags'),
    ]

The documentation on tagging pages has more information on how to use tags in views.

How to use StreamField for mixed content

StreamField provides a content editing model suitable for pages that do not follow a fixed structure – such as blog posts or news stories – where the text may be interspersed with subheadings, images, pull quotes and video. It’s also suitable for more specialised content types, such as maps and charts (or, for a programming blog, code snippets). In this model, these different content types are represented as a sequence of ‘blocks’, which can be repeated and arranged in any order.

For further background on StreamField, and why you would use it instead of a rich text field for the article body, see the blog post Rich text fields and faster horses.

StreamField also offers a rich API to define your own block types, ranging from simple collections of sub-blocks (such as a ‘person’ block consisting of first name, surname and photograph) to completely custom components with their own editing interface. Within the database, the StreamField content is stored as JSON, ensuring that the full informational content of the field is preserved, rather than just an HTML representation of it.

Using StreamField

StreamField is a model field that can be defined within your page model like any other field:

from django.db import models

from wagtail.core.models import Page
from wagtail.core.fields import StreamField
from wagtail.core import blocks
from wagtail.admin.edit_handlers import FieldPanel, StreamFieldPanel
from wagtail.images.blocks import ImageChooserBlock

class BlogPage(Page):
    author = models.CharField(max_length=255)
    date = models.DateField("Post date")
    body = StreamField([
        ('heading', blocks.CharBlock(form_classname="full title")),
        ('paragraph', blocks.RichTextBlock()),
        ('image', ImageChooserBlock()),
    ])

    content_panels = Page.content_panels + [
        FieldPanel('author'),
        FieldPanel('date'),
        StreamFieldPanel('body'),
    ]

In this example, the body field of BlogPage is defined as a StreamField where authors can compose content from three different block types: headings, paragraphs, and images, which can be used and repeated in any order. The block types available to authors are defined as a list of (name, block_type) tuples: ‘name’ is used to identify the block type within templates, and should follow the standard Python conventions for variable names: lower-case and underscores, no spaces.

You can find the complete list of available block types in the StreamField block reference.

Note

StreamField is not a direct replacement for other field types such as RichTextField. If you need to migrate an existing field to StreamField, refer to Migrating RichTextFields to StreamField.

Template rendering

StreamField provides an HTML representation for the stream content as a whole, as well as for each individual block. To include this HTML into your page, use the {% include_block %} tag:

{% load wagtailcore_tags %}

 ...

{% include_block page.body %}

In the default rendering, each block of the stream is wrapped in a <div class="block-my_block_name"> element (where my_block_name is the block name given in the StreamField definition). If you wish to provide your own HTML markup, you can instead iterate over the field’s value, and invoke {% include_block %} on each block in turn:

{% load wagtailcore_tags %}

 ...

<article>
    {% for block in page.body %}
        <section>{% include_block block %}</section>
    {% endfor %}
</article>

For more control over the rendering of specific block types, each block object provides block_type and value properties:

{% load wagtailcore_tags %}

 ...

<article>
    {% for block in page.body %}
        {% if block.block_type == 'heading' %}
            <h1>{{ block.value }}</h1>
        {% else %}
            <section class="block-{{ block.block_type }}">
                {% include_block block %}
            </section>
        {% endif %}
    {% endfor %}
</article>
Combining blocks

In addition to using the built-in block types directly within StreamField, it’s possible to construct new block types by combining sub-blocks in various ways. Examples of this could include:

  • An “image with caption” block consisting of an image chooser and a text field
  • A “related links” section, where an author can provide any number of links to other pages
  • A slideshow block, where each slide may be an image, text or video, arranged in any order

Once a new block type has been built up in this way, you can use it anywhere where a built-in block type would be used - including using it as a component for yet another block type. For example, you could define an image gallery block where each item is an “image with caption” block.

StructBlock

StructBlock allows you to group several ‘child’ blocks together to be presented as a single block. The child blocks are passed to StructBlock as a list of (name, block_type) tuples:

 body = StreamField([
     ('person', blocks.StructBlock([
         ('first_name', blocks.CharBlock()),
         ('surname', blocks.CharBlock()),
         ('photo', ImageChooserBlock(required=False)),
         ('biography', blocks.RichTextBlock()),
     ])),
     ('heading', blocks.CharBlock(form_classname="full title")),
     ('paragraph', blocks.RichTextBlock()),
     ('image', ImageChooserBlock()),
 ])

When reading back the content of a StreamField (such as when rendering a template), the value of a StructBlock is a dict-like object with keys corresponding to the block names given in the definition:

<article>
    {% for block in page.body %}
        {% if block.block_type == 'person' %}
            <div class="person">
                {% image block.value.photo width-400 %}
                <h2>{{ block.value.first_name }} {{ block.value.surname }}</h2>
                {{ block.value.biography }}
            </div>
        {% else %}
            (rendering for other block types)
        {% endif %}
    {% endfor %}
</article>
Subclassing StructBlock

Placing a StructBlock’s list of child blocks inside a StreamField definition can often be hard to read, and makes it difficult for the same block to be reused in multiple places. As an alternative, StructBlock can be subclassed, with the child blocks defined as attributes on the subclass. The ‘person’ block in the above example could be rewritten as:

class PersonBlock(blocks.StructBlock):
    first_name = blocks.CharBlock()
    surname = blocks.CharBlock()
    photo = ImageChooserBlock(required=False)
    biography = blocks.RichTextBlock()

PersonBlock can then be used in a StreamField definition in the same way as the built-in block types:

body = StreamField([
    ('person', PersonBlock()),
    ('heading', blocks.CharBlock(form_classname="full title")),
    ('paragraph', blocks.RichTextBlock()),
    ('image', ImageChooserBlock()),
])
Block icons

In the menu that content authors use to add new blocks to a StreamField, each block type has an associated icon. For StructBlock and other structural block types, a placeholder icon is used, since the purpose of these blocks is specific to your project. To set a custom icon, pass the option icon as either a keyword argument to StructBlock, or an attribute on a Meta class:

 body = StreamField([
     ('person', blocks.StructBlock([
         ('first_name', blocks.CharBlock()),
         ('surname', blocks.CharBlock()),
         ('photo', ImageChooserBlock(required=False)),
         ('biography', blocks.RichTextBlock()),
     ], icon='user')),
     ('heading', blocks.CharBlock(form_classname="full title")),
     ('paragraph', blocks.RichTextBlock()),
     ('image', ImageChooserBlock()),
 ])
 class PersonBlock(blocks.StructBlock):
     first_name = blocks.CharBlock()
     surname = blocks.CharBlock()
     photo = ImageChooserBlock(required=False)
     biography = blocks.RichTextBlock()

     class Meta:
         icon = 'user'

For a list of the recognised icon identifiers, see the UI Styleguide.

ListBlock

ListBlock defines a repeating block, allowing content authors to insert as many instances of a particular block type as they like. For example, a ‘gallery’ block consisting of multiple images can be defined as follows:

 body = StreamField([
     ('gallery', blocks.ListBlock(ImageChooserBlock())),
     ('heading', blocks.CharBlock(form_classname="full title")),
     ('paragraph', blocks.RichTextBlock()),
     ('image', ImageChooserBlock()),
 ])

When reading back the content of a StreamField (such as when rendering a template), the value of a ListBlock is a list of child values:

<article>
    {% for block in page.body %}
        {% if block.block_type == 'gallery' %}
            <ul class="gallery">
                {% for img in block.value %}
                    <li>{% image img width-400 %}</li>
                {% endfor %}
            </ul>
        {% else %}
            (rendering for other block types)
        {% endif %}
    {% endfor %}
</article>
StreamBlock

StreamBlock defines a set of child block types that can be mixed and repeated in any sequence, via the same mechanism as StreamField itself. For example, a carousel that supports both image and video slides could be defined as follows:

 body = StreamField([
     ('carousel', blocks.StreamBlock([
         ('image', ImageChooserBlock()),
         ('video', EmbedBlock()),
     ])),
     ('heading', blocks.CharBlock(form_classname="full title")),
     ('paragraph', blocks.RichTextBlock()),
     ('image', ImageChooserBlock()),
 ])

StreamBlock can also be subclassed in the same way as StructBlock, with the child blocks being specified as attributes on the class:

class PersonBlock(blocks.StreamBlock):
    image = ImageChooserBlock()
    video = EmbedBlock()

    class Meta:
        icon = 'image'

A StreamBlock subclass defined in this way can also be passed to a StreamField definition, instead of passing a list of block types. This allows setting up a common set of block types to be used on multiple page types:

class CommonContentBlock(blocks.StreamBlock):
    heading = blocks.CharBlock(form_classname="full title")
    paragraph = blocks.RichTextBlock()
    image = ImageChooserBlock()


class BlogPage(Page):
    body = StreamField(CommonContentBlock())

When reading back the content of a StreamField, the value of a StreamBlock is a sequence of block objects with block_type and value properties, just like the top-level value of the StreamField itself.

<article>
    {% for block in page.body %}
        {% if block.block_type == 'carousel' %}
            <ul class="carousel">
                {% for slide in block.value %}
                    {% if slide.block_type == 'image' %}
                        <li class="image">{% image slide.value width-200 %}</li>
                    {% else %}
                        <li> class="video">{% include_block slide %}</li>
                    {% endif %}
                {% endfor %}
            </ul>
        {% else %}
            (rendering for other block types)
        {% endif %}
    {% endfor %}
</article>
Limiting block counts

By default, a StreamField can contain an unlimited number of blocks. The min_num and max_num options on StreamField or StreamBlock allow you to set a minimum or maximum number of blocks:

body = StreamField([
    ('heading', blocks.CharBlock(form_classname="full title")),
    ('paragraph', blocks.RichTextBlock()),
    ('image', ImageChooserBlock()),
], min_num=2, max_num=5)

Or equivalently:

class CommonContentBlock(blocks.StreamBlock):
    heading = blocks.CharBlock(form_classname="full title")
    paragraph = blocks.RichTextBlock()
    image = ImageChooserBlock()

    class Meta:
        min_num = 2
        max_num = 5

The block_counts option can be used to set a minimum or maximum count for specific block types. This accepts a dict, mapping block names to a dict containing either or both of min_num and max_num. For example, to permit between 1 and 3 ‘heading’ blocks:

body = StreamField([
    ('heading', blocks.CharBlock(form_classname="full title")),
    ('paragraph', blocks.RichTextBlock()),
    ('image', ImageChooserBlock()),
], block_counts={
    'heading': {'min_num': 1, 'max_num': 3},
})

Or equivalently:

class CommonContentBlock(blocks.StreamBlock):
    heading = blocks.CharBlock(form_classname="full title")
    paragraph = blocks.RichTextBlock()
    image = ImageChooserBlock()

    class Meta:
        block_counts = {
            'heading': {'min_num': 1, 'max_num': 3},
        }
Per-block templates

By default, each block is rendered using simple, minimal HTML markup, or no markup at all. For example, a CharBlock value is rendered as plain text, while a ListBlock outputs its child blocks in a <ul> wrapper. To override this with your own custom HTML rendering, you can pass a template argument to the block, giving the filename of a template file to be rendered. This is particularly useful for custom block types derived from StructBlock:

('person', blocks.StructBlock(
    [
        ('first_name', blocks.CharBlock()),
        ('surname', blocks.CharBlock()),
        ('photo', ImageChooserBlock(required=False)),
        ('biography', blocks.RichTextBlock()),
    ],
    template='myapp/blocks/person.html',
    icon='user'
))

Or, when defined as a subclass of StructBlock:

class PersonBlock(blocks.StructBlock):
    first_name = blocks.CharBlock()
    surname = blocks.CharBlock()
    photo = ImageChooserBlock(required=False)
    biography = blocks.RichTextBlock()

    class Meta:
        template = 'myapp/blocks/person.html'
        icon = 'user'

Within the template, the block value is accessible as the variable value:

{% load wagtailimages_tags %}

<div class="person">
    {% image value.photo width-400 %}
    <h2>{{ value.first_name }} {{ value.surname }}</h2>
    {{ value.biography }}
</div>

Since first_name, surname, photo and biography are defined as blocks in their own right, this could also be written as:

{% load wagtailcore_tags wagtailimages_tags %}

<div class="person">
    {% image value.photo width-400 %}
    <h2>{% include_block value.first_name %} {% include_block value.surname %}</h2>
    {% include_block value.biography %}
</div>

Writing {{ my_block }} is roughly equivalent to {% include_block my_block %}, but the short form is more restrictive, as it does not pass variables from the calling template such as request or page; for this reason, it is recommended that you only use it for simple values that do not render HTML of their own. For example, if our PersonBlock used the template:

{% load wagtailimages_tags %}

<div class="person">
    {% image value.photo width-400 %}
    <h2>{{ value.first_name }} {{ value.surname }}</h2>

    {% if request.user.is_authenticated %}
        <a href="#">Contact this person</a>
    {% endif %}

    {{ value.biography }}
</div>

then the request.user.is_authenticated test would not work correctly when rendering the block through a {{ ... }} tag:

{# Incorrect: #}

{% for block in page.body %}
    {% if block.block_type == 'person' %}
        <div>
            {{ block }}
        </div>
    {% endif %}
{% endfor %}

{# Correct: #}

{% for block in page.body %}
    {% if block.block_type == 'person' %}
        <div>
            {% include_block block %}
        </div>
    {% endif %}
{% endfor %}

Like Django’s {% include %} tag, {% include_block %} also allows passing additional variables to the included template, through the syntax {% include_block my_block with foo="bar" %}:

{# In page template: #}

{% for block in page.body %}
    {% if block.block_type == 'person' %}
        {% include_block block with classname="important" %}
    {% endif %}
{% endfor %}

{# In PersonBlock template: #}

<div class="{{ classname }}">
    ...
</div>

The syntax {% include_block my_block with foo="bar" only %} is also supported, to specify that no variables from the parent template other than foo will be passed to the child template.

As well as passing variables from the parent template, block subclasses can pass additional template variables of their own by overriding the get_context method:

import datetime

class EventBlock(blocks.StructBlock):
    title = blocks.CharBlock()
    date = blocks.DateBlock()

    def get_context(self, value, parent_context=None):
        context = super().get_context(value, parent_context=parent_context)
        context['is_happening_today'] = (value['date'] == datetime.date.today())
        return context

    class Meta:
        template = 'myapp/blocks/event.html'

In this example, the variable is_happening_today will be made available within the block template. The parent_context keyword argument is available when the block is rendered through an {% include_block %} tag, and is a dict of variables passed from the calling template.

All block types, not just StructBlock, support the template property. However, for blocks that handle basic Python data types, such as CharBlock and IntegerBlock, there are some limitations on where the template will take effect. For further details, see About StreamField BoundBlocks and values.

Customisations

All block types implement a common API for rendering their front-end and form representations, and storing and retrieving values to and from the database. By subclassing the various block classes and overriding these methods, all kinds of customisations are possible, from modifying the layout of StructBlock form fields to implementing completely new ways of combining blocks. For further details, see How to build custom StreamField blocks.

Modifying StreamField data

A StreamField’s value behaves as a list, and blocks can be inserted, overwritten and deleted before saving the instance back to the database. A new item can be written to the list as a tuple of (block_type, value) - when read back, it will be returned as a BoundBlock object.

# Replace the first block with a new block of type 'heading'
my_page.body[0] = ('heading', "My story")

# Delete the last block
del my_page.body[-1]

# Append a block to the stream
my_page.body.append(('paragraph', "<p>And they all lived happily ever after.</p>"))

# Save the updated data back to the database
my_page.save()
Migrating RichTextFields to StreamField

If you change an existing RichTextField to a StreamField, the database migration will complete with no errors, since both fields use a text column within the database. However, StreamField uses a JSON representation for its data, so the existing text requires an extra conversion step in order to become accessible again. For this to work, the StreamField needs to include a RichTextBlock as one of the available block types. (When updating the model, don’t forget to change FieldPanel to StreamFieldPanel too.) Create the migration as normal using ./manage.py makemigrations, then edit it as follows (in this example, the ‘body’ field of the demo.BlogPage model is being converted to a StreamField with a RichTextBlock named rich_text):

# -*- coding: utf-8 -*-
from django.db import models, migrations
from wagtail.core.rich_text import RichText


def convert_to_streamfield(apps, schema_editor):
    BlogPage = apps.get_model("demo", "BlogPage")
    for page in BlogPage.objects.all():
        if page.body.raw_text and not page.body:
            page.body = [('rich_text', RichText(page.body.raw_text))]
            page.save()


def convert_to_richtext(apps, schema_editor):
    BlogPage = apps.get_model("demo", "BlogPage")
    for page in BlogPage.objects.all():
        if page.body.raw_text is None:
            raw_text = ''.join([
                child.value.source for child in page.body
                if child.block_type == 'rich_text'
            ])
            page.body = raw_text
            page.save()


class Migration(migrations.Migration):

    dependencies = [
        # leave the dependency line from the generated migration intact!
        ('demo', '0001_initial'),
    ]

    operations = [
        # leave the generated AlterField intact!
        migrations.AlterField(
            model_name='BlogPage',
            name='body',
            field=wagtail.core.fields.StreamField([('rich_text', wagtail.core.blocks.RichTextBlock())]),
        ),

        migrations.RunPython(
            convert_to_streamfield,
            convert_to_richtext,
        ),
    ]

Note that the above migration will work on published Page objects only. If you also need to migrate draft pages and page revisions, then edit the migration as in the following example instead:

# -*- coding: utf-8 -*-
import json

from django.core.serializers.json import DjangoJSONEncoder
from django.db import migrations, models

from wagtail.core.rich_text import RichText


def page_to_streamfield(page):
    changed = False
    if page.body.raw_text and not page.body:
        page.body = [('rich_text', {'rich_text': RichText(page.body.raw_text)})]
        changed = True
    return page, changed


def pagerevision_to_streamfield(revision_data):
    changed = False
    body = revision_data.get('body')
    if body:
        try:
            json.loads(body)
        except ValueError:
            revision_data['body'] = json.dumps(
                [{
                    "value": {"rich_text": body},
                    "type": "rich_text"
                }],
                cls=DjangoJSONEncoder)
            changed = True
        else:
            # It's already valid JSON. Leave it.
            pass
    return revision_data, changed


def page_to_richtext(page):
    changed = False
    if page.body.raw_text is None:
        raw_text = ''.join([
            child.value['rich_text'].source for child in page.body
            if child.block_type == 'rich_text'
        ])
        page.body = raw_text
        changed = True
    return page, changed


def pagerevision_to_richtext(revision_data):
    changed = False
    body = revision_data.get('body', 'definitely non-JSON string')
    if body:
        try:
            body_data = json.loads(body)
        except ValueError:
            # It's not apparently a StreamField. Leave it.
            pass
        else:
            raw_text = ''.join([
                child['value']['rich_text'] for child in body_data
                if child['type'] == 'rich_text'
            ])
            revision_data['body'] = raw_text
            changed = True
    return revision_data, changed


def convert(apps, schema_editor, page_converter, pagerevision_converter):
    BlogPage = apps.get_model("demo", "BlogPage")
    for page in BlogPage.objects.all():

        page, changed = page_converter(page)
        if changed:
            page.save()

        for revision in page.revisions.all():
            revision_data = json.loads(revision.content_json)
            revision_data, changed = pagerevision_converter(revision_data)
            if changed:
                revision.content_json = json.dumps(revision_data, cls=DjangoJSONEncoder)
                revision.save()


def convert_to_streamfield(apps, schema_editor):
    return convert(apps, schema_editor, page_to_streamfield, pagerevision_to_streamfield)


def convert_to_richtext(apps, schema_editor):
    return convert(apps, schema_editor, page_to_richtext, pagerevision_to_richtext)


class Migration(migrations.Migration):

    dependencies = [
        # leave the dependency line from the generated migration intact!
        ('demo', '0001_initial'),
    ]

    operations = [
        # leave the generated AlterField intact!
        migrations.AlterField(
            model_name='BlogPage',
            name='body',
            field=wagtail.core.fields.StreamField([('rich_text', wagtail.core.blocks.RichTextBlock())]),
        ),

        migrations.RunPython(
            convert_to_streamfield,
            convert_to_richtext,
        ),
    ]

Permissions

Wagtail adapts and extends the Django permission system to cater for the needs of website content creation, such as moderation workflows, and multiple teams working on different areas of a site (or multiple sites within the same Wagtail installation). Permissions can be configured through the ‘Groups’ area of the Wagtail admin interface, under ‘Settings’.

Page permissions

Permissions can be attached at any point in the page tree, and propagate down the tree. For example, if a site had the page tree:

MegaCorp/
    About us
    Offices/
        UK
        France
        Germany

then a group with ‘edit’ permissions on the ‘Offices’ page would automatically receive the ability to edit the ‘UK’, ‘France’ and ‘Germany’ pages. Permissions can be set globally for the entire tree by assigning them on the ‘root’ page - since all pages must exist underneath the root node, and the root cannot be deleted, this permission will cover all pages that exist now and in future.

Whenever a user creates a page through the Wagtail admin, that user is designated as the owner of that page. Any user with ‘add’ permission has the ability to edit pages they own, as well as adding new ones. This is in recognition of the fact that creating pages is typically an iterative process involving creating a number of draft versions - giving a user the ability to create a draft but not letting them subsequently edit it would not be very useful. Ability to edit a page also implies the ability to delete it; unlike Django’s standard permission model, there is no distinct ‘delete’ permission.

The full set of available permission types is as follows:

  • Add - grants the ability to create new subpages underneath this page (provided the page model permits this - see Parent page / subpage type rules), and to edit and delete pages owned by the current user. Published pages cannot be deleted unless the user also has ‘publish’ permission.
  • Edit - grants the ability to edit and delete this page, and any pages underneath it, regardless of ownership. A user with only ‘edit’ permission may not create new pages, only edit existing ones. Published pages cannot be deleted unless the user also has ‘publish’ permission.
  • Publish - grants the ability to publish and unpublish this page and/or its children. A user without publish permission cannot directly make changes that are visible to visitors of the website; instead, they must submit their changes for moderation. Publish permission is independent of edit permission; a user with only publish permission will not be able to make any edits of their own.
  • Bulk delete - allows a user to delete pages that have descendants, in a single operation. Without this permission, a user has to delete the descendant pages individually before deleting the parent. This is a safeguard against accidental deletion. This permission must be used in conjunction with ‘add’ / ‘edit’ permission, as it does not provide any deletion rights of its own; it only provides a ‘shortcut’ for the permissions the user has already. For example, a user with just ‘add’ and ‘bulk delete’ permissions will only be able to bulk-delete if all the affected pages are owned by that user, and are unpublished.
  • Lock - grants the ability to lock or unlock this page (and any pages underneath it) for editing, preventing users from making any further edits to it.

Drafts can be viewed only if the user has either Edit or Publish permission.

Image / document permissions

The permission rules for images and documents work on a similar basis to pages. Images and documents are considered to be ‘owned’ by the user who uploaded them; a user with ‘add’ permission also has the ability to edit items they own; and deletion is considered equivalent to editing rather than having a specific permission type.

Access to specific sets of images and documents can be controlled by setting up collections. By default all images and documents belong to the ‘root’ collection, but users with appropriate permissions can create new collections the Settings -> Collections area of the admin interface. Permissions set on ‘root’ apply to all collections, so a user with ‘edit’ permission for images in the root collection can edit all images; permissions set on other collections only apply to that collection and any of its sub-collections.

The ‘choose’ permission for images and documents determines which collections are visible within the chooser interface used to select images and document links for insertion into pages (and other models, such as snippets). Typically, all users are granted choose permission for all collections, allowing them to use any uploaded image or document on pages they create, but this permission can be limited to allow creating collections that are only visible to specific groups.

Collection management permissions

Permission for managing collections themselves can be attached at any point in the collection tree. The available collection management permissions are as follows:

  • Add - grants the ability to create new collections underneath this collection.
  • Edit - grants the ability to edit the name of the collection, change its location in the collection tree, and to change the privacy settings for documents within this collection.
  • Delete - grants the ability to delete collections that were added below this collection. Note: a collection must have no subcollections under it and the collection itself must be empty before it can be deleted.

Note

Users are not allowed to move or delete the collection that is used to assign them permission to manage collections.

Displaying custom permissions in the admin

Most permissions will automatically show up in the wagtail admin Group edit form, however, you can also add them using the register_permissions hook (see register_permissions).

Advanced topics

Images

Generating renditions in Python

Rendered versions of original images generated by the Wagtail {% image %} template tag are called “renditions”, and are stored as new image files in the site’s [media]/images directory on the first invocation.

Image renditions can also be generated dynamically from Python via the native get_rendition() method, for example:

newimage = myimage.get_rendition('fill-300x150|jpegquality-60')

If myimage had a filename of foo.jpg, a new rendition of the image file called foo.fill-300x150.jpegquality-60.jpg would be generated and saved into the site’s [media]/images directory. Argument options are identical to the {% image %} template tag’s filter spec, and should be separated with |.

The generated Rendition object will have properties specific to that version of the image, such as url, width and height, so something like this could be used in an API generator, for example:

url = myimage.get_rendition('fill-300x186|jpegquality-60').url

Properties belonging to the original image from which the generated Rendition was created, such as title, can be accessed through the Rendition’s image property:

>>> newimage.image.title
'Blue Sky'
>>> newimage.image.is_landscape()
True

See also: How to use images in templates

Animated GIF support

Pillow, Wagtail’s default image library, doesn’t support animated GIFs.

To get animated GIF support, you will have to install Wand. Wand is a binding to ImageMagick so make sure that has been installed as well.

When installed, Wagtail will automatically use Wand for resizing GIF files but continue to resize other images with Pillow.

Image file formats
Using the picture element

The picture element can be used with the format-<type> image operation to specify different image formats and let the browser choose the one it prefers. For example:

{% load wagtailimages_tags %}

<picture>
    {% image myimage width-1000 format-webp as image_webp %}
    <source srcset="{{ image_webp.url }}" type="image/webp">

    {% image myimage width-1000 format-png as image_png %}
    <source srcset="{{ image_png.url }}" type="image/png">

    {% image myimage width-1000 format-png %}
</picture>
Customizing output formats

By default all bmp and webp images are converted to the png format when no image output format is given.

The default conversion mapping can be changed by setting the WAGTAILIMAGES_FORMAT_CONVERSIONS to a dictionary which maps the input type to an output type.

For example:

WAGTAILIMAGES_FORMAT_CONVERSIONS = {
    'bmp': 'jpeg',
    'webp': 'webp',
}

will convert bmp images to jpeg and disable the default webp to png conversion.

Custom image models

The Image model can be customised, allowing additional fields to be added to images.

To do this, you need to add two models to your project:

  • The image model itself that inherits from wagtail.images.models.AbstractImage. This is where you would add your additional fields
  • The renditions model that inherits from wagtail.images.models.AbstractRendition. This is used to store renditions for the new model.

Here’s an example:

# models.py
from django.db import models

from wagtail.images.models import Image, AbstractImage, AbstractRendition


class CustomImage(AbstractImage):
    # Add any extra fields to image here

    # eg. To add a caption field:
    # caption = models.CharField(max_length=255, blank=True)

    admin_form_fields = Image.admin_form_fields + (
        # Then add the field names here to make them appear in the form:
        # 'caption',
    )


class CustomRendition(AbstractRendition):
    image = models.ForeignKey(CustomImage, on_delete=models.CASCADE, related_name='renditions')

    class Meta:
        unique_together = (
            ('image', 'filter_spec', 'focal_point_key'),
        )

Then set the WAGTAILIMAGES_IMAGE_MODEL setting to point to it:

WAGTAILIMAGES_IMAGE_MODEL = 'images.CustomImage'

Migrating from the builtin image model

When changing an existing site to use a custom image model, no images will be copied to the new model automatically. Copying old images to the new model would need to be done manually with a data migration.

Any templates that reference the builtin image model will still continue to work as before but would need to be updated in order to see any new images.

Referring to the image model
wagtail.images.get_image_model()

Get the image model from the WAGTAILIMAGES_IMAGE_MODEL setting. Useful for developers making Wagtail plugins that need the image model. Defaults to the standard Image model if no custom model is defined.

wagtail.images.get_image_model_string()

Get the dotted app.Model name for the image model as a string. Useful for developers making Wagtail plugins that need to refer to the image model, such as in foreign keys, but the model itself is not required.

Changing rich text representation

The HTML representation of an image in rich text can be customised - for example, to display captions or custom fields.

To do this requires subclassing Format (see Image Formats in the Rich Text Editor), and overriding its image_to_html method.

You may then register formats of your subclass using register_image_format as usual.

# image_formats.py
from wagtail.images.formats import Format, register_image_format


class SubclassedImageFormat(Format):

    def image_to_html(self, image, alt_text, extra_attributes=None):

        custom_html = # the custom HTML representation of your image here
                      # in Format, the image's rendition.img_tag(extra_attributes) is used to generate the HTML
                      # representation

        return custom_html


register_image_format(
    SubclassedImageFormat('subclassed_format', 'Subclassed Format', classnames, filter_spec)
)

As an example, let’s say you want the alt text to be displayed as a caption for the image as well:

# image_formats.py
from django.utils.html import format_html
from wagtail.images.formats import Format, register_image_format


class CaptionedImageFormat(Format):

    def image_to_html(self, image, alt_text, extra_attributes=None):

        default_html = super().image_to_html(image, alt_text, extra_attributes)

        return format_html("{}<figcaption>{}</figcaption>", default_html, alt_text)


register_image_format(
    CaptionedImageFormat('captioned_fullwidth', 'Full width captioned', 'bodytext-image', 'width-750')
)

Note

Any custom HTML image features will not be displayed in the Draftail editor, only on the published page.

Feature Detection

Wagtail has the ability to automatically detect faces and features inside your images and crop the images to those features.

Feature detection uses third-party tools to detect faces/features in an image when the image is uploaded. The detected features are stored internally as a focal point in the focal_point_{x, y, width, height} fields on the Image model. These fields are used by the fill image filter when an image is rendered in a template to crop the image.

Installation

Two third-party tools are known to work with Wagtail: One based on OpenCV for general feature detection and one based on Rustface for face detection.

OpenCV on Debian/Ubuntu

Feature detection requires OpenCV which can be a bit tricky to install as it’s not currently pip-installable.

There is more than one way to install these components, but in each case you will need to test that both OpenCV itself and the Python interface have been correctly installed.

Install opencv-python

opencv-python is available on PyPI. It includes a Python interface to OpenCV, as well as the statically-built OpenCV binaries themselves.

To install:

$ pip install opencv-python

Depending on what else is installed on your system, this may be all that is required. On lighter-weight Linux systems, you may need to identify and install missing system libraries (for example, a slim version of Debian Stretch requires libsm6 libxrender1 libxext6 to be installed with apt).

Install a system-level package

A system-level package can take care of all of the required components. Check what is available for your operating system. For example, python-opencv is available for Debian; it installs OpenCV itself, and sets up Python bindings.

However, it may make incorrect assumptions about how you’re using Python (for example, which version you’re using) - test as described below.

Testing the installation

Test the installation:

python3
>>> import cv2

An error such as:

ImportError: libSM.so.6: cannot open shared object file: No such file or directory

indicates that a required system library (in this case libsm6) has not been installed.

On the other hand,

ModuleNotFoundError: No module named 'cv2'

means that the Python components have not been set up correctly in your Python environment.

If you don’t get an import error, installation has probably been successful.

Rustface

Rustface is Python library with prebuilt wheel files provided for Linux and macOS. Although implemented in Rust it is pip-installable:

$ pip install wheel
$ pip install rustface
Registering with Willow

Rustface provides a plug-in that needs to be registered with Willow.

This should be done somewhere that gets run on application startup:

from willow.registry import registry
import rustface.willow

registry.register_plugin(rustface.willow)

For example, in an app’s AppConfig.ready.

Cropping

The face detection algorithm produces a focal area that is tightly cropped to the face rather than the whole head.

For images with a single face this can be okay in some cases, e.g. thumbnails, it might be overly tight for “headshots”. Image renditions can encompass more of the head by reducing the crop percentage (-c<percentage>), at the end of the resize-rule, down to as low as 0%:

{% image page.photo fill-200x200-c0 %}
Switching on feature detection in Wagtail

Once installed, you need to set the WAGTAILIMAGES_FEATURE_DETECTION_ENABLED setting to True to automatically detect faces/features whenever a new image is uploaded in to Wagtail or when an image without a focal point is saved (this is done via a pre-save signal handler):

# settings.py

WAGTAILIMAGES_FEATURE_DETECTION_ENABLED = True
Manually running feature detection

If you already have images in your Wagtail site and would like to run feature detection on them, or you want to apply feature detection selectively when the WAGTAILIMAGES_FEATURE_DETECTION_ENABLED is set to False you can run it manually using the get_suggested_focal_point() method on the Image model.

For example, you can manually run feature detection on all images by running the following code in the python shell:

from wagtail.images import get_image_model

Image = get_image_model()

for image in Image.objects.all():
    if not image.has_focal_point():
        image.set_focal_point(image.get_suggested_focal_point())
        image.save()
Dynamic image serve view

In most cases, developers wanting to generate image renditions in Python should use the get_rendition() method. See Generating renditions in Python.

If you need to be able to generate image versions for an external system such as a blog or mobile app, Wagtail provides a view for dynamically generating renditions of images by calling a unique URL.

The view takes an image id, filter spec and security signature in the URL. If these parameters are valid, it serves an image file matching that criteria.

Like the {% image %} tag, the rendition is generated on the first call and subsequent calls are served from a cache.

Setup

Add an entry for the view into your URLs configuration:

from wagtail.images.views.serve import ServeView

urlpatterns = [
    ...

    re_path(r'^images/([^/]*)/(\d*)/([^/]*)/[^/]*$', ServeView.as_view(), name='wagtailimages_serve'),

    ...

    # Ensure that the wagtailimages_serve line appears above the default Wagtail page serving route
    re_path(r'', include(wagtail_urls)),
]
Usage
Image URL generator UI

When the dynamic serve view is enabled, an image URL generator in the admin interface becomes available automatically. This can be accessed through the edit page of any image by clicking the “URL generator” button on the right hand side.

This interface allows editors to generate URLs to cropped versions of the image.

Generating dynamic image URLs in Python

Dynamic image URLs can also be generated using Python code and served to a client over an API or used directly in the template.

One advantage of using dynamic image URLs in the template is that they do not block the initial response while rendering like the {% image %} tag does.

The generate_image_url function in wagtail.images.views.serve is a convenience method to generate a dynamic image URL.

Here’s an example of this being used in a view:

def display_image(request, image_id):
    image = get_object_or_404(Image, id=image_id)

    return render(request, 'display_image.html', {
        'image_url': generate_image_url(image, 'fill-100x100')
    })

Image operations can be chained by joining them with a | character:

return render(request, 'display_image.html', {
    'image_url': generate_image_url(image, 'fill-100x100|jpegquality-40')
})

In your templates:

{% load wagtailimages_tags %}
...

<!-- Get the url for the image scaled to a width of 400 pixels: -->
{% image_url page.photo "width-400" %}

<!-- Again, but this time as a square thumbnail: -->
{% image_url page.photo "fill-100x100|jpegquality-40" %}

<!-- This time using our custom image serve view: -->
{% image_url page.photo "width-400" "mycustomview_serve" %}

You can pass an optional view name that will be used to serve the image through. The default is wagtailimages_serve

Advanced configuration
Making the view redirect instead of serve

By default, the view will serve the image file directly. This behaviour can be changed to a 301 redirect instead which may be useful if you host your images externally.

To enable this, pass action='redirect' into the ServeView.as_view() method in your urls configuration:

from wagtail.images.views.serve import ServeView

urlpatterns = [
    ...

    re_path(r'^images/([^/]*)/(\d*)/([^/]*)/[^/]*$', ServeView.as_view(action='redirect'), name='wagtailimages_serve'),
]
Integration with django-sendfile

django-sendfile offloads the job of transferring the image data to the web server instead of serving it directly from the Django application. This could greatly reduce server load in situations where your site has many images being downloaded but you’re unable to use a Caching proxy or a CDN.

You firstly need to install and configure django-sendfile and configure your web server to use it. If you haven’t done this already, please refer to the installation docs.

To serve images with django-sendfile, you can use the SendFileView class. This view can be used out of the box:

from wagtail.images.views.serve import SendFileView

urlpatterns = [
    ...

    re_path(r'^images/([^/]*)/(\d*)/([^/]*)/[^/]*$', SendFileView.as_view(), name='wagtailimages_serve'),
]

You can customise it to override the backend defined in the SENDFILE_BACKEND setting:

from wagtail.images.views.serve import SendFileView
from project.sendfile_backends import MyCustomBackend

class MySendFileView(SendFileView):
    backend = MyCustomBackend

You can also customise it to serve private files. For example, if the only need is to be authenticated (e.g. for Django >= 1.9):

from django.contrib.auth.mixins import LoginRequiredMixin
from wagtail.images.views.serve import SendFileView

class PrivateSendFileView(LoginRequiredMixin, SendFileView):
    raise_exception = True
Focal points

Focal points are used to indicate to Wagtail the area of an image that contains the subject. This is used by the fill filter to focus the cropping on the subject, and avoid cropping into it.

Focal points can be defined manually by a Wagtail user, or automatically by using face or feature detection.

Setting the background-position inline style based on the focal point

When using a Wagtail image as the background of an element, you can use the .background_position_style attribute on the rendition to position the rendition based on the focal point in the image:

{% image page.image width-1024 as image %}

<div style="background-image: url('{{ image.url }}'); {{ image.background_position_style }}">
</div>
Accessing the focal point in templates

New in version 2.14.

You can access the focal point in the template by accessing the .focal_point attribute of a rendition:

{% load wagtailimages %}

{% image myimage width-800 as myrendition %}

<img
    src="{{ myrendition.url }}"
    alt="{{ myimage.title }}"
    {% if myrendition.focal_point %}
        data-focus-x="{{ myrendition.focal_point.centroid.x }}"
        data-focus-y="{{ myrendition.focal_point.centroid.y }}"
        data-focus-width="{{ myrendition.focal_point.width }}"
        data-focus-height="{{ myrendition.focal_point.height }}"
    {% endif %}
/>
Title generation on upload

When uploading an image, Wagtail takes the filename, removes the file extension, and populates the title field. This section is about how to customise this filename to title conversion.

The filename to title conversion is used on the single file widget, multiple upload widget, and within chooser modals.

You can also customise this same behaviour for documents.

You can customise the resolved value of this title using a JavaScript event listener which will listen to the 'wagtail:images-upload' event.

The simplest way to add JavaScript to the editor is via the insert_global_admin_js hook, however any JavaScript that adds the event listener will work.

DOM Event

The event name to listen for is 'wagtail:images-upload'. It will be dispatched on the image upload form. The event’s detail attribute will contain:

  • data - An object which includes the title to be used. It is the filename with the extension removed.
  • maxTitleLength - An integer (or null) which is the maximum length of the Image model title field.
  • filename - The original filename without the extension removed.

To modify the generated Image title, access and update event.detail.data.title, no return value is needed.

For single image uploads, the custom event will only run if the title does not already have a value so that we do not overwrite whatever the user has typed.

You can prevent the default behaviour by calling event.preventDefault(). For the single upload page or modals, this will not pre-fill any value into the title. For multiple upload, this will avoid any title submission and use the filename title only (with file extension) as a title is required to save the image.

The event will ‘bubble’ up so that you can simply add a global document listener to capture all of these events, or you can scope your listener or handler logic as needed to ensure you only adjust titles in some specific scenarios.

See MDN for more information about custom JavasScript events.

Code Examples
Removing any url unsafe characters from the title
# wagtail_hooks.py
from django.utils.safestring import mark_safe

from wagtail.core import hooks


@hooks.register("insert_global_admin_js")
def get_global_admin_js():
    return mark_safe(
    """
    <script>
    window.addEventListener('DOMContentLoaded', function () {
        document.addEventListener('wagtail:images-upload', function(event) {
            var newTitle = (event.detail.data.title || '').replace(/[^a-zA-Z0-9\s-]/g, "");
            event.detail.data.title = newTitle;
        });
    });
    </script>
    """
    )
Changing generated titles on the page editor only to remove dashes/underscores

Using the insert_editor_js hook instead so that this script will not run on the Image upload page, only on page editors.

# wagtail_hooks.py
from django.utils.safestring import mark_safe

from wagtail.core import hooks


@hooks.register("insert_editor_js")
def get_global_admin_js():
    return mark_safe(
    """
    <script>
    window.addEventListener('DOMContentLoaded', function () {
        document.addEventListener('wagtail:images-upload', function(event) {
            // replace dashes/underscores with a space
            var newTitle = (event.detail.data.title || '').replace(/(\s|_|-)/g, " ");
            event.detail.data.title = newTitle;
        });
    });
    </script>
    """
    )
Stopping pre-filling of title based on filename
# wagtail_hooks.py
from django.utils.safestring import mark_safe

from wagtail.core import hooks


@hooks.register("insert_global_admin_js")
def get_global_admin_js():
    return mark_safe(
    """
    <script>
    window.addEventListener('DOMContentLoaded', function () {
        document.addEventListener('wagtail:images-upload', function(event) {
            // will stop title pre-fill on single file uploads
            // will set the multiple upload title to the filename (with extension)
            event.preventDefault();
        });
    });
    </script>
    """
    )

Documents

Custom document model

An alternate Document model can be used to add custom behaviour and additional fields.

You need to complete the following steps in your project to do this:

  • Create a new document model that inherits from wagtail.documents.models.AbstractDocument. This is where you would add additional fields.
  • Point WAGTAILDOCS_DOCUMENT_MODEL to the new model.

Here’s an example:

# models.py
from wagtail.documents.models import Document, AbstractDocument

class CustomDocument(AbstractDocument):
    # Custom field example:
    source = models.CharField(
        max_length=255,
        blank=True,
        null=True
    )

    admin_form_fields = Document.admin_form_fields + (
        # Add all custom fields names to make them appear in the form:
        'source',
    )

Then in your settings module:

# Ensure that you replace app_label with the app you placed your custom
# model in.
WAGTAILDOCS_DOCUMENT_MODEL = 'app_label.CustomDocument'

Migrating from the builtin document model

When changing an existing site to use a custom document model, no documents will be copied to the new model automatically. Copying old documents to the new model would need to be done manually with a data migration.

Any templates that reference the builtin document model will still continue to work as before.

Referring to the document model
wagtail.documents.get_document_model()

Get the document model from the WAGTAILDOCS_DOCUMENT_MODEL setting. Defaults to the standard Document model if no custom model is defined.

wagtail.documents.get_document_model_string()

Get the dotted app.Model name for the document model as a string. Useful for developers making Wagtail plugins that need to refer to the document model, such as in foreign keys, but the model itself is not required.

Title generation on upload

When uploading a file (document), Wagtail takes the filename, removes the file extension, and populates the title field. This section is about how to customise this filename to title conversion.

The filename to title conversion is used on the single file widget, multiple upload widget, and within chooser modals.

You can also customise this same behaviour for images.

You can customise the resolved value of this title using a JavaScript event listener which will listen to the 'wagtail:documents-upload' event.

The simplest way to add JavaScript to the editor is via the insert_global_admin_js hook, however any JavaScript that adds the event listener will work.

DOM Event

The event name to listen for is 'wagtail:documents-upload'. It will be dispatched on the document upload form. The event’s detail attribute will contain:

  • data - An object which includes the title to be used. It is the filename with the extension removed.
  • maxTitleLength - An integer (or null) which is the maximum length of the Document model title field.
  • filename - The original filename without the extension removed.

To modify the generated Document title, access and update event.detail.data.title, no return value is needed.

For single document uploads, the custom event will only run if the title does not already have a value so that we do not overwrite whatever the user has typed.

You can prevent the default behaviour by calling event.preventDefault(). For the single upload page or modals, this will not pre-fill any value into the title. For multiple upload, this will avoid any title submission and use the filename title only (with file extension) as a title is required to save the document.

The event will ‘bubble’ up so that you can simply add a global document listener to capture all of these events, or you can scope your listener or handler logic as needed to ensure you only adjust titles in some specific scenarios.

See MDN for more information about custom JavasScript events.

Code Examples
Adding the file extension to the start of the title
# wagtail_hooks.py
from django.utils.safestring import mark_safe

from wagtail.core import hooks


@hooks.register("insert_global_admin_js")
def get_global_admin_js():
    return mark_safe(
    """
    <script>
    window.addEventListener('DOMContentLoaded', function () {
        document.addEventListener('wagtail:documents-upload', function(event) {
            var extension = (event.detail.filename.match(/\.([^.]*?)(?=\?|#|$)/) || [''])[1];
            var newTitle = '(' + extension.toUpperCase() + ') ' + (event.detail.data.title || '');
            event.detail.data.title = newTitle;
        });
    });
    </script>
    """
    )
Changing generated titles on the page editor only to remove dashes/underscores

Using the insert_editor_js hook instead so that this script will not run on the Document upload page, only on page editors.

# wagtail_hooks.py
from django.utils.safestring import mark_safe

from wagtail.core import hooks


@hooks.register("insert_editor_js")
def get_global_admin_js():
    return mark_safe(
    """
    <script>
    window.addEventListener('DOMContentLoaded', function () {
        document.addEventListener('wagtail:documents-upload', function(event) {
            // replace dashes/underscores with a space
            var newTitle = (event.detail.data.title || '').replace(/(\s|_|-)/g, " ");
            event.detail.data.title = newTitle;
        });
    });
    </script>
    """
    )
Stopping pre-filling of title based on filename
# wagtail_hooks.py
from django.utils.safestring import mark_safe

from wagtail.core import hooks


@hooks.register("insert_global_admin_js")
def get_global_admin_js():
    return mark_safe(
    """
    <script>
    window.addEventListener('DOMContentLoaded', function () {
        document.addEventListener('wagtail:documents-upload', function(event) {
            // will stop title pre-fill on single file uploads
            // will set the multiple upload title to the filename (with extension)
            event.preventDefault();
        });
    });
    </script>
    """
    )

Embedded content

Wagtail supports generating embed code from URLs to content on external providers such as Youtube or Twitter. By default, Wagtail will fetch the embed code directly from the relevant provider’s site using the oEmbed protocol.

Wagtail has a built-in list of the most common providers and this list can be changed with a setting. Wagtail also supports fetching embed code using Embedly and custom embed finders.

Embedding content on your site

Wagtail’s embeds module should work straight out of the box for most providers. You can use any of the following methods to call the module:

Rich text

Wagtail’s default rich text editor has a “media” icon that allows embeds to be placed into rich text. You don’t have to do anything to enable this; just make sure the rich text field’s content is being passed through the |richtext filter in the template as this is what calls the embeds module to fetch and nest the embed code.

EmbedBlock StreamField block type

The EmbedBlock block type allows embeds to be placed into a StreamField.

The max_width and max_height arguments are sent to the provider when fetching the embed code.

For example:

from wagtail.embeds.blocks import EmbedBlock

class MyStreamField(blocks.StreamBlock):
    ...

    embed = EmbedBlock(max_width=800, max_height=400)
{% embed %} tag

Syntax: {% embed <url> [max_width=<max width>] %}

You can nest embeds into a template by passing the URL and an optional max_width argument to the {% embed %} tag.

The max_width argument is sent to the provider when fetching the embed code.

{% load wagtailembeds_tags %}

{# Embed a YouTube video #}
{% embed 'https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ffu-2jEdLPw' %}

{# This tag can also take the URL from a variable #}
{% embed page.video_url %}
From Python

You can also call the internal get_embed function that takes a URL string and returns an Embed object (see model documentation below). This also takes a max_width keyword argument that is sent to the provider when fetching the embed code.

from wagtail.embeds.embeds import get_embed
from wagtail.embeds.exceptions import EmbedException

try:
    embed = get_embed('https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ffu-2jEdLPw')

    print(embed.html)
except EmbedException:
    # Cannot find embed
    pass
Configuring embed “finders”

Embed finders are the modules within Wagtail that are responsible for producing embed code from a URL.

Embed finders are configured using the WAGTAILEMBEDS_FINDERS setting. This is a list of finder configurations that are each run in order until one of them successfully returns an embed:

The default configuration is:

WAGTAILEMBEDS_FINDERS = [
    {
        'class': 'wagtail.embeds.finders.oembed'
    }
]
oEmbed (default)

The default embed finder fetches the embed code directly from the content provider using the oEmbed protocol. Wagtail has a built-in list of providers which are all enabled by default. You can find that provider list at the following link:

https://github.com/wagtail/wagtail/blob/main/wagtail/embeds/oembed_providers.py

Customising the provider list

You can limit which providers may be used by specifying the list of providers in the finder configuration.

For example, this configuration will only allow content to be nested from Vimeo and Youtube. It also adds a custom provider:

from wagtail.embeds.oembed_providers import youtube, vimeo

# Add a custom provider
# Your custom provider must support oEmbed for this to work. You should be
# able to find these details in the provider's documentation.
# - 'endpoint' is the URL of the oEmbed endpoint that Wagtail will call
# - 'urls' specifies which patterns
my_custom_provider = {
    'endpoint': 'https://customvideosite.com/oembed',
    'urls': [
        '^http(?:s)?://(?:www\\.)?customvideosite\\.com/[^#?/]+/videos/.+$',
    ]
}

WAGTAILEMBEDS_FINDERS = [
    {
        'class': 'wagtail.embeds.finders.oembed',
        'providers': [youtube, vimeo, my_custom_provider],
    }
]
Customising an individual provider

Multiple finders can be chained together. This can be used for customising the configuration for one provider without affecting the others.

For example, this is how you can instruct Youtube to return videos in HTTPS (which must be done explicitly for YouTube):

from wagtail.embeds.oembed_providers import youtube


WAGTAILEMBEDS_FINDERS = [
    # Fetches YouTube videos but puts ``?scheme=https`` in the GET parameters
    # when calling YouTube's oEmbed endpoint
    {
        'class': 'wagtail.embeds.finders.oembed',
        'providers': [youtube],
        'options': {'scheme': 'https'}
    },

    # Handles all other oEmbed providers the default way
    {
        'class': 'wagtail.embeds.finders.oembed',
    }
]

How Wagtail uses multiple finders

If multiple providers can handle a URL (for example, a YouTube video was requested using the configuration above), the topmost finder is chosen to perform the request.

Wagtail will not try to run any other finder, even if the chosen one didn’t return an embed.

Facebook and Instagram

As of October 2020, Facebook deprecated their public oEmbed APIs. If you would like to embed Facebook or Instagram posts in your site, you will need to use the new authenticated APIs. This requires you to set up a Facebook Developer Account and create a Facebook App that includes the oEmbed Product. Instructions for creating the necessary app are in the requirements sections of the Facebook and Instagram documentation.

As of June 2021, the oEmbed Product has been replaced with the oEmbed Read feature. In order to embed Facebook and Instagram posts your app must activate the oEmbed Read feature. Furthermore the app must be reviewed and accepted by Facebook. You can find the announcement in the API changelog.

Apps that activated the oEmbed Product before June 8, 2021 need to activate the oEmbed Read feature and review their app before September 7, 2021.

Once you have your app access tokens (App ID and App Secret), add the Facebook and/or Instagram finders to your WAGTAILEMBEDS_FINDERS setting and configure them with the App ID and App Secret from your app:

WAGTAILEMBEDS_FINDERS = [
    {
        'class': 'wagtail.embeds.finders.facebook',
        'app_id': 'YOUR FACEBOOK APP_ID HERE',
        'app_secret': 'YOUR FACEBOOK APP_SECRET HERE',
    },
    {
        'class': 'wagtail.embeds.finders.instagram',
        'app_id': 'YOUR INSTAGRAM APP_ID HERE',
        'app_secret': 'YOUR INSTAGRAM APP_SECRET HERE',
    },

    # Handles all other oEmbed providers the default way
    {
        'class': 'wagtail.embeds.finders.oembed',
    }
]

By default, Facebook and Instagram embeds include some JavaScript that is necessary to fully render the embed. In certain cases, this might not be something you want - for example, if you have multiple Facebook embeds, this would result in multiple script tags. By passing 'omitscript': True in the configuration, you can indicate that these script tags should be omitted from the embed HTML. Note that you will then have to take care of loading this script yourself.

Embed.ly

Embed.ly is a paid-for service that can also provide embeds for sites that do not implement the oEmbed protocol.

They also provide some helpful features such as giving embeds a consistent look and a common video playback API which is useful if your site allows videos to be hosted on different providers and you need to implement custom controls for them.

Wagtail has built in support for fetching embeds from Embed.ly. To use it, first pip install the Embedly python package.

Now add an embed finder to your WAGTAILEMBEDS_FINDERS setting that uses the wagtail.embeds.finders.oembed class and pass it your API key:

WAGTAILEMBEDS_FINDERS = [
    {
        'class': 'wagtail.embeds.finders.embedly',
        'key': 'YOUR EMBED.LY KEY HERE'
    }
]
Custom embed finder classes

For complete control, you can create a custom finder class.

Here’s a stub finder class that could be used as a skeleton; please read the docstrings for details of what each method does:

from wagtail.embeds.finders.base import EmbedFinder


class ExampleFinder(EmbedFinder):
    def __init__(self, **options):
        pass

    def accept(self, url):
        """
        Returns True if this finder knows how to fetch an embed for the URL.

        This should not have any side effects (no requests to external servers)
        """
        pass

    def find_embed(self, url, max_width=None):
        """
        Takes a URL and max width and returns a dictionary of information about the
        content to be used for embedding it on the site.

        This is the part that may make requests to external APIs.
        """
        # TODO: Perform the request

        return {
            'title': "Title of the content",
            'author_name': "Author name",
            'provider_name': "Provider name (eg. YouTube, Vimeo, etc)",
            'type': "Either 'photo', 'video', 'link' or 'rich'",
            'thumbnail_url': "URL to thumbnail image",
            'width': width_in_pixels,
            'height': height_in_pixels,
            'html': "<h2>The Embed HTML</h2>",
        }

Once you’ve implemented all of those methods, you just need to add it to your WAGTAILEMBEDS_FINDERS setting:

WAGTAILEMBEDS_FINDERS = [
    {
        'class': 'path.to.your.finder.class.here',
        # Any other options will be passed as kwargs to the __init__ method
    }
]
The Embed model
class wagtail.embeds.models.Embed

Embeds are fetched only once and stored in the database so subsequent requests for an individual embed do not hit the embed finders again.

url

(text)

The URL of the original content of this embed.

max_width

(integer, nullable)

The max width that was requested.

type

(text)

The type of the embed. This can be either ‘video’, ‘photo’, ‘link’ or ‘rich’.

html

(text)

The HTML content of the embed that should be placed on the page

title

(text)

The title of the content that is being embedded.

author_name

(text)

The author name of the content that is being embedded.

provider_name

(text)

The provider name of the content that is being embedded.

For example: YouTube, Vimeo

thumbnail_url

(text)

a URL to a thumbnail image of the content that is being embedded.

width

(integer, nullable)

The width of the embed (images and videos only).

height

(integer, nullable)

The height of the embed (images and videos only).

last_updated

(datetime)

The Date/time when this embed was last fetched.

Deleting embeds

As long as your embeds configuration is not broken, deleting items in the Embed model should be perfectly safe to do. Wagtail will automatically repopulate the records that are being used on the site.

You may want to do this if you’ve changed from oEmbed to Embedly or vice-versa as the embed code they generate may be slightly different and lead to inconsistency on your site.

How to add Wagtail into an existing Django project

To install Wagtail completely from scratch, create a new Django project and an app within that project. For instructions on these tasks, see Writing your first Django app. Your project directory will look like the following:

myproject/
    myproject/
        __init__.py
        settings.py
        urls.py
        wsgi.py
    myapp/
        __init__.py
        models.py
        tests.py
        admin.py
        views.py
    manage.py

From your app directory, you can safely remove admin.py and views.py, since Wagtail will provide this functionality for your models. Configuring Django to load Wagtail involves adding modules and variables to settings.py and URL configuration to urls.py. For a more complete view of what’s defined in these files, see Django Settings and Django URL Dispatcher.

What follows is a settings reference which skips many boilerplate Django settings. If you just want to get your Wagtail install up quickly without fussing with settings at the moment, see Ready to Use Example Configuration Files.

Middleware (settings.py)
MIDDLEWARE = [
  'django.contrib.sessions.middleware.SessionMiddleware',
  'django.middleware.common.CommonMiddleware',
  'django.middleware.csrf.CsrfViewMiddleware',
  'django.contrib.auth.middleware.AuthenticationMiddleware',
  'django.contrib.messages.middleware.MessageMiddleware',
  'django.middleware.clickjacking.XFrameOptionsMiddleware',
  'django.middleware.security.SecurityMiddleware',

  'wagtail.contrib.redirects.middleware.RedirectMiddleware',
]

Wagtail depends on the default set of Django middleware modules, to cover basic security and functionality such as login sessions. One additional middleware module is provided:

RedirectMiddleware
Wagtail provides a simple interface for adding arbitrary redirects to your site and this module makes it happen.
Apps (settings.py)
INSTALLED_APPS = [

  'myapp',  # your own app

  'wagtail.contrib.forms',
  'wagtail.contrib.redirects',
  'wagtail.embeds',
  'wagtail.sites',
  'wagtail.users',
  'wagtail.snippets',
  'wagtail.documents',
  'wagtail.images',
  'wagtail.search',
  'wagtail.admin',
  'wagtail.core',

  'taggit',
  'modelcluster',

  'django.contrib.auth',
  'django.contrib.contenttypes',
  'django.contrib.sessions',
  'django.contrib.messages',
  'django.contrib.staticfiles',
]

Wagtail requires several Django app modules, third-party apps, and defines several apps of its own. Wagtail was built to be modular, so many Wagtail apps can be omitted to suit your needs. Your own app (here myapp) is where you define your models, templates, static assets, template tags, and other custom functionality for your site.

Wagtail Apps
wagtail.core
The core functionality of Wagtail, such as the Page class, the Wagtail tree, and model fields.
wagtail.admin
The administration interface for Wagtail, including page edit handlers.
wagtail.documents
The Wagtail document content type.
wagtail.snippets
Editing interface for non-Page models and objects. See Snippets.
wagtail.users
User editing interface.
wagtail.images
The Wagtail image content type.
wagtail.embeds
Module governing oEmbed and Embedly content in Wagtail rich text fields. See Inserting videos into body content.
wagtail.search
Search framework for Page content. See Search.
wagtail.sites
Management UI for Wagtail sites.
wagtail.contrib.redirects
Admin interface for creating arbitrary redirects on your site.
wagtail.contrib.forms
Models for creating forms on your pages and viewing submissions. See Form builder.
Third-Party Apps
taggit
Tagging framework for Django. This is used internally within Wagtail for image and document tagging and is available for your own models as well. See Tagging for a Wagtail model recipe or the Taggit Documentation.
modelcluster
Extension of Django ForeignKey relation functionality, which is used in Wagtail pages for on-the-fly related object creation. For more information, see Inline Panels and Model Clusters or the django-modelcluster github project page.
URL Patterns
from django.contrib import admin

from wagtail.core import urls as wagtail_urls
from wagtail.admin import urls as wagtailadmin_urls
from wagtail.documents import urls as wagtaildocs_urls

urlpatterns = [
    path('django-admin/', admin.site.urls),

    path('admin/', include(wagtailadmin_urls)),
    path('documents/', include(wagtaildocs_urls)),

    # Optional URL for including your own vanilla Django urls/views
    re_path(r'', include('myapp.urls')),

    # For anything not caught by a more specific rule above, hand over to
    # Wagtail's serving mechanism
    re_path(r'', include(wagtail_urls)),
]

This block of code for your project’s urls.py does a few things:

  • Load the vanilla Django admin interface to /django-admin/
  • Load the Wagtail admin and its various apps
  • Dispatch any vanilla Django apps you’re using other than Wagtail which require their own URL configuration (this is optional, since Wagtail might be all you need)
  • Lets Wagtail handle any further URL dispatching.

That’s not everything you might want to include in your project’s URL configuration, but it’s what’s necessary for Wagtail to flourish.

Ready to Use Example Configuration Files

These two files should reside in your project directory (myproject/myproject/).

settings.py
import os

PROJECT_DIR = os.path.dirname(os.path.dirname(os.path.abspath(__file__)))
BASE_DIR = os.path.dirname(PROJECT_DIR)

DEBUG = True

# Application definition

INSTALLED_APPS = [
    'myapp',

    'wagtail.contrib.forms',
    'wagtail.contrib.redirects',
    'wagtail.embeds',
    'wagtail.sites',
    'wagtail.users',
    'wagtail.snippets',
    'wagtail.documents',
    'wagtail.images',
    'wagtail.search',
    'wagtail.admin',
    'wagtail.core',

    'taggit',
    'modelcluster',

    'django.contrib.auth',
    'django.contrib.contenttypes',
    'django.contrib.sessions',
    'django.contrib.messages',
    'django.contrib.staticfiles',
]


MIDDLEWARE = [
    'django.contrib.sessions.middleware.SessionMiddleware',
    'django.middleware.common.CommonMiddleware',
    'django.middleware.csrf.CsrfViewMiddleware',
    'django.contrib.auth.middleware.AuthenticationMiddleware',
    'django.contrib.messages.middleware.MessageMiddleware',
    'django.middleware.clickjacking.XFrameOptionsMiddleware',
    'django.middleware.security.SecurityMiddleware',

    'wagtail.contrib.redirects.middleware.RedirectMiddleware',
]

ROOT_URLCONF = 'myproject.urls'

TEMPLATES = [
    {
        'BACKEND': 'django.template.backends.django.DjangoTemplates',
        'DIRS': [
            os.path.join(PROJECT_DIR, 'templates'),
        ],
        'APP_DIRS': True,
        'OPTIONS': {
            'context_processors': [
                'django.template.context_processors.debug',
                'django.template.context_processors.request',
                'django.contrib.auth.context_processors.auth',
                'django.contrib.messages.context_processors.messages',
            ],
        },
    },
]

WSGI_APPLICATION = 'myproject.wsgi.application'

# Database

DATABASES = {
    'default': {
        'ENGINE': 'django.db.backends.postgresql',
        'NAME': 'myprojectdb',
        'USER': 'postgres',
        'PASSWORD': '',
        'HOST': '',  # Set to empty string for localhost.
        'PORT': '',  # Set to empty string for default.
        'CONN_MAX_AGE': 600,  # number of seconds database connections should persist for
    }
}

# Internationalization

LANGUAGE_CODE = 'en-us'
TIME_ZONE = 'UTC'
USE_I18N = True
USE_L10N = True
USE_TZ = True


# Static files (CSS, JavaScript, Images)

STATICFILES_FINDERS = [
    'django.contrib.staticfiles.finders.FileSystemFinder',
    'django.contrib.staticfiles.finders.AppDirectoriesFinder',
]

STATICFILES_DIRS = [
    os.path.join(PROJECT_DIR, 'static'),
]

STATIC_ROOT = os.path.join(BASE_DIR, 'static')
STATIC_URL = '/static/'

MEDIA_ROOT = os.path.join(BASE_DIR, 'media')
MEDIA_URL = '/media/'


ADMINS = [
    # ('Your Name', 'your_email@example.com'),
]
MANAGERS = ADMINS

# Default to dummy email backend. Configure dev/production/local backend
# as per https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/stable/topics/email/#email-backends
EMAIL_BACKEND = 'django.core.mail.backends.dummy.EmailBackend'

# Hosts/domain names that are valid for this site; required if DEBUG is False
ALLOWED_HOSTS = []

# Make this unique, and don't share it with anybody.
SECRET_KEY = 'change-me'

EMAIL_SUBJECT_PREFIX = '[Wagtail] '

INTERNAL_IPS = ('127.0.0.1', '10.0.2.2')

# A sample logging configuration. The only tangible logging
# performed by this configuration is to send an email to
# the site admins on every HTTP 500 error when DEBUG=False.
# See https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/stable/topics/logging for
# more details on how to customize your logging configuration.
LOGGING = {
    'version': 1,
    'disable_existing_loggers': False,
    'filters': {
        'require_debug_false': {
            '()': 'django.utils.log.RequireDebugFalse'
        }
    },
    'handlers': {
        'mail_admins': {
            'level': 'ERROR',
            'filters': ['require_debug_false'],
            'class': 'django.utils.log.AdminEmailHandler'
        }
    },
    'loggers': {
        'django.request': {
            'handlers': ['mail_admins'],
            'level': 'ERROR',
            'propagate': True,
        },
    }
}


# WAGTAIL SETTINGS

# This is the human-readable name of your Wagtail install
# which welcomes users upon login to the Wagtail admin.
WAGTAIL_SITE_NAME = 'My Project'

# Replace the search backend
#WAGTAILSEARCH_BACKENDS = {
#  'default': {
#    'BACKEND': 'wagtail.search.backends.elasticsearch5',
#    'INDEX': 'myapp'
#  }
#}

# Wagtail email notifications from address
# WAGTAILADMIN_NOTIFICATION_FROM_EMAIL = 'wagtail@myhost.io'

# Wagtail email notification format
# WAGTAILADMIN_NOTIFICATION_USE_HTML = True

# Reverse the default case-sensitive handling of tags
TAGGIT_CASE_INSENSITIVE = True
urls.py
from django.urls import include, path, re_path
from django.conf.urls.static import static
from django.views.generic.base import RedirectView
from django.contrib import admin
from django.conf import settings
import os.path

from wagtail.core import urls as wagtail_urls
from wagtail.admin import urls as wagtailadmin_urls
from wagtail.documents import urls as wagtaildocs_urls


urlpatterns = [
    path('django-admin/', admin.site.urls),

    path('admin/', include(wagtailadmin_urls)),
    path('documents/', include(wagtaildocs_urls)),

    # For anything not caught by a more specific rule above, hand over to
    # Wagtail's serving mechanism
    re_path(r'', include(wagtail_urls)),
]


if settings.DEBUG:
    from django.contrib.staticfiles.urls import staticfiles_urlpatterns

    urlpatterns += staticfiles_urlpatterns() # tell gunicorn where static files are in dev mode
    urlpatterns += static(settings.MEDIA_URL + 'images/', document_root=os.path.join(settings.MEDIA_ROOT, 'images'))
    urlpatterns += [
        path('favicon.ico', RedirectView.as_view(url=settings.STATIC_URL + 'myapp/images/favicon.ico'))
    ]

Deploying Wagtail

On your server

Wagtail is straightforward to deploy on modern Linux-based distributions, and should run with any of the combinations detailed in Django’s deployment documentation. See the section on performance for the non-Python services we recommend.

On Divio Cloud

Divio Cloud is a Dockerised cloud hosting platform for Python/Django that allows you to launch and deploy Wagtail projects in minutes. With a free account, you can create a Wagtail project. Choose from a:

Divio Cloud also hosts a live Wagtail Bakery demo (no account required).

On PythonAnywhere

PythonAnywhere is a Platform-as-a-Service (PaaS) focused on Python hosting and development. It allows developers to quickly develop, host, and scale applications in a cloud environment. Starting with a free plan they also provide MySQL and PostgreSQL databases as well as very flexible and affordable paid plans, so there’s all you need to host a Wagtail site. To get quickly up and running you may use the wagtail-pythonanywhere-quickstart.

On Google Cloud

Google Cloud is an Infrastructure-as-a-Service (IaaS) that offers multiple managed products, supported by Python client libraries, to help you build, deploy, and monitor your applications. You can deploy Wagtail, or any Django application, in a number of ways, including on App Engine or Cloud Run.

On other PAASs and IAASs

We know of Wagtail sites running on Heroku, Digital Ocean and elsewhere. If you have successfully installed Wagtail on your platform or infrastructure, please contribute your notes to this documentation!

Deployment tips
Static files

As with all Django projects, static files are not served by the Django application server in production (i.e. outside of the manage.py runserver command); these need to be handled separately at the web server level. See Django’s documentation on deploying static files.

The JavaScript and CSS files used by the Wagtail admin frequently change between releases of Wagtail - it’s important to avoid serving outdated versions of these files due to browser or server-side caching, as this can cause hard-to-diagnose issues. We recommend enabling ManifestStaticFilesStorage in the STATICFILES_STORAGE setting - this ensures that different versions of files are assigned distinct URLs.

Cloud storage

Wagtail follows Django’s conventions for managing uploaded files, and can be configured to store uploaded images and documents on a cloud storage service such as Amazon S3; this is done through the DEFAULT_FILE_STORAGE setting in conjunction with an add-on package such as django-storages. Be aware that setting up remote storage will not entirely offload file handling tasks from the application server - some Wagtail functionality requires files to be read back by the application server. In particular, original image files need to be read back whenever a new resized rendition is created, and documents may be configured to be served through a Django view in order to enforce permission checks (see WAGTAILDOCS_SERVE_METHOD).

Note that the django-storages Amazon S3 backends (storages.backends.s3boto.S3BotoStorage and storages.backends.s3boto3.S3Boto3Storage) do not correctly handle duplicate filenames in their default configuration. When using these backends, AWS_S3_FILE_OVERWRITE must be set to False.

If you are also serving Wagtail’s static files from remote storage (using Django’s STATICFILES_STORAGE setting), you’ll need to ensure that it is configured to serve CORS HTTP headers, as current browsers will reject remotely-hosted font files that lack a valid header. For Amazon S3, refer to the documentation Setting Bucket and Object Access Permissions, or (for the storages.backends.s3boto.S3Boto3Storage backend only) add the following to your Django settings:

AWS_S3_OBJECT_PARAMETERS = {
    "ACL": "public-read"
}

The ACL parameter accepts a list of predefined configurations for Amazon S3. For more information, refer to the documentation Canned ACL.

For Google Cloud Storage, create a cors.json configuration:

[
    {
      "origin": ["*"],
      "responseHeader": ["Content-Type"],
      "method": ["GET"],
      "maxAgeSeconds": 3600
    }
]

Then, apply this CORS configuration to the storage bucket:

gsutil cors set cors.json gs://$GS_BUCKET_NAME

For other storage services, refer to your provider’s documentation, or the documentation for the Django storage backend library you’re using.

Performance

Wagtail is designed for speed, both in the editor interface and on the front-end, but if you want even better performance or you need to handle very high volumes of traffic, here are some tips on eking out the most from your installation.

Editor interface

We have tried to minimise external dependencies for a working installation of Wagtail, in order to make it as simple as possible to get going. However, a number of default settings can be configured for better performance:

Cache

We recommend Redis as a fast, persistent cache. Install Redis through your package manager (on Debian or Ubuntu: sudo apt-get install redis-server), add django-redis to your requirements.txt, and enable it as a cache backend:

CACHES = {
    'default': {
        'BACKEND': 'django_redis.cache.RedisCache',
        'LOCATION': 'redis://127.0.0.1:6379/dbname',
        # for django-redis < 3.8.0, use:
        # 'LOCATION': '127.0.0.1:6379',
        'OPTIONS': {
            'CLIENT_CLASS': 'django_redis.client.DefaultClient',
        }
    }
}
Caching image renditions

If you define a cache named ‘renditions’ (typically alongside your ‘default’ cache), Wagtail will cache image rendition lookups, which may improve the performance of pages which include many images.

CACHES = {
    'default': {...},
    'renditions': {
        'BACKEND': 'django.core.cache.backends.memcached.MemcachedCache',
        'LOCATION': '127.0.0.1:11211',
        'TIMEOUT': 600,
        'OPTIONS': {
            'MAX_ENTRIES': 1000
        }
    }
}
Database

Wagtail is tested on PostgreSQL, SQLite and MySQL. It may work on some third-party database backends as well, but this is not guaranteed. We recommend PostgreSQL for production use.

Templates

The overhead from reading and compiling templates adds up. Django wraps its default loaders with cached template loader: which stores the compiled Template in memory and returns it for subsequent requests. The cached loader is automatically enabled when DEBUG is False. If you are using custom loaders, update your settings to use it:

TEMPLATES = [{
    'BACKEND': 'django.template.backends.django.DjangoTemplates',
    'DIRS': [os.path.join(BASE_DIR, 'templates')],
    'OPTIONS': {
        'loaders': [
            ('django.template.loaders.cached.Loader', [
                'django.template.loaders.filesystem.Loader',
                'django.template.loaders.app_directories.Loader',
                'path.to.custom.Loader',
            ]),
        ],
    },
}]
Public users
Caching proxy

To support high volumes of traffic with excellent response times, we recommend a caching proxy. Both Varnish and Squid have been tested in production. Hosted proxies like Cloudflare should also work well.

Wagtail supports automatic cache invalidation for Varnish/Squid. See Frontend cache invalidator for more information.

Internationalisation

Multi-language content
Overview

Out of the box, Wagtail assumes all content will be authored in a single language. This document describes how to configure Wagtail for authoring content in multiple languages.

Note

Wagtail provides the infrastructure for creating and serving content in multiple languages. There are two options for managing translations across different languages in the admin interface: wagtail.contrib.simple_translation or the more advanced wagtail-localize (third-party package).

This document only covers the internationalisation of content managed by Wagtail. For information on how to translate static content in template files, JavaScript code, etc, refer to the Django internationalisation docs. Or, if you are building a headless site, refer to the docs of the frontend framework you are using.

Wagtail’s approach to multi-lingual content

This section provides an explanation of Wagtail’s internationalisation approach. If you’re in a hurry, you can skip to Configuration.

In summary:

  • Wagtail stores content in a separate page tree for each locale
  • It has a built-in Locale model and all pages are linked to a Locale with the locale foreign key field
  • It records which pages are translations of each other using a shared UUID stored in the translation_key field
  • It automatically routes requests through translations of the site’s homepage
  • It uses Django’s i18n_patterns and LocaleMiddleware for language detection
Page structure

Wagtail stores content in a separate page tree for each locale.

For example, if you have two sites in two locales, then you will see four homepages at the top level of the page hierarchy in the explorer.

This approach has some advantages for the editor experience as well:

  • There is no default language for editing, so content can be authored in any language and then translated to any other.
  • Translations of a page are separate pages so they can be published at different times.
  • Editors can be given permission to edit content in one locale and not others.
How locales and translations are recorded in the database

All pages (and any snippets that have translation enabled) have a locale and translation_key field:

  • locale is a foreign key to the Locale model
  • translation_key is a UUID that’s used to find translations of a piece of content. Translations of the same page/snippet share the same value in this field

These two fields have a ‘unique together’ constraint so you can’t have more than one translation in the same locale.

Translated homepages

When you set up a site in Wagtail, you select the site’s homepage in the ‘root page’ field and all requests to that site’s root URL will be routed to that page.

Multi-lingual sites have a separate homepage for each locale that exist as siblings in the page tree. Wagtail finds the other homepages by looking for translations of the site’s ‘root page’.

This means that to make a site available in another locale, you just need to translate and publish its homepage in that new locale.

If Wagtail can’t find a homepage that matches the user’s language, it will fall back to the page that is selected as the ‘root page’ on the site record, so you can use this field to specify the default language of your site.

Language detection and routing

For detecting the user’s language and adding a prefix to the URLs (/en/, /fr-fr/, for example), Wagtail is designed to work with Django’s builtin internationalisation utilities such as i18n_patterns and LocaleMiddleware. This means that Wagtail should work seamlessly with any other internationalised Django applications on your site.

Locales

The locales that are enabled on a site are recorded in the Locale model in wagtailcore. This model has just two fields: ID and language_code which stores the BCP-47 language tag that represents this locale.

The locale records can be set up with an optional management UI or created in the shell. The possible values of the language_code field are controlled by the WAGTAIL_CONTENT_LANGUAGES setting.

Note

Read this if you’ve changed LANGUAGE_CODE before enabling internationalisation

On initial migration, Wagtail creates a Locale record for the language that was set in the LANGUAGE_CODE setting at the time the migration was run. All pages will be assigned to this Locale when Wagtail’s internationalisation is disabled.

If you have changed the LANGUAGE_CODE setting since updating to Wagtail 2.11, you will need to manually update the record in the Locale model too before enabling internationalisation, as your existing content will be assigned to the old code.

Configuration

In this section, we will go through the minimum configuration required to enable content to be authored in multiple languages.

Enabling internationalisation

To enable internationalisation in both Django and Wagtail, set the following settings to True:

# my_project/settings.py

USE_I18N = True
WAGTAIL_I18N_ENABLED = True

In addition, you might also want to enable Django’s localisation support. This will make dates and numbers display in the user’s local format:

# my_project/settings.py

USE_L10N = True
Configuring available languages

Next we need to configure the available languages. There are two settings for this that are each used for different purposes:

  • LANGUAGES - This sets which languages are available on the frontend of the site.
  • WAGTAIL_CONTENT_LANGUAGES - This sets which the languages Wagtail content can be authored in.

You can set both of these settings to the exact same value. For example, to enable English, French, and Spanish:

# my_project/settings.py

WAGTAIL_CONTENT_LANGUAGES = LANGUAGES = [
    ('en', "English"),
    ('fr', "French"),
    ('es', "Spanish"),
]

Note

Whenever WAGTAIL_CONTENT_LANGUAGES is changed, the Locale model needs to be updated as well to match.

This can either be done with a data migration or with the optional locale management UI described in the next section.

You can also set these to different values. You might want to do this if you want to have some programmatic localisation (like date formatting or currency, for example) but use the same Wagtail content in multiple regions:

# my_project/settings.py

LANGUAGES = [
    ('en-GB', "English (Great Britain)"),
    ('en-US', "English (United States)"),
    ('en-CA', "English (Canada)"),
    ('fr-FR', "French (France)"),
    ('fr-CA', "French (Canada)"),
]

WAGTAIL_CONTENT_LANGUAGES = [
    ('en-GB', "English"),
    ('fr-FR', "French"),
]

When configured like this, the site will be available in all the different locales in the first list, but there will only be two language trees in Wagtail.

All the en- locales will use the “English” language tree, and the fr- locales will use the “French” language tree. The differences between each locale in a language would be programmatic. For example: which date/number format to use, and what currency to display prices in.

Enabling the locale management UI (optional)

An optional locale management app exists to allow a Wagtail administrator to set up the locales from the Wagtail admin interface.

To enable it, add wagtail.locales into INSTALLED_APPS:

# my_project/settings.py

INSTALLED_APPS = [
    # ...
    'wagtail.locales',
    # ...
]
Adding a language prefix to URLs

To allow all of the page trees to be served at the same domain, we need to add a URL prefix for each language.

To implement this, we can use Django’s built-in i18n_patterns function, which adds a language prefix to all of the URL patterns passed into it. This activates the language code specified in the URL and Wagtail takes this into account when it decides how to route the request.

In your project’s urls.py add Wagtail’s core URLs (and any other URLs you want to be translated) into an i18n_patterns block:

# /my_project/urls.py

...

from django.conf.urls.i18n import i18n_patterns

# Non-translatable URLs
# Note: if you are using the Wagtail API or sitemaps,
# these should not be added to `i18n_patterns` either
urlpatterns = [
    path('django-admin/', admin.site.urls),

    path('admin/', include(wagtailadmin_urls)),
    path('documents/', include(wagtaildocs_urls)),
]

# Translatable URLs
# These will be available under a language code prefix. For example /en/search/
urlpatterns += i18n_patterns(
    path('search/', search_views.search, name='search'),
    path("", include(wagtail_urls)),
)
User language auto-detection

After wrapping your URL patterns with i18n_patterns, your site will now respond on URL prefixes. But now it won’t respond on the root path.

To fix this, we need to detect the user’s browser language and redirect them to the best language prefix. The recommended approach to do this is with Django’s LocaleMiddleware:

# my_project/settings.py

MIDDLEWARE = [
    # ...
    'django.middleware.locale.LocaleMiddleware',
    # ...
]
Custom routing/language detection

You don’t strictly have to use i18n_patterns or LocaleMiddleware for this and you can write your own logic if you need to.

All Wagtail needs is the language to be activated (using Django’s django.utils.translation.activate function) before the wagtail.core.views.serve view is called.

Recipes for internationalised sites
Language/region selector

Perhaps the most important bit of internationalisation-related UI you can add to your site is a selector to allow users to switch between different languages.

If you’re not convinced that you need this, have a look at https://www.w3.org/International/questions/qa-site-conneg#yyyshortcomings for some rationale.

Basic example

Here is a basic example of how to add links between translations of a page.

This example, however, will only include languages defined in WAGTAIL_CONTENT_LANGUAGES and not any extra languages that might be defined in LANGUAGES. For more information on what both of these settings mean, see Configuring available languages.

If both settings are set to the same value, this example should work well for you, otherwise skip to the next section that has a more complicated example which takes this into account.

{# make sure these are at the top of the file #}
{% load i18n wagtailcore_tags %}

{% if page %}
    {% for translation in page.get_translations.live %}
        {% get_language_info for translation.locale.language_code as lang %}
        <a href="{% pageurl translation %}" rel="alternate" hreflang="{{ language_code }}">
            {{ lang.name_local }}
        </a>
    {% endfor %}
{% endif %}

Let’s break this down:

{% if page %}
    ...
{% endif %}

If this is part of a shared base template it may be used in situations where no page object is available, such as 404 error responses, so check that we have a page before proceeding.

{% for translation in page.get_translations.live %}
    ...
{% endfor %}

This for block iterates through all published translations of the current page.

{% get_language_info for translation.locale.language_code as lang %}

This is a Django built-in tag that gets info about the language of the translation. For more information, see get_language_info() in the Django docs.

<a href="{% pageurl translation %}" rel="alternate" hreflang="{{ language_code }}">
    {{ lang.name_local }}
</a>

This adds a link to the translation. We use {{ lang.name_local }} to display the name of the locale in its own language. We also add rel and hreflang attributes to the <a> tag for SEO.

Handling locales that share content

Rather than iterating over pages, this example iterates over all of the configured languages and finds the page for each one. This works better than the Basic example above on sites that have extra Django LANGUAGES that share the same Wagtail content.

For this example to work, you firstly need to add Django’s django.template.context_processors.i18n context processor to your TEMPLATES setting:

# myproject/settings.py

TEMPLATES = [
    {
        # ...
        'OPTIONS': {
            'context_processors': [
                # ...
                'django.template.context_processors.i18n',
            ],
        },
    },
]

Now for the example itself:

{% for language_code, language_name in LANGUAGES %}
    {% get_language_info for language_code as lang %}

    {% language language_code %}
        <a href="{% pageurl page.localized %}" rel="alternate" hreflang="{{ language_code }}">
            {{ lang.name_local }}
        </a>
    {% endlanguage %}
{% endfor %}

Let’s break this down too:

{% for language_code, language_name in LANGUAGES %}
    ...
{% endfor %}

This for block iterates through all of the configured languages on the site. The LANGUAGES variable comes from the django.template.context_processors.i18n context processor.

{% get_language_info for language_code as lang %}

Does exactly the same as the previous example.

{% language language_code %}
    ...
{% endlanguage %}

This language tag comes from Django’s i18n tag library. It changes the active language for just the code contained within it.

<a href="{% pageurl page.localized %}" rel="alternate" hreflang="{{ language_code }}">
    {{ lang.name_local }}
</a>

The only difference with the <a> tag here from the <a> tag in the previous example is how we’re getting the page’s URL: {% pageurl page.localized %}.

All page instances in Wagtail have a .localized attribute which fetches the translation of the page in the current active language. This is why we activated the language previously.

Another difference here is that if the same translated page is shared in two locales, Wagtail will generate the correct URL for the page based on the current active locale. This is the key difference between this example and the previous one as the previous one can only get the URL of the page in its default locale.

API filters for headless sites

For headless sites, the Wagtail API supports two extra filters for internationalised sites:

  • ?locale= Filters pages by the given locale
  • ?translation_of= Filters pages to only include translations of the given page ID

For more information, see Special filters for internationalised sites.

Translatable snippets

You can make a snippet translatable by making it inherit from wagtail.core.models.TranslatableMixin. For example:

# myapp/models.py

from django.db import models

from wagtail.core.models import TranslatableMixin
from wagtail.snippets.models import register_snippet


@register_snippet
class Advert(TranslatableMixin, models.Model):
    name = models.CharField(max_length=255)

The TranslatableMixin model adds the locale and translation_key fields to the model.

Making snippets with existing data translatable

For snippets with existing data, it’s not possible to just add TranslatableMixin, make a migration, and run it. This is because the locale and translation_key fields are both required and translation_key needs a unique value for each instance.

To migrate the existing data properly, we firstly need to use BootstrapTranslatableMixin, which excludes these constraints, then add a data migration to set the two fields, then switch to TranslatableMixin.

This is only needed if there are records in the database. So if the model is empty, you can go straight to adding TranslatableMixin and skip this.

Step 1: Add BootstrapTranslatableMixin to the model

This will add the two fields without any constraints:

# myapp/models.py

from django.db import models

from wagtail.core.models import BootstrapTranslatableMixin
from wagtail.snippets.models import register_snippet


@register_snippet
class Advert(BootstrapTranslatableMixin, models.Model):
    name = models.CharField(max_length=255)

    # if the model has a Meta class, ensure it inherits from
    # BootstrapTranslatableMixin.Meta too
    class Meta(BootstrapTranslatableMixin.Meta):
        verbose_name = 'adverts'

Run python manage.py makemigrations myapp to generate the schema migration.

Step 2: Create a data migration

Create a data migration with the following command:

python manage.py makemigrations myapp --empty

This will generate a new empty migration in the app’s migrations folder. Edit that migration and add a BootstrapTranslatableModel for each model to bootstrap in that app:

from django.db import migrations
from wagtail.core.models import BootstrapTranslatableModel

class Migration(migrations.Migration):
    dependencies = [
        ('myapp', '0002_bootstraptranslations'),
    ]

    # Add one operation for each model to bootstrap here
    # Note: Only include models that are in the same app!
    operations = [
        BootstrapTranslatableModel('myapp.Advert'),
    ]

Repeat this for any other apps that contain a model to be bootstrapped.

Step 3: Change BootstrapTranslatableMixin to TranslatableMixin

Now that we have a migration that fills in the required fields, we can swap out BootstrapTranslatableMixin for TranslatableMixin that has all the constraints:

# myapp/models.py

from wagtail.core.models import TranslatableMixin  # Change this line

@register_snippet
class Advert(TranslatableMixin, models.Model):  # Change this line
    name = models.CharField(max_length=255)

    class Meta(TranslatableMixin.Meta):  # Change this line, if present
        verbose_name = 'adverts'
Step 4: Run makemigrations to generate schema migrations, then migrate!

Run makemigrations to generate the schema migration that adds the constraints into the database, then run migrate to run all of the migrations:

python manage.py makemigrations myapp
python manage.py migrate

When prompted to select a fix for the nullable field ‘locale’ being changed to non-nullable, select the option “Ignore for now” (as this has been handled by the data migration).

Translation workflow

As mentioned at the beginning, Wagtail does supply wagtail.contrib.simple_translation.

The simple_translation module provides a user interface that allows users to copy pages and translatable snippets into another language.

  • Copies are created in the source language (not translated)
  • Copies of pages are in draft status

Content editors need to translate the content and publish the pages.

To enable add "wagtail.contrib.simple_translation" to INSTALLED_APPS and run python manage.py migrate to create the submit_translation permissions. In the Wagtail admin, go to settings and give some users or groups the “Can submit translations” permission.

Note

Simple Translation is optional. It can be switched out by third-party packages. Like the more advanced wagtail-localize.

Wagtail Localize

As part of the initial work on implementing internationalisation for Wagtail core, we also created a translation package called wagtail-localize. This supports translating pages within Wagtail, using PO files, machine translation, and external integration with translation services.

Github: https://github.com/wagtail/wagtail-localize

Alternative internationalisation plugins

Before official multi-language support was added into Wagtail, site implementors had to use external plugins. These have not been replaced by Wagtail’s own implementation as they use slightly different approaches, one of them might fit your use case better:

For a comparison of these options, see AccordBox’s blog post How to support multi-language in Wagtail CMS.

Wagtail admin translations

The Wagtail admin backend has been translated into many different languages. You can find a list of currently available translations on Wagtail’s Transifex page. (Note: if you’re using an old version of Wagtail, this page may not accurately reflect what languages you have available).

If your language isn’t listed on that page, you can easily contribute new languages or correct mistakes. Sign up and submit changes to Transifex. Translation updates are typically merged into an official release within one month of being submitted.

Change Wagtail admin language on a per-user basis

Logged-in users can set their preferred language from /admin/account/. By default, Wagtail provides a list of languages that have a >= 90% translation coverage. It is possible to override this list via the WAGTAILADMIN_PERMITTED_LANGUAGES setting.

In case there is zero or one language permitted, the form will be hidden.

If there is no language selected by the user, the LANGUAGE_CODE will be used.

Changing the primary language of your Wagtail installation

The default language of Wagtail is en-us (American English). You can change this by tweaking a couple of Django settings:

If there is a translation available for your language, the Wagtail admin backend should now be in the language you’ve chosen.

Private pages

Users with publish permission on a page can set it to be private by clicking the ‘Privacy’ control in the top right corner of the page explorer or editing interface. This sets a restriction on who is allowed to view the page and its sub-pages. Several different kinds of restriction are available:

  • Accessible to logged-in users: The user must log in to view the page. All user accounts are granted access, regardless of permission level.
  • Accessible with the following password: The user must enter the given password to view the page. This is appropriate for situations where you want to share a page with a trusted group of people, but giving them individual user accounts would be overkill. The same password is shared between all users, and this works independently of any user accounts that exist on the site.
  • Accessible to users in specific groups: The user must be logged in, and a member of one or more of the specified groups, in order to view the page.

Similarly, documents can be made private by placing them in a collection with appropriate privacy settings (see Image / document permissions).

Private pages and documents work on Wagtail out of the box - the site implementer does not need to do anything to set them up. However, the default “log in” and “password required” forms are only bare-bones HTML pages, and site implementers may wish to replace them with a page customised to their site design.

Setting up a login page

The basic login page can be customised by setting WAGTAIL_FRONTEND_LOGIN_TEMPLATE to the path of a template you wish to use:

WAGTAIL_FRONTEND_LOGIN_TEMPLATE = 'myapp/login.html'

Wagtail uses Django’s standard django.contrib.auth.views.LoginView view here, and so the context variables available on the template are as detailed in Django's login view documentation.

If the stock Django login view is not suitable - for example, you wish to use an external authentication system, or you are integrating Wagtail into an existing Django site that already has a working login view - you can specify the URL of the login view via the WAGTAIL_FRONTEND_LOGIN_URL setting:

WAGTAIL_FRONTEND_LOGIN_URL = '/accounts/login/'

To integrate Wagtail into a Django site with an existing login mechanism, setting WAGTAIL_FRONTEND_LOGIN_URL = LOGIN_URL will usually be sufficient.

Setting up a global “password required” page

By setting PASSWORD_REQUIRED_TEMPLATE in your Django settings file, you can specify the path of a template which will be used for all “password required” forms on the site (except for page types that specifically override it - see below):

PASSWORD_REQUIRED_TEMPLATE = 'myapp/password_required.html'

This template will receive the same set of context variables that the blocked page would pass to its own template via get_context() - including page to refer to the page object itself - plus the following additional variables (which override any of the page’s own context variables of the same name):

  • form - A Django form object for the password prompt; this will contain a field named password as its only visible field. A number of hidden fields may also be present, so the page must loop over form.hidden_fields if not using one of Django’s rendering helpers such as form.as_p.
  • action_url - The URL that the password form should be submitted to, as a POST request.

A basic template suitable for use as PASSWORD_REQUIRED_TEMPLATE might look like this:

<!DOCTYPE HTML>
<html>
    <head>
        <title>Password required</title>
    </head>
    <body>
        <h1>Password required</h1>
        <p>You need a password to access this page.</p>
        <form action="{{ action_url }}" method="POST">
            {% csrf_token %}

            {{ form.non_field_errors }}

            <div>
                {{ form.password.errors }}
                {{ form.password.label_tag }}
                {{ form.password }}
            </div>

            {% for field in form.hidden_fields %}
                {{ field }}
            {% endfor %}
            <input type="submit" value="Continue" />
        </form>
    </body>
</html>

Password restrictions on documents use a separate template, specified through the setting DOCUMENT_PASSWORD_REQUIRED_TEMPLATE; this template also receives the context variables form and action_url as described above.

Setting a “password required” page for a specific page type

The attribute password_required_template can be defined on a page model to use a custom template for the “password required” view, for that page type only. For example, if a site had a page type for displaying embedded videos along with a description, it might choose to use a custom “password required” template that displays the video description as usual, but shows the password form in place of the video embed.

class VideoPage(Page):
    ...

    password_required_template = 'video/password_required.html'

Customising Wagtail

Customising the editing interface
Customising the tabbed interface

As standard, Wagtail organises panels for pages into three tabs: ‘Content’, ‘Promote’ and ‘Settings’. For snippets Wagtail puts all panels into one page. Depending on the requirements of your site, you may wish to customise this for specific page types or snippets - for example, adding an additional tab for sidebar content. This can be done by specifying an edit_handler attribute on the page or snippet model. For example:

from wagtail.admin.edit_handlers import TabbedInterface, ObjectList

class BlogPage(Page):
    # field definitions omitted

    content_panels = [
        FieldPanel('title', classname="full title"),
        FieldPanel('date'),
        FieldPanel('body', classname="full"),
    ]
    sidebar_content_panels = [
        SnippetChooserPanel('advert'),
        InlinePanel('related_links', label="Related links"),
    ]

    edit_handler = TabbedInterface([
        ObjectList(content_panels, heading='Content'),
        ObjectList(sidebar_content_panels, heading='Sidebar content'),
        ObjectList(Page.promote_panels, heading='Promote'),
        ObjectList(Page.settings_panels, heading='Settings', classname="settings"),
    ])
Rich Text (HTML)

Wagtail provides a general-purpose WYSIWYG editor for creating rich text content (HTML) and embedding media such as images, video, and documents. To include this in your models, use the RichTextField function when defining a model field:

from wagtail.core.fields import RichTextField
from wagtail.admin.edit_handlers import FieldPanel


class BookPage(Page):
    body = RichTextField()

    content_panels = Page.content_panels + [
        FieldPanel('body', classname="full"),
    ]

RichTextField inherits from Django’s basic TextField field, so you can pass any field parameters into RichTextField as if using a normal Django field. This field does not need a special panel and can be defined with FieldPanel.

However, template output from RichTextField is special and needs to be filtered in order to preserve embedded content. See Rich text (filter).

Limiting features in a rich text field

By default, the rich text editor provides users with a wide variety of options for text formatting and inserting embedded content such as images. However, we may wish to restrict a rich text field to a more limited set of features - for example:

  • The field might be intended for a short text snippet, such as a summary to be pulled out on index pages, where embedded images or videos would be inappropriate;
  • When page content is defined using StreamField, elements such as headings, images and videos are usually given their own block types, alongside a rich text block type used for ordinary paragraph text; in this case, allowing headings and images to also exist within the rich text content is redundant (and liable to result in inconsistent designs).

This can be achieved by passing a features keyword argument to RichTextField, with a list of identifiers for the features you wish to allow:

body = RichTextField(features=['h2', 'h3', 'bold', 'italic', 'link'])

The feature identifiers provided on a default Wagtail installation are as follows:

  • h1, h2, h3, h4, h5, h6 - heading elements
  • bold, italic - bold / italic text
  • ol, ul - ordered / unordered lists
  • hr - horizontal rules
  • link - page, external and email links
  • document-link - links to documents
  • image - embedded images
  • embed - embedded media (see Embedded content)

We have few additional feature identifiers as well. They are not enabled by default, but you can use them in your list of identifiers. These are as follows:

  • code - inline code
  • superscript, subscript, strikethrough - text formatting
  • blockquote - blockquote

The process for creating new features is described in the following pages:

Image Formats in the Rich Text Editor

On loading, Wagtail will search for any app with the file image_formats.py and execute the contents. This provides a way to customise the formatting options shown to the editor when inserting images in the RichTextField editor.

As an example, add a “thumbnail” format:

# image_formats.py
from wagtail.images.formats import Format, register_image_format

register_image_format(Format('thumbnail', 'Thumbnail', 'richtext-image thumbnail', 'max-120x120'))

To begin, import the Format class, register_image_format function, and optionally unregister_image_format function. To register a new Format, call the register_image_format with the Format object as the argument. The Format class takes the following constructor arguments:

name
The unique key used to identify the format. To unregister this format, call unregister_image_format with this string as the only argument.
label
The label used in the chooser form when inserting the image into the RichTextField.
classnames

The string to assign to the class attribute of the generated <img> tag.

Note

Any class names you provide must have CSS rules matching them written separately, as part of the front end CSS code. Specifying a classnames value of left will only ensure that class is output in the generated markup, it won’t cause the image to align itself left.

filter_spec
The string specification to create the image rendition. For more, see the How to use images in templates.

To unregister, call unregister_image_format with the string of the name of the Format as the only argument.

Warning

Unregistering Format objects will cause errors viewing or editing pages that reference them.

Customising generated forms
class wagtail.admin.forms.WagtailAdminModelForm
class wagtail.admin.forms.WagtailAdminPageForm

Wagtail automatically generates forms using the panels configured on the model. By default, this form subclasses WagtailAdminModelForm, or WagtailAdminPageForm for pages. A custom base form class can be configured by setting the base_form_class attribute on any model. Custom forms for snippets must subclass WagtailAdminModelForm, and custom forms for pages must subclass WagtailAdminPageForm.

This can be used to add non-model fields to the form, to automatically generate field content, or to add custom validation logic for your models:

from django import forms
from django.db import models
import geocoder  # not in Wagtail, for example only - https://geocoder.readthedocs.io/
from wagtail.admin.edit_handlers import FieldPanel
from wagtail.admin.forms import WagtailAdminPageForm
from wagtail.core.models import Page


class EventPageForm(WagtailAdminPageForm):
    address = forms.CharField()

    def clean(self):
        cleaned_data = super().clean()

        # Make sure that the event starts before it ends
        start_date = cleaned_data['start_date']
        end_date = cleaned_data['end_date']
        if start_date and end_date and start_date > end_date:
            self.add_error('end_date', 'The end date must be after the start date')

        return cleaned_data

    def save(self, commit=True):
        page = super().save(commit=False)

        # Update the duration field from the submitted dates
        page.duration = (page.end_date - page.start_date).days

        # Fetch the location by geocoding the address
        page.location = geocoder.arcgis(self.cleaned_data['address'])

        if commit:
            page.save()
        return page


class EventPage(Page):
    start_date = models.DateField()
    end_date = models.DateField()
    duration = models.IntegerField()
    location = models.CharField(max_length=255)

    content_panels = [
        FieldPanel('title'),
        FieldPanel('start_date'),
        FieldPanel('end_date'),
        FieldPanel('address'),
    ]
    base_form_class = EventPageForm

Wagtail will generate a new subclass of this form for the model, adding any fields defined in panels or content_panels. Any fields already defined on the model will not be overridden by these automatically added fields, so the form field for a model field can be overridden by adding it to the custom form.

Customising admin templates

In your projects with Wagtail, you may wish to replace elements such as the Wagtail logo within the admin interface with your own branding. This can be done through Django’s template inheritance mechanism.

You need to create a templates/wagtailadmin/ folder within one of your apps - this may be an existing one, or a new one created for this purpose, for example, dashboard. This app must be registered in INSTALLED_APPS before wagtail.admin:

INSTALLED_APPS = (
    # ...

    'dashboard',

    'wagtail.core',
    'wagtail.admin',

    # ...
)
Custom branding

The template blocks that are available to customise the branding in the admin interface are as follows:

branding_favicon

To replace the favicon displayed when viewing admin pages, create a template file dashboard/templates/wagtailadmin/admin_base.html that overrides the block branding_favicon:

{% extends "wagtailadmin/admin_base.html" %}
{% load static %}

{% block branding_favicon %}
    <link rel="shortcut icon" href="{% static 'images/favicon.ico' %}" />
{% endblock %}
branding_title

To replace the title prefix (which is ‘Wagtail’ by default), create a template file dashboard/templates/wagtailadmin/admin_base.html that overrides the block branding_title:

{% extends "wagtailadmin/admin_base.html" %}

{% block branding_title %}Frank's CMS{% endblock %}
branding_login

To replace the login message, create a template file dashboard/templates/wagtailadmin/login.html that overrides the block branding_login:

{% extends "wagtailadmin/login.html" %}

{% block branding_login %}Sign in to Frank's Site{% endblock %}
branding_welcome

To replace the welcome message on the dashboard, create a template file dashboard/templates/wagtailadmin/home.html that overrides the block branding_welcome:

{% extends "wagtailadmin/home.html" %}

{% block branding_welcome %}Welcome to Frank's Site{% endblock %}
Custom user interface colors

Warning

The default Wagtail colors conform to the WCAG2.1 AA level color contrast requirements. When customizing the admin colors you should test the contrast using tools like Axe.

To customize the primary color used in the admin user interface, inject a CSS file using the hook insert_global_admin_css and override the variables within the :root selector:

:root {
    --color-primary-hue: 25;
}

color-primary is an hsl color composed of 3 CSS variables - --color-primary-hue (0-360 with no unit), --color-primary-saturation (a percentage), and --color-primary-lightness (also a percentage). Separating the color into 3 allows us to calculate variations on the color to use alongside the primary color. If needed, you can also control those variations manually by setting hue, saturation, and lightness variables for the following colors: color-primary-darker, color-primary-dark, color-primary-lighter, color-primary-light, color-input-focus, and color-input-focus-border:

:root {
    --color-primary-hue: 25;
    --color-primary-saturation: 100%;
    --color-primary-lightness: 25%;
    --color-primary-darker-hue: 24;
    --color-primary-darker-saturation: 100%;
    --color-primary-darker-lightness: 20%;
    --color-primary-dark-hue: 23;
    --color-primary-dark-saturation: 100%;
    --color-primary-dark-lightness: 15%;
}

If instead you intend to set all available colors, you can use any valid css colors:

:root {
    --color-primary: mediumaquamarine;
    --color-primary-darker: rebeccapurple;
    --color-primary-dark: hsl(330, 100%, 70%);
    --color-primary-lighter: azure;
    --color-primary-light: aliceblue;
    --color-input-focus: rgb(204, 0, 102);
    --color-input-focus-border: #4d0026;
}
Specifying a site or page in the branding

The admin interface has a number of variables available to the renderer context that can be used to customize the branding in the admin page. These can be useful for customizing the dashboard on a multitenanted Wagtail installation:

root_page

Returns the highest explorable page object for the currently logged in user. If the user has no explore rights, this will default to None.

root_site

Returns the name on the site record for the above root page.

site_name

Returns the value of root_site, unless it evaluates to None. In that case, it will return the value of settings.WAGTAIL_SITE_NAME.

To use these variables, create a template file dashboard/templates/wagtailadmin/home.html, just as if you were overriding one of the template blocks in the dashboard, and use them as you would any other Django template variable:

{% extends "wagtailadmin/home.html" %}

{% block branding_welcome %}Welcome to the Admin Homepage for {{ root_site }}{% endblock %}
Extending the login form

To add extra controls to the login form, create a template file dashboard/templates/wagtailadmin/login.html.

above_login and below_login

To add content above or below the login form, override these blocks:

{% extends "wagtailadmin/login.html" %}

{% block above_login %} If you are not Frank you should not be here! {% endblock %}
fields

To add extra fields to the login form, override the fields block. You will need to add {{ block.super }} somewhere in your block to include the username and password fields:

{% extends "wagtailadmin/login.html" %}

{% block fields %}
    {{ block.super }}
    <li class="full">
        <div class="field iconfield">
            Two factor auth token
            <div class="input icon-key">
                <input type="text" name="two-factor-auth">
            </div>
        </div>
    </li>
{% endblock %}
submit_buttons

To add extra buttons to the login form, override the submit_buttons block. You will need to add {{ block.super }} somewhere in your block to include the sign in button:

{% extends "wagtailadmin/login.html" %}

{% block submit_buttons %}
    {{ block.super }}
    <a href="{% url 'signup' %}"><button type="button" class="button">{% trans 'Sign up' %}</button></a>
{% endblock %}
login_form

To completely customise the login form, override the login_form block. This block wraps the whole contents of the <form> element:

{% extends "wagtailadmin/login.html" %}

{% block login_form %}
    <p>Some extra form content</p>
    {{ block.super }}
{% endblock %}
Extending client-side components

Some of Wagtail’s admin interface is written as client-side JavaScript with React. In order to customise or extend those components, you may need to use React too, as well as other related libraries. To make this easier, Wagtail exposes its React-related dependencies as global variables within the admin. Here are the available packages:

// 'focus-trap-react'
window.FocusTrapReact;
// 'react'
window.React;
// 'react-dom'
window.ReactDOM;
// 'react-transition-group/CSSTransitionGroup'
window.CSSTransitionGroup;

Wagtail also exposes some of its own React components. You can reuse:

window.wagtail.components.Icon;
window.wagtail.components.Portal;

Pages containing rich text editors also have access to:

// 'draft-js'
window.DraftJS;
// 'draftail'
window.Draftail;

// Wagtail’s Draftail-related APIs and components.
window.draftail;
window.draftail.ModalWorkflowSource;
window.draftail.ImageModalWorkflowSource;
window.draftail.EmbedModalWorkflowSource;
window.draftail.LinkModalWorkflowSource;
window.draftail.DocumentModalWorkflowSource;
window.draftail.Tooltip;
window.draftail.TooltipEntity;
Custom user models
Custom user forms example

This example shows how to add a text field and foreign key field to a custom user model and configure Wagtail user forms to allow the fields values to be updated.

Create a custom user model. This must at minimum inherit from AbstractBaseUser and PermissionsMixin. In this case we extend the AbstractUser class and add two fields. The foreign key references another model (not shown).

from django.contrib.auth.models import AbstractUser

class User(AbstractUser):
    country = models.CharField(verbose_name='country', max_length=255)
    status = models.ForeignKey(MembershipStatus, on_delete=models.SET_NULL, null=True, default=1)

Add the app containing your user model to INSTALLED_APPS - it must be above the 'wagtail.users' line, in order to override Wagtail’s built-in templates - and set AUTH_USER_MODEL to reference your model. In this example the app is called users and the model is User

AUTH_USER_MODEL = 'users.User'

Create your custom user ‘create’ and ‘edit’ forms in your app:

from django import forms
from django.utils.translation import gettext_lazy as _

from wagtail.users.forms import UserEditForm, UserCreationForm

from users.models import MembershipStatus


class CustomUserEditForm(UserEditForm):
    country = forms.CharField(required=True, label=_("Country"))
    status = forms.ModelChoiceField(queryset=MembershipStatus.objects, required=True, label=_("Status"))


class CustomUserCreationForm(UserCreationForm):
    country = forms.CharField(required=True, label=_("Country"))
    status = forms.ModelChoiceField(queryset=MembershipStatus.objects, required=True, label=_("Status"))

Extend the Wagtail user ‘create’ and ‘edit’ templates. These extended templates should be placed in a template directory wagtailusers/users.

Template create.html:

{% extends "wagtailusers/users/create.html" %}

{% block extra_fields %}
    {% include "wagtailadmin/shared/field_as_li.html" with field=form.country %}
    {% include "wagtailadmin/shared/field_as_li.html" with field=form.status %}
{% endblock extra_fields %}

Template edit.html:

{% extends "wagtailusers/users/edit.html" %}

{% block extra_fields %}
    {% include "wagtailadmin/shared/field_as_li.html" with field=form.country %}
    {% include "wagtailadmin/shared/field_as_li.html" with field=form.status %}
{% endblock extra_fields %}

The extra_fields block allows fields to be inserted below the last_name field in the default templates. Other block overriding options exist to allow appending fields to the end or beginning of the existing fields, or to allow all the fields to be redefined.

Add the wagtail settings to your project to reference the user form additions:

WAGTAIL_USER_EDIT_FORM = 'users.forms.CustomUserEditForm'
WAGTAIL_USER_CREATION_FORM = 'users.forms.CustomUserCreationForm'
WAGTAIL_USER_CUSTOM_FIELDS = ['country', 'status']
How to build custom StreamField blocks
Custom editing interfaces for StructBlock

To customise the styling of a StructBlock as it appears in the page editor, you can specify a form_classname attribute (either as a keyword argument to the StructBlock constructor, or in a subclass’s Meta) to override the default value of struct-block:

class PersonBlock(blocks.StructBlock):
    first_name = blocks.CharBlock()
    surname = blocks.CharBlock()
    photo = ImageChooserBlock(required=False)
    biography = blocks.RichTextBlock()

    class Meta:
        icon = 'user'
        form_classname = 'person-block struct-block'

You can then provide custom CSS for this block, targeted at the specified classname, by using the insert_editor_css hook.

Note

Wagtail’s editor styling has some built in styling for the struct-block class and other related elements. If you specify a value for form_classname, it will overwrite the classes that are already applied to StructBlock, so you must remember to specify the struct-block as well.

For more extensive customisations that require changes to the HTML markup as well, you can override the form_template attribute in Meta to specify your own template path. The following variables are available on this template:

children
An OrderedDict of BoundBlocks for all of the child blocks making up this StructBlock.
help_text
The help text for this block, if specified.
classname
The class name passed as form_classname (defaults to struct-block).
block_definition
The StructBlock instance that defines this block.
prefix
The prefix used on form fields for this block instance, guaranteed to be unique across the form.

To add additional variables, you can override the block’s get_form_context method:

class PersonBlock(blocks.StructBlock):
    first_name = blocks.CharBlock()
    surname = blocks.CharBlock()
    photo = ImageChooserBlock(required=False)
    biography = blocks.RichTextBlock()

    def get_form_context(self, value, prefix='', errors=None):
        context = super().get_form_context(value, prefix=prefix, errors=errors)
        context['suggested_first_names'] = ['John', 'Paul', 'George', 'Ringo']
        return context

    class Meta:
        icon = 'user'
        form_template = 'myapp/block_forms/person.html'

A form template for a StructBlock must include the output of render_form for each child block in the children dict, inside a container element with a data-contentpath attribute equal to the block’s name. This attribute is used by the commenting framework to attach comments to the correct fields. The StructBlock’s form template is also responsible for rendering labels for each field, but this (and all other HTML markup) can be customised as you see fit. The template below replicates the default StructBlock form rendering:

{% load wagtailadmin_tags  %}

<div class="{{ classname }}">
    {% if help_text %}
        <span>
            <div class="help">
                {% icon name="help" class_name="default" %}
                {{ help_text }}
            </div>
        </span>
    {% endif %}

    {% for child in children.values %}
        <div class="field {% if child.block.required %}required{% endif %}" data-contentpath="{{ child.block.name }}">
            {% if child.block.label %}
                <label class="field__label" {% if child.id_for_label %}for="{{ child.id_for_label }}"{% endif %}>{{ child.block.label }}</label>
            {% endif %}
            {{ child.render_form }}
        </div>
    {% endfor %}
</div>

New in version 2.13: The data-contentpath attribute is now required on a containing element around the render_form output.

Additional JavaScript on StructBlock forms

Often it may be desirable to attach custom JavaScript behaviour to a StructBlock form. For example, given a block such as:

class AddressBlock(StructBlock):
    street = CharBlock()
    town = CharBlock()
    state = CharBlock(required=False)
    country = ChoiceBlock(choices=[
        ('us', 'United States'),
        ('ca', 'Canada'),
        ('mx', 'Mexico'),
    ])

we may wish to disable the ‘state’ field when a country other than United States is selected. Since new blocks can be added dynamically, we need to integrate with StreamField’s own front-end logic to ensure that our custom JavaScript code is executed when a new block is initialised.

StreamField uses the telepath library to map Python block classes such as StructBlock to a corresponding JavaScript implementation. These JavaScript implementations can be accessed through the window.wagtailStreamField.blocks namespace, as the following classes:

  • FieldBlockDefinition
  • ListBlockDefinition
  • StaticBlockDefinition
  • StreamBlockDefinition
  • StructBlockDefinition

First, we define a telepath adapter for AddressBlock, so that it uses our own JavaScript class in place of the default StructBlockDefinition. This can be done in the same module as the AddressBlock definition:

from wagtail.core.blocks.struct_block import StructBlockAdapter
from wagtail.core.telepath import register
from django import forms
from django.utils.functional import cached_property

class AddressBlockAdapter(StructBlockAdapter):
    js_constructor = 'myapp.blocks.AddressBlock'

    @cached_property
    def media(self):
        structblock_media = super().media
        return forms.Media(
            js=structblock_media._js + ['js/address-block.js'],
            css=structblock_media._css
        )

register(AddressBlockAdapter(), AddressBlock)

Here 'myapp.blocks.AddressBlock' is the identifier for our JavaScript class that will be registered with the telepath client-side code, and 'js/address-block.js' is the file that defines it (as a path within any static file location recognised by Django). This implementation subclasses StructBlockDefinition and adds our custom code to the render method:

class AddressBlockDefinition extends window.wagtailStreamField.blocks.StructBlockDefinition {
    render(placeholder, prefix, initialState, initialError) {
        const block = super.render(placeholder, prefix, initialState, initialError);

        const stateField = $(document).find('#' + prefix + '-state');
        const countryField = $(document).find('#' + prefix + '-country');
        const updateStateInput = () => {
            if (countryField.val() == 'us') {
                stateField.removeAttr('disabled');
            } else {
                stateField.attr('disabled', true);
            }
        }
        updateStateInput();
        countryField.on('change', updateStateInput);

        return block;
    }
}
window.telepath.register('myapp.blocks.AddressBlock', AddressBlockDefinition);
Additional methods and properties on StructBlock values

When rendering StreamField content on a template, StructBlock values are represented as dict-like objects where the keys correspond to the names of the child blocks. Specifically, these values are instances of the class wagtail.core.blocks.StructValue.

Sometimes, it’s desirable to make additional methods or properties available on this object. For example, given a StructBlock that represents either an internal or external link:

class LinkBlock(StructBlock):
    text = CharBlock(label="link text", required=True)
    page = PageChooserBlock(label="page", required=False)
    external_url = URLBlock(label="external URL", required=False)

you may want to make a url property available, that returns either the page URL or external URL depending which one was filled in. A common mistake is to define this property on the block class itself:

class LinkBlock(StructBlock):
    text = CharBlock(label="link text", required=True)
    page = PageChooserBlock(label="page", required=False)
    external_url = URLBlock(label="external URL", required=False)

    @property
    def url(self):  # INCORRECT - will not work
        return self.external_url or self.page.url

This does not work because the value as seen in the template is not an instance of LinkBlock. StructBlock instances only serve as specifications for the block’s behaviour, and do not hold block data in their internal state - in this respect, they are similar to Django’s form widget objects (which provide methods for rendering a given value as a form field, but do not hold on to the value itself).

Instead, you should define a subclass of StructValue that implements your custom property or method. Within this method, the block’s data can be accessed as self['page'] or self.get('page'), since StructValue is a dict-like object.

from wagtail.core.blocks import StructValue


class LinkStructValue(StructValue):
    def url(self):
        external_url = self.get('external_url')
        page = self.get('page')
        return external_url or page.url

Once this is defined, set the block’s value_class option to instruct it to use this class rather than a plain StructValue:

class LinkBlock(StructBlock):
    text = CharBlock(label="link text", required=True)
    page = PageChooserBlock(label="page", required=False)
    external_url = URLBlock(label="external URL", required=False)

    class Meta:
        value_class = LinkStructValue

Your extended value class methods will now be available in your template:

{% for block in page.body %}
    {% if block.block_type == 'link' %}
        <a href="{{ link.value.url }}">{{ link.value.text }}</a>
    {% endif %}
{% endfor %}
Custom block types

If you need to implement a custom UI, or handle a datatype that is not provided by Wagtail’s built-in block types (and cannot be built up as a structure of existing fields), it is possible to define your own custom block types. For further guidance, refer to the source code of Wagtail’s built-in block classes.

For block types that simply wrap an existing Django form field, Wagtail provides an abstract class wagtail.core.blocks.FieldBlock as a helper. Subclasses should set a field property that returns the form field object:

class IPAddressBlock(FieldBlock):
    def __init__(self, required=True, help_text=None, **kwargs):
        self.field = forms.GenericIPAddressField(required=required, help_text=help_text)
        super().__init__(**kwargs)

Since the StreamField editing interface needs to create blocks dynamically, certain complex widget types will need additional JavaScript code to define how to render and populate them on the client-side. If a field uses a widget type that does not inherit from one of the classes inheriting from django.forms.widgets.Input, django.forms.Textarea, django.forms.Select or django.forms.RadioSelect, or has customised client-side behaviour to the extent where it is not possible to read or write its data simply by accessing the form element’s value property, you will need to provide a JavaScript handler object, implementing the methods detailed on Form widget client-side API.

Handling block definitions within migrations

As with any model field in Django, any changes to a model definition that affect a StreamField will result in a migration file that contains a ‘frozen’ copy of that field definition. Since a StreamField definition is more complex than a typical model field, there is an increased likelihood of definitions from your project being imported into the migration – which would cause problems later on if those definitions are moved or deleted.

To mitigate this, StructBlock, StreamBlock and ChoiceBlock implement additional logic to ensure that any subclasses of these blocks are deconstructed to plain instances of StructBlock, StreamBlock and ChoiceBlock – in this way, the migrations avoid having any references to your custom class definitions. This is possible because these block types provide a standard pattern for inheritance, and know how to reconstruct the block definition for any subclass that follows that pattern.

If you subclass any other block class, such as FieldBlock, you will need to either keep that class definition in place for the lifetime of your project, or implement a custom deconstruct method that expresses your block entirely in terms of classes that are guaranteed to remain in place. Similarly, if you customise a StructBlock, StreamBlock or ChoiceBlock subclass to the point where it can no longer be expressed as an instance of the basic block type – for example, if you add extra arguments to the constructor – you will need to provide your own deconstruct method.

Third-party tutorials

Warning

The following list is a collection of tutorials and development notes from third-party developers. Some of the older links may not apply to the latest Wagtail versions.

You can also find more resources from the community on Awesome Wagtail.

Tip

We are working on a collection of Wagtail tutorials and best practices. Please tweet @WagtailCMS or contact us directly to share your Wagtail HOWTOs, development notes or site launches.

Testing your Wagtail site

Wagtail comes with some utilities that simplify writing tests for your site.

WagtailPageTests
class wagtail.tests.utils.WagtailPageTests

WagtailPageTests extends django.test.TestCase, adding a few new assert methods. You should extend this class to make use of its methods:

from wagtail.tests.utils import WagtailPageTests
from myapp.models import MyPage

class MyPageTests(WagtailPageTests):
    def test_can_create_a_page(self):
        ...
assertCanCreateAt(parent_model, child_model, msg=None)

Assert a particular child Page type can be created under a parent Page type. parent_model and child_model should be the Page classes being tested.

def test_can_create_under_home_page(self):
    # You can create a ContentPage under a HomePage
    self.assertCanCreateAt(HomePage, ContentPage)
assertCanNotCreateAt(parent_model, child_model, msg=None)

Assert a particular child Page type can not be created under a parent Page type. parent_model and child_model should be the Page classes being tested.

def test_cant_create_under_event_page(self):
    # You can not create a ContentPage under an EventPage
    self.assertCanNotCreateAt(EventPage, ContentPage)
assertCanCreate(parent, child_model, data, msg=None)

Assert that a child of the given Page type can be created under the parent, using the supplied POST data.

parent should be a Page instance, and child_model should be a Page subclass. data should be a dict that will be POSTed at the Wagtail admin Page creation method.

from wagtail.tests.utils.form_data import nested_form_data, streamfield

def test_can_create_content_page(self):
    # Get the HomePage
    root_page = HomePage.objects.get(pk=2)

    # Assert that a ContentPage can be made here, with this POST data
    self.assertCanCreate(root_page, ContentPage, nested_form_data({
        'title': 'About us',
        'body': streamfield([
            ('text', 'Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet'),
        ])
    }))

See Form data helpers for a set of functions useful for constructing POST data.

assertAllowedParentPageTypes(child_model, parent_models, msg=None)

Test that the only page types that child_model can be created under are parent_models.

The list of allowed parent models may differ from those set in Page.parent_page_types, if the parent models have set Page.subpage_types.

def test_content_page_parent_pages(self):
    # A ContentPage can only be created under a HomePage
    # or another ContentPage
    self.assertAllowedParentPageTypes(
        ContentPage, {HomePage, ContentPage})

    # An EventPage can only be created under an EventIndex
    self.assertAllowedParentPageTypes(
        EventPage, {EventIndex})
assertAllowedSubpageTypes(parent_model, child_models, msg=None)

Test that the only page types that can be created under parent_model are child_models.

The list of allowed child models may differ from those set in Page.subpage_types, if the child models have set Page.parent_page_types.

def test_content_page_subpages(self):
    # A ContentPage can only have other ContentPage children
    self.assertAllowedSubpageTypes(
        ContentPage, {ContentPage})

    # A HomePage can have ContentPage and EventIndex children
    self.assertAllowedParentPageTypes(
        HomePage, {ContentPage, EventIndex})
Form data helpers

The assertCanCreate method requires page data to be passed in the same format that the page edit form would submit. For complex page types, it can be difficult to construct this data structure by hand; the wagtail.tests.utils.form_data module provides a set of helper functions to assist with this.

wagtail.tests.utils.form_data.nested_form_data(data)

Translates a nested dict structure into a flat form data dict with hyphen-separated keys.

nested_form_data({
    'foo': 'bar',
    'parent': {
        'child': 'field',
    },
})
# Returns: {'foo': 'bar', 'parent-child': 'field'}
wagtail.tests.utils.form_data.rich_text(value, editor='default', features=None)

Converts an HTML-like rich text string to the data format required by the currently active rich text editor.

Parameters:
  • editor – An alternative editor name as defined in WAGTAILADMIN_RICH_TEXT_EDITORS
  • features – A list of features allowed in the rich text content (see Limiting features in a rich text field)
self.assertCanCreate(root_page, ContentPage, nested_form_data({
    'title': 'About us',
    'body': rich_text('<p>Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet</p>'),
}))
wagtail.tests.utils.form_data.streamfield(items)

Takes a list of (block_type, value) tuples and turns it in to StreamField form data. Use this within a nested_form_data() call, with the field name as the key.

nested_form_data({'content': streamfield([
    ('text', 'Hello, world'),
])})
# Returns:
# {
#     'content-count': '1',
#     'content-0-type': 'text',
#     'content-0-value': 'Hello, world',
#     'content-0-order': '0',
#     'content-0-deleted': '',
# }
wagtail.tests.utils.form_data.inline_formset(items, initial=0, min=0, max=1000)

Takes a list of form data for an InlineFormset and translates it in to valid POST data. Use this within a nested_form_data() call, with the formset relation name as the key.

nested_form_data({'lines': inline_formset([
    {'text': 'Hello'},
    {'text': 'World'},
])})
# Returns:
# {
#     'lines-TOTAL_FORMS': '2',
#     'lines-INITIAL_FORMS': '0',
#     'lines-MIN_NUM_FORMS': '0',
#     'lines-MAX_NUM_FORMS': '1000',
#     'lines-0-text': 'Hello',
#     'lines-0-ORDER': '0',
#     'lines-0-DELETE': '',
#     'lines-1-text': 'World',
#     'lines-1-ORDER': '1',
#     'lines-1-DELETE': '',
# }
Fixtures
Using dumpdata

Creating fixtures for tests is best done by creating content in a development environment, and using Django’s dumpdata command.

Note that by default dumpdata will represent content_type by the primary key; this may cause consistency issues when adding / removing models, as content types are populated separately from fixtures. To prevent this, use the --natural-foreign switch, which represents content types by ["app", "model"] instead.

Manual modification

You could modify the dumped fixtures manually, or even write them all by hand. Here are a few things to be wary of.

Custom Page models

When creating customised Page models in fixtures, you will need to add both a wagtailcore.page entry, and one for your custom Page model.

Let’s say you have a website module which defines a Homepage(Page) class. You could create such a homepage in a fixture with:

[
  {
    "model": "wagtailcore.page",
    "pk": 3,
    "fields": {
      "title": "My Customer's Homepage",
      "content_type": ["website", "homepage"],
      "depth": 2
    }
  },
  {
    "model": "website.homepage",
    "pk": 3,
    "fields": {}
  }
]
Treebeard fields

Filling in the path / numchild / depth fields is necessary in order for tree operations like get_parent() to work correctly. url_path is another field that can cause errors in some uncommon cases if it isn’t filled in.

The Treebeard docs might help in understanding how this works.

Wagtail API

The API module provides a public-facing, JSON-formatted API to allow retrieving content as raw field data. This is useful for cases like serving content to non-web clients (such as a mobile phone app) or pulling content out of Wagtail for use in another site.

See RFC 8: Wagtail API for full details on our stabilisation policy.

Wagtail API v2 Configuration Guide

This section of the docs will show you how to set up a public API for your Wagtail site.

Even though the API is built on Django REST Framework, you do not need to install this manually as it is already a dependency of Wagtail.

Basic configuration
Enable the app

Firstly, you need to enable Wagtail’s API app so Django can see it. Add wagtail.api.v2 to INSTALLED_APPS in your Django project settings:

# settings.py

INSTALLED_APPS = [
    ...

    'wagtail.api.v2',

    ...
]

Optionally, you may also want to add rest_framework to INSTALLED_APPS. This would make the API browsable when viewed from a web browser but is not required for basic JSON-formatted output.

Configure endpoints

Next, it’s time to configure which content will be exposed on the API. Each content type (such as pages, images and documents) has its own endpoint. Endpoints are combined by a router, which provides the url configuration you can hook into the rest of your project.

Wagtail provides three endpoint classes you can use:

  • Pages wagtail.api.v2.views.PagesAPIViewSet
  • Images wagtail.images.api.v2.views.ImagesAPIViewSet
  • Documents wagtail.documents.api.v2.views.DocumentsAPIViewSet

You can subclass any of these endpoint classes to customise their functionality. Additionally, there is a base endpoint class you can use for adding different content types to the API: wagtail.api.v2.views.BaseAPIViewSet

For this example, we will create an API that includes all three builtin content types in their default configuration:

# api.py

from wagtail.api.v2.views import PagesAPIViewSet
from wagtail.api.v2.router import WagtailAPIRouter
from wagtail.images.api.v2.views import ImagesAPIViewSet
from wagtail.documents.api.v2.views import DocumentsAPIViewSet

# Create the router. "wagtailapi" is the URL namespace
api_router = WagtailAPIRouter('wagtailapi')

# Add the three endpoints using the "register_endpoint" method.
# The first parameter is the name of the endpoint (eg. pages, images). This
# is used in the URL of the endpoint
# The second parameter is the endpoint class that handles the requests
api_router.register_endpoint('pages', PagesAPIViewSet)
api_router.register_endpoint('images', ImagesAPIViewSet)
api_router.register_endpoint('documents', DocumentsAPIViewSet)

Next, register the URLs so Django can route requests into the API:

# urls.py

from .api import api_router

urlpatterns = [
    ...

    path('api/v2/', api_router.urls),

    ...

    # Ensure that the api_router line appears above the default Wagtail page serving route
    re_path(r'^', include(wagtail_urls)),
]

With this configuration, pages will be available at /api/v2/pages/, images at /api/v2/images/ and documents at /api/v2/documents/

Adding custom page fields

It’s likely that you would need to export some custom fields over the API. This can be done by adding a list of fields to be exported into the api_fields attribute for each page model.

For example:

# blog/models.py

from wagtail.api import APIField

class BlogPageAuthor(Orderable):
    page = models.ForeignKey('blog.BlogPage', on_delete=models.CASCADE, related_name='authors')
    name = models.CharField(max_length=255)

    api_fields = [
        APIField('name'),
    ]


class BlogPage(Page):
    published_date = models.DateTimeField()
    body = RichTextField()
    feed_image = models.ForeignKey('wagtailimages.Image', on_delete=models.SET_NULL, null=True, ...)
    private_field = models.CharField(max_length=255)

    # Export fields over the API
    api_fields = [
        APIField('published_date'),
        APIField('body'),
        APIField('feed_image'),
        APIField('authors'),  # This will nest the relevant BlogPageAuthor objects in the API response
    ]

This will make published_date, body, feed_image and a list of authors with the name field available in the API. But to access these fields, you must select the blog.BlogPage type using the ?type parameter in the API itself.

Custom serialisers

Serialisers are used to convert the database representation of a model into JSON format. You can override the serialiser for any field using the serializer keyword argument:

from rest_framework.fields import DateField

class BlogPage(Page):
    ...

    api_fields = [
        # Change the format of the published_date field to "Thursday 06 April 2017"
        APIField('published_date', serializer=DateField(format='%A %d %B %Y')),
        ...
    ]

Django REST framework’s serializers can all take a source argument allowing you to add API fields that have a different field name or no underlying field at all:

from rest_framework.fields import DateField

class BlogPage(Page):
    ...

    api_fields = [
        # Date in ISO8601 format (the default)
        APIField('published_date'),

        # A separate published_date_display field with a different format
        APIField('published_date_display', serializer=DateField(format='%A $d %B %Y', source='published_date')),
        ...
    ]

This adds two fields to the API (other fields omitted for brevity):

{
    "published_date": "2017-04-06",
    "published_date_display": "Thursday 06 April 2017"
}
Images in the API

The ImageRenditionField serialiser allows you to add renditions of images into your API. It requires an image filter string specifying the resize operations to perform on the image. It can also take the source keyword argument described above.

For example:

from wagtail.images.api.fields import ImageRenditionField

class BlogPage(Page):
    ...

    api_fields = [
        # Adds information about the source image (eg, title) into the API
        APIField('feed_image'),

        # Adds a URL to a rendered thumbnail of the image to the API
        APIField('feed_image_thumbnail', serializer=ImageRenditionField('fill-100x100', source='feed_image')),
        ...
    ]

This would add the following to the JSON:

{
    "feed_image": {
        "id": 45529,
        "meta": {
            "type": "wagtailimages.Image",
            "detail_url": "http://www.example.com/api/v2/images/12/",
            "download_url": "/media/images/a_test_image.jpg",
            "tags": []
        },
        "title": "A test image",
        "width": 2000,
        "height": 1125
    },
    "feed_image_thumbnail": {
        "url": "/media/images/a_test_image.fill-100x100.jpg",
        "width": 100,
        "height": 100,
        "alt": "image alt text"
    }
}

Note: download_url is the original uploaded file path, whereas feed_image_thumbnail['url'] is the url of the rendered image. When you are using another storage backend, such as S3, download_url will return a URL to the image if your media files are properly configured.

Additional settings
WAGTAILAPI_BASE_URL

(required when using frontend cache invalidation)

This is used in two places, when generating absolute URLs to document files and invalidating the cache.

Generating URLs to documents will fall back the the current request’s hostname if this is not set. Cache invalidation cannot do this, however, so this setting must be set when using this module alongside the wagtailfrontendcache module.

WAGTAILAPI_SEARCH_ENABLED

(default: True)

Setting this to false will disable full text search. This applies to all endpoints.

WAGTAILAPI_LIMIT_MAX

(default: 20)

This allows you to change the maximum number of results a user can request at a time. This applies to all endpoints. Set to None for no limit.

Wagtail API v2 Usage Guide

The Wagtail API module exposes a public, read only, JSON-formatted API which can be used by external clients (such as a mobile app) or the site’s frontend.

This document is intended for developers using the API exposed by Wagtail. For documentation on how to enable the API module in your Wagtail site, see Wagtail API v2 Configuration Guide

Fetching content

To fetch content over the API, perform a GET request against one of the following endpoints:

  • Pages /api/v2/pages/
  • Images /api/v2/images/
  • Documents /api/v2/documents/

Note

The available endpoints and their URLs may vary from site to site, depending on how the API has been configured.

Example response

Each response contains the list of items (items) and the total count (meta.total_count). The total count is irrespective of pagination.

GET /api/v2/endpoint_name/

HTTP 200 OK
Content-Type: application/json

{
    "meta": {
        "total_count": "total number of results"
    },
    "items": [
        {
            "id": 1,
            "meta": {
                "type": "app_name.ModelName",
                "detail_url": "http://api.example.com/api/v2/endpoint_name/1/"
            },
            "field": "value"
        },
        {
            "id": 2,
            "meta": {
                "type": "app_name.ModelName",
                "detail_url": "http://api.example.com/api/v2/endpoint_name/2/"
            },
            "field": "different value"
        }
    ]
}
Custom page fields in the API

Wagtail sites contain many page types, each with their own set of fields. The pages endpoint will only expose the common fields by default (such as title and slug).

To access custom page fields with the API, select the page type with the ?type parameter. This will filter the results to only include pages of that type but will also make all the exported custom fields for that type available in the API.

For example, to access the published_date, body and authors fields on the blog.BlogPage model in the configuration docs:

GET /api/v2/pages/?type=blog.BlogPage&fields=published_date,body,authors(name)

HTTP 200 OK
Content-Type: application/json

{
    "meta": {
        "total_count": 10
    },
    "items": [
        {
            "id": 1,
            "meta": {
                "type": "blog.BlogPage",
                "detail_url": "http://api.example.com/api/v2/pages/1/",
                "html_url": "http://www.example.com/blog/my-blog-post/",
                "slug": "my-blog-post",
                "first_published_at": "2016-08-30T16:52:00Z"
            },
            "title": "Test blog post",
            "published_date": "2016-08-30",
            "authors": [
                {
                    "id": 1,
                    "meta": {
                        "type": "blog.BlogPageAuthor",
                    },
                    "name": "Karl Hobley"
                }
            ]
        },

        ...
    ]
}

Note

Only fields that have been explicitly exported by the developer may be used in the API. This is done by adding a api_fields attribute to the page model. You can read about configuration here.

This doesn’t apply to images/documents as there is only one model exposed in those endpoints. But for projects that have customised image/document models, the api_fields attribute can be used to export any custom fields into the API.

Ordering

The results can be ordered by any field by setting the ?order parameter to the name of the field to order by.

GET /api/v2/pages/?order=title

HTTP 200 OK
Content-Type: application/json

{
    "meta": {
        "total_count": 50
    },
    "items": [
        pages will be listed here in ascending title order (a-z)
    ]
}

The results will be ordered in ascending order by default. This can be changed to descending order by prefixing the field name with a - sign.

GET /api/v2/pages/?order=-title

HTTP 200 OK
Content-Type: application/json

{
    "meta": {
        "total_count": 50
    },
    "items": [
        pages will be listed here in descending title order (z-a)
    ]
}

Note

Ordering is case-sensitive so lowercase letters are always ordered after uppercase letters when in ascending order.

Random ordering

Passing random into the ?order parameter will make results return in a random order. If there is no caching, each request will return results in a different order.

GET /api/v2/pages/?order=random

HTTP 200 OK
Content-Type: application/json

{
    "meta": {
        "total_count": 50
    },
    "items": [
        pages will be listed here in random order
    ]
}

Note

It’s not possible to use ?offset while ordering randomly because consistent random ordering cannot be guaranteed over multiple requests (so requests for subsequent pages may return results that also appeared in previous pages).

Filtering

Any field may be used in an exact match filter. Use the filter name as the parameter and the value to match against.

For example, to find a page with the slug “about”:

GET /api/v2/pages/?slug=about

HTTP 200 OK
Content-Type: application/json

{
    "meta": {
        "total_count": 1
    },
    "items": [
        {
            "id": 10,
            "meta": {
                "type": "standard.StandardPage",
                "detail_url": "http://api.example.com/api/v2/pages/10/",
                "html_url": "http://www.example.com/about/",
                "slug": "about",
                "first_published_at": "2016-08-30T16:52:00Z"
            },
            "title": "About"
        },
    ]
}
Filtering by tree position (pages only)

Pages can additionally be filtered by their relation to other pages in the tree.

The ?child_of filter takes the id of a page and filters the list of results to contain only direct children of that page.

For example, this can be useful for constructing the main menu, by passing the id of the homepage to the filter:

GET /api/v2/pages/?child_of=2&show_in_menus=true

HTTP 200 OK
Content-Type: application/json

{
    "meta": {
        "total_count": 5
    },
    "items": [
        {
            "id": 3,
            "meta": {
                "type": "blog.BlogIndexPage",
                "detail_url": "http://api.example.com/api/v2/pages/3/",
                "html_url": "http://www.example.com/blog/",
                "slug": "blog",
                "first_published_at": "2016-09-21T13:54:00Z"
            },
            "title": "About"
        },
        {
            "id": 10,
            "meta": {
                "type": "standard.StandardPage",
                "detail_url": "http://api.example.com/api/v2/pages/10/",
                "html_url": "http://www.example.com/about/",
                "slug": "about",
                "first_published_at": "2016-08-30T16:52:00Z"
            },
            "title": "About"
        },

        ...
    ]
}

The ?ancestor_of filter takes the id of a page and filters the list to only include ancestors of that page (parent, grandparent etc.) all the way down to the site’s root page.

For example, when combined with the type filter it can be used to find the particular blog.BlogIndexPage a blog.BlogPage belongs to. By itself, it can be used to to construct a breadcrumb trail from the current page back to the site’s root page.

The ?descendant_of filter takes the id of a page and filter the list to only include descendants of that page (children, grandchildren etc.).

Special filters for internationalised sites

When WAGTAIL_I18N_ENABLED is set to True (see Enabling internationalisation for more details) two new filters are made available on the pages endpoint.

Filtering pages by locale

The ?locale= filter is used to filter the listing to only include pages in the specified locale. For example:

GET /api/v2/pages/?locale=en-us

HTTP 200 OK
Content-Type: application/json

{
    "meta": {
        "total_count": 5
    },
    "items": [
        {
            "id": 10,
            "meta": {
                "type": "standard.StandardPage",
                "detail_url": "http://api.example.com/api/v2/pages/10/",
                "html_url": "http://www.example.com/usa-page/",
                "slug": "usa-page",
                "first_published_at": "2016-08-30T16:52:00Z",
                "locale": "en-us"
            },
            "title": "American page"
        },

        ...
    ]
}
Getting translations of a page

The ?translation_of filter is used to filter the listing to only include pages that are a translation of the specified page ID. For example:

GET /api/v2/pages/?translation_of=10

HTTP 200 OK
Content-Type: application/json

{
    "meta": {
        "total_count": 2
    },
    "items": [
        {
            "id": 11,
            "meta": {
                "type": "standard.StandardPage",
                "detail_url": "http://api.example.com/api/v2/pages/11/",
                "html_url": "http://www.example.com/gb-page/",
                "slug": "gb-page",
                "first_published_at": "2016-08-30T16:52:00Z",
                "locale": "en-gb"
            },
            "title": "British page"
        },
        {
            "id": 12,
            "meta": {
                "type": "standard.StandardPage",
                "detail_url": "http://api.example.com/api/v2/pages/12/",
                "html_url": "http://www.example.com/fr-page/",
                "slug": "fr-page",
                "first_published_at": "2016-08-30T16:52:00Z",
                "locale": "fr"
            },
            "title": "French page"
        },
    ]
}
Fields

By default, only a subset of the available fields are returned in the response. The ?fields parameter can be used to both add additional fields to the response and remove default fields that you know you won’t need.

Additional fields

Additional fields can be added to the response by setting ?fields to a comma-separated list of field names you want to add.

For example, ?fields=body,feed_image will add the body and feed_image fields to the response.

This can also be used across relationships. For example, ?fields=body,feed_image(width,height) will nest the width and height of the image in the response.

All fields

Setting ?fields to an asterisk (*) will add all available fields to the response. This is useful for discovering what fields have been exported.

For example: ?fields=*

Removing fields

Fields you know that you do not need can be removed by prefixing the name with a - and adding it to ?fields.

For example, ?fields=-title,body will remove title and add body.

This can also be used with the asterisk. For example, ?fields=*,-body adds all fields except for body.

Removing all default fields

To specify exactly the fields you need, you can set the first item in fields to an underscore (_) which removes all default fields.

For example, ?fields=_,title will only return the title field.

Detail views

You can retrieve a single object from the API by appending its id to the end of the URL. For example:

  • Pages /api/v2/pages/1/
  • Images /api/v2/images/1/
  • Documents /api/v2/documents/1/

All exported fields will be returned in the response by default. You can use the ?fields parameter to customise which fields are shown.

For example: /api/v2/pages/1/?fields=_,title,body will return just the title and body of the page with the id of 1.

Finding pages by HTML path

You can find an individual page by its HTML path using the /api/v2/pages/find/?html_path=<path> view.

This will return either a 302 redirect response to that page’s detail view, or a 404 not found response.

For example: /api/v2/pages/find/?html_path=/ always redirects to the homepage of the site

Default endpoint fields
Common fields

These fields are returned by every endpoint.

id (number)

The unique ID of the object

Note

Except for page types, every other content type has its own id space so you must combine this with the type field in order to get a unique identifier for an object.

type (string)
The type of the object in app_label.ModelName format
detail_url (string)
The URL of the detail view for the object
Pages
title (string)
meta.slug (string)
meta.show_in_menus (boolean)
meta.seo_title (string)
meta.search_description (string)
meta.first_published_at (date/time)
These values are taken from their corresponding fields on the page
meta.html_url (string)
If the site has an HTML frontend that’s generated by Wagtail, this field will be set to the URL of this page
meta.parent
Nests some information about the parent page (only available on detail views)
Images
title (string)
The value of the image’s title field. Within Wagtail, this is used in the image’s alt HTML attribute.
width (number)
height (number)
The size of the original image file
meta.tags (list of strings)
A list of tags associated with the image
Documents
title (string)
The value of the document’s title field
meta.tags (list of strings)
A list of tags associated with the document
meta.download_url (string)
A URL to the document file
Changes since v1
Breaking changes
  • The results list in listing responses has been renamed to items (was previously either pages, images or documents)
Major features
  • The fields parameter has been improved to allow removing fields, adding all fields and customising nested fields
Minor features
  • html_url, slug, first_published_at, expires_at and show_in_menus fields have been added to the pages endpoint
  • download_url field has been added to the documents endpoint
  • Multiple page types can be specified in type parameter on pages endpoint
  • true and false may now be used when filtering boolean fields
  • order can now be used in conjunction with search
  • search_operator parameter was added

How to build a site with AMP support

This recipe document describes a method for creating an AMP version of a Wagtail site and hosting it separately to the rest of the site on a URL prefix. It also describes how to make Wagtail render images with the <amp-img> tag when a user is visiting a page on the AMP version of the site.

Overview

In the next section, we will add a new URL entry that points at Wagtail’s internal serve() view which will have the effect of rendering the whole site again under the /amp prefix.

Then, we will add some utilities that will allow us to track whether the current request is in the /amp prefixed version of the site without needing a request object.

After that, we will add a template context processor to allow us to check from within templates which version of the site is being rendered.

Then, finally, we will modify the behaviour of the {% image %} tag to make it render <amp-img> tags when rendering the AMP version of the site.

Creating the second page tree

We can render the whole site at a different prefix by duplicating the Wagtail URL in the project urls.py file and giving it a prefix. This must be before the default URL from Wagtail, or it will try to find /amp as a page:

# <project>/urls.py

urlpatterns += [
    # Add this line just before the default ``include(wagtail_urls)`` line
    path('amp/', include(wagtail_urls)),

    path('', include(wagtail_urls)),
]

If you now open http://localhost:8000/amp/ in your browser, you should see the homepage.

Making pages aware of “AMP mode”

All the pages will now render under the /amp prefix, but right now there isn’t any difference between the AMP version and the normal version.

To make changes, we need to add a way to detect which URL was used to render the page. To do this, we will have to wrap Wagtail’s serve() view and set a thread-local to indicate to all downstream code that AMP mode is active.

Note

Why a thread-local?

(feel free to skip this part if you’re not interested)

Modifying the request object would be the most common way to do this. However, the image tag rendering is performed in a part of Wagtail that does not have access to the request.

Thread-locals are global variables that can have a different value for each running thread. As each thread only handles one request at a time, we can use it as a way to pass around data that is specific to that request without having to pass the request object everywhere.

Django uses thread-locals internally to track the currently active language for the request.

Please be aware though: In Django 3.x and above, you will need to use an asgiref.Local instead. This is because Django 3.x handles multiple requests in a single thread so thread-locals will no longer be unique to a single request.

Now let’s create that thread-local and some utility functions to interact with it, save this module as amp_utils.py in an app in your project:

# <app>/amp_utils.py

from contextlib import contextmanager
from threading import local

# FIXME: For Django 3.0 support, replace this with asgiref.Local
_amp_mode_active = local()

@contextmanager
def activate_amp_mode():
    """
    A context manager used to activate AMP mode
    """
    _amp_mode_active.value = True
    try:
        yield
    finally:
        del _amp_mode_active.value

def amp_mode_active():
    """
    Returns True if AMP mode is currently active
    """
    return hasattr(_amp_mode_active, 'value')

This module defines two functions:

  • activate_amp_mode is a context manager which can be invoked using Python’s with syntax. In the body of the with statement, AMP mode would be active.
  • amp_mode_active is a function that returns True when AMP mode is active.

Next, we need to define a view that wraps Wagtail’s builtin serve view and invokes the activate_amp_mode context manager:

# <app>/amp_views.py

from django.template.response import SimpleTemplateResponse
from wagtail.core.views import serve as wagtail_serve

from .amp_utils import activate_amp_mode

def serve(request, path):
    with activate_amp_mode():
        response = wagtail_serve(request, path)

        # Render template responses now while AMP mode is still active
        if isinstance(response, SimpleTemplateResponse):
            response.render()

        return response

Then we need to create a amp_urls.py file in the same app:

# <app>/amp_urls.py

from django.urls import re_path
from wagtail.core.urls import serve_pattern

from . import amp_views

urlpatterns = [
    re_path(serve_pattern, amp_views.serve, name='wagtail_amp_serve')
]

Finally, we need to update the project’s main urls.py to use this new URLs file for the /amp prefix:

# <project>/urls.py

from myapp import amp_urls as wagtail_amp_urls

urlpatterns += [
    # Change this line to point at your amp_urls instead of Wagtail's urls
    path('amp/', include(wagtail_amp_urls)),

    re_path(r'', include(wagtail_urls)),
]

After this, there shouldn’t be any noticeable difference to the AMP version of the site.

Write a template context processor so that AMP state can be checked in templates

This is optional, but worth doing so we can confirm that everything is working so far.

Add a amp_context_processors.py file into your app that contains the following:

# <app>/amp_context_processors.py

from .amp_utils import amp_mode_active

def amp(request):
    return {
        'amp_mode_active': amp_mode_active(),
    }

Now add the path to this context processor to the ['OPTIONS']['context_processors'] key of the TEMPLATES setting:

# Either <project>/settings.py or <project>/settings/base.py

TEMPLATES = [
    {
        ...

        'OPTIONS': {
            'context_processors': [
                ...
                # Add this after other context processors
                'myapp.amp_context_processors.amp',
            ],
        },
    },
]

You should now be able to use the amp_mode_active variable in templates. For example:

{% if amp_mode_active %}
    AMP MODE IS ACTIVE!
{% endif %}
Using a different page template when AMP mode is active

You’re probably not going to want to use the same templates on the AMP site as you do on the normal web site. Let’s add some logic in to make Wagtail use a separate template whenever a page is served with AMP enabled.

We can use a mixin, which allows us to re-use the logic on different page types. Add the following to the bottom of the amp_utils.py file that you created earlier:

# <app>/amp_utils.py

import os.path

...

class PageAMPTemplateMixin:

    @property
    def amp_template(self):
        # Get the default template name and insert `_amp` before the extension
        name, ext = os.path.splitext(self.template)
        return name + '_amp' + ext

    def get_template(self, request):
        if amp_mode_active():
            return self.amp_template

        return super().get_template(request)

Now add this mixin to any page model, for example:

# <app>/models.py

from .amp_utils import PageAMPTemplateMixin

class MyPageModel(PageAMPTemplateMixin, Page):
    ...

When AMP mode is active, the template at app_label/mypagemodel_amp.html will be used instead of the default one.

If you have a different naming convention, you can override the amp_template attribute on the model. For example:

# <app>/models.py

from .amp_utils import PageAMPTemplateMixin

class MyPageModel(PageAMPTemplateMixin, Page):
    amp_template = 'my_custom_amp_template.html'
Overriding the {% image %} tag to output <amp-img> tags

Finally, let’s change Wagtail’s {% image %} tag, so it renders an <amp-img> tags when rendering pages with AMP enabled. We’ll make the change on the Rendition model itself so it applies to both images rendered with the {% image %} tag and images rendered in rich text fields as well.

Doing this with a Custom image model is easier, as you can override the img_tag method on your custom Rendition model to return a different tag.

For example:

from django.forms.utils import flatatt
from django.utils.safestring import mark_safe

from wagtail.images.models import AbstractRendition

...

class CustomRendition(AbstractRendition):
    def img_tag(self, extra_attributes):
        attrs = self.attrs_dict.copy()
        attrs.update(extra_attributes)

        if amp_mode_active():
            return mark_safe('<amp-img{}>'.format(flatatt(attrs)))
        else:
            return mark_safe('<img{}>'.format(flatatt(attrs)))

    ...

Without a custom image model, you will have to monkey-patch the builtin Rendition model. Add this anywhere in your project where it would be imported on start:

from django.forms.utils import flatatt
from django.utils.safestring import mark_safe

from wagtail.images.models import Rendition

def img_tag(rendition, extra_attributes={}):
    """
    Replacement implementation for Rendition.img_tag

    When AMP mode is on, this returns an <amp-img> tag instead of an <img> tag
    """
    attrs = rendition.attrs_dict.copy()
    attrs.update(extra_attributes)

    if amp_mode_active():
        return mark_safe('<amp-img{}>'.format(flatatt(attrs)))
    else:
        return mark_safe('<img{}>'.format(flatatt(attrs)))

Rendition.img_tag = img_tag

Accessibility considerations

Accessibility for CMS-driven websites is a matter of modeling content appropriately, creating accessible templates, and authoring content with readability and accessibility guidelines in mind.

Wagtail generally puts developers in control of content modeling and front-end markup, but there are a few areas to be aware of nonetheless, and ways to help authors be aware of readability best practices. Note there is much more to building accessible websites than we cover here – see our list of accessibility resources for more information.


Content modeling

As part of defining your site’s models, here are areas to pay special attention to:

Alt text for images

The default behavior for Wagtail images is to use the title field as the alt text (#4945). This is inappropriate, as it’s not communicated in the CMS interface, and the image upload form uses the image’s filename as the title by default.

Ideally, always add an optional “alt text” field wherever an image is used, alongside the image field:

  • For normal fields, add an alt text field to your image’s panel.
  • For StreamField, add an extra field to your image block.
  • For rich text – Wagtail already makes it possible to customize alt text for rich text images.

When defining the alt text fields, make sure they are optional so editors can choose to not write any alt text for decorative images. Take the time to provide help_text with appropriate guidance. For example, linking to established resources on alt text.

Note

Should I add an alt text field on the Image model for my site?

It’s better than nothing to have a dedicated alt field on the Image model (#5789), and may be appropriate for some websites, but we recommend to have it inline with the content because ideally alt text should be written for the context the image is used in:

  • If the alt text’s content is already part of the rest of the page, ideally the image should not repeat the same content.
  • Ideally, the alt text should be written based on the context the image is displayed in.
  • An image might be decorative in some cases but not in others. For example, thumbnails in page listings can often be considered decorative.

See RFC 51: Contextual alt text for a long-term solution to this problem.

Embeds title

Missing embed titles are common failures in accessibility audits of Wagtail websites. In some cases, Wagtail embeds’ iframe doesn’t have a title attribute set. This is generally a problem with OEmbed providers like YouTube (#5982). This is very problematic for screen reader users, who rely on the title to understand what the embed is, and whether to interact with it or not.

If your website relies on embeds that have are missing titles, make sure to either:

  • Add the OEmbed title field as a title on the iframe.
  • Add a custom mandatory Title field to your embeds, and add it as the iframe’s title.
Available heading levels

Wagtail makes it very easy for developers to control which heading levels should be available for any given content, via rich text features or custom StreamField blocks. In both cases, take the time to restrict what heading levels are available so the pages’ document outline is more likely to be logical and sequential. Consider using the following restrictions:

  • Disallow h1 in rich text. There should only be one h1 tag per page, which generally maps to the page’s title.
  • Limit heading levels to h2 for the main content of a page. Add h3 only if deemed necessary. Avoid other levels as a general rule.
  • For content that is displayed in a specific section of the page, limit heading levels to those directly below the section’s main heading.

If managing headings via StreamField, make sure to apply the same restrictions there.

Bold and italic formatting in rich text

By default, Wagtail stores its bold formatting as a b tag, and italic as i (#4665). While those tags don’t necessarily always have correct semantics (strong and em are more ubiquitous), there isn’t much consequence for screen reader users, as by default screen readers do not announce content differently based on emphasis.

If this is a concern to you, you can change which tags are used when saving content with rich text format converters. In the future, rich text rewrite handlers should also support this being done without altering the storage format (#4223).

TableBlock

The TableBlock default implementation makes it too easy for end-users to miss they need either row or column headers (#5989). Make sure to always have either row headers or column headers set. Always add a Caption, so screen reader users navigating the site’s tables know where they are.


Accessibility in templates

Here are common gotchas to be aware of to make the site’s templates as accessible as possible,

Alt text in templates

See the content modelling section above. Additionally, make sure to customise images’ alt text, either setting it to the relevant field, or to an empty string for decorative images, or images where the alt text would be a repeat of other content. Even when your images have alt text coming directly from the image model, you still need to decide whether there should be alt text for the particular context the image is used in. For example, avoid alt text in listings where the alt text just repeats the listing items’ title.

Empty heading tags

In both rich text and custom StreamField blocks, it’s sometimes easy for editors to create a heading block but not add any content to it. If this is a problem for your site,

  • Add validation rules to those fields, making sure the page can’t be saved with the empty headings, for example by using the StreamField CharBlock which is required by default.
  • Consider adding similar validation rules for rich text fields (#6526).

Additionally, you can hide empty heading blocks with CSS:

h1:empty, h2:empty, h3:empty, h4:empty, h5:empty, h6:empty {
    display: none;
}
Forms

The wagtailforms Form builder uses Django’s forms API. Here are considerations specific to forms in templates:

  • Avoid rendering helpers such as as_table, as_ul, as_p, which can make forms harder to navigate for screen reader users or cause HTML validation issues (see Django ticket #32339).
  • Make sure to visually distinguish required and optional fields.
  • Take the time to group related fields together in fieldset, with an appropriate legend, in particular for radios and checkboxes (see Django ticket #32338).
  • If relevant, use the appropriate autocomplete and autocapitalize attributes.
  • For Date and Datetime fields, make sure to display the expected format or an example value (see Django ticket #32340). Or use input type=”date”.
  • For Number fields, consider whether input type="number" really is appropriate, or whether there may be better alternatives such as inputmode.

Make sure to test your forms’ implementation with assistive technologies, and review official W3C guidance on accessible forms development for further information.


Authoring accessible content

Here are things you can do to help authors create accessible content.

wagtail-accessibility

wagtail-accessibility is a third-party package which adds tota11y to Wagtail previews. This makes it easy for authors to run basic accessibility checks – validating the page’s heading outline, or link text.

help_text and HelpPanel

Occasional Wagtail users may not be aware of your site’s content guidelines, or best practices of writing for the web. Use fields’ help_text and HelpPanel (see Panel types).

Readability

Readability is fundamental to accessibility. One of the ways to improve text content is to have a clear target for reading level / reading age, which can be assessed with wagtail-readinglevel as a score displayed in rich text fields.


Accessibility resources

We focus on considerations specific to Wagtail websites, but there is much more to accessibility. Here are valuable resources to learn more, for developers but also designers and authors:

About StreamField BoundBlocks and values

All StreamField block types accept a template parameter to determine how they will be rendered on a page. However, for blocks that handle basic Python data types, such as CharBlock and IntegerBlock, there are some limitations on where the template will take effect, since those built-in types (str, int and so on) cannot be ‘taught’ about their template rendering. As an example of this, consider the following block definition:

class HeadingBlock(blocks.CharBlock):
    class Meta:
        template = 'blocks/heading.html'

where blocks/heading.html consists of:

<h1>{{ value }}</h1>

This gives us a block that behaves as an ordinary text field, but wraps its output in <h1> tags whenever it is rendered:

class BlogPage(Page):
    body = StreamField([
        # ...
        ('heading', HeadingBlock()),
        # ...
    ])
{% load wagtailcore_tags %}

{% for block in page.body %}
    {% if block.block_type == 'heading' %}
        {% include_block block %}  {# This block will output its own <h1>...</h1> tags. #}
    {% endif %}
{% endfor %}

This kind of arrangement - a value that supposedly represents a plain text string, but has its own custom HTML representation when output on a template - would normally be a very messy thing to achieve in Python, but it works here because the items you get when iterating over a StreamField are not actually the ‘native’ values of the blocks. Instead, each item is returned as an instance of BoundBlock - an object that represents the pairing of a value and its block definition. By keeping track of the block definition, a BoundBlock always knows which template to render. To get to the underlying value - in this case, the text content of the heading - you would need to access block.value. Indeed, if you were to output {% include_block block.value %} on the page, you would find that it renders as plain text, without the <h1> tags.

(More precisely, the items returned when iterating over a StreamField are instances of a class StreamChild, which provides the block_type property as well as value.)

Experienced Django developers may find it helpful to compare this to the BoundField class in Django’s forms framework, which represents the pairing of a form field value with its corresponding form field definition, and therefore knows how to render the value as an HTML form field.

Most of the time, you won’t need to worry about these internal details; Wagtail will use the template rendering wherever you would expect it to. However, there are certain cases where the illusion isn’t quite complete - namely, when accessing children of a ListBlock or StructBlock. In these cases, there is no BoundBlock wrapper, and so the item cannot be relied upon to know its own template rendering. For example, consider the following setup, where our HeadingBlock is a child of a StructBlock:

class EventBlock(blocks.StructBlock):
    heading = HeadingBlock()
    description = blocks.TextBlock()
    # ...

    class Meta:
        template = 'blocks/event.html'

In blocks/event.html:

{% load wagtailcore_tags %}

<div class="event {% if value.heading == 'Party!' %}lots-of-balloons{% endif %}">
    {% include_block value.heading %}
    - {% include_block value.description %}
</div>

In this case, value.heading returns the plain string value rather than a BoundBlock; this is necessary because otherwise the comparison in {% if value.heading == 'Party!' %} would never succeed. This in turn means that {% include_block value.heading %} renders as the plain string, without the <h1> tags. To get the HTML rendering, you need to explicitly access the BoundBlock instance through value.bound_blocks.heading:

{% load wagtailcore_tags %}

<div class="event {% if value.heading == 'Party!' %}lots-of-balloons{% endif %}">
    {% include_block value.bound_blocks.heading %}
    - {% include_block value.description %}
</div>

In practice, it would probably be more natural and readable to make the <h1> tag explicit in the EventBlock’s template:

{% load wagtailcore_tags %}

<div class="event {% if value.heading == 'Party!' %}lots-of-balloons{% endif %}">
    <h1>{{ value.heading }}</h1>
    - {% include_block value.description %}
</div>

This limitation does not apply to StructBlock and StreamBlock values as children of a StructBlock, because Wagtail implements these as complex objects that know their own template rendering, even when not wrapped in a BoundBlock. For example, if a StructBlock is nested in another StructBlock, as in:

class EventBlock(blocks.StructBlock):
    heading = HeadingBlock()
    description = blocks.TextBlock()
    guest_speaker = blocks.StructBlock([
        ('first_name', blocks.CharBlock()),
        ('surname', blocks.CharBlock()),
        ('photo', ImageChooserBlock()),
    ], template='blocks/speaker.html')

then {% include_block value.guest_speaker %} within the EventBlock’s template will pick up the template rendering from blocks/speaker.html as intended.

In summary, interactions between BoundBlocks and plain values work according to the following rules:

  1. When iterating over the value of a StreamField or StreamBlock (as in {% for block in page.body %}), you will get back a sequence of BoundBlocks.
  2. If you have a BoundBlock instance, you can access the plain value as block.value.
  3. Accessing a child of a StructBlock (as in value.heading) will return a plain value; to retrieve the BoundBlock instead, use value.bound_blocks.heading.
  4. The value of a ListBlock is a plain Python list; iterating over it returns plain child values.
  5. StructBlock and StreamBlock values always know how to render their own templates, even if you only have the plain value rather than the BoundBlock.

Multi-site, multi-instance and multi-tenancy

This page gives background information on how to run multiple Wagtail sites (with the same source code).

Multi-site

Multi-site is a Wagtail project configuration where content creators go into a single admin interface and manage the content of multiple websites. Permission to manage specific content, and restricting access to other content, is possible to some extent.

Multi-site configuration is a single code base, on a single server, connecting to a single database. Media is stored in a single media root directory. Content can be shared between sites.

Wagtail supports multi-site out of the box: Wagtail comes with a site model. The site model contains a hostname, port, and root page field. When a URL is requested, the request comes in, the domain name and port are taken from the request object to look up the correct site object. The root page is used as starting point to resolve the URL and serve the correct page.

Wagtail also comes with site settings. Site settings are ‘singletons’ that let you store additional information on a site. For example, social media settings, a field to upload a logo, or a choice field to select a theme.

Model objects can be linked to a site by placing a foreign key field on the model pointing to the site object. A request object can be used to look up the current site. This way, content belonging to a specific site can be served.

User, groups, and permissions can be configured in such a way that content creators can only manage the pages, images, and documents of a specific site. Wagtail can have multiple site objects and multiple page trees. Permissions can be linked to a specific page tree or a subsection thereof. Collections are used to categorize images and documents. A collection can be restricted to users who are in a specific group.

Some projects require content editors to have permissions on specific sites and restrict access to other sites. Splitting all content per site and guaranteeing that no content ‘leaks’ is difficult to realize in a multi-site project. If you require full separation of content, then multi-instance might be a better fit…

Multi-instance

Multi-instance is a Wagtail project configuration where a single set of project files is used by multiple websites. Each website has its own settings file, and a dedicated database and media directory. Each website runs in its own server process. This guarantees the total separation of all content.

Assume the domains a.com and b.com. Settings files can be base.py, acom.py, and bcom.py. The base settings will contain all settings like normal. The contents of site-specific settings override the base settings:

# settings/acom.py
from base import *  # noqa

ALLOWED_HOSTS = ['a.com']
DATABASES["NAME"] = "acom"
DATABASES["PASSWORD"] = "password-for-acom"
MEDIA_DIR = BASE_DIR / "acom-media"

Each site can be started with its own settings file. In development ./manage.py runserver --settings settings.acom. In production, for example with uWSGI, specify the correct settings with env = DJANGO_SETTINGS_MODULE=settings.acom.

Because each site has its own database and media folder, nothing can ‘leak’ to another site. But this also means that content cannot be shared between sites as one can do when using the multi-site option.

In this configuration, multiple sites share the same, single set of project files. Deployment would update the single set of project files and reload each instance.

This multi-instance configuration isn’t that different from deploying the project code several times. However, having a single set of project files, and only differentiate with settings files, is the closest Wagtail can get to true multi-tenancy. Every site is identical, content is separated, including user management. ‘Adding a new tenant’ is adding a new settings file and running a new instance.

In a multi-instance configuration, each instance requires a certain amount of server resources (CPU and memory). That means adding sites will increase server load. This only scales up to a certain point.

Multi-tenancy

Multi-tenancy is a project configuration in which a single instance of the software serves multiple tenants. A tenant is a group of users who have access and permission to a single site. Multitenant software is designed to provide every tenant its configuration, data, and user management.

Wagtail supports multi-site, where user management and content are shared. Wagtail can run multi-instance where there is full separation of content at the cost of running multiple instances. Multi-tenancy combines the best of both worlds: a single instance, and the full separation of content per site and user management.

Wagtail does not support full multi-tenancy at this moment. But it is on our radar, we would like to improve Wagtail to add multi-tenancy - while still supporting the existing multi-site option. If you have ideas or like to contribute, join us on Slack in the multi-tenancy channel.

Wagtail currently has the following features to support multi-tenancy:

  • A Site model mapping a hostname to a root page
  • Permissions to allow groups of users to manage:
    • arbitrary sections of the page tree
    • sections of the collection tree (coming soon)
    • one or more collections of documents and images
  • The page API is automatically scoped to the host used for the request

But several features do not currently support multi-tenancy:

  • Snippets are global pieces of content so not suitable for multi-tenancy but any model that can be registered as a snippet can also be managed via the Wagtail model admin. You can add a site_id to the model and then use the model admin get_queryset method to determine which site can manage each object. The built-in snippet choosers can be replaced by modelchooser that allows filtering the queryset to restrict which sites may display which objects.
  • Site, site setting, user, and group management. At the moment, your best bet is to only allow superusers to manage these objects.
  • Workflows and workflow tasks
  • Site history
  • Redirects

Permission configuration for built-in models like Sites, Site settings and Users is not site-specific, so any user with permission to edit a single entry can edit them all. This limitation can be mostly circumvented by only allowing superusers to manage these models.

Python, Django, and Wagtail allow you to override, extend and customize functionality. Here are some ideas that may help you create a multi-tenancy solution for your site:

  • Django allows to override templates, this also works in the Wagtail admin.
  • A custom user model can be used to link users to a specific site.
  • Custom admin views can provide more restrictive user management.

We welcome interested members of the Wagtail community to contribute code and ideas.

How to use a redirect with Form builder to prevent double submission

It is common for form submission HTTP responses to be a 302 Found temporary redirection to a new page. By default wagtail.contrib.forms.models.FormPage success responses don’t do this, meaning there is a risk that users will refresh the success page and re-submit their information.

Instead of rendering the render_landing_page content in the POST response, we will redirect to a route of the FormPage instance at a child URL path. The content will still be managed within the same form page’s admin. This approach uses the additonal contrib module wagtail.contrib.routable_page.

An alternative approach is to redirect to an entirely different page, which does not require the routable_page module. See Custom landing page redirect.

Make sure "wagtail.contrib.routable_page" is added to INSTALLED_APPS, see Installation documentation.

from django.shortcuts import redirect

from wagtail.contrib.forms.models import AbstractEmailForm
from wagtail.contrib.routable_page.models import RoutablePageMixin, route


class FormPage(RoutablePageMixin, AbstractEmailForm):

    # fields, content_panels, …

    @route(r"^$")
    def index_route(self, request, *args, **kwargs):
        """Serve the form, and validate it on POST"""
        return super(AbstractEmailForm, self).serve(request, *args, **kwargs)

    def render_landing_page(self, request, form_submission, *args, **kwargs):
        """Redirect instead to self.thank_you route"""
        url = self.reverse_subpage("thank_you")
        # If a form_submission instance is available, append the ID to URL.
        if form_submission:
            url += "?id=%s" % form_submission.id
        return redirect(self.url + url, permanent=False)

    @route(r"^thank-you/$")
    def thank_you(self, request):
        """Return the superclass's landing page, after redirect."""
        form_submission = None
        try:
            submission_id = int(request.GET["id"])
        except (KeyError, TypeError):
            pass
        else:
            submission_class = self.get_submission_class()
            try:
                form_submission = submission_class.objects.get(id=submission_id)
            except submission_class.DoesNotExist:
                pass

        return super().render_landing_page(request, form_submission)

Extending Wagtail

The Wagtail admin interface is a suite of Django apps, and so the familiar concepts from Django development - views, templates, URL routes and so on - can be used to add new functionality to Wagtail. Numerous third-party packages can be installed to extend Wagtail’s capabilities.

This section describes the various mechanisms that can be used to integrate your own code into Wagtail’s admin interface.

Creating admin views

The most common use for adding custom views to the Wagtail admin is to provide an interface for managing a Django model. The ModelAdmin app makes this simple, providing ready-made views for listing, creating and editing objects with minimal configuration.

For other kinds of admin view that don’t fit this pattern, you can write your own Django views and register them as part of the Wagtail admin through hooks. In this example, we’ll implement a view that displays a calendar for the current year, using the calendar module from Python’s standard library.

Defining a view

Within a Wagtail project, create a new wagtailcalendar app with ./manage.py startapp wagtailcalendar and add it to your project’s INSTALLED_APPS. (In this case we’re using the name ‘wagtailcalendar’ to avoid clashing with the standard library’s calendar module - in general there is no need to use a ‘wagtail’ prefix.)

Edit views.py as follows - note that this is a plain Django view with no Wagtail-specific code.

import calendar

from django.http import HttpResponse
from django.utils import timezone


def index(request):
    current_year = timezone.now().year
    calendar_html = calendar.HTMLCalendar().formatyear(current_year)

    return HttpResponse(calendar_html)
Registering a URL route

At this point, the standard practice for a Django project would be to add a URL route for this view to your project’s top-level URL config module. However, in this case we want the view to only be available to logged-in users, and to appear within the /admin/ URL namespace which is managed by Wagtail. This is done through the register_admin_urls hook.

On startup, Wagtail looks for a wagtail_hooks submodule within each installed app. In this submodule, you can define functions to be run at various points in Wagtail’s operation, such as building the URL config for the admin, and constructing the main menu.

Create a wagtail_hooks.py file within the wagtailcalendar app containing the following:

from django.urls import path
from wagtail.core import hooks

from .views import index


@hooks.register('register_admin_urls')
def register_calendar_url():
    return [
        path('calendar/', index, name='calendar'),
    ]

The calendar will now be visible at the URL /admin/calendar/.

A calendar, presented in unstyled HTML
Adding a template

Currently this view is outputting a plain HTML fragment. Let’s insert this into the usual Wagtail admin page furniture, by creating a template that extends Wagtail’s base template "wagtailadmin/base.html".

Note

The base template and HTML structure are not considered a stable part of Wagtail’s API, and may change in future releases.

Update views.py as follows:

import calendar
from django.shortcuts import render
from django.utils import timezone

def index(request):
    current_year = timezone.now().year
    calendar_html = calendar.HTMLCalendar().formatyear(current_year)

    return render(request, 'wagtailcalendar/index.html', {
        'current_year': current_year,
        'calendar_html': calendar_html,
    })

Now create a templates/wagtailcalendar/ folder within the wagtailcalendar app, containing index.html as follows:

{% extends "wagtailadmin/base.html" %}
{% block titletag %}{{ current_year }} calendar{% endblock %}

{% block extra_css %}
    {{ block.super }}
    <style>
        table.month {
            margin: 20px;
        }
        table.month td, table.month th {
            padding: 5px;
        }
    </style>
{% endblock %}

{% block content %}
    {% include "wagtailadmin/shared/header.html" with title="Calendar" icon="date" %}

    <div class="nice-padding">
        {{ calendar_html|safe }}
    </div>
{% endblock %}

Here we are overriding three of the blocks defined in the base template: titletag (which sets the content of the HTML <title> tag), extra_css (which allows us to provide additional CSS styles specific to this page), and content (for the main content area of the page). We’re also including the standard header bar component, and setting a title and icon. For a list of the recognised icon identifiers, see the UI Styleguide.

Revisiting /admin/calendar/ will now show the calendar within the Wagtail admin page furniture.

A calendar, shown within the Wagtail admin interface
Adding a menu item

Our calendar view is now complete, but there’s no way to reach it from the rest of the admin backend. To add an item to the sidebar menu, we’ll use another hook, register_admin_menu_item. Update wagtail_hooks.py as follows:

from django.urls import path, reverse

from wagtail.admin.menu import MenuItem
from wagtail.core import hooks

from .views import index


@hooks.register('register_admin_urls')
def register_calendar_url():
    return [
        path('calendar/', index, name='calendar'),
    ]


@hooks.register('register_admin_menu_item')
def register_calendar_menu_item():
    return MenuItem('Calendar', reverse('calendar'), icon_name='date')

A ‘Calendar’ item will now appear in the menu.

Wagtail admin sidebar menu, showing a "Calendar" menu item with a date icon

Template components

Working with objects that know how to render themselves as elements on an HTML template is a common pattern seen throughout the Wagtail admin. For example, the admin homepage is a view provided by the central wagtail.admin app, but brings together information panels sourced from various other modules of Wagtail, such as images and documents (potentially along with others provided by third-party packages). These panels are passed to the homepage via the construct_homepage_panels hook, and each one is responsible for providing its own HTML rendering. In this way, the module providing the panel has full control over how it appears on the homepage.

Wagtail implements this pattern using a standard object type known as a component. A component is a Python object that provides the following methods and properties:

render_html(self, parent_context=None)

Given a context dictionary from the calling template (which may be a Context object or a plain dict of context variables), returns the string representation to be inserted into the template. This will be subject to Django’s HTML escaping rules, so a return value consisting of HTML should typically be returned as a SafeString instance.

media

A (possibly empty) form media object defining JavaScript and CSS resources used by the component.

Note

Any object implementing this API can be considered a valid component; it does not necessarily have to inherit from the Component class described below, and user code that works with components should not assume this (for example, it must not use isinstance to check whether a given value is a component).

Creating components

The preferred way to create a component is to define a subclass of wagtail.admin.ui.components.Component and specify a template_name attribute on it. The rendered template will then be used as the component’s HTML representation:

from wagtail.admin.ui.components import Component

class WelcomePanel(Component):
    template_name = 'my_app/panels/welcome.html'


my_welcome_panel = WelcomePanel()

my_app/templates/my_app/panels/welcome.html:

<h1>Welcome to my app!</h1>

For simple cases that don’t require a template, the render_html method can be overridden instead:

from django.utils.html import format_html
from wagtail.admin.components import Component

class WelcomePanel(Component):
    def render_html(self, parent_context):
        return format_html("<h1>{}</h1>", "Welcome to my app!")
Passing context to the template

The get_context_data method can be overridden to pass context variables to the template. As with render_html, this receives the context dictionary from the calling template:

from wagtail.admin.ui.components import Component

class WelcomePanel(Component):
    template_name = 'my_app/panels/welcome.html'

    def get_context_data(self, parent_context):
        context = super().get_context_data(parent_context)
        context['username'] = parent_context['request'].user.username
        return context

my_app/templates/my_app/panels/welcome.html:

<h1>Welcome to my app, {{ username }}!</h1>
Adding media definitions

Like Django form widgets, components can specify associated JavaScript and CSS resources using either an inner Media class or a dynamic media property:

class WelcomePanel(Component):
    template_name = 'my_app/panels/welcome.html'

    class Media:
        css = {
            'all': ('my_app/css/welcome-panel.css',)
        }
Using components on your own templates

The wagtailadmin_tags tag library provides a {% component %} tag for including components on a template. This takes care of passing context variables from the calling template to the component (which would not be the case for a basic {{ ... }} variable tag). For example, given the view:

from django.shortcuts import render

def welcome_page(request):
    panels = [
        WelcomePanel(),
    ]

    render(request, 'my_app/welcome.html', {
        'panels': panels,
    })

the my_app/welcome.html template could render the panels as follows:

{% load wagtailadmin_tags %}
{% for panel in panels %}
    {% component panel %}
{% endfor %}

Note that it is your template’s responsibility to output any media declarations defined on the components. For a Wagtail admin view, this is best done by constructing a media object for the whole page within the view, passing this to the template, and outputting it via the base template’s extra_js and extra_css blocks:

from django.forms import Media
from django.shortcuts import render

def welcome_page(request):
    panels = [
        WelcomePanel(),
    ]

    media = Media()
    for panel in panels:
        media += panel.media

    render(request, 'my_app/welcome.html', {
        'panels': panels,
        'media': media,
    })

my_app/welcome.html:

{% extends "wagtailadmin/base.html" %}
{% load wagtailadmin_tags %}

{% block extra_js %}
    {{ block.super }}
    {{ media.js }}
{% endblock %}

{% block extra_css %}
    {{ block.super }}
    {{ media.css }}
{% endblock %}

{% block content %}
    {% for panel in panels %}
        {% component panel %}
    {% endfor %}
{% endblock %}

Adding reports

Reports are views with listings of pages matching a specific query. They can also export these listings in spreadsheet format. They are found in the Reports submenu: by default, the Locked Pages report is provided, allowing an overview of locked pages on the site.

It is possible to create your own custom reports in the Wagtail admin. Two base classes are provided: wagtail.admin.views.reports.ReportView, which provides basic listing and spreadsheet export functionality, and wagtail.admin.views.reports.PageReportView, which additionally provides a default set of fields suitable for page listings. For this example, we’ll add a report which shows any pages with unpublished changes.

# <project>/views.py

from wagtail.admin.views.reports import PageReportView


class UnpublishedChangesReportView(PageReportView):
    pass
Defining your report

The most important attributes and methods to customise to define your report are:

get_queryset(self)

This retrieves the queryset of pages for your report. For our example:

# <project>/views.py

from wagtail.admin.views.reports import PageReportView
from wagtail.core.models import Page


class UnpublishedChangesReportView(PageReportView):

    def get_queryset(self):
        return Page.objects.filter(has_unpublished_changes=True)
template_name

(string)

The template used to render your report. For ReportView, this defaults to "wagtailadmin/reports/base_report.html", which provides an empty report page layout; for PageReportView, this defaults to "wagtailadmin/reports/base_page_report.html" which provides a listing based on the explorer views, displaying action buttons, as well as the title, time of the last update, status, and specific type of any pages. In this example, we’ll change this to a new template in a later section.

title

(string)

The name of your report, which will be displayed in the header. For our example, we’ll set it to "Pages with unpublished changes".

header_icon

(string)

The name of the icon, using the standard Wagtail icon names. For example, the locked pages view uses "locked", and for our example report, we’ll set it to 'doc-empty-inverse'.

Spreadsheet exports
list_export

(list)

A list of the fields/attributes for each model which are exported as columns in the spreadsheet view. For ReportView, this is empty by default, and for PageReportView, it corresponds to the listing fields: the title, time of the last update, status, and specific type of any pages. For our example, we might want to know when the page was last published, so we’ll set list_export as follows:

list_export = PageReportView.list_export + ['last_published_at']

export_headings

(dictionary)

A dictionary of any fields/attributes in list_export for which you wish to manually specify a heading for the spreadsheet column, and their headings. If unspecified, the heading will be taken from the field verbose_name if applicable, and the attribute string otherwise. For our example, last_published_at will automatically get a heading of "Last Published At", but a simple “Last Published” looks neater. We’ll add that by setting export_headings:

export_headings = dict(last_published_at='Last Published', **PageReportView.export_headings)

custom_value_preprocess

(dictionary)

A dictionary of (value_class_1, value_class_2, ...) tuples mapping to {export_format: preprocessing_function} dictionaries, allowing custom preprocessing functions to be applied when exporting field values of specific classes (or their subclasses). If unspecified (and ReportView.custom_field_preprocess also does not specify a function), force_str will be used. To prevent preprocessing, set the preprocessing_function to None.

custom_field_preprocess

(dictionary)

A dictionary of field_name strings mapping to {export_format: preprocessing_function} dictionaries, allowing custom preprocessing functions to be applied when exporting field values of specific classes (or their subclasses). This will take priority over functions specified in ReportView.custom_value_preprocess. If unspecified (and ReportView.custom_value_preprocess also does not specify a function), force_str will be used. To prevent preprocessing, set the preprocessing_function to None.

Customising templates

For this example “pages with unpublished changes” report, we’ll add an extra column to the listing template, showing the last publication date for each page. To do this, we’ll extend two templates: wagtailadmin/reports/base_page_report.html, and wagtailadmin/reports/listing/_list_page_report.html.

{# <project>/templates/reports/unpublished_changes_report.html #}

{% extends 'wagtailadmin/reports/base_page_report.html' %}

{% block listing %}
    {% include 'reports/include/_list_unpublished_changes.html' %}
{% endblock %}

{% block no_results %}
    <p>No pages with unpublished changes.</p>
{% endblock %}
{# <project>/templates/reports/include/_list_unpublished_changes.html #}

{% extends 'wagtailadmin/reports/listing/_list_page_report.html' %}

{% block extra_columns %}
    <th>Last Published</th>
{% endblock %}

{% block extra_page_data %}
    <td valign="top">
        {{ page.last_published_at }}
    </td>
{% endblock %}

Finally, we’ll set UnpublishedChangesReportView.template_name to this new template: 'reports/unpublished_changes_report.html'.

Adding a menu item and admin URL

To add a menu item for your new report to the Reports submenu, you will need to use the register_reports_menu_item hook (see: register_reports_menu_item). To add an admin url for the report, you will need to use the register_admin_urls hook (see register_admin_urls). This can be done as follows:

# <project>/wagtail_hooks.py

from django.urls import path, reverse

from wagtail.admin.menu import AdminOnlyMenuItem
from wagtail.core import hooks

from .views import UnpublishedChangesReportView

@hooks.register('register_reports_menu_item')
def register_unpublished_changes_report_menu_item():
    return AdminOnlyMenuItem("Pages with unpublished changes", reverse('unpublished_changes_report'), classnames='icon icon-' + UnpublishedChangesReportView.header_icon, order=700)

@hooks.register('register_admin_urls')
def register_unpublished_changes_report_url():
    return [
        path('reports/unpublished-changes/', UnpublishedChangesReportView.as_view(), name='unpublished_changes_report'),
    ]

Here, we use the AdminOnlyMenuItem class to ensure our report icon is only shown to superusers. To make the report visible to all users, you could replace this with MenuItem.

The full code
# <project>/views.py

from wagtail.admin.views.reports import PageReportView
from wagtail.core.models import Page


class UnpublishedChangesReportView(PageReportView):

    header_icon = 'doc-empty-inverse'
    template_name = 'reports/unpublished_changes_report.html'
    title = "Pages with unpublished changes"

    list_export = PageReportView.list_export + ['last_published_at']
    export_headings = dict(last_published_at='Last Published', **PageReportView.export_headings)

    def get_queryset(self):
        return Page.objects.filter(has_unpublished_changes=True)
# <project>/wagtail_hooks.py

from django.urls import path, reverse

from wagtail.admin.menu import AdminOnlyMenuItem
from wagtail.core import hooks

from .views import UnpublishedChangesReportView

@hooks.register('register_reports_menu_item')
def register_unpublished_changes_report_menu_item():
    return AdminOnlyMenuItem("Pages with unpublished changes", reverse('unpublished_changes_report'), classnames='icon icon-' + UnpublishedChangesReportView.header_icon, order=700)

@hooks.register('register_admin_urls')
def register_unpublished_changes_report_url():
    return [
        path('reports/unpublished-changes/', UnpublishedChangesReportView.as_view(), name='unpublished_changes_report'),
    ]
{# <project>/templates/reports/unpublished_changes_report.html #}

{% extends 'wagtailadmin/reports/base_page_report.html' %}

{% block listing %}
    {% include 'reports/include/_list_unpublished_changes.html' %}
{% endblock %}

{% block no_results %}
    <p>No pages with unpublished changes.</p>
{% endblock %}
{# <project>/templates/reports/include/_list_unpublished_changes.html #}

{% extends 'wagtailadmin/reports/listing/_list_page_report.html' %}

{% block extra_columns %}
    <th>Last Published</th>
{% endblock %}

{% block extra_page_data %}
    <td valign="top">
        {{ page.last_published_at }}
    </td>
{% endblock %}

Adding new Task types

The Workflow system allows users to create tasks, which represent stages of moderation.

Wagtail provides one built in task type: GroupApprovalTask, which allows any user in specific groups to approve or reject moderation.

However, it is possible to add your own task types in code. Instances of your custom task can then be created in the Tasks section of the Wagtail Admin.

Task models

All custom tasks must be models inheriting from wagtailcore.Task. In this set of examples, we’ll set up a task which can be approved by only one specific user.

# <project>/models.py

from wagtail.core.models import Task


class UserApprovalTask(Task):
    pass

Subclassed Tasks follow the same approach as Pages: they are concrete models, with the specific subclass instance accessible by calling Task.specific().

You can now add any custom fields. To make these editable in the admin, add the names of the fields into the admin_form_fields attribute:

For example:

# <project>/models.py

from django.conf import settings
from django.db import models
from wagtail.core.models import Task


class UserApprovalTask(Task):
    user = models.ForeignKey(settings.AUTH_USER_MODEL, on_delete=models.SET_NULL, null=True, blank=False)

    admin_form_fields = Task.admin_form_fields + ['user']

Any fields that shouldn’t be edited after task creation - for example, anything that would fundamentally change the meaning of the task in any history logs - can be added to admin_form_readonly_on_edit_fields. For example:

# <project>/models.py

from django.conf import settings
from django.db import models
from wagtail.core.models import Task


class UserApprovalTask(Task):
    user = models.ForeignKey(settings.AUTH_USER_MODEL, on_delete=models.SET_NULL, null=True, blank=False)

    admin_form_fields = Task.admin_form_fields + ['user']

    # prevent editing of ``user`` after the task is created
    # by default, this attribute contains the 'name' field to prevent tasks from being renamed
    admin_form_readonly_on_edit_fields = Task.admin_form_readonly_on_edit_fields + ['user']

Wagtail will choose a default form widget to use based on the field type. But you can override the form widget using the admin_form_widgets attribute:

# <project>/models.py

from django.conf import settings
from django.db import models
from wagtail.core.models import Task

from .widgets import CustomUserChooserWidget


class UserApprovalTask(Task):
    user = models.ForeignKey(settings.AUTH_USER_MODEL, on_delete=models.SET_NULL, null=True, blank=False)

    admin_form_fields = Task.admin_form_fields + ['user']

    admin_form_widgets = {
        'user': CustomUserChooserWidget,
    }
Custom TaskState models

You might also need to store custom state information for the task: for example, a rating left by an approving user. Normally, this is done on an instance of TaskState, which is created when a page starts the task. However, this can also be subclassed equivalently to Task:

# <project>/models.py

from wagtail.core.models import TaskState


class UserApprovalTaskState(TaskState):
    pass

Your custom task must then be instructed to generate an instance of your custom task state on start instead of a plain TaskState instance:

# <project>/models.py

from django.conf import settings
from django.db import models
from wagtail.core.models import Task, TaskState


class UserApprovalTaskState(TaskState):
    pass


class UserApprovalTask(Task):
    user = models.ForeignKey(settings.AUTH_USER_MODEL, on_delete=models.SET_NULL, null=True, blank=False)

    admin_form_fields = Task.admin_form_fields + ['user']

    task_state_class = UserApprovalTaskState
Customising behaviour

Both Task and TaskState have a number of methods which can be overridden to implement custom behaviour. Here are some of the most useful:

Task.user_can_access_editor(page, user), Task.user_can_lock(page, user), Task.user_can_unlock(page, user):

These methods determine if users usually without permissions can access the editor, lock, or unlock the page, by returning True or False. Note that returning False will not prevent users who would normally be able to perform those actions. For example, for our UserApprovalTask:

def user_can_access_editor(self, page, user):
    return user == self.user

Task.page_locked_for_user(page, user):

This returns True if the page should be locked and uneditable by the user. It is used by GroupApprovalTask to lock the page to any users not in the approval group.

def page_locked_for_user(self, page, user):
    return user != self.user

Task.get_actions(page, user):

This returns a list of (action_name, action_verbose_name, action_requires_additional_data_from_modal) tuples, corresponding to the actions available for the task in the edit view menu. action_requires_additional_data_from_modal should be a boolean, returning True if choosing the action should open a modal for additional data input - for example, entering a comment.

For example:

def get_actions(self, page, user):
    if user == self.user:
        return [
            ('approve', "Approve", False),
            ('reject', "Reject", False),
            ('cancel', "Cancel", False),
        ]
    else:
        return []

Task.get_form_for_action(action):

Returns a form to be used for additional data input for the given action modal. By default, returns TaskStateCommentForm, with a single comment field. The form data returned in form.cleaned_data must be fully serializable as JSON.

Task.get_template_for_action(action):

Returns the name of a custom template to be used in rendering the data entry modal for that action.

Task.on_action(task_state, user, action_name, **kwargs):

This performs the actions specified in Task.get_actions(page, user): it is passed an action name, eg approve, and the relevant task state. By default, it calls approve and reject methods on the task state when the corresponding action names are passed through. Any additional data entered in a modal (see get_form_for_action and get_actions) is supplied as kwargs.

For example, let’s say we wanted to add an additional option: cancelling the entire workflow:

def on_action(self, task_state, user, action_name):
    if action_name == 'cancel':
        return task_state.workflow_state.cancel(user=user)
    else:
        return super().on_action(task_state, user, workflow_state)

Task.get_task_states_user_can_moderate(user, **kwargs):

This returns a QuerySet of TaskStates (or subclasses) the given user can moderate - this is currently used to select pages to display on the user’s dashboard.

For example:

def get_task_states_user_can_moderate(self, user, **kwargs):
    if user == self.user:
        # get all task states linked to the (base class of) current task
        return TaskState.objects.filter(status=TaskState.STATUS_IN_PROGRESS, task=self.task_ptr)
    else:
        return TaskState.objects.none()

Task.get_description()

A class method that returns the human-readable description for the task.

For example:

@classmethod
def get_description(cls):
    return _("Members of the chosen Wagtail Groups can approve this task")
Adding notifications

Wagtail’s notifications are sent by wagtail.admin.mail.Notifier subclasses: callables intended to be connected to a signal.

By default, email notifications are sent upon workflow submission, approval and rejection, and upon submission to a group approval task.

As an example, we’ll add email notifications for when our new task is started.

# <project>/mail.py

from wagtail.admin.mail import EmailNotificationMixin, Notifier
from wagtail.core.models import TaskState

from .models import UserApprovalTaskState


class BaseUserApprovalTaskStateEmailNotifier(EmailNotificationMixin, Notifier):
    """A base notifier to send updates for UserApprovalTask events"""

    def __init__(self):
        # Allow UserApprovalTaskState and TaskState to send notifications
        super().__init__((UserApprovalTaskState, TaskState))

    def can_handle(self, instance, **kwargs):
        if super().can_handle(instance, **kwargs) and isinstance(instance.task.specific, UserApprovalTask):
            # Don't send notifications if a Task has been cancelled and then resumed - ie page was updated to a new revision
            return not TaskState.objects.filter(workflow_state=instance.workflow_state, task=instance.task, status=TaskState.STATUS_CANCELLED).exists()
        return False

    def get_context(self, task_state, **kwargs):
        context = super().get_context(task_state, **kwargs)
        context['page'] = task_state.workflow_state.page
        context['task'] = task_state.task.specific
        return context

    def get_recipient_users(self, task_state, **kwargs):

        # Send emails to the user assigned to the task
        approving_user = task_state.task.specific.user

        recipients = {approving_user}

        return recipients


class UserApprovalTaskStateSubmissionEmailNotifier(BaseUserApprovalTaskStateEmailNotifier):
    """A notifier to send updates for UserApprovalTask submission events"""

    notification = 'submitted'

Similarly, you could define notifier subclasses for approval and rejection notifications.

Next, you need to instantiate the notifier, and connect it to the task_submitted signal.

# <project>/signal_handlers.py

from wagtail.core.signals import task_submitted
from .mail import UserApprovalTaskStateSubmissionEmailNotifier


task_submission_email_notifier = UserApprovalTaskStateSubmissionEmailNotifier()

def register_signal_handlers():
    task_submitted.connect(user_approval_task_submission_email_notifier, dispatch_uid='user_approval_task_submitted_email_notification')

register_signal_handlers() should then be run on loading the app: for example, by adding it to the ready() method in your AppConfig (and making sure this config is set as default_app_config in <project>/__init__.py).

# <project>/apps.py
from django.apps import AppConfig


class MyAppConfig(AppConfig):
    name = 'myappname'
    label = 'myapplabel'
    verbose_name = 'My verbose app name'

    def ready(self):
        from .signal_handlers import register_signal_handlers
        register_signal_handlers()

Audit log

Wagtail provides a mechanism to log actions performed on its objects. Common activities such as page creation, update, deletion, locking and unlocking, revision scheduling and privacy changes are automatically logged at the model level.

The Wagtail admin uses the action log entries to provide a site-wide and page specific history of changes. It uses a registry of ‘actions’ that provide additional context for the logged action.

The audit log-driven Page history replaces the revisions list page, but provide a filter for revision-specific entries.

Note

The audit log does not replace revisions.

The wagtail.core.log_actions.log function can be used to add logging to your own code.

log(instance, action, user=None, uuid=None, title=None, data=None)

Adds an entry to the audit log.

Parameters:
  • instance – The model instance that the action is performed on
  • action – The code name for the action being performed. This can be one of the names listed below, or a custom action defined through the register_log_actions hook.
  • user – Optional - the user initiating the action. For actions logged within an admin view, this defaults to the logged-in user.
  • uuid – Optional - log entries given the same UUID indicates that they occurred as part of the same user action (e.g. a page being immediately published on creation).
  • title – The string representation of the instance being logged. By default, Wagtail will attempt to use the instance’s str representation, or get_admin_display_title for page objects.
  • data – Optional - a dictionary of additional JSON-serialisable data to store against the log entry

Note

When adding logging, you need to log the action or actions that happen to the object. For example, if the user creates and publishes a page, there should be a “create” entry and a “publish” entry. Or, if the user copies a published page and chooses to keep it published, there should be a “copy” and a “publish” entry for new page.

# mypackage/views.py
from wagtail.core.log_actions import log

def copy_for_translation(page):
    # ...
    page.copy(log_action='mypackage.copy_for_translation')

def my_method(request, page):
    # ..
    # Manually log an action
    data = {
        'make': {'it': 'so'}
    }
    log(
        instance=page, action='mypackage.custom_action', data=data
    )

Changed in version 2.15: The log function was added. Previously, logging was only implemented for pages, and invoked through the PageLogEntry.objects.log_action method.

Log actions provided by Wagtail
Action Notes
wagtail.create The object was created
wagtail.edit The object was edited (for pages, saved as draft)
wagtail.delete The object was deleted. Will only surface in the Site History for administrators
wagtail.publish The page was published
wagtail.publish.schedule Draft is scheduled for publishing
wagtail.publish.scheduled Draft published via publish_scheduled_pages management command
wagtail.schedule.cancel Draft scheduled for publishing cancelled via “Cancel scheduled publish”
wagtail.unpublish The page was unpublished
wagtail.unpublish.scheduled Page unpublished via publish_scheduled_pages management command
wagtail.lock Page was locked
wagtail.unlock Page was unlocked
wagtail.moderation.approve The revision was approved for moderation
wagtail.moderation.reject The revision was rejected
wagtail.rename A page was renamed
wagtail.revert The page was reverted to a previous draft
wagtail.copy The page was copied to a new location
wagtail.copy_for_translation The page was copied into a new locale for translation
wagtail.move The page was moved to a new location
wagtail.reorder The order of the page under it’s parent was changed
wagtail.view_restriction.create The page was restricted
wagtail.view_restriction.edit The page restrictions were updated
wagtail.view_restriction.delete The page restrictions were removed
wagtail.workflow.start The page was submitted for moderation in a Workflow
wagtail.workflow.approve The draft was approved at a Workflow Task
wagtail.workflow.reject The draft was rejected, and changes requested at a Workflow Task
wagtail.workflow.resume The draft was resubmitted to the workflow
wagtail.workflow.cancel The workflow was cancelled
Log context

The wagtail.core.log_actions module provides a context manager to simplify code that logs a large number of actions, such as import scripts:

from wagtail.core.log_actions import LogContext

with LogContext(user=User.objects.get(username='admin')):
    # ...
    log(page, 'wagtail.edit')
    # ...
    log(page, 'wagtail.publish')

All log calls within the block will then be attributed to the specified user, and assigned a common UUID. A log context is created automatically for views within the Wagtail admin.

Log models

Logs are stored in the database via the models wagtail.core.models.PageLogEntry (for actions on Page instances) and wagtail.core.models.ModelLogEntry (for actions on all other models). Page logs are stored in their own model to ensure that reports can be filtered according to the current user’s permissions, which could not be done efficiently with a generic foreign key.

If your own models have complex reporting requirements that would make ModelLogEntry unsuitable, you can configure them to be logged to their own log model; this is done by subclassing the abstract wagtail.core.models.BaseLogEntry model, and registering that model with the log registry’s register_model method:

from myapp.models import Sprocket, SprocketLogEntry
# here SprocketLogEntry is a subclass of BaseLogEntry

@hooks.register('register_log_actions')
def sprocket_log_model(actions):
    actions.register_model(Sprocket, SprocketLogEntry)

Customising the user account settings form

This document describes how to customise the user account settings form that can be found by clicking “Account settings” at the bottom of the main menu.

Adding new panels

Each panel on this form is a separate model form which can operate on an instance of either the user model, or the UserProfile model.

Basic example

Here is an example of how to add a new form that operates on the user model:

# forms.py

from django import forms
from django.contrib.auth import get_user_model

class CustomSettingsForm(forms.ModelForm):

    class Meta:
        model = get_user_model()
        fields = [...]
# hooks.py

from wagtail.admin.views.account import BaseSettingsPanel
from wagtail.core import hooks
from .forms import CustomSettingsForm

@hooks.register('register_account_settings_panel')
class CustomSettingsPanel(BaseSettingsPanel):
    name = 'custom'
    title = "My custom settings"
    order = 500
    form_class = CustomSettingsForm
    form_object = 'user'

The attributes are as follows:

  • name - A unique name for the panel. All form fields are prefixed with this name, so it must be lowercase and cannot contain symbols -
  • title - The heading that is displayed to the user
  • order - Used to order panels on a tab. The builtin Wagtail panels start at 100 and increase by 100 for each panel.
  • form_class - A ModelForm subclass that operates on a user or a profile
  • form_object - Set to user to operate on the user, and profile to operate on the profile
  • tab (optional) - Set which tab the panel appears on.
  • template_name (optional) - Override the default template used for rendering the panel
Operating on the UserProfile model

To add a panel that alters data on the user’s UserProfile instance, set form_object to 'profile':

# forms.py

from django import forms
from wagtail.users.models import UserProfile

class CustomProfileSettingsForm(forms.ModelForm):

    class Meta:
        model = UserProfile
        fields = [...]
# hooks.py

from wagtail.admin.views.account import BaseSettingsPanel
from wagtail.core import hooks
from .forms import CustomProfileSettingsForm

@hooks.register('register_account_settings_panel')
class CustomSettingsPanel(BaseSettingsPanel):
    name = 'custom'
    title = "My custom settings"
    order = 500
    form_class = CustomProfileSettingsForm
    form_object = 'profile'
Creating new tabs

You can define a new tab using the SettingsTab class:

# hooks.py

from wagtail.admin.views.account import BaseSettingsPanel, SettingsTab
from wagtail.core import hooks
from .forms import CustomSettingsForm

custom_tab = SettingsTab('custom', "Custom settings", order=300)

@hooks.register('register_account_settings_panel')
class CustomSettingsPanel(BaseSettingsPanel):
    name = 'custom'
    title = "My custom settings"
    tab = custom_tab
    order = 100
    form_class = CustomSettingsForm

SettingsTab takes three arguments:

  • name - A slug to use for the tab (this is placed after the # when linking to a tab)
  • title - The display name of the title
  • order - The order of the tab. The builtin Wagtail tabs start at 100 and increase by 100 for each tab
Customising the template

You can provide a custom template for the panel by specifying a template name:

# hooks.py

from wagtail.admin.views.account import BaseSettingsPanel
from wagtail.core import hooks
from .forms import CustomSettingsForm

@hooks.register('register_account_settings_panel')
class CustomSettingsPanel(BaseSettingsPanel):
    name = 'custom'
    title = "My custom settings"
    order = 500
    form_class = CustomSettingsForm
    template_name = 'myapp/admin/custom_settings.html'
{# templates/myapp/admin/custom_settings.html #}

{# This is the default template Wagtail uses, which just renders the form #}

<ul class="fields">
    {% for field in form %}
        {% include "wagtailadmin/shared/field_as_li.html" with field=field %}
    {% endfor %}
</ul>

Customising group edit/create views

The views for managing groups within the app are collected into a ‘viewset’ class, which acts as a single point of reference for all shared components of those views, such as forms. By subclassing the viewset, it is possible to override those components and customise the behaviour of the group management interface.

Custom edit/create forms

This example shows how to customize forms on the ‘edit group’ and ‘create group’ views in the Wagtail admin.

Let’s say you need to connect Active Directory groups with Django groups. We create a model for Active Directory groups as follows:

from django.contrib.auth.models import Group
from django.db import models


class ADGroup(models.Model):
    guid = models.CharField(verbose_name="GUID", max_length=64, db_index=True, unique=True)
    name = models.CharField(verbose_name="Group", max_length=255)
    domain = models.CharField(verbose_name="Domain", max_length=255, db_index=True)
    description = models.TextField(verbose_name="Description", blank=True, null=True)
    roles = models.ManyToManyField(Group, verbose_name="Role", related_name="adgroups", blank=True)

  class Meta:
      verbose_name = "AD group"
      verbose_name_plural = "AD groups"

However, there is no role field on the Wagtail group ‘edit’ or ‘create’ view. To add it, inherit from wagtail.users.forms.GroupForm and add a new field:

from django import forms

from wagtail.users.forms import GroupForm as WagtailGroupForm

from .models import ADGroup


class GroupForm(WagtailGroupForm):
    adgroups = forms.ModelMultipleChoiceField(
        label="AD groups",
        required=False,
        queryset=ADGroup.objects.order_by("name"),
    )

    class Meta(WagtailGroupForm.Meta):
        fields = WagtailGroupForm.Meta.fields + ("adgroups",)

    def __init__(self, initial=None, instance=None, **kwargs):
        if instance is not None:
            if initial is None:
                initial = {}
            initial["adgroups"] = instance.adgroups.all()
        super().__init__(initial=initial, instance=instance, **kwargs)

    def save(self, commit=True):
        instance = super().save()
        instance.adgroups.set(self.cleaned_data["adgroups"])
        return instance

Now add your custom form into the group viewset by inheriting the default Wagtail GroupViewSet class and overriding the get_form_class method.

from wagtail.users.views.groups import GroupViewSet as WagtailGroupViewSet

from .forms import GroupForm


class GroupViewSet(WagtailGroupViewSet):
    def get_form_class(self, for_update=False):
        return GroupForm

Add the field to the group ‘edit’/’create’ templates:

{% extends "wagtailusers/groups/edit.html" %}
{% load wagtailusers_tags wagtailadmin_tags i18n %}

{% block extra_fields %}
    {% include "wagtailadmin/shared/field_as_li.html" with field=form.adgroups %}
{% endblock extra_fields %}

Finally we configure the wagtail.users application to use the custom viewset, by setting up a custom AppConfig class. Within your project folder (i.e. the package containing the top-level settings and urls modules), create apps.py (if it does not exist already) and add:

from wagtail.users.apps import WagtailUsersAppConfig


class CustomUsersAppConfig(WagtailUsersAppConfig):
    group_viewset = "myapplication.someapp.viewsets.GroupViewSet"

Replace wagtail.users in settings.INSTALLED_APPS with the path to CustomUsersAppConfig.

INSTALLED_APPS = [
    ...,
    "myapplication.apps.CustomUsersAppConfig",
    # "wagtail.users",
    ...,
]

Rich text internals

At first glance, Wagtail’s rich text capabilities appear to give editors direct control over a block of HTML content. In reality, it’s necessary to give editors a representation of rich text content that is several steps removed from the final HTML output, for several reasons:

  • The editor interface needs to filter out certain kinds of unwanted markup; this includes malicious scripting, font styles pasted from an external word processor, and elements which would break the validity or consistency of the site design (for example, pages will generally reserve the <h1> element for the page title, and so it would be inappropriate to allow users to insert their own additional <h1> elements through rich text).
  • Rich text fields can specify a features argument to further restrict the elements permitted in the field - see Limiting features in a rich text field.
  • Enforcing a subset of HTML helps to keep presentational markup out of the database, making the site more maintainable, and making it easier to repurpose site content (including, potentially, producing non-HTML output such as LaTeX).
  • Elements such as page links and images need to preserve metadata such as the page or image ID, which is not present in the final HTML representation.

This requires the rich text content to go through a number of validation and conversion steps; both between the editor interface and the version stored in the database, and from the database representation to the final rendered HTML.

For this reason, extending Wagtail’s rich text handling to support a new element is more involved than simply saying (for example) “enable the <blockquote> element”, since various components of Wagtail - both client and server-side - need to agree on how to handle that feature, including how it should be exposed in the editor interface, how it should be represented within the database, and (if appropriate) how it should be translated when rendered on the front-end.

The components involved in Wagtail’s rich text handling are described below.

Data format

Rich text data (as handled by RichTextField, and RichTextBlock within StreamField) is stored in the database in a format that is similar, but not identical, to HTML. For example, a link to a page might be stored as:

<p><a linktype="page" id="3">Contact us</a> for more information.</p>

Here, the linktype attribute identifies a rule that shall be used to rewrite the tag. When rendered on a template through the |richtext filter (see Rich text (filter)), this is converted into valid HTML:

<p><a href="/contact-us/">Contact us</a> for more information.</p>

In the case of RichTextBlock, the block’s value is a RichText object which performs this conversion automatically when rendered as a string, so the |richtext filter is not necessary.

Likewise, an image inside rich text content might be stored as:

<embed embedtype="image" id="10" alt="A pied wagtail" format="left" />

which is converted into an img element when rendered:

<img alt="A pied wagtail" class="richtext-image left" height="294" src="/media/images/pied-wagtail.width-500_ENyKffb.jpg" width="500">

Again, the embedtype attribute identifies a rule that shall be used to rewrite the tag. All tags other than <a linktype="..."> and <embed embedtype="..." /> are left unchanged in the converted HTML.

A number of additional constraints apply to <a linktype="..."> and <embed embedtype="..." /> tags, to allow the conversion to be performed efficiently via string replacement:

  • The tag name and attributes must be lower-case
  • Attribute values must be quoted with double-quotes
  • embed elements must use XML self-closing tag syntax (i.e. end in /> instead of a closing </embed> tag)
  • The only HTML entities permitted in attribute values are &lt;, &gt;, &amp; and &quot;
The feature registry

Any app within your project can define extensions to Wagtail’s rich text handling, such as new linktype and embedtype rules. An object known as the feature registry serves as a central source of truth about how rich text should behave. This object can be accessed through the register_rich_text_features hook, which is called on startup to gather all definitions relating to rich text:

# my_app/wagtail_hooks.py

from wagtail.core import hooks

@hooks.register('register_rich_text_features')
def register_my_feature(features):
    # add new definitions to 'features' here
Rewrite handlers

Rewrite handlers are classes that know how to translate the content of rich text tags like <a linktype="..."> and <embed embedtype="..." /> into front-end HTML. For example, the PageLinkHandler class knows how to convert the rich text tag <a linktype="page" id="123"> into the HTML tag <a href="/path/to/page/123">.

Rewrite handlers can also provide other useful information about rich text tags. For example, given an appropriate tag, PageLinkHandler can be used to extract which page is being referred to. This can be useful for downstream code that may want information about objects being referenced in rich text.

You can create custom rewrite handlers to support your own new linktype and embedtype tags. New handlers must be Python classes that inherit from either wagtail.core.richtext.LinkHandler or wagtail.core.richtext.EmbedHandler. Your new classes should override at least some of the following methods (listed here for LinkHandler, although EmbedHandler has an identical signature):

class LinkHandler
identifier

Required. The identifier attribute is a string that indicates which rich text tags should be handled by this handler.

For example, PageLinkHandler.identifier is set to the string "page", indicating that any rich text tags with <a linktype="page"> should be handled by it.

expand_db_attributes(attrs)

Required. The expand_db_attributes method is expected to take a dictionary of attributes from a database rich text <a> tag (<embed> for EmbedHandler) and use it to generate valid frontend HTML.

For example, PageLinkHandler.expand_db_attributes might receive {'id': 123}, use it to retrieve the Wagtail page with ID 123, and render a link to its URL like <a href="/path/to/page/123">.

get_model()

Optional. The static get_model method only applies to those handlers that are used to render content related to Django models. This method allows handlers to expose the type of content that they know how to handle.

For example, PageLinkHandler.get_model returns the Wagtail class Page.

Handlers that aren’t related to Django models can leave this method undefined, and calling it will raise NotImplementedError.

get_instance(attrs)

Optional. The static or classmethod get_instance method also only applies to those handlers that are used to render content related to Django models. This method is expected to take a dictionary of attributes from a database rich text <a> tag (<embed> for EmbedHandler) and use it to return the specific Django model instance being referred to.

For example, PageLinkHandler.get_instance might receive {'id': 123} and return the instance of the Wagtail Page class with ID 123.

If left undefined, a default implementation of this method will query the id model field on the class returned by get_model using the provided id attribute; this can be overridden in your own handlers should you want to use some other model field.

Below is an example custom rewrite handler that implements these methods to add support for rich text linking to user email addresses. It supports the conversion of rich text tags like <a linktype="user" username="wagtail"> to valid HTML like <a href="mailto:hello@wagtail.io">. This example assumes that equivalent front-end functionality has been added to allow users to insert these kinds of links into their rich text editor.

from django.contrib.auth import get_user_model
from wagtail.core.rich_text import LinkHandler

class UserLinkHandler(LinkHandler):
    identifier = 'user'

    @staticmethod
    def get_model():
        return get_user_model()

    @classmethod
    def get_instance(cls, attrs):
        model = cls.get_model()
        return model.objects.get(username=attrs['username'])

    @classmethod
    def expand_db_attributes(cls, attrs):
        user = cls.get_instance(attrs)
        return '<a href="mailto:%s">' % user.email
Registering rewrite handlers

Rewrite handlers must also be registered with the feature registry via the register_rich_text_features hook. Independent methods for registering both link handlers and embed handlers are provided.

This method allows you to register a custom handler deriving from wagtail.core.rich_text.LinkHandler, and adds it to the list of link handlers available during rich text conversion.

# my_app/wagtail_hooks.py

from wagtail.core import hooks
from my_app.handlers import MyCustomLinkHandler

@hooks.register('register_rich_text_features')
def register_link_handler(features):
    features.register_link_type(MyCustomLinkHandler)

It is also possible to define link rewrite handlers for Wagtail’s built-in external and email links, even though they do not have a predefined linktype. For example, if you want external links to have a rel="nofollow" attribute for SEO purposes:

from django.utils.html import escape
from wagtail.core import hooks
from wagtail.core.rich_text import LinkHandler

class NoFollowExternalLinkHandler(LinkHandler):
    identifier = 'external'

    @classmethod
    def expand_db_attributes(cls, attrs):
        href = attrs["href"]
        return '<a href="%s" rel="nofollow">' % escape(href)

@hooks.register('register_rich_text_features')
def register_external_link(features):
    features.register_link_type(NoFollowExternalLinkHandler)

Similarly you can use email linktype to add a custom rewrite handler for email links (e.g. to obfuscate emails in rich text).

FeatureRegistry.register_embed_type(handler)

This method allows you to register a custom handler deriving from wagtail.core.rich_text.EmbedHandler, and adds it to the list of embed handlers available during rich text conversion.

# my_app/wagtail_hooks.py

from wagtail.core import hooks
from my_app.handlers import MyCustomEmbedHandler

@hooks.register('register_rich_text_features')
def register_embed_handler(features):
    features.register_embed_type(MyCustomEmbedHandler)
Editor widgets

The editor interface used on rich text fields can be configured with the WAGTAILADMIN_RICH_TEXT_EDITORS setting. Wagtail provides two editor implementations: wagtail.admin.rich_text.DraftailRichTextArea (the Draftail editor based on Draft.js) and wagtail.admin.rich_text.HalloRichTextArea (deprecated, based on Hallo.js).

It is possible to create your own rich text editor implementation. At minimum, a rich text editor is a Django Widget subclass whose constructor accepts an options keyword argument (a dictionary of editor-specific configuration options sourced from the OPTIONS field in WAGTAILADMIN_RICH_TEXT_EDITORS), and which consumes and produces string data in the HTML-like format described above.

Typically, a rich text widget also receives a features list, passed from either RichTextField / RichTextBlock or the features option in WAGTAILADMIN_RICH_TEXT_EDITORS, which defines the features available in that instance of the editor (see Limiting features in a rich text field). To opt in to supporting features, set the attribute accepts_features = True on your widget class; the widget constructor will then receive the feature list as a keyword argument features.

There is a standard set of recognised feature identifiers as listed under Limiting features in a rich text field, but this is not a definitive list; feature identifiers are only defined by convention, and it is up to each editor widget to determine which features it will recognise, and adapt its behaviour accordingly. Individual editor widgets might implement fewer or more features than the default set, either as built-in functionality or through a plugin mechanism if the editor widget has one.

For example, a third-party Wagtail extension might introduce table as a new rich text feature, and provide implementations for the Draftail and Hallo editors (which both provide a plugin mechanism). In this case, the third-party extension will not be aware of your custom editor widget, and so the widget will not know how to handle the table feature identifier. Editor widgets should silently ignore any feature identifiers that they do not recognise.

The default_features attribute of the feature registry is a list of feature identifiers to be used whenever an explicit feature list has not been given in RichTextField / RichTextBlock or WAGTAILADMIN_RICH_TEXT_EDITORS. This list can be modified within the register_rich_text_features hook to make new features enabled by default, and retrieved by calling get_default_features().

@hooks.register('register_rich_text_features')
def make_h1_default(features):
    features.default_features.append('h1')

Outside of the register_rich_text_features hook - for example, inside a widget class - the feature registry can be imported as the object wagtail.core.rich_text.features. A possible starting point for a rich text editor with feature support would be:

from django.forms import widgets
from wagtail.core.rich_text import features

class CustomRichTextArea(widgets.TextArea):
    accepts_features = True

    def __init__(self, *args, **kwargs):
        self.options = kwargs.pop('options', None)

        self.features = kwargs.pop('features', None)
        if self.features is None:
            self.features = features.get_default_features()

        super().__init__(*args, **kwargs)
Editor plugins
FeatureRegistry.register_editor_plugin(editor_name, feature_name, plugin_definition)

Rich text editors often provide a plugin mechanism to allow extending the editor with new functionality. The register_editor_plugin method provides a standardised way for register_rich_text_features hooks to define plugins to be pulled in to the editor when a given rich text feature is enabled.

register_editor_plugin is passed an editor name (a string uniquely identifying the editor widget - Wagtail uses the identifiers draftail and hallo for its built-in editors), a feature identifier, and a plugin definition object. This object is specific to the editor widget and can be any arbitrary value, but will typically include a Django form media definition referencing the plugin’s JavaScript code - which will then be merged into the editor widget’s own media definition - along with any relevant configuration options to be passed when instantiating the editor.

FeatureRegistry.get_editor_plugin(editor_name, feature_name)

Within the editor widget, the plugin definition for a given feature can be retrieved via the get_editor_plugin method, passing the editor’s own identifier string and the feature identifier. This will return None if no matching plugin has been registered.

For details of the plugin formats for Wagtail’s built-in editors, see Extending the Draftail Editor and Extending the Hallo Editor.

Format converters

Editor widgets will often be unable to work directly with Wagtail’s rich text format, and require conversion to their own native format. For Draftail, this is a JSON-based format known as ContentState (see How Draft.js Represents Rich Text Data). Hallo.js and other editors based on HTML’s contentEditable mechanism require valid HTML, and so Wagtail uses a convention referred to as “editor HTML”, where the additional data required on link and embed elements is stored in data- attributes, for example: <a href="/contact-us/" data-linktype="page" data-id="3">Contact us</a>.

Wagtail provides two utility classes, wagtail.admin.rich_text.converters.contentstate.ContentstateConverter and wagtail.admin.rich_text.converters.editor_html.EditorHTMLConverter, to perform conversions between rich text format and the native editor formats. These classes are independent of any editor widget, and distinct from the rewriting process that happens when rendering rich text onto a template.

Both classes accept a features list as an argument to their constructor, and implement two methods, from_database_format(data) which converts Wagtail rich text data to the editor’s format, and to_database_format(data) which converts editor data to Wagtail rich text format.

As with editor plugins, the behaviour of a converter class can vary according to the feature list passed to it. In particular, it can apply whitelisting rules to ensure that the output only contains HTML elements corresponding to the currently active feature set. The feature registry provides a register_converter_rule method to allow register_rich_text_features hooks to define conversion rules that will be activated when a given feature is enabled.

FeatureRegistry.register_converter_rule(converter_name, feature_name, rule_definition)

register_editor_plugin is passed a converter name (a string uniquely identifying the converter class - Wagtail uses the identifiers contentstate and editorhtml), a feature identifier, and a rule definition object. This object is specific to the converter and can be any arbitrary value.

For details of the rule definition format for the contentstate and editorhtml converters, see Extending the Draftail Editor and Extending the Hallo Editor respectively.

FeatureRegistry.get_converter_rule(converter_name, feature_name)

Within a converter class, the rule definition for a given feature can be retrieved via the get_converter_rule method, passing the converter’s own identifier string and the feature identifier. This will return None if no matching rule has been registered.

Extending the Draftail Editor

Wagtail’s rich text editor is built with Draftail, and its functionality can be extended through plugins.

Plugins come in three types:

  • Inline styles – To format a portion of a line, eg. bold, italic, monospace.
  • Blocks – To indicate the structure of the content, eg. blockquote, ol.
  • Entities – To enter additional data/metadata, eg. link (with a URL), image (with a file).

All of these plugins are created with a similar baseline, which we can demonstrate with one of the simplest examples – a custom feature for an inline style of mark. Place the following in a wagtail_hooks.py file in any installed app:

import wagtail.admin.rich_text.editors.draftail.features as draftail_features
from wagtail.admin.rich_text.converters.html_to_contentstate import InlineStyleElementHandler
from wagtail.core import hooks

# 1. Use the register_rich_text_features hook.
@hooks.register('register_rich_text_features')
def register_mark_feature(features):
    """
    Registering the `mark` feature, which uses the `MARK` Draft.js inline style type,
    and is stored as HTML with a `<mark>` tag.
    """
    feature_name = 'mark'
    type_ = 'MARK'
    tag = 'mark'

    # 2. Configure how Draftail handles the feature in its toolbar.
    control = {
        'type': type_,
        'label': '☆',
        'description': 'Mark',
        # This isn’t even required – Draftail has predefined styles for MARK.
        # 'style': {'textDecoration': 'line-through'},
    }

    # 3. Call register_editor_plugin to register the configuration for Draftail.
    features.register_editor_plugin(
        'draftail', feature_name, draftail_features.InlineStyleFeature(control)
    )

    # 4.configure the content transform from the DB to the editor and back.
    db_conversion = {
        'from_database_format': {tag: InlineStyleElementHandler(type_)},
        'to_database_format': {'style_map': {type_: tag}},
    }

    # 5. Call register_converter_rule to register the content transformation conversion.
    features.register_converter_rule('contentstate', feature_name, db_conversion)

    # 6. (optional) Add the feature to the default features list to make it available
    # on rich text fields that do not specify an explicit 'features' list
    features.default_features.append('mark')

These steps will always be the same for all Draftail plugins. The important parts are to:

  • Consistently use the feature’s Draft.js type or Wagtail feature names where appropriate.
  • Give enough information to Draftail so it knows how to make a button for the feature, and how to render it (more on this later).
  • Configure the conversion to use the right HTML element (as they are stored in the DB).

For detailed configuration options, head over to the Draftail documentation to see all of the details. Here are some parts worth highlighting about controls:

  • The type is the only mandatory piece of information.
  • To display the control in the toolbar, combine icon, label and description.
  • The controls’ icon can be a string to use an icon font with CSS classes, say 'icon': 'fas fa-user',. It can also be an array of strings, to use SVG paths, or SVG symbol references eg. 'icon': ['M100 100 H 900 V 900 H 100 Z'],. The paths need to be set for a 1024x1024 viewbox.
Creating new inline styles

In addition to the initial example, inline styles take a style property to define what CSS rules will be applied to text in the editor. Be sure to read the Draftail documentation on inline styles.

Finally, the DB to/from conversion uses an InlineStyleElementHandler to map from a given tag (<mark> in the example above) to a Draftail type, and the inverse mapping is done with Draft.js exporter configuration of the style_map.

Creating new blocks

Blocks are nearly as simple as inline styles:

from wagtail.admin.rich_text.converters.html_to_contentstate import BlockElementHandler

@hooks.register('register_rich_text_features')
def register_help_text_feature(features):
    """
    Registering the `help-text` feature, which uses the `help-text` Draft.js block type,
    and is stored as HTML with a `<div class="help-text">` tag.
    """
    feature_name = 'help-text'
    type_ = 'help-text'

    control = {
        'type': type_,
        'label': '?',
        'description': 'Help text',
        # Optionally, we can tell Draftail what element to use when displaying those blocks in the editor.
        'element': 'div',
    }

    features.register_editor_plugin(
        'draftail', feature_name, draftail_features.BlockFeature(control, css={'all': ['help-text.css']})
    )

    features.register_converter_rule('contentstate', feature_name, {
        'from_database_format': {'div[class=help-text]': BlockElementHandler(type_)},
        'to_database_format': {'block_map': {type_: {'element': 'div', 'props': {'class': 'help-text'}}}},
    })

Here are the main differences:

  • We can configure an element to tell Draftail how to render those blocks in the editor.
  • We register the plugin with BlockFeature.
  • We set up the conversion with BlockElementHandler and block_map.

Optionally, we can also define styles for the blocks with the Draftail-block--help-text (Draftail-block--<block type>) CSS class.

That’s it! The extra complexity is that you may need to write CSS to style the blocks in the editor.

Creating new entities

Warning

This is an advanced feature. Please carefully consider whether you really need this.

Entities aren’t simply formatting buttons in the toolbar. They usually need to be much more versatile, communicating to APIs or requesting further user input. As such,

  • You will most likely need to write a hefty dose of JavaScript, some of it with React.
  • The API is very low-level. You will most likely need some Draft.js knowledge.
  • Custom UIs in rich text can be brittle. Be ready to spend time testing in multiple browsers.

The good news is that having such a low-level API will enable third-party Wagtail plugins to innovate on rich text features, proposing new kinds of experiences. But in the meantime, consider implementing your UI through StreamField instead, which has a battle-tested API meant for Django developers.


Here are the main requirements to create a new entity feature:

  • Like for inline styles and blocks, register an editor plugin.
  • The editor plugin must define a source: a React component responsible for creating new entity instances in the editor, using the Draft.js API.
  • The editor plugin also needs a decorator (for inline entities) or block (for block entities): a React component responsible for displaying entity instances within the editor.
  • Like for inline styles and blocks, set up the to/from DB conversion.
  • The conversion usually is more involved, since entities contain data that needs to be serialised to HTML.

To write the React components, Wagtail exposes its own React, Draft.js and Draftail dependencies as global variables. Read more about this in Extending client-side components. To go further, please look at the Draftail documentation as well as the Draft.js exporter documentation.

Here is a detailed example to showcase how those tools are used in the context of Wagtail. For the sake of our example, we can imagine a news team working at a financial newspaper. They want to write articles about the stock market, refer to specific stocks anywhere inside of their content (eg. “$TSLA” tokens in a sentence), and then have their article automatically enriched with the stock’s information (a link, a number, a sparkline).

The editor toolbar could contain a “stock chooser” that displays a list of available stocks, then inserts the user’s selection as a textual token. For our example, we will just pick a stock at random:

_images/draftail_entity_stock_source.gif

Those tokens are then saved in the rich text on publish. When the news article is displayed on the site, we then insert live market data coming from an API next to each token:

_images/draftail_entity_stock_rendering.png

In order to achieve this, we start with registering the rich text feature like for inline styles and blocks:

@hooks.register('register_rich_text_features')
def register_stock_feature(features):
    features.default_features.append('stock')
    """
    Registering the `stock` feature, which uses the `STOCK` Draft.js entity type,
    and is stored as HTML with a `<span data-stock>` tag.
    """
    feature_name = 'stock'
    type_ = 'STOCK'

    control = {
        'type': type_,
        'label': '$',
        'description': 'Stock',
    }

    features.register_editor_plugin(
        'draftail', feature_name, draftail_features.EntityFeature(
            control,
            js=['stock.js'],
            css={'all': ['stock.css']}
        )
    )

    features.register_converter_rule('contentstate', feature_name, {
        # Note here that the conversion is more complicated than for blocks and inline styles.
        'from_database_format': {'span[data-stock]': StockEntityElementHandler(type_)},
        'to_database_format': {'entity_decorators': {type_: stock_entity_decorator}},
    })

The js and css keyword arguments on EntityFeature can be used to specify additional JS and CSS files to load when this feature is active. Both are optional. Their values are added to a Media object, more documentation on these objects is available in the Django Form Assets documentation.

Since entities hold data, the conversion to/from database format is more complicated. We have to create the two handlers:

from draftjs_exporter.dom import DOM
from wagtail.admin.rich_text.converters.html_to_contentstate import InlineEntityElementHandler

def stock_entity_decorator(props):
    """
    Draft.js ContentState to database HTML.
    Converts the STOCK entities into a span tag.
    """
    return DOM.create_element('span', {
        'data-stock': props['stock'],
    }, props['children'])


class StockEntityElementHandler(InlineEntityElementHandler):
    """
    Database HTML to Draft.js ContentState.
    Converts the span tag into a STOCK entity, with the right data.
    """
    mutability = 'IMMUTABLE'

    def get_attribute_data(self, attrs):
        """
        Take the ``stock`` value from the ``data-stock`` HTML attribute.
        """
        return {
            'stock': attrs['data-stock'],
        }

Note how they both do similar conversions, but use different APIs. to_database_format is built with the Draft.js exporter components API, whereas from_database_format uses a Wagtail API.

The next step is to add JavaScript to define how the entities are created (the source), and how they are displayed (the decorator). Within stock.js, we define the source component:

const React = window.React;
const Modifier = window.DraftJS.Modifier;
const EditorState = window.DraftJS.EditorState;

const DEMO_STOCKS = ['AMD', 'AAPL', 'TWTR', 'TSLA', 'BTC'];

// Not a real React component – just creates the entities as soon as it is rendered.
class StockSource extends React.Component {
    componentDidMount() {
        const { editorState, entityType, onComplete } = this.props;

        const content = editorState.getCurrentContent();
        const selection = editorState.getSelection();

        const randomStock = DEMO_STOCKS[Math.floor(Math.random() * DEMO_STOCKS.length)];

        // Uses the Draft.js API to create a new entity with the right data.
        const contentWithEntity = content.createEntity(entityType.type, 'IMMUTABLE', {
            stock: randomStock,
        });
        const entityKey = contentWithEntity.getLastCreatedEntityKey();

        // We also add some text for the entity to be activated on.
        const text = `$${randomStock}`;

        const newContent = Modifier.replaceText(content, selection, text, null, entityKey);
        const nextState = EditorState.push(editorState, newContent, 'insert-characters');

        onComplete(nextState);
    }

    render() {
        return null;
    }
}

This source component uses data and callbacks provided by Draftail. It also uses dependencies from global variables – see Extending client-side components.

We then create the decorator component:

const Stock = (props) => {
    const { entityKey, contentState } = props;
    const data = contentState.getEntity(entityKey).getData();

    return React.createElement('a', {
        role: 'button',
        onMouseUp: () => {
            window.open(`https://finance.yahoo.com/quote/${data.stock}`);
        },
    }, props.children);
};

This is a straightforward React component. It does not use JSX since we do not want to have to use a build step for our JavaScript.

Finally, we register the JS components of our plugin:

window.draftail.registerPlugin({
    type: 'STOCK',
    source: StockSource,
    decorator: Stock,
});

And that’s it! All of this setup will finally produce the following HTML on the site’s front-end:

<p>
    Anyone following Elon Musk’s <span data-stock="TSLA">$TSLA</span> should also look into <span data-stock="BTC">$BTC</span>.
</p>

To fully complete the demo, we can add a bit of JavaScript to the front-end in order to decorate those tokens with links and a little sparkline.

[].slice.call(document.querySelectorAll('[data-stock]')).forEach((elt) => {
    const link = document.createElement('a');
    link.href = `https://finance.yahoo.com/quote/${elt.dataset.stock}`;
    link.innerHTML = `${elt.innerHTML}<svg width="50" height="20" stroke-width="2" stroke="blue" fill="rgba(0, 0, 255, .2)"><path d="M4 14.19 L 4 14.19 L 13.2 14.21 L 22.4 13.77 L 31.59 13.99 L 40.8 13.46 L 50 11.68 L 59.19 11.35 L 68.39 10.68 L 77.6 7.11 L 86.8 7.85 L 96 4" fill="none"></path><path d="M4 14.19 L 4 14.19 L 13.2 14.21 L 22.4 13.77 L 31.59 13.99 L 40.8 13.46 L 50 11.68 L 59.19 11.35 L 68.39 10.68 L 77.6 7.11 L 86.8 7.85 L 96 4 V 20 L 4 20 Z" stroke="none"></path></svg>`;

    elt.innerHTML = '';
    elt.appendChild(link);
});

Custom block entities can also be created (have a look at the separate Draftail documentation), but these are not detailed here since StreamField is the go-to way to create block-level rich text in Wagtail.

Integration of the Draftail widgets

To further customise how the Draftail widgets are integrated into the UI, there are additional extension points for CSS and JS:

  • In JavaScript, use the [data-draftail-input] attribute selector to target the input which contains the data, and [data-draftail-editor-wrapper] for the element which wraps the editor.
  • The editor instance is bound on the input field for imperative access. Use document.querySelector('[data-draftail-input]').draftailEditor.
  • In CSS, use the classes prefixed with Draftail-.

Extending the Hallo Editor

Warning

As of Wagtail 2.0, the hallo.js editor is deprecated. We have no intentions to remove it from Wagtail as of yet, but it will no longer receive bug fixes. Please be aware of the known hallo.js issues should you want to keep using it.

To use hallo.js on Wagtail 2.x, add the following to your settings:

WAGTAILADMIN_RICH_TEXT_EDITORS = {
    'default': {
        'WIDGET': 'wagtail.admin.rich_text.HalloRichTextArea'
    }
}

The legacy hallo.js editor’s functionality can be extended through plugins. For information on developing custom hallo.js plugins, see the project’s page: https://github.com/bergie/hallo

Once the plugin has been created, it should be registered through the feature registry’s register_editor_plugin(editor, feature_name, plugin) method. For a hallo.js plugin, the editor parameter should always be 'hallo'.

A plugin halloblockquote, implemented in myapp/js/hallo-blockquote.js, that adds support for the <blockquote> tag, would be registered under the feature name block-quote as follows:

from wagtail.admin.rich_text import HalloPlugin
from wagtail.core import hooks

@hooks.register('register_rich_text_features')
def register_embed_feature(features):
    features.register_editor_plugin(
        'hallo', 'block-quote',
        HalloPlugin(
            name='halloblockquote',
            js=['myapp/js/hallo-blockquote.js'],
        )
    )

The constructor for HalloPlugin accepts the following keyword arguments:

  • name - the plugin name as defined in the JavaScript code. hallo.js plugin names are prefixed with the "IKS." namespace, but the name passed here should be without the prefix.
  • options - a dictionary (or other JSON-serialisable object) of options to be passed to the JavaScript plugin code on initialisation
  • js - a list of JavaScript files to be imported for this plugin, defined in the same way as a Django form media definition
  • css - a dictionary of CSS files to be imported for this plugin, defined in the same way as a Django form media definition
  • order - an index number (default 100) specifying the order in which plugins should be listed, which in turn determines the order buttons will appear in the toolbar

When writing the front-end code for the plugin, Wagtail’s Hallo implementation offers two extension points:

  • In JavaScript, use the [data-hallo-editor] attribute selector to target the editor, eg. var $editor = $('[data-hallo-editor]');.
  • In CSS, use the .halloeditor class selector.
Whitelisting rich text elements

After extending the editor to support a new HTML element, you’ll need to add it to the whitelist of permitted elements - Wagtail’s standard behaviour is to strip out unrecognised elements, to prevent editors from inserting styles and scripts (either deliberately, or inadvertently through copy-and-paste) that the developer didn’t account for.

Elements can be added to the whitelist through the feature registry’s register_converter_rule(converter, feature_name, ruleset) method. When the hallo.js editor is in use, the converter parameter should always be 'editorhtml'.

The following code will add the <blockquote> element to the whitelist whenever the block-quote feature is active:

from wagtail.admin.rich_text.converters.editor_html import WhitelistRule
from wagtail.core.whitelist import allow_without_attributes

@hooks.register('register_rich_text_features')
def register_blockquote_feature(features):
    features.register_converter_rule('editorhtml', 'block-quote', [
        WhitelistRule('blockquote', allow_without_attributes),
    ])

WhitelistRule is passed the element name, and a callable which will perform some kind of manipulation of the element whenever it is encountered. This callable receives the element as a BeautifulSoup Tag object.

The wagtail.core.whitelist module provides a few helper functions to assist in defining these handlers: allow_without_attributes, a handler which preserves the element but strips out all of its attributes, and attribute_rule which accepts a dict specifying how to handle each attribute, and returns a handler function. This dict will map attribute names to either True (indicating that the attribute should be kept), False (indicating that it should be dropped), or a callable (which takes the initial attribute value and returns either a final value for the attribute, or None to drop the attribute).

Adding custom bulk actions

This document describes how to add custom bulk actions to different listings.

Registering a custom bulk action
from wagtail.admin.views.bulk_action import BulkAction
from wagtail.core import hooks


@hooks.register('register_bulk_action')
class CustomDeleteBulkAction(BulkAction):
    display_name = _("Delete")
    aria_label = _("Delete selected objects")
    action_type = "delete"
    template_name = "/path/to/confirm_bulk_delete.html"
    models = [...]

    @classmethod
    def execute_action(cls, objects, **kwargs):
        for obj in objects:
            do_something(obj)
        return num_parent_objects, num_child_objects  # return the count of updated objects

The attributes are as follows:

  • display_name - The label that will be displayed on the button in the user interface
  • aria_label - The aria-label attribute that will be applied to the button in the user interface
  • action_type - A unique identifier for the action. Will be required in the url for bulk actions
  • template_name - The path to the confirmation template
  • models - A list of models on which the bulk action can act
  • action_priority (optional) - A number that is used to determine the placement of the button in the list of buttons
  • classes (optional) - A set of CSS classnames that will be used on the button in the user interface

An example for a confirmation template is as follows:

<!-- /path/to/confirm_bulk_delete.html -->

{% extends 'wagtailadmin/bulk_actions/confirmation/base.html' %}
{% load i18n wagtailadmin_tags %}

{% block titletag %}{% blocktrans count counter=items|length %}Delete 1 item{% plural %}Delete {{ counter }} items{% endblocktrans %}{% endblock %}

{% block header %}
    {% trans "Delete" as del_str %}
    {% include "wagtailadmin/shared/header.html" with title=del_str icon="doc-empty-inverse" %}
{% endblock header %}

{% block items_with_access %}
        {% if items %}
        <p>{% trans "Are you sure you want to delete these items?" %}</p>
        <ul>
            {% for item in items %}
            <li>
                <a href="" target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer">{{ item.item.title }}</a>
            </li>
            {% endfor %}
        </ul>
        {% endif %}
{% endblock items_with_access %}

{% block items_with_no_access %}

{% blocktrans asvar no_access_msg count counter=items_with_no_access|length %}You don't have permission to delete this item{% plural %}You don't have permission to delete these items{% endblocktrans %}
{% include './list_items_with_no_access.html' with items=items_with_no_access no_access_msg=no_access_msg %}

{% endblock items_with_no_access %}

{% block form_section %}
{% if items %}
    {% trans 'Yes, delete' as action_button_text %}
    {% trans "No, don't delete" as no_action_button_text %}
    {% include 'wagtailadmin/bulk_actions/confirmation/form.html' with action_button_class="serious" %}
{% else %}
    {% include 'wagtailadmin/bulk_actions/confirmation/go_back.html' %}
{% endif %}
{% endblock form_section %}
<!-- ./list_items_with_no_access.html -->
{% extends 'wagtailadmin/bulk_actions/confirmation/list_items_with_no_access.html' %}
{% load i18n %}

{% block per_item %}
    {% if item.can_edit %}
    <a href="{% url 'wagtailadmin_pages:edit' item.item.id %}" target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer">{{ item.item.title }}</a>
    {% else %}
    {{ item.item.title }}
    {% endif %}
{% endblock per_item %}

The execute_action classmethod is the only method that must be overridden for the bulk action to work properly. It takes a list of objects as the only required argument, and a bunch of keyword arguments that can be supplied by overriding the get_execution_context method. For example.

@classmethod
def execute_action(cls, objects, **kwargs):
    # the kwargs here is the output of the get_execution_context method
    user = kwargs.get('user', None)
    num_parent_objects, num_child_objects = 0, 0
    # you could run the action per object or run them in bulk using django's bulk update and delete methods
    for obj in objects:
        num_child_objects += obj.get_children().count()
        num_parent_objects += 1
        obj.delete(user=user)
        num_parent_objects += 1
    return num_parent_objects, num_child_objects

The get_execution_context method can be overridden to provide context to the execute_action

def get_execution_context(self):
    return {
        'user': self.request.user
    }

The get_context_data method can be overridden to pass additional context to the confirmation template.

def get_context_data(self, **kwargs):
    context = super().get_context_data(**kwargs)
    context['new_key'] = some_value
    return context

The check_perm method can be overridden to check if an object has some permission or not. objects for which the check_perm returns False will be available in the context under the key 'items_with_no_access'.

def check_perm(self, obj):
    return obj.has_perm('some_perm')  # returns True or False

The success message shown on the admin can be customised by overriding the get_success_message method.

def get_success_message(self, num_parent_objects, num_child_objects):
    return _("{} objects, including {} child objects have been updated".format(num_parent_objects, num_child_objects))
Adding bulk actions to the page explorer

When creating a custom bulk action class for pages, subclass from wagtail.admin.views.pages.bulk_actions.page_bulk_action.PageBulkAction instead of wagtail.admin.views.bulk_action.BulkAction

Basic example
from wagtail.admin.views.pages.bulk_actions.page_bulk_action import PageBulkAction
from wagtail.core import hooks


@hooks.register('register_bulk_action')
class CustomPageBulkAction(PageBulkAction):
    ...
Adding bulk actions to the Images listing

When creating a custom bulk action class for images, subclass from wagtail.images.views.bulk_actions.image_bulk_action.ImageBulkAction instead of wagtail.admin.views.bulk_action.BulkAction

Basic example
from wagtail.images.views.bulk_actions.image_bulk_action import ImageBulkAction
from wagtail.core import hooks


@hooks.register('register_bulk_action')
class CustomImageBulkAction(ImageBulkAction):
    ...
Adding bulk actions to the documents listing

When creating a custom bulk action class for documents, subclass from wagtail.documents.views.bulk_actions.document_bulk_action.DocumentBulkAction instead of wagtail.admin.views.bulk_action.BulkAction

Basic example
from wagtail.documents.views.bulk_actions.document_bulk_action import DocumentBulkAction
from wagtail.core import hooks


@hooks.register('register_bulk_action')
class CustomDocumentBulkAction(DocumentBulkAction):
    ...
Adding bulk actions to the user listing

When creating a custom bulk action class for users, subclass from wagtail.users.views.bulk_actions.user_bulk_action.UserBulkAction instead of wagtail.admin.views.bulk_action.BulkAction

Basic example
from wagtail.users.views.bulk_actions.user_bulk_action import UserBulkAction
from wagtail.core import hooks


@hooks.register('register_bulk_action')
class CustomUserBulkAction(UserBulkAction):
    ...

Reference

Pages

Wagtail requires a little careful setup to define the types of content that you want to present through your website. The basic unit of content in Wagtail is the Page, and all of your page-level content will inherit basic webpage-related properties from it. But for the most part, you will be defining content yourself, through the construction of Django models using Wagtail’s Page as a base.

Wagtail organizes content created from your models in a tree, which can have any structure and combination of model objects in it. Wagtail doesn’t prescribe ways to organize and interrelate your content, but here we’ve sketched out some strategies for organizing your models.

The presentation of your content, the actual webpages, includes the normal use of the Django template system. We’ll cover additional functionality that Wagtail provides at the template level later on.

Theory
Introduction to Trees

If you’re unfamiliar with trees as an abstract data type, you might want to review the concepts involved.

As a web developer, though, you probably already have a good understanding of trees as filesystem directories or paths. Wagtail pages can create the same structure, as each page in the tree has its own URL path, like so:

/
    people/
        nien-nunb/
        laura-roslin/
    events/
        captain-picard-day/
        winter-wrap-up/

The Wagtail admin interface uses the tree to organize content for editing, letting you navigate up and down levels in the tree through its Explorer menu. This method of organization is a good place to start in thinking about your own Wagtail models.

Nodes and Leaves

It might be handy to think of the Page-derived models you want to create as being one of two node types: parents and leaves. Wagtail isn’t prescriptive in this approach, but it’s a good place to start if you’re not experienced in structuring your own content types.

Nodes

Parent nodes on the Wagtail tree probably want to organize and display a browse-able index of their descendants. A blog, for instance, needs a way to show a list of individual posts.

A Parent node could provide its own function returning its descendant objects.

class EventPageIndex(Page):
    # ...
    def events(self):
        # Get list of live event pages that are descendants of this page
        events = EventPage.objects.live().descendant_of(self)

        # Filter events list to get ones that are either
        # running now or start in the future
        events = events.filter(date_from__gte=date.today())

        # Order by date
        events = events.order_by('date_from')

        return events

This example makes sure to limit the returned objects to pieces of content which make sense, specifically ones which have been published through Wagtail’s admin interface (live()) and are children of this node (descendant_of(self)). By setting a subpage_types class property in your model, you can specify which models are allowed to be set as children, and by setting a parent_page_types class property, you can specify which models are allowed to be parents of this page model. Wagtail will allow any Page-derived model by default. Regardless, it’s smart for a parent model to provide an index filtered to make sense.

Leaves

Leaves are the pieces of content itself, a page which is consumable, and might just consist of a bunch of properties. A blog page leaf might have some body text and an image. A person page leaf might have a photo, a name, and an address.

It might be helpful for a leaf to provide a way to back up along the tree to a parent, such as in the case of breadcrumbs navigation. The tree might also be deep enough that a leaf’s parent won’t be included in general site navigation.

The model for the leaf could provide a function that traverses the tree in the opposite direction and returns an appropriate ancestor:

class EventPage(Page):
    # ...
    def event_index(self):
        # Find closest ancestor which is an event index
        return self.get_ancestors().type(EventIndexPage).last()

If defined, subpage_types and parent_page_types will also limit the parent models allowed to contain a leaf. If not, Wagtail will allow any combination of parents and leafs to be associated in the Wagtail tree. Like with index pages, it’s a good idea to make sure that the index is actually of the expected model to contain the leaf.

Other Relationships

Your Page-derived models might have other interrelationships which extend the basic Wagtail tree or depart from it entirely. You could provide functions to navigate between siblings, such as a “Next Post” link on a blog page (post->post->post). It might make sense for subtrees to interrelate, such as in a discussion forum (forum->post->replies) Skipping across the hierarchy might make sense, too, as all objects of a certain model class might interrelate regardless of their ancestors (events = EventPage.objects.all). It’s largely up to the models to define their interrelations, the possibilities are really endless.

Anatomy of a Wagtail Request

For going beyond the basics of model definition and interrelation, it might help to know how Wagtail handles requests and constructs responses. In short, it goes something like:

  1. Django gets a request and routes through Wagtail’s URL dispatcher definitions
  2. Wagtail checks the hostname of the request to determine which Site record will handle this request.
  3. Starting from the root page of that site, Wagtail traverses the page tree, calling the route() method and letting each page model decide whether it will handle the request itself or pass it on to a child page.
  4. The page responsible for handling the request returns a RouteResult object from route(), which identifies the page along with any additional args/kwargs to be passed to serve().
  5. Wagtail calls serve(), which constructs a context using get_context()
  6. serve() finds a template to pass it to using get_template()
  7. A response object is returned by serve() and Django responds to the requester.

You can apply custom behaviour to this process by overriding Page class methods such as route() and serve() in your own models. For examples, see Recipes.

Scheduled Publishing

Page publishing can be scheduled through the Go live date/time feature in the Settings tab of the Edit page. This allows you to set set up initial page publishing or a page update in advance. In order for pages to be published at the scheduled time you should set up the publish_scheduled_pages management command.

The basic workflow is as follows:

  • Scheduling a revision for a page that is not currently live means that page will go live when the scheduled time comes.
  • Scheduling a revision for a page that is already live means that revision will be published when the time comes.
  • If page has a scheduled revision and you set another revision to publish immediately, the scheduled revision will be unscheduled.

The Revisions view for a given page will show which revision is scheduled and when it is scheduled for. A scheduled revision in the list will also provide an Unschedule button to cancel it.

Recipes
Overriding the serve() Method

Wagtail defaults to serving Page-derived models by passing a reference to the page object to a Django HTML template matching the model’s name, but suppose you wanted to serve something other than HTML? You can override the serve() method provided by the Page class and handle the Django request and response more directly.

Consider this example from the Wagtail demo site’s models.py, which serves an EventPage object as an iCal file if the format variable is set in the request:

class EventPage(Page):
    ...

    def serve(self, request):
        if "format" in request.GET:
            if request.GET['format'] == 'ical':
                # Export to ical format
                response = HttpResponse(
                    export_event(self, 'ical'),
                    content_type='text/calendar',
                )
                response['Content-Disposition'] = 'attachment; filename=' + self.slug + '.ics'
                return response
            else:
                # Unrecognised format error
                message = 'Could not export event\n\nUnrecognised format: ' + request.GET['format']
                return HttpResponse(message, content_type='text/plain')
        else:
            # Display event page as usual
            return super().serve(request)

serve() takes a Django request object and returns a Django response object. Wagtail returns a TemplateResponse object with the template and context which it generates, which allows middleware to function as intended, so keep in mind that a simpler response object like a HttpResponse will not receive these benefits.

With this strategy, you could use Django or Python utilities to render your model in JSON or XML or any other format you’d like.

Adding Endpoints with Custom route() Methods

Note

A much simpler way of adding more endpoints to pages is provided by the routable_page module.

Wagtail routes requests by iterating over the path components (separated with a forward slash /), finding matching objects based on their slug, and delegating further routing to that object’s model class. The Wagtail source is very instructive in figuring out what’s happening. This is the default route() method of the Page class:

class Page(...):
    ...

    def route(self, request, path_components):
        if path_components:
            # request is for a child of this page
            child_slug = path_components[0]
            remaining_components = path_components[1:]

            # find a matching child or 404
            try:
                subpage = self.get_children().get(slug=child_slug)
            except Page.DoesNotExist:
                raise Http404

            # delegate further routing
            return subpage.specific.route(request, remaining_components)

        else:
            # request is for this very page
            if self.live:
                # Return a RouteResult that will tell Wagtail to call
                # this page's serve() method
                return RouteResult(self)
            else:
                # the page matches the request, but isn't published, so 404
                raise Http404

route() takes the current object (self), the request object, and a list of the remaining path_components from the request URL. It either continues delegating routing by calling route() again on one of its children in the Wagtail tree, or ends the routing process by returning a RouteResult object or raising a 404 error.

The RouteResult object (defined in wagtail.core.url_routing) encapsulates all the information Wagtail needs to call a page’s serve() method and return a final response: this information consists of the page object, and any additional args/kwargs to be passed to serve().

By overriding the route() method, we could create custom endpoints for each object in the Wagtail tree. One use case might be using an alternate template when encountering the print/ endpoint in the path. Another might be a REST API which interacts with the current object. Just to see what’s involved, lets make a simple model which prints out all of its child path components.

First, models.py:

from django.shortcuts import render
from wagtail.core.url_routing import RouteResult
from django.http.response import Http404
from wagtail.core.models import Page

...

class Echoer(Page):

    def route(self, request, path_components):
        if path_components:
            # tell Wagtail to call self.serve() with an additional 'path_components' kwarg
            return RouteResult(self, kwargs={'path_components': path_components})
        else:
            if self.live:
                # tell Wagtail to call self.serve() with no further args
                return RouteResult(self)
            else:
                raise Http404

    def serve(self, path_components=[]):
        return render(request, self.template, {
            'page': self,
            'echo': ' '.join(path_components),
        })

This model, Echoer, doesn’t define any properties, but does subclass Page so objects will be able to have a custom title and slug. The template just has to display our {{ echo }} property.

Now, once creating a new Echoer page in the Wagtail admin titled “Echo Base,” requests such as:

http://127.0.0.1:8000/echo-base/tauntaun/kennel/bed/and/breakfast/

Will return:

tauntaun kennel bed and breakfast

Be careful if you’re introducing new required arguments to the serve() method - Wagtail still needs to be able to display a default view of the page for previewing and moderation, and by default will attempt to do this by calling serve() with a request object and no further arguments. If your serve() method does not accept that as a method signature, you will need to override the page’s serve_preview() method to call serve() with suitable arguments:

def serve_preview(self, request, mode_name):
    return self.serve(request, color='purple')
Tagging

Wagtail provides tagging capabilities through the combination of two Django modules, django-taggit (which provides a general-purpose tagging implementation) and django-modelcluster (which extends django-taggit’s TaggableManager to allow tag relations to be managed in memory without writing to the database - necessary for handling previews and revisions). To add tagging to a page model, you’ll need to define a ‘through’ model inheriting from TaggedItemBase to set up the many-to-many relationship between django-taggit’s Tag model and your page model, and add a ClusterTaggableManager accessor to your page model to present this relation as a single tag field.

In this example, we set up tagging on BlogPage through a BlogPageTag model:

# models.py

from modelcluster.fields import ParentalKey
from modelcluster.contrib.taggit import ClusterTaggableManager
from taggit.models import TaggedItemBase

class BlogPageTag(TaggedItemBase):
    content_object = ParentalKey('demo.BlogPage', on_delete=models.CASCADE, related_name='tagged_items')

class BlogPage(Page):
    ...
    tags = ClusterTaggableManager(through=BlogPageTag, blank=True)

    promote_panels = Page.promote_panels + [
        ...
        FieldPanel('tags'),
    ]

Wagtail’s admin provides a nice interface for inputting tags into your content, with typeahead tag completion and friendly tag icons.

We can now make use of the many-to-many tag relationship in our views and templates. For example, we can set up the blog’s index page to accept a ?tag=... query parameter to filter the BlogPage listing by tag:

from django.shortcuts import render

class BlogIndexPage(Page):
    ...
    def get_context(self, request):
        context = super().get_context(request)

        # Get blog entries
        blog_entries = BlogPage.objects.child_of(self).live()

        # Filter by tag
        tag = request.GET.get('tag')
        if tag:
            blog_entries = blog_entries.filter(tags__name=tag)

        context['blog_entries'] = blog_entries
        return context

Here, blog_entries.filter(tags__name=tag) follows the tags relation on BlogPage, to filter the listing to only those pages with a matching tag name before passing this to the template for rendering. We can now update the blog_page.html template to show a list of tags associated with the page, with links back to the filtered index page:

{% for tag in page.tags.all %}
    <a href="{% pageurl page.blog_index %}?tag={{ tag }}">{{ tag }}</a>
{% endfor %}

Iterating through page.tags.all will display each tag associated with page, while the links back to the index make use of the filter option added to the BlogIndexPage model. A Django query could also use the tagged_items related name field to get BlogPage objects associated with a tag.

The same approach can be used to add tagging to non-page models managed through Snippets and ModelAdmin. In this case, the model must inherit from modelcluster.models.ClusterableModel to be compatible with ClusterTaggableManager.

Custom tag models

In the above example, any newly-created tags will be added to django-taggit’s default Tag model, which will be shared by all other models using the same recipe as well as Wagtail’s image and document models. In particular, this means that the autocompletion suggestions on tag fields will include tags previously added to other models. To avoid this, you can set up a custom tag model inheriting from TagBase, along with a ‘through’ model inheriting from ItemBase, which will provide an independent pool of tags for that page model.

from django.db import models
from modelcluster.contrib.taggit import ClusterTaggableManager
from modelcluster.fields import ParentalKey
from taggit.models import TagBase, ItemBase

class BlogTag(TagBase):
    class Meta:
        verbose_name = "blog tag"
        verbose_name_plural = "blog tags"


class TaggedBlog(ItemBase):
    tag = models.ForeignKey(
        BlogTag, related_name="tagged_blogs", on_delete=models.CASCADE
    )
    content_object = ParentalKey(
        to='demo.BlogPage',
        on_delete=models.CASCADE,
        related_name='tagged_items'
    )

class BlogPage(Page):
    ...
    tags = ClusterTaggableManager(through='demo.TaggedBlog', blank=True)

Within the admin, the tag field will automatically recognise the custom tag model being used, and will offer autocomplete suggestions taken from that tag model.

Disabling free tagging

By default, tag fields work on a “free tagging” basis: editors can enter anything into the field, and upon saving, any tag text not recognised as an existing tag will be created automatically. To disable this behaviour, and only allow editors to enter tags that already exist in the database, custom tag models accept a free_tagging = False option:

from taggit.models import TagBase
from wagtail.snippets.models import register_snippet

@register_snippet
class BlogTag(TagBase):
    free_tagging = False

    class Meta:
        verbose_name = "blog tag"
        verbose_name_plural = "blog tags"

Here we have registered BlogTag as a snippet, to provide an interface for administrators (and other users with the appropriate permissions) to manage the allowed set of tags. With the free_tagging = False option set, editors can no longer enter arbitrary text into the tag field, and must instead select existing tags from the autocomplete dropdown.

Have redirects created automatically when changing page slug

You may want redirects created automatically when a url gets changed in the admin so as to avoid broken links. You can add something like the following block to a wagtail_hooks.py file within one of your project’s apps.

from wagtail.core import hooks
from wagtail.contrib.redirects.models import Redirect

# Create redirect when editing slugs
@hooks.register('before_edit_page')
def create_redirect_on_slug_change(request, page):
    if request.method == 'POST':
        if page.slug != request.POST['slug']:
            Redirect.objects.create(
                    old_path=page.url[:-1],
                    site=page.get_site(),
                    redirect_page=page
                )

Note: This does not work in some cases e.g. when you redirect a page, create a new page in that url and then move the new one. It should be helpful in most cases however.

Panel types
Built-in Fields and Choosers

Django’s field types are automatically recognised and provided with an appropriate widget for input. Just define that field the normal Django way and pass the field name into FieldPanel when defining your panels. Wagtail will take care of the rest.

Here are some Wagtail-specific types that you might include as fields in your models.

FieldPanel
class wagtail.admin.edit_handlers.FieldPanel(field_name, classname=None, widget=None, heading='', disable_comments=False)

This is the panel used for basic Django field types.

field_name

This is the name of the class property used in your model definition.

classname

This is a string of optional CSS classes given to the panel which are used in formatting and scripted interactivity. By default, panels are formatted as inset fields.

The CSS class full can be used to format the panel so it covers the full width of the Wagtail page editor.

The CSS class title can be used to give the field a larger text size, suitable for representing page titles and section headings.

widget(optional)

This parameter allows you to specify a Django form widget to use instead of the default widget for this field type.

heading(optional)

This allows you to override the heading for the panel, which will otherwise be set automatically using the form field’s label (taken in turn from a model field’s verbose_name).

disable_comments(optional)

This allows you to prevent a field level comment button showing for this panel if set to True (see Commenting).

StreamFieldPanel
class wagtail.admin.edit_handlers.StreamFieldPanel(field_name, classname=None, widget=None)

This is the panel used for Wagtail’s StreamField type (see How to use StreamField for mixed content).

FieldPanel.field_name

This is the name of the class property used in your model definition.

FieldPanel.classname(optional)

This is a string of optional CSS classes given to the panel which are used in formatting and scripted interactivity. By default, panels are formatted as inset fields.

The CSS class full can be used to format the panel so it covers the full width of the Wagtail page editor.

MultiFieldPanel
class wagtail.admin.edit_handlers.MultiFieldPanel(children, heading="", classname=None)

This panel condenses several FieldPanel s or choosers, from a list or tuple, under a single heading string.

children

A list or tuple of child panels

heading

A heading for the fields

InlinePanel
class wagtail.admin.edit_handlers.InlinePanel(relation_name, panels=None, classname='', heading='', label='', help_text='', min_num=None, max_num=None)

This panel allows for the creation of a “cluster” of related objects over a join to a separate model, such as a list of related links or slides to an image carousel.

This is a powerful but complex feature which will take some space to cover, so we’ll skip over it for now. For a full explanation on the usage of InlinePanel, see Inline Panels and Model Clusters.

Collapsing InlinePanels to save space

Note that you can use classname="collapsible collapsed" to load the panel collapsed under its heading in order to save space in the Wagtail admin. See Collapsible for more details on collapsible usage.

FieldRowPanel
class wagtail.admin.edit_handlers.FieldRowPanel(children, classname=None)

This panel creates a columnar layout in the editing interface, where each of the child Panels appears alongside each other rather than below.

Use of FieldRowPanel particularly helps reduce the “snow-blindness” effect of seeing so many fields on the page, for complex models. It also improves the perceived association between fields of a similar nature. For example if you created a model representing an “Event” which had a starting date and ending date, it may be intuitive to find the start and end date on the same “row”.

By default, the panel is divided into equal-width columns, but this can be overridden by adding col* class names to each of the child Panels of the FieldRowPanel. The Wagtail editing interface is laid out using a grid system, in which the maximum width of the editor is 12 columns. Classes col1-col12 can be applied to each child of a FieldRowPanel. The class col3 will ensure that field appears 3 columns wide or a quarter the width. col4 would cause the field to be 4 columns wide, or a third the width.

children

A list or tuple of child panels to display on the row

classname

A class to apply to the FieldRowPanel as a whole

HelpPanel
class wagtail.admin.edit_handlers.HelpPanel(content='', template='wagtailadmin/edit_handlers/help_panel.html', heading='', classname='')
content

HTML string that gets displayed in the panel.

template

Path to a template rendering the full panel HTML.

heading

A heading for the help content.

classname

String of CSS classes given to the panel which are used in formatting and scripted interactivity.

PageChooserPanel
class wagtail.admin.edit_handlers.PageChooserPanel(field_name, page_type=None, can_choose_root=False)

You can explicitly link Page-derived models together using the Page model and PageChooserPanel.

from wagtail.core.models import Page
from wagtail.admin.edit_handlers import PageChooserPanel


class BookPage(Page):
    related_page = models.ForeignKey(
        'wagtailcore.Page',
        null=True,
        blank=True,
        on_delete=models.SET_NULL,
        related_name='+',
    )

    content_panels = Page.content_panels + [
        PageChooserPanel('related_page', 'demo.PublisherPage'),
    ]

PageChooserPanel takes one required argument, the field name. Optionally, specifying a page type (in the form of an "appname.modelname" string) will filter the chooser to display only pages of that type. A list or tuple of page types can also be passed in, to allow choosing a page that matches any of those page types:

PageChooserPanel('related_page', ['demo.PublisherPage', 'demo.AuthorPage'])

Passing can_choose_root=True will allow the editor to choose the tree root as a page. Normally this would be undesirable, since the tree root is never a usable page, but in some specialised cases it may be appropriate; for example, a page with an automatic “related articles” feed could use a PageChooserPanel to select which subsection articles will be taken from, with the root corresponding to ‘everywhere’.

ImageChooserPanel
class wagtail.images.edit_handlers.ImageChooserPanel(field_name)

Wagtail includes a unified image library, which you can access in your models through the Image model and the ImageChooserPanel chooser. Here’s how:

from wagtail.images.models import Image
from wagtail.images.edit_handlers import ImageChooserPanel


class BookPage(Page):
    cover = models.ForeignKey(
        'wagtailimages.Image',
        null=True,
        blank=True,
        on_delete=models.SET_NULL,
        related_name='+'
    )

    content_panels = Page.content_panels + [
        ImageChooserPanel('cover'),
    ]

Django’s default behaviour is to “cascade” deletions through a ForeignKey relationship, which may not be what you want. This is why the null, blank, and on_delete parameters should be set to allow for an empty field. ImageChooserPanel takes only one argument: the name of the field.

Displaying Image objects in a template requires the use of a template tag. See How to use images in templates.

FormSubmissionsPanel
class wagtail.contrib.forms.edit_handlers.FormSubmissionsPanel

This panel adds a single, read-only section in the edit interface for pages implementing the AbstractForm model. It includes the number of total submissions for the given form and also a link to the listing of submissions.

from wagtail.contrib.forms.models import AbstractForm
from wagtail.contrib.forms.edit_handlers import FormSubmissionsPanel

class ContactFormPage(AbstractForm):
    content_panels = [
        FormSubmissionsPanel(),
    ]
DocumentChooserPanel
class wagtail.documents.edit_handlers.DocumentChooserPanel(field_name)

For files in other formats, Wagtail provides a generic file store through the Document model:

from wagtail.documents.models import Document
from wagtail.documents.edit_handlers import DocumentChooserPanel


class BookPage(Page):
    book_file = models.ForeignKey(
        'wagtaildocs.Document',
        null=True,
        blank=True,
        on_delete=models.SET_NULL,
        related_name='+'
    )

    content_panels = Page.content_panels + [
        DocumentChooserPanel('book_file'),
    ]

As with images, Wagtail documents should also have the appropriate extra parameters to prevent cascade deletions across a ForeignKey relationship. DocumentChooserPanel takes only one argument: the name of the field.

SnippetChooserPanel
class wagtail.snippets.edit_handlers.SnippetChooserPanel(field_name, snippet_type=None)

Snippets are vanilla Django models you create yourself without a Wagtail-provided base class. A chooser, SnippetChooserPanel, is provided which takes the field name as an argument.

from wagtail.snippets.edit_handlers import SnippetChooserPanel

class BookPage(Page):
    advert = models.ForeignKey(
        'demo.Advert',
        null=True,
        blank=True,
        on_delete=models.SET_NULL,
        related_name='+'
    )

    content_panels = Page.content_panels + [
        SnippetChooserPanel('advert'),
    ]

See Snippets for more information.

Field Customisation

By adding CSS classes to your panel definitions or adding extra parameters to your field definitions, you can control much of how your fields will display in the Wagtail page editing interface. Wagtail’s page editing interface takes much of its behaviour from Django’s admin, so you may find many options for customisation covered there. (See Django model field reference).

Full-Width Input

Use classname="full" to make a field (input element) stretch the full width of the Wagtail page editor. This will not work if the field is encapsulated in a MultiFieldPanel, which places its child fields into a formset.

Titles

Use classname="title" to make Page’s built-in title field stand out with more vertical padding.

Collapsible

By default, panels are expanded and not collapsible. Use classname="collapsible" to enable the collapse control. Use classname="collapsible collapsed" will load the editor page with the panel collapsed under its heading.

You must define a heading when using collapsible with MultiFieldPanel. You must define a heading or label when using collapsible with InlinePanel.

content_panels = [
    MultiFieldPanel(
        [
            ImageChooserPanel('cover'),
            DocumentChooserPanel('book_file'),
            PageChooserPanel('publisher'),
        ],
        heading="Collection of Book Fields",
        classname="collapsible collapsed"
    ),
]
Placeholder Text

By default, Wagtail uses the field’s label as placeholder text. To change it, pass to the FieldPanel a widget with a placeholder attribute set to your desired text. You can select widgets from Django’s form widgets, or any of the Wagtail’s widgets found in wagtail.admin.widgets.

For example, to customize placeholders for a Book model exposed via ModelAdmin:

# models.py
from django import forms            # the default Django widgets live here
from wagtail.admin import widgets   # to use Wagtail's special datetime widget

class Book(models.Model):
    title = models.CharField(max_length=256)
    release_date = models.DateField()
    price = models.DecimalField(max_digits=5, decimal_places=2)

    # you can create them separately
    title_widget = forms.TextInput(
        attrs = {
            'placeholder': 'Enter Full Title'
        }
    )
    # using the correct widget for your field type and desired effect
    date_widget = widgets.AdminDateInput(
        attrs = {
            'placeholder': 'dd-mm-yyyy'
        }
    )

    panels = [
        FieldPanel('title', widget=title_widget), # then add them as a variable
        FieldPanel('release_date', widget=date_widget),
        FieldPanel('price', widget=forms.NumberInput(attrs={'placeholder': 'Retail price on release'})) # or directly inline
    ]
Required Fields

To make input or chooser selection mandatory for a field, add blank=False to its model definition.

Hiding Fields

Without a panel definition, a default form field (without label) will be used to represent your fields. If you intend to hide a field on the Wagtail page editor, define the field with editable=False.

Inline Panels and Model Clusters

The django-modelcluster module allows for streamlined relation of extra models to a Wagtail page via a ForeignKey-like relationship called ParentalKey. Normally, your related objects “cluster” would need to be created beforehand (or asynchronously) before being linked to a Page; however, objects related to a Wagtail page via ParentalKey can be created on-the-fly and saved to a draft revision of a Page object.

Let’s look at the example of adding related links to a Page-derived model. We want to be able to add as many as we like, assign an order, and do all of this without leaving the page editing screen.

from wagtail.core.models import Orderable, Page
from modelcluster.fields import ParentalKey

# The abstract model for related links, complete with panels
class RelatedLink(models.Model):
    title = models.CharField(max_length=255)
    link_external = models.URLField("External link", blank=True)

    panels = [
        FieldPanel('title'),
        FieldPanel('link_external'),
    ]

    class Meta:
        abstract = True

# The real model which combines the abstract model, an
# Orderable helper class, and what amounts to a ForeignKey link
# to the model we want to add related links to (BookPage)
class BookPageRelatedLinks(Orderable, RelatedLink):
    page = ParentalKey('demo.BookPage', on_delete=models.CASCADE, related_name='related_links')

class BookPage(Page):
  # ...

  content_panels = Page.content_panels + [
    InlinePanel('related_links', label="Related Links"),
  ]

The RelatedLink class is a vanilla Django abstract model. The BookPageRelatedLinks model extends it with capability for being ordered in the Wagtail interface via the Orderable class as well as adding a page property which links the model to the BookPage model we’re adding the related links objects to. Finally, in the panel definitions for BookPage, we’ll add an InlinePanel to provide an interface for it all. Let’s look again at the parameters that InlinePanel accepts:

InlinePanel( relation_name, panels=None, heading='', label='', help_text='', min_num=None, max_num=None )

The relation_name is the related_name label given to the cluster’s ParentalKey relation. You can add the panels manually or make them part of the cluster model. heading and help_text provide a heading and caption, respectively, for the Wagtail editor. label sets the text on the add button, and is used as the heading when heading is not present. Finally, min_num and max_num allow you to set the minimum/maximum number of forms that the user must submit.

For another example of using model clusters, see Tagging

For more on django-modelcluster, visit the django-modelcluster github project page.

Model Reference

wagtail.core.models is split into submodules for maintainability. All definitions intended as public should be imported here (with ‘noqa’ comments as required) and outside code should continue to import them from wagtail.core.models (e.g. from wagtail.core.models import Site, not from wagtail.core.models.sites import Site.)

Submodules should take care to keep the direction of dependencies consistent; where possible they should implement low-level generic functionality which is then imported by higher-level models such as Page.

This document contains reference information for the model classes inside the wagtailcore module.

Page
Database fields
class wagtail.core.models.Page
title

(text)

Human-readable title of the page.

draft_title

(text)

Human-readable title of the page, incorporating any changes that have been made in a draft edit (in contrast to the title field, which for published pages will be the title as it exists in the current published version).

slug

(text)

This is used for constructing the page’s URL.

For example: http://domain.com/blog/[my-slug]/

content_type

(foreign key to django.contrib.contenttypes.models.ContentType)

A foreign key to the ContentType object that represents the specific model of this page.

live

(boolean)

A boolean that is set to True if the page is published.

Note: this field defaults to True meaning that any pages that are created programmatically will be published by default.

has_unpublished_changes

(boolean)

A boolean that is set to True when the page is either in draft or published with draft changes.

owner

(foreign key to user model)

A foreign key to the user that created the page.

first_published_at

(date/time)

The date/time when the page was first published.

last_published_at

(date/time)

The date/time when the page was last published.

seo_title

(text)

Alternate SEO-crafted title, for use in the page’s <title> HTML tag.

search_description

(text)

SEO-crafted description of the content, used for search indexing. This is also suitable for the page’s <meta name="description"> HTML tag.

show_in_menus

(boolean)

Toggles whether the page should be included in site-wide menus.

This is used by the in_menu() QuerySet filter.

Defaults to False and can be overridden on the model with show_in_menus_default = True.

Note

To set the global default for all pages, set Page.show_in_menus_default = True once where you first import the Page model.

locked

(boolean)

When set to True, the Wagtail editor will not allow any users to edit the content of the page.

If locked_by is also set, only that user can edit the page.

locked_by

(foreign key to user model)

The user who has currently locked the page. Only this user can edit the page.

If this is None when locked is True, nobody can edit the page.

locked_at

(date/time)

The date/time when the page was locked.

alias_of

(foreign key to another page)

If set, this page is an alias of the page referenced in this field.

locale

(foreign key to Locale)

This foreign key links to the Locale object that represents the page language.

translation_key

(uuid)

A UUID that is shared between translations of a page. These are randomly generated when a new page is created and copied when a translation of a page is made.

A translation_key value can only be used on one page in each locale.

Methods and properties

In addition to the model fields provided, Page has many properties and methods that you may wish to reference, use, or override in creating your own models.

Note

See also django-treebeard’s node API. Page is a subclass of materialized path tree nodes.

class wagtail.core.models.Page
get_specific(deferred=False, copy_attrs=None, copy_attrs_exclude=None)

New in version 2.12.

Return this page in its most specific subclassed form.

Changed in version 2.13: * When copy_attrs is not supplied, all known non-field attribute values are copied to the returned object. Previously, no non-field values would be copied. * The copy_attrs_exclude option was added.

By default, a database query is made to fetch all field values for the specific object. If you only require access to custom methods or other non-field attributes on the specific object, you can use deferred=True to avoid this query. However, any attempts to access specific field values from the returned object will trigger additional database queries.

By default, references to all non-field attribute values are copied from current object to the returned one. This includes:

  • Values set by a queryset, for example: annotations, or values set as a result of using select_related() or prefetch_related().
  • Any cached_property values that have been evaluated.
  • Attributes set elsewhere in Python code.

For fine-grained control over which non-field values are copied to the returned object, you can use copy_attrs to specify a complete list of attribute names to include. Alternatively, you can use copy_attrs_exclude to specify a list of attribute names to exclude.

If called on a page object that is already an instance of the most specific class (e.g. an EventPage), the object will be returned as is, and no database queries or other operations will be triggered.

If the page was originally created using a page type that has since been removed from the codebase, a generic Page object will be returned (without any custom field values or other functionality present on the original class). Usually, deleting these pages is the best course of action, but there is currently no safe way for Wagtail to do that at migration time.

specific

Returns this page in its most specific subclassed form with all field values fetched from the database. The result is cached in memory.

specific_deferred

New in version 2.12.

Returns this page in its most specific subclassed form without any additional field values being fetched from the database. The result is cached in memory.

specific_class

Return the class that this page would be if instantiated in its most specific form.

If the model class can no longer be found in the codebase, and the relevant ContentType has been removed by a database migration, the return value will be None.

If the model class can no longer be found in the codebase, but the relevant ContentType is still present in the database (usually a result of switching between git branches without running or reverting database migrations beforehand), the return value will be None.

cached_content_type

New in version 2.10.

Return this page’s content_type value from the ContentType model’s cached manager, which will avoid a database query if the object is already in memory.

get_url(request=None, current_site=None)

Return the ‘most appropriate’ URL for referring to this page from the pages we serve, within the Wagtail backend and actual website templates; this is the local URL (starting with ‘/’) if we’re only running a single site (i.e. we know that whatever the current page is being served from, this link will be on the same domain), and the full URL (with domain) if not. Return None if the page is not routable.

Accepts an optional but recommended request keyword argument that, if provided, will be used to cache site-level URL information (thereby avoiding repeated database / cache lookups) and, via the Site.find_for_request() function, determine whether a relative or full URL is most appropriate.

get_full_url(request=None)

Return the full URL (including protocol / domain) to this page, or None if it is not routable

full_url

Return the full URL (including protocol / domain) to this page, or None if it is not routable

relative_url(current_site, request=None)

Return the ‘most appropriate’ URL for this page taking into account the site we’re currently on; a local URL if the site matches, or a fully qualified one otherwise. Return None if the page is not routable.

Accepts an optional but recommended request keyword argument that, if provided, will be used to cache site-level URL information (thereby avoiding repeated database / cache lookups).

get_site()

Return the Site object that this page belongs to.

get_url_parts(request=None)

Determine the URL for this page and return it as a tuple of (site_id, site_root_url, page_url_relative_to_site_root). Return None if the page is not routable.

This is used internally by the full_url, url, relative_url and get_site properties and methods; pages with custom URL routing should override this method in order to have those operations return the custom URLs.

Accepts an optional keyword argument request, which may be used to avoid repeated database / cache lookups. Typically, a page model that overrides get_url_parts should not need to deal with request directly, and should just pass it to the original method when calling super.

route(request, path_components)
serve(request, *args, **kwargs)
context_object_name = None

Custom name for page instance in page’s Context.

get_context(request, *args, **kwargs)
get_template(request, *args, **kwargs)
get_admin_display_title()

Return the title for this page as it should appear in the admin backend; override this if you wish to display extra contextual information about the page, such as language. By default, returns draft_title.

preview_modes

A list of (internal_name, display_name) tuples for the modes in which this page can be displayed for preview/moderation purposes. Ordinarily a page will only have one display mode, but subclasses of Page can override this - for example, a page containing a form might have a default view of the form, and a post-submission ‘thank you’ page

serve_preview(request, mode_name)

Return an HTTP response for use in page previews. Normally this would be equivalent to self.serve(request), since we obviously want the preview to be indicative of how it looks on the live site. However, there are a couple of cases where this is not appropriate, and custom behaviour is required:

1) The page has custom routing logic that derives some additional required args/kwargs to be passed to serve(). The routing mechanism is bypassed when previewing, so there’s no way to know what args we should pass. In such a case, the page model needs to implement its own version of serve_preview.

2) The page has several different renderings that we would like to be able to see when previewing - for example, a form page might have one rendering that displays the form, and another rendering to display a landing page when the form is posted. This can be done by setting a custom preview_modes list on the page model - Wagtail will allow the user to specify one of those modes when previewing, and pass the chosen mode_name to serve_preview so that the page model can decide how to render it appropriately. (Page models that do not specify their own preview_modes list will always receive an empty string as mode_name.)

Any templates rendered during this process should use the ‘request’ object passed here - this ensures that request.user and other properties are set appropriately for the wagtail user bar to be displayed. This request will always be a GET.

get_parent(update=False)
Returns:the parent node of the current node object. Caches the result in the object itself to help in loops.
get_ancestors(inclusive=False)

Returns a queryset of the current page’s ancestors, starting at the root page and descending to the parent, or to the current page itself if inclusive is true.

get_descendants(inclusive=False)

Returns a queryset of all pages underneath the current page, any number of levels deep. If inclusive is true, the current page itself is included in the queryset.

get_siblings(inclusive=True)

Returns a queryset of all other pages with the same parent as the current page. If inclusive is true, the current page itself is included in the queryset.

get_translations(inclusive=False)

Returns a queryset containing the translations of this instance.

get_translation(locale)

Finds the translation in the specified locale.

If there is no translation in that locale, this raises a model.DoesNotExist exception.

get_translation_or_none(locale)

Finds the translation in the specified locale.

If there is no translation in that locale, this returns None.

has_translation(locale)

Returns True if a translation exists in the specified locale.

copy_for_translation(locale, copy_parents=False, alias=False, exclude_fields=None)

Creates a copy of this page in the specified locale.

The new page will be created in draft as a child of this page’s translated parent.

For example, if you are translating a blog post from English into French, this method will look for the French version of the blog index and create the French translation of the blog post under that.

If this page’s parent is not translated into the locale, then a ParentNotTranslatedError is raised. You can circumvent this error by passing copy_parents=True which copies any parents that are not translated yet.

The exclude_fields parameter can be used to set any fields to a blank value in the copy.

Note that this method calls the .copy() method internally so any fields that are excluded in .exclude_fields_in_copy will be excluded from the translation.

localized

Finds the translation in the current active language.

If there is no translation in the active language, self is returned.

Note: This will not return the translation if it is in draft. If you want to include drafts, use the .localized_draft attribute instead.

localized_draft

Finds the translation in the current active language.

If there is no translation in the active language, self is returned.

Note: This will return translations that are in draft. If you want to exclude these, use the .localized attribute.

search_fields

A list of fields to be indexed by the search engine. See Search docs Indexing extra fields

subpage_types

A list of page models which can be created as children of this page type. For example, a BlogIndex page might allow a BlogPage as a child, but not a JobPage:

class BlogIndex(Page):
    subpage_types = ['mysite.BlogPage', 'mysite.BlogArchivePage']

The creation of child pages can be blocked altogether for a given page by setting its subpage_types attribute to an empty array:

class BlogPage(Page):
    subpage_types = []
parent_page_types

A list of page models which are allowed as parent page types. For example, a BlogPage may only allow itself to be created below the BlogIndex page:

class BlogPage(Page):
    parent_page_types = ['mysite.BlogIndexPage']

Pages can block themselves from being created at all by setting parent_page_types to an empty array (this is useful for creating unique pages that should only be created once):

class HiddenPage(Page):
    parent_page_types = []

To allow for a page to be only created under the root page (e.g. for HomePage models) set the parent_page_type to ['wagtailcore.Page'].

class HomePage(Page):
    parent_page_types = ['wagtailcore.Page']
classmethod can_exist_under(parent)

Checks if this page type can exist as a subpage under a parent page instance.

See also: Page.can_create_at() and Page.can_move_to()

classmethod can_create_at(parent)

Checks if this page type can be created as a subpage under a parent page instance.

can_move_to(parent)

Checks if this page instance can be moved to be a subpage of a parent page instance.

password_required_template

Defines which template file should be used to render the login form for Protected pages using this model. This overrides the default, defined using PASSWORD_REQUIRED_TEMPLATE in your settings. See Private pages

is_creatable

Controls if this page can be created through the Wagtail administration. Defaults to True, and is not inherited by subclasses. This is useful when using multi-table inheritance, to stop the base model from being created as an actual page.

max_count

Controls the maximum number of pages of this type that can be created through the Wagtail administration interface. This is useful when needing “allow at most 3 of these pages to exist”, or for singleton pages.

max_count_per_parent

Controls the maximum number of pages of this type that can be created under any one parent page.

exclude_fields_in_copy

An array of field names that will not be included when a Page is copied. Useful when you have relations that do not use ClusterableModel or should not be copied.

class BlogPage(Page):
    exclude_fields_in_copy = ['special_relation', 'custom_uuid']

The following fields will always be excluded in a copy - [‘id’, ‘path’, ‘depth’, ‘numchild’, ‘url_path’, ‘path’].

base_form_class

The form class used as a base for editing Pages of this type in the Wagtail page editor. This attribute can be set on a model to customise the Page editor form. Forms must be a subclass of WagtailAdminPageForm. See Customising generated forms for more information.

with_content_json(content_json)

Returns a new version of the page with field values updated to reflect changes in the provided content_json (which usually comes from a previously-saved page revision).

Certain field values are preserved in order to prevent errors if the returned page is saved, such as id, content_type and some tree-related values. The following field values are also preserved, as they are considered to be meaningful to the page as a whole, rather than to a specific revision:

  • draft_title
  • live
  • has_unpublished_changes
  • owner
  • locked
  • locked_by
  • locked_at
  • latest_revision_created_at
  • first_published_at
  • alias_of
  • wagtail_admin_comments (COMMENTS_RELATION_NAME)
save(clean=True, user=None, log_action=False, **kwargs)

Overrides default method behaviour to make additional updates unique to pages, such as updating the url_path value of descendant page to reflect changes to this page’s slug.

New pages should generally be saved via the add_child() or add_sibling() method of an existing page, which will correctly set the path and depth fields on the new page before saving it.

By default, pages are validated using full_clean() before attempting to save changes to the database, which helps to preserve validity when restoring pages from historic revisions (which might not necessarily reflect the current model state). This validation step can be bypassed by calling the method with clean=False.

create_alias(*, recursive=False, parent=None, update_slug=None, update_locale=None, user=None, log_action='wagtail.create_alias', reset_translation_key=True, _mpnode_attrs=None)

Creates an alias of the given page.

An alias is like a copy, but an alias remains in sync with the original page. They are not directly editable and do not have revisions.

You can convert an alias into a regular page by setting the .alias_of attribute to None and creating an initial revision.

Parameters:
  • recursive (boolean, optional) – create aliases of the page’s subtree, defaults to False
  • parent (Page, optional) – The page to create the new alias under
  • update_slug (string, optional) – The slug of the new alias page, defaults to the slug of the original page
  • update_locale (Locale, optional) – The locale of the new alias page, defaults to the locale of the original page
  • user (User, optional) – The user who is performing this action. This user would be assigned as the owner of the new page and appear in the audit log
  • log_action (string or None, optional) – Override the log action with a custom one. or pass None to skip logging, defaults to ‘wagtail.create_alias’
  • reset_translation_key (boolean, optional) – Generate new translation_keys for the page and any translatable child objects, defaults to False
update_aliases(*, revision=None, user=None, _content_json=None, _updated_ids=None)

Publishes all aliases that follow this page with the latest content from this page.

This is called by Wagtail whenever a page with aliases is published.

Parameters:
  • revision (PageRevision, optional) – The revision of the original page that we are updating to (used for logging purposes)
  • user (User, optional) – The user who is publishing (used for logging purposes)
has_workflow

Returns True if the page or an ancestor has an active workflow assigned, otherwise False

get_workflow()

Returns the active workflow assigned to the page or its nearest ancestor

workflow_in_progress

Returns True if a workflow is in progress on the current page, otherwise False

current_workflow_state

Returns the in progress or needs changes workflow state on this page, if it exists

current_workflow_task_state

Returns (specific class of) the current task state of the workflow on this page, if it exists

current_workflow_task

Returns (specific class of) the current task in progress on this page, if it exists

Site

The Site model is useful for multi-site installations as it allows an administrator to configure which part of the tree to use for each hostname that the server responds on.

The find_for_request() function returns the Site object that will handle the given HTTP request.

Database fields
class wagtail.core.models.Site
hostname

(text)

This is the hostname of the site, excluding the scheme, port and path.

For example: www.mysite.com

Note

If you’re looking for how to get the root url of a site, use the root_url attribute.

port

(number)

This is the port number that the site responds on.

site_name

(text - optional)

A human-readable name for the site. This is not used by Wagtail itself, but is suitable for use on the site front-end, such as in <title> elements.

For example: Rod's World of Birds

root_page

(foreign key to Page)

This is a link to the root page of the site. This page will be what appears at the / URL on the site and would usually be a homepage.

is_default_site

(boolean)

This is set to True if the site is the default. Only one site can be the default.

The default site is used as a fallback in situations where a site with the required hostname/port couldn’t be found.

Methods and properties
class wagtail.core.models.Site
static find_for_request(request)

Find the site object responsible for responding to this HTTP request object. Try:

  • unique hostname first
  • then hostname and port
  • if there is no matching hostname at all, or no matching hostname:port combination, fall back to the unique default site, or raise an exception

NB this means that high-numbered ports on an extant hostname may still be routed to a different hostname which is set as the default

The site will be cached via request._wagtail_site

root_url

This returns the URL of the site. It is calculated from the hostname and the port fields.

The scheme part of the URL is calculated based on value of the port field:

  • 80 = http://
  • 443 = https://
  • Everything else will use the http:// scheme and the port will be appended to the end of the hostname (eg. http://mysite.com:8000/)
static get_site_root_paths()

Return a list of SiteRootPath instances, most specific path first - used to translate url_paths into actual URLs with hostnames

Each root path is an instance of the SiteRootPath named tuple, and have the following attributes:

  • site_id - The ID of the Site record
  • root_path - The internal URL path of the site’s home page (for example ‘/home/’)
  • root_url - The scheme/domain name of the site (for example ‘https://www.example.com/’)
  • language_code - The language code of the site (for example ‘en’)
Locale

The Locale model defines the set of languages and/or locales that can be used on a site. Each Locale record corresponds to a “language code” defined in the WAGTAIL_CONTENT_LANGUAGES setting.

Wagtail will initially set up one Locale to act as the default language for all existing content. This first locale will automatically pick the value from WAGTAIL_CONTENT_LANGUAGES that most closely matches the site primary language code defined in LANGUAGE_CODE. If the primary language code is changed later, Wagtail will not automatically create a new Locale record or update an existing one.

Before internationalisation is enabled, all pages use this primary Locale record. This is to satisfy the database constraints, and makes it easier to switch internationalisation on at a later date.

Changing WAGTAIL_CONTENT_LANGUAGES

Languages can be added or removed from WAGTAIL_CONTENT_LANGUAGES over time.

Before removing an option from WAGTAIL_CONTENT_LANGUAGES, it’s important that the Locale record is updated to a use a different content language or is deleted. Any Locale instances that have invalid content languages are automatically filtered out from all database queries making them unable to be edited or viewed.

Methods and properties
class wagtail.core.models.Locale
language_code

The language code that represents this locale

The language code can either be a language code on its own (such as en, fr), or it can include a region code (such as en-gb, fr-fr).

classmethod get_default()

Returns the default Locale based on the site’s LANGUAGE_CODE setting

classmethod get_active()

Returns the Locale that corresponds to the currently activated language in Django.

get_display_name()
Translatable Mixin

TranslatableMixin is an abstract model that can be added to any non-page Django model to make it translatable. Pages already include this mixin, so there is no need to add it.

Methods and properties

The locale and translation_key fields have a unique key constraint to prevent the object being translated into a language more than once.

class wagtail.core.models.TranslatableMixin
locale

(Foreign Key to Locale)

For pages, this defaults to the locale of the parent page.

translation_key

(uuid)

A UUID that is randomly generated whenever a new model instance is created. This is shared with all translations of that instance so can be used for querying translations.

get_translations(inclusive=False)

Returns a queryset containing the translations of this instance.

get_translation(locale)

Finds the translation in the specified locale.

If there is no translation in that locale, this raises a model.DoesNotExist exception.

get_translation_or_none(locale)

Finds the translation in the specified locale.

If there is no translation in that locale, this returns None.

has_translation(locale)

Returns True if a translation exists in the specified locale.

copy_for_translation(locale)

Creates a copy of this instance with the specified locale.

Note that the copy is initially unsaved.

classmethod get_translation_model()

Returns this model’s “Translation model”.

The “Translation model” is the model that has the locale and translation_key fields. Typically this would be the current model, but it may be a super-class if multi-table inheritance is in use (as is the case for wagtailcore.Page).

localized

Finds the translation in the current active language.

If there is no translation in the active language, self is returned.

PageRevision

Every time a page is edited a new PageRevision is created and saved to the database. It can be used to find the full history of all changes that have been made to a page and it also provides a place for new changes to be kept before going live.

  • Revisions can be created from any Page object by calling its save_revision() method
  • The content of the page is JSON-serialised and stored in the content_json field
  • You can retrieve a PageRevision as a Page object by calling the as_page_object() method
Database fields
class wagtail.core.models.PageRevision
page

(foreign key to Page)

submitted_for_moderation

(boolean)

True if this revision is in moderation

created_at

(date/time)

This is the time the revision was created

user

(foreign key to user model)

This links to the user that created the revision

content_json

(text)

This field contains the JSON content for the page at the time the revision was created

Managers
class wagtail.core.models.PageRevision
objects

This manager is used to retrieve all of the PageRevision objects in the database

Example:

PageRevision.objects.all()
submitted_revisions

This manager is used to retrieve all of the PageRevision objects that are awaiting moderator approval

Example:

PageRevision.submitted_revisions.all()
Methods and properties
class wagtail.core.models.PageRevision
as_page_object()

This method retrieves this revision as an instance of its Page subclass.

approve_moderation(user=None)

Calling this on a revision that’s in moderation will mark it as approved and publish it

reject_moderation(user=None)

Calling this on a revision that’s in moderation will mark it as rejected

is_latest_revision()

Returns True if this revision is its page’s latest revision

publish(user=None, changed=True, log_action=True, previous_revision=None)

Publishes or schedules revision for publishing.

Parameters:
  • user – the publishing user
  • changed – indicated whether content has changed
  • log_action – flag for the logging action. Pass False to skip logging. Cannot pass an action string as the method performs several actions: “publish”, “revert” (and publish the reverted revision), “schedule publishing with a live revision”, “schedule revision reversal publishing, with a live revision”, “schedule publishing”, “schedule revision reversal publishing”
  • previous_revision – indicates a revision reversal. Should be set to the previous revision instance

Calling this will copy the content of this revision into the live page object. If the page is in draft, it will be published.

GroupPagePermission
Database fields
class wagtail.core.models.GroupPagePermission
group

(foreign key to django.contrib.auth.models.Group)

page

(foreign key to Page)

permission_type

(choice list)

PageViewRestriction
Database fields
class wagtail.core.models.PageViewRestriction
page

(foreign key to Page)

password

(text)

Orderable (abstract)
Database fields
class wagtail.core.models.Orderable
sort_order

(number)

Workflow

Workflows represent sequences of tasks which much be approved for an action to be performed on a page - typically publication.

Database fields
class wagtail.core.models.Workflow
name

(text)

Human-readable name of the workflow.

active

(boolean)

Whether or not the workflow is active: active workflows can be added to pages, and started. Inactive workflows cannot.

Methods and properties
class wagtail.core.models.Workflow
start(page, user)

Initiates a workflow by creating an instance of WorkflowState

tasks

Returns all Task instances linked to this workflow

deactivate(user=None)

Sets the workflow as inactive, and cancels all in progress instances of WorkflowState linked to this workflow

all_pages()

Returns a queryset of all the pages that this Workflow applies to.

WorkflowState

Workflow states represent the status of a started workflow on a page.

Database fields
class wagtail.core.models.WorkflowState
page

(foreign key to Page)

The page on which the workflow has been started

workflow

(foreign key to Workflow)

The workflow whose state the WorkflowState represents

status

(text)

The current status of the workflow (options are WorkflowState.STATUS_CHOICES)

created_at

(date/time)

When this instance of WorkflowState was created - when the workflow was started

requested_by

(foreign key to user model)

The user who started this workflow

current_task_state

(foreign key to TaskState)

The TaskState model for the task the workflow is currently at: either completing (if in progress) or the final task state (if finished)

Methods and properties
class wagtail.core.models.WorkflowState
STATUS_CHOICES

A tuple of the possible options for the status field, and their verbose names. Options are STATUS_IN_PROGRESS, STATUS_APPROVED, STATUS_CANCELLED and STATUS_NEEDS_CHANGES.

update(user=None, next_task=None)

Checks the status of the current task, and progresses (or ends) the workflow if appropriate. If the workflow progresses, next_task will be used to start a specific task next if provided.

get_next_task()

Returns the next active task, which has not been either approved or skipped

cancel(user=None)

Cancels the workflow state

finish(user=None)

Finishes a successful in progress workflow, marking it as approved and performing the on_finish action

resume(user=None)

Put a STATUS_NEEDS_CHANGES workflow state back into STATUS_IN_PROGRESS, and restart the current task

copy_approved_task_states_to_revision(revision)

This creates copies of previously approved task states with page_revision set to a different revision.

all_tasks_with_status()

Returns a list of Task objects that are linked with this workflow state’s workflow. The status of that task in this workflow state is annotated in the .status field. And a displayable version of that status is annotated in the .status_display field.

This is different to querying TaskState as it also returns tasks that haven’t been started yet (so won’t have a TaskState).

revisions()

Returns all page revisions associated with task states linked to the current workflow state

Task

Tasks represent stages in a workflow which must be approved for the workflow to complete successfully.

Database fields
class wagtail.core.models.Task
name

(text)

Human-readable name of the task.

active

(boolean)

Whether or not the task is active: active workflows can be added to workflows, and started. Inactive workflows cannot, and are skipped when in an existing workflow.

content_type

(foreign key to django.contrib.contenttypes.models.ContentType)

A foreign key to the ContentType object that represents the specific model of this task.

Methods and properties
class wagtail.core.models.Task
workflows

Returns all Workflow instances that use this task

active_workflows

Return a QuerySet` of active workflows that this task is part of

task_state_class

The specific task state class to generate to store state information for this task. If not specified, this will be TaskState.

classmethod get_verbose_name()

Returns the human-readable “verbose name” of this task model e.g “Group approval task”.

specific

Return this Task in its most specific subclassed form.

start(workflow_state, user=None)

Start this task on the provided workflow state by creating an instance of TaskState

on_action(task_state, user, action_name, **kwargs)

Performs an action on a task state determined by the action_name string passed

user_can_access_editor(page, user)

Returns True if a user who would not normally be able to access the editor for the page should be able to if the page is currently on this task. Note that returning False does not remove permissions from users who would otherwise have them.

user_can_lock(page, user)

Returns True if a user who would not normally be able to lock the page should be able to if the page is currently on this task. Note that returning False does not remove permissions from users who would otherwise have them.

user_can_unlock(page, user)

Returns True if a user who would not normally be able to unlock the page should be able to if the page is currently on this task. Note that returning False does not remove permissions from users who would otherwise have them.

page_locked_for_user(page, user)

Returns True if the page should be locked to a given user’s edits. This can be used to prevent editing by non-reviewers.

get_actions(page, user)

Get the list of action strings (name, verbose_name, whether the action requires additional data - see get_form_for_action) for actions the current user can perform for this task on the given page. These strings should be the same as those able to be passed to on_action

get_task_states_user_can_moderate(user, **kwargs)

Returns a QuerySet of the task states the current user can moderate

deactivate(user=None)

Set active to False and cancel all in progress task states linked to this task

get_form_for_action(action)
get_template_for_action(action)
classmethod get_description()

Returns the task description.

TaskState

Task states store state information about the progress of a task on a particular page revision.

Database fields
class wagtail.core.models.TaskState
workflow_state

(foreign key to WorkflowState)

The workflow state which started this task state.

page_revision

(foreign key to PageRevision)

The page revision this task state was created on.

task

(foreign key to Task)

The task that this task state is storing state information for.

status

(text)

The completion status of the task on this revision. Options are available in TaskState.STATUS_CHOICES)

content_type

(foreign key to django.contrib.contenttypes.models.ContentType)

A foreign key to the ContentType object that represents the specific model of this task.

started_at

(date/time)

When this task state was created.

finished_at

(date/time)

When this task state was cancelled, rejected, or approved.

finished_by

(foreign key to user model)

The user who completed (cancelled, rejected, approved) the task.

comment

(text)

A text comment, typically added by a user when the task is completed.

Methods and properties
class wagtail.core.models.TaskState
STATUS_CHOICES

A tuple of the possible options for the status field, and their verbose names. Options are STATUS_IN_PROGRESS, STATUS_APPROVED, STATUS_CANCELLED, STATUS_REJECTED and STATUS_SKIPPED.

exclude_fields_in_copy

A list of fields not to copy when the TaskState.copy() method is called.

specific

Return this TaskState in its most specific subclassed form.

approve(user=None, update=True, comment='')

Approve the task state and update the workflow state

reject(user=None, update=True, comment='')

Reject the task state and update the workflow state

task_type_started_at

Finds the first chronological started_at for successive TaskStates - ie started_at if the task had not been restarted

cancel(user=None, resume=False, comment='')

Cancel the task state and update the workflow state. If resume is set to True, then upon update the workflow state is passed the current task as next_task, causing it to start a new task state on the current task if possible

copy(update_attrs=None, exclude_fields=None)

Copy this task state, excluding the attributes in the exclude_fields list and updating any attributes to values specified in the update_attrs dictionary of attribute: new value pairs

get_comment()

Returns a string that is displayed in workflow history.

This could be a comment by the reviewer, or generated. Use mark_safe to return HTML.

WorkflowTask

Represents the ordering of a task in a specific workflow.

Database fields
class wagtail.core.models.WorkflowTask
workflow

(foreign key to Workflow)

task

(foreign key to Task)

sort_order

(number)

The ordering of the task in the workflow.

WorkflowPage

Represents the assignment of a workflow to a page and its descendants.

Database fields
class wagtail.core.models.WorkflowPage
workflow

(foreign key to Workflow)

page

(foreign key to Page)

BaseLogEntry

An abstract base class that represents a record of an action performed on an object.

Database fields
class wagtail.core.models.BaseLogEntry
content_type

(foreign key to django.contrib.contenttypes.models.ContentType)

A foreign key to the ContentType object that represents the specific model of this model.

label

(text)

The object title at the time of the entry creation

Note: Wagtail will attempt to use get_admin_display_title or the string representation of the object passed to log_action()

user

(foreign key to user model)

A foreign key to the user that triggered the action.

data_json

(text)

The JSON representation of any additional details for each action. e.g. source page id and title when copying from a page. Or workflow id/name and next step id/name on a workflow transition

timestamp

(date/time)

The date/time when the entry was created.

content_changed

(boolean)

A boolean that can set to True when the content has changed.

deleted

(boolean)

A boolean that can set to True when the object is deleted. Used to filter entries in the Site History report.

Methods and properties
class wagtail.core.models.BaseLogEntry
user_display_name

Returns the display name of the associated user; get_full_name if available and non-empty, otherwise get_username. Defaults to ‘system’ when none is provided

data

Provides deserialized data

comment
object_verbose_name
object_id()
PageLogEntry

Represents a record of an action performed on an Page, subclasses BaseLogEntry.

Database fields
class wagtail.core.models.PageLogEntry
page

(foreign key to Page)

A foreign key to the page the action is performed on.

revision

(foreign key to PageRevision)

A foreign key to the current page revision.

Comment

Represents a comment on a page.

Database fields
class wagtail.core.models.Comment
page

(parental key to Page)

A parental key to the page the comment has been added to.

user

(foreign key to user model)

A foreign key to the user who added this comment.

text

(text)

The text content of the comment.

contentpath

(text)

The path to the field or streamfield block the comment is attached to, in the form field or field.streamfield_block_id.

position

(text)

An identifier for the position of the comment within its field. The format used is determined by the field.

created_at

(date/time)

The date/time when the comment was created.

updated_at

(date/time)

The date/time when the comment was updated.

revision_created

(foreign key to PageRevision)

A foreign key to the revision on which the comment was created.

resolved_at

(date/time)

The date/time when the comment was resolved, if any.

resolved_by

(foreign key to user model)

A foreign key to the user who resolved this comment, if any.

CommentReply

Represents a reply to a comment thread.

Database fields
class wagtail.core.models.CommentReply
comment

(parental key to Comment)

A parental key to the comment that started the thread.

user

(foreign key to user model)

A foreign key to the user who added this comment.

text

(text)

The text content of the comment.

created_at

(date/time)

The date/time when the comment was created.

updated_at

(date/time)

The date/time when the comment was updated.

PageSubscription

Represents a user’s subscription to email notifications about page events. Currently only used for comment notifications.

Database fields
class wagtail.core.models.PageSubscription
page

(parental key to Page)

user

(foreign key to user model)

comment_notifications

(boolean)

Whether the user should receive comment notifications for all comments, or just comments in threads they participate in.

Page QuerySet reference

All models that inherit from Page are given some extra QuerySet methods accessible from their .objects attribute.

Examples
  • Selecting only live pages

    live_pages = Page.objects.live()
    
  • Selecting published EventPages that are descendants of events_index

    events = EventPage.objects.live().descendant_of(events_index)
    
  • Getting a list of menu items

    # This gets a QuerySet of live children of the homepage with ``show_in_menus`` set
    menu_items = homepage.get_children().live().in_menu()
    
Reference
class wagtail.core.query.PageQuerySet(*args, **kwargs)
live()

This filters the QuerySet to only contain published pages.

Example:

published_pages = Page.objects.live()
not_live()

This filters the QuerySet to only contain unpublished pages.

Example:

unpublished_pages = Page.objects.not_live()
in_menu()

This filters the QuerySet to only contain pages that are in the menus.

Example:

# Build a menu from live pages that are children of the homepage
menu_items = homepage.get_children().live().in_menu()

Note

To put your page in menus, set the show_in_menus flag to true:

# Add 'my_page' to the menu
my_page.show_in_menus = True
not_in_menu()

This filters the QuerySet to only contain pages that are not in the menus.

in_site(site)

This filters the QuerySet to only contain pages within the specified site.

Example:

# Get all the EventPages in the current site
site = Site.find_for_request(request)
site_events = EventPage.objects.in_site(site)
page(other)

This filters the QuerySet so it only contains the specified page.

Example:

# Append an extra page to a QuerySet
new_queryset = old_queryset | Page.objects.page(page_to_add)
not_page(other)

This filters the QuerySet so it doesn’t contain the specified page.

Example:

# Remove a page from a QuerySet
new_queryset = old_queryset & Page.objects.not_page(page_to_remove)
descendant_of(other, inclusive=False)

This filters the QuerySet to only contain pages that descend from the specified page.

If inclusive is set to True, it will also contain the page itself (instead of just its descendants).

Example:

# Get EventPages that are under the special_events Page
special_events = EventPage.objects.descendant_of(special_events_index)

# Alternative way
special_events = special_events_index.get_descendants()
not_descendant_of(other, inclusive=False)

This filters the QuerySet to not contain any pages that descend from the specified page.

If inclusive is set to True, it will also exclude the specified page.

Example:

# Get EventPages that are not under the archived_events Page
non_archived_events = EventPage.objects.not_descendant_of(archived_events_index)
child_of(other)

This filters the QuerySet to only contain pages that are direct children of the specified page.

Example:

# Get a list of sections
sections = Page.objects.child_of(homepage)

# Alternative way
sections = homepage.get_children()
not_child_of(other)

This filters the QuerySet to not contain any pages that are direct children of the specified page.

ancestor_of(other, inclusive=False)

This filters the QuerySet to only contain pages that are ancestors of the specified page.

If inclusive is set to True, it will also include the specified page.

Example:

# Get the current section
current_section = Page.objects.ancestor_of(current_page).child_of(homepage).first()

# Alternative way
current_section = current_page.get_ancestors().child_of(homepage).first()
not_ancestor_of(other, inclusive=False)

This filters the QuerySet to not contain any pages that are ancestors of the specified page.

If inclusive is set to True, it will also exclude the specified page.

Example:

# Get the other sections
other_sections = Page.objects.not_ancestor_of(current_page).child_of(homepage)
parent_of(other)

This filters the QuerySet to only contain the parent of the specified page.

not_parent_of(other)

This filters the QuerySet to exclude the parent of the specified page.

sibling_of(other, inclusive=True)

This filters the QuerySet to only contain pages that are siblings of the specified page.

By default, inclusive is set to True so it will include the specified page in the results.

If inclusive is set to False, the page will be excluded from the results.

Example:

# Get list of siblings
siblings = Page.objects.sibling_of(current_page)

# Alternative way
siblings = current_page.get_siblings()
not_sibling_of(other, inclusive=True)

This filters the QuerySet to not contain any pages that are siblings of the specified page.

By default, inclusive is set to True so it will exclude the specified page from the results.

If inclusive is set to False, the page will be included in the results.

public()

This filters the QuerySet to only contain pages that are not in a private section

See: Private pages

Note

This doesn’t filter out unpublished pages. If you want to only have published public pages, use .live().public()

Example:

# Find all the pages that are viewable by the public
all_pages = Page.objects.live().public()
not_public()

This filters the QuerySet to only contain pages that are in a private section

search(query, fields=None, operator=None, order_by_relevance=True, partial_match=True, backend='default')

This runs a search query on all the items in the QuerySet

See: Searching QuerySets

Example:

# Search future events
results = EventPage.objects.live().filter(date__gt=timezone.now()).search("Hello")
type(*types)

This filters the QuerySet to only contain pages that are an instance of the specified model(s) (including subclasses).

Example:

# Find all pages that are of type AbstractEmailForm, or one of it's subclasses
form_pages = Page.objects.type(AbstractEmailForm)

# Find all pages that are of type AbstractEmailForm or AbstractEventPage, or one of their subclasses
form_and_event_pages = Page.objects.type(AbstractEmailForm, AbstractEventPage)
not_type(*types)

This filters the QuerySet to exclude any pages which are an instance of the specified model(s).

exact_type(*types)

This filters the QuerySet to only contain pages that are an instance of the specified model(s) (matching the model exactly, not subclasses).

Example:

# Find all pages that are of the exact type EventPage
event_pages = Page.objects.exact_type(EventPage)

# Find all page of the exact type EventPage or NewsPage
news_and_events_pages = Page.objects.exact_type(EventPage, NewsPage)

Note

If you are only interested in pages of a single type, it is clearer (and often more efficient) to use the specific model’s manager to get a queryset. For example:

event_pages = EventPage.objects.all()
not_exact_type(*types)

This filters the QuerySet to exclude any pages which are an instance of the specified model(s) (matching the model exactly, not subclasses).

Example:

# First, find all news and event pages
news_and_events = Page.objects.type(NewsPage, EventPage)

# Now exclude pages with an exact type of EventPage or NewsPage,
# leaving only instance of more 'specialist' types
specialised_news_and_events = news_and_events.not_exact_type(NewsPage, EventPage)
unpublish()

This unpublishes all live pages in the QuerySet.

Example:

# Unpublish current_page and all of its children
Page.objects.descendant_of(current_page, inclusive=True).unpublish()
specific(defer=False)

This efficiently gets all the specific pages for the queryset, using the minimum number of queries.

When the “defer” keyword argument is set to True, only generic page field values will be loaded and all specific fields will be deferred.

Example:

# Get the specific instance of all children of the hompage,
# in a minimum number of database queries.
homepage.get_children().specific()

See also: Page.specific

defer_streamfields()

Apply to a queryset to prevent fetching/decoding of StreamField values on evaluation. Useful when working with potentially large numbers of results, where StreamField values are unlikely to be needed. For example, when generating a sitemap or a long list of page links.

Example:

# Apply to a queryset to avoid fetching StreamField values
# for a specific model
EventPage.objects.all().defer_streamfields()

# Or combine with specific() to avoid fetching StreamField
# values for all models
homepage.get_children().defer_streamfields().specific()
first_common_ancestor(include_self=False, strict=False)

Find the first ancestor that all pages in this queryset have in common. For example, consider a page hierarchy like:

- Home/
    - Foo Event Index/
        - Foo Event Page 1/
        - Foo Event Page 2/
    - Bar Event Index/
        - Bar Event Page 1/
        - Bar Event Page 2/

The common ancestors for some queries would be:

>>> Page.objects\
...     .type(EventPage)\
...     .first_common_ancestor()
<Page: Home>
>>> Page.objects\
...     .type(EventPage)\
...     .filter(title__contains='Foo')\
...     .first_common_ancestor()
<Page: Foo Event Index>

This method tries to be efficient, but if you have millions of pages scattered across your page tree, it will be slow.

If include_self is True, the ancestor can be one of the pages in the queryset:

>>> Page.objects\
...     .filter(title__contains='Foo')\
...     .first_common_ancestor()
<Page: Foo Event Index>
>>> Page.objects\
...     .filter(title__exact='Bar Event Index')\
...     .first_common_ancestor()
<Page: Bar Event Index>

A few invalid cases exist: when the queryset is empty, when the root Page is in the queryset and include_self is False, and when there are multiple page trees with no common root (a case Wagtail does not support). If strict is False (the default), then the first root node is returned in these cases. If strict is True, then a ObjectDoesNotExist is raised.

StreamField reference

StreamField block reference

This document details the block types provided by Wagtail for use in StreamField, and how they can be combined into new block types.

class wagtail.core.fields.StreamField(blocks, blank=False, min_num=None, max_num=None, block_counts=None)

A model field for representing long-form content as a sequence of content blocks of various types. See How to use StreamField for mixed content.

Parameters:
  • blocks – A list of block types, passed as either a list of (name, block_definition) tuples or a StreamBlock instance.
  • blank – When false (the default), at least one block must be provided for the field to be considered valid.
  • min_num – Minimum number of sub-blocks that the stream must have.
  • max_num – Maximum number of sub-blocks that the stream may have.
  • block_counts – Specifies the minimum and maximum number of each block type, as a dictionary mapping block names to dicts with (optional) min_num and max_num fields.
body = StreamField([
    ('heading', blocks.CharBlock(form_classname="full title")),
    ('paragraph', blocks.RichTextBlock()),
    ('image', ImageChooserBlock()),
], block_counts={
    'heading': {'min_num': 1},
    'image': {'max_num': 5},
})

New in version 2.13: The min_num, max_num and block_counts arguments were added. Previously, these were only available on the StreamBlock definition.

Block options

All block definitions accept the following optional keyword arguments:

default
The default value that a new ‘empty’ block should receive.
label
The label to display in the editor interface when referring to this block - defaults to a prettified version of the block name (or, in a context where no name is assigned - such as within a ListBlock - the empty string).
icon
The name of the icon to display for this block type in the menu of available block types. For a list of icon names, see the Wagtail style guide, which can be enabled by adding wagtail.contrib.styleguide to your project’s INSTALLED_APPS.
template
The path to a Django template that will be used to render this block on the front end. See Template rendering.
group
The group used to categorize this block, i.e. any blocks with the same group name will be shown together in the editor interface with the group name as a heading.
Field block types
class wagtail.core.blocks.CharBlock

A single-line text input. The following keyword arguments are accepted in addition to the standard ones:

Parameters:
  • required – If true (the default), the field cannot be left blank.
  • max_length – The maximum allowed length of the field.
  • min_length – The minimum allowed length of the field.
  • help_text – Help text to display alongside the field.
  • validators – A list of validation functions for the field (see Django Validators).
  • form_classname – A value to add to the form field’s class attribute when rendered on the page editing form.
class wagtail.core.blocks.TextBlock

A multi-line text input. As with CharBlock, the following keyword arguments are accepted in addition to the standard ones:

Parameters:
  • required – If true (the default), the field cannot be left blank.
  • max_length – The maximum allowed length of the field.
  • min_length – The minimum allowed length of the field.
  • help_text – Help text to display alongside the field.
  • validators – A list of validation functions for the field (see Django Validators).
  • form_classname – A value to add to the form field’s class attribute when rendered on the page editing form.
class wagtail.core.blocks.EmailBlock

A single-line email input that validates that the value is a valid e-mail address. The following keyword arguments are accepted in addition to the standard ones:

Parameters:
  • required – If true (the default), the field cannot be left blank.
  • help_text – Help text to display alongside the field.
  • validators – A list of validation functions for the field (see Django Validators).
  • form_classname – A value to add to the form field’s class attribute when rendered on the page editing form.
class wagtail.core.blocks.IntegerBlock

A single-line integer input that validates that the value is a valid whole number. The following keyword arguments are accepted in addition to the standard ones:

Parameters:
  • required – If true (the default), the field cannot be left blank.
  • max_value – The maximum allowed numeric value of the field.
  • min_value – The minimum allowed numeric value of the field.
  • help_text – Help text to display alongside the field.
  • validators – A list of validation functions for the field (see Django Validators).
  • form_classname – A value to add to the form field’s class attribute when rendered on the page editing form.
class wagtail.core.blocks.FloatBlock

A single-line Float input that validates that the value is a valid floating point number. The following keyword arguments are accepted in addition to the standard ones:

Parameters:
  • required – If true (the default), the field cannot be left blank.
  • max_value – The maximum allowed numeric value of the field.
  • min_value – The minimum allowed numeric value of the field.
  • validators – A list of validation functions for the field (see Django Validators).
  • form_classname – A value to add to the form field’s class attribute when rendered on the page editing form.
class wagtail.core.blocks.DecimalBlock

A single-line decimal input that validates that the value is a valid decimal number. The following keyword arguments are accepted in addition to the standard ones:

Parameters:
  • required – If true (the default), the field cannot be left blank.
  • help_text – Help text to display alongside the field.
  • max_value – The maximum allowed numeric value of the field.
  • min_value – The minimum allowed numeric value of the field.
  • max_digits – The maximum number of digits allowed in the number. This number must be greater than or equal to decimal_places.
  • decimal_places – The number of decimal places to store with the number.
  • validators – A list of validation functions for the field (see Django Validators).
  • form_classname – A value to add to the form field’s class attribute when rendered on the page editing form.
class wagtail.core.blocks.RegexBlock

A single-line text input that validates a string against a regular expression. The regular expression used for validation must be supplied as the first argument, or as the keyword argument regex.

blocks.RegexBlock(regex=r'^[0-9]{3}$', error_messages={
    'invalid': "Not a valid library card number."
})

The following keyword arguments are accepted in addition to the standard ones:

Parameters:
  • regex – Regular expression to validate against.
  • error_messages – Dictionary of error messages, containing either or both of the keys required (for the message shown on an empty value) or invalid (for the message shown on a non-matching value).
  • required – If true (the default), the field cannot be left blank.
  • help_text – Help text to display alongside the field.
  • max_length – The maximum allowed length of the field.
  • min_length – The minimum allowed length of the field.
  • validators – A list of validation functions for the field (see Django Validators).
  • form_classname – A value to add to the form field’s class attribute when rendered on the page editing form.
class wagtail.core.blocks.URLBlock

A single-line text input that validates that the string is a valid URL. The following keyword arguments are accepted in addition to the standard ones:

Parameters:
  • required – If true (the default), the field cannot be left blank.
  • max_length – The maximum allowed length of the field.
  • min_length – The minimum allowed length of the field.
  • help_text – Help text to display alongside the field.
  • validators – A list of validation functions for the field (see Django Validators).
  • form_classname – A value to add to the form field’s class attribute when rendered on the page editing form.
class wagtail.core.blocks.BooleanBlock

A checkbox. The following keyword arguments are accepted in addition to the standard ones:

Parameters:
  • required – If true (the default), the checkbox must be ticked to proceed. As with Django’s BooleanField, a checkbox that can be left ticked or unticked must be explicitly denoted with required=False.
  • help_text – Help text to display alongside the field.
  • form_classname – A value to add to the form field’s class attribute when rendered on the page editing form.
class wagtail.core.blocks.DateBlock
A date picker. The following keyword arguments are accepted in addition to the standard ones:
Parameters:
  • format – Date format. This must be one of the recognised formats listed in the DATE_INPUT_FORMATS setting. If not specified Wagtail will use the WAGTAIL_DATE_FORMAT setting with fallback to ‘%Y-%m-%d’.
  • required – If true (the default), the field cannot be left blank.
  • help_text – Help text to display alongside the field.
  • validators – A list of validation functions for the field (see Django Validators).
  • form_classname – A value to add to the form field’s class attribute when rendered on the page editing form.
class wagtail.core.blocks.TimeBlock
A time picker. The following keyword arguments are accepted in addition to the standard ones:
Parameters:
  • required – If true (the default), the field cannot be left blank.
  • help_text – Help text to display alongside the field.
  • validators – A list of validation functions for the field (see Django Validators).
  • form_classname – A value to add to the form field’s class attribute when rendered on the page editing form.
class wagtail.core.blocks.DateTimeBlock
A combined date / time picker. The following keyword arguments are accepted in addition to the standard ones:
Parameters:
  • format – Date/time format. This must be one of the recognised formats listed in the DATETIME_INPUT_FORMATS setting. If not specified Wagtail will use the WAGTAIL_DATETIME_FORMAT setting with fallback to ‘%Y-%m-%d %H:%M’.
  • required – If true (the default), the field cannot be left blank.
  • help_text – Help text to display alongside the field.
  • validators – A list of validation functions for the field (see Django Validators).
  • form_classname – A value to add to the form field’s class attribute when rendered on the page editing form.
class wagtail.core.blocks.RichTextBlock

A WYSIWYG editor for creating formatted text including links, bold / italics etc. The following keyword arguments are accepted in addition to the standard ones:

Parameters:
  • editor – The rich text editor to be used (see Rich text).
  • features – Specifies the set of features allowed (see Limiting features in a rich text field).
  • required – If true (the default), the field cannot be left blank.
  • help_text – Help text to display alongside the field.
  • validators – A list of validation functions for the field (see Django Validators).
  • form_classname – A value to add to the form field’s class attribute when rendered on the page editing form.
class wagtail.core.blocks.RawHTMLBlock

A text area for entering raw HTML which will be rendered unescaped in the page output. The following keyword arguments are accepted in addition to the standard ones:

Parameters:
  • required – If true (the default), the field cannot be left blank.
  • max_length – The maximum allowed length of the field.
  • min_length – The minimum allowed length of the field.
  • help_text – Help text to display alongside the field.
  • validators – A list of validation functions for the field (see Django Validators).
  • form_classname – A value to add to the form field’s class attribute when rendered on the page editing form.

Warning

When this block is in use, there is nothing to prevent editors from inserting malicious scripts into the page, including scripts that would allow the editor to acquire administrator privileges when another administrator views the page. Do not use this block unless your editors are fully trusted.

class wagtail.core.blocks.BlockQuoteBlock

A text field, the contents of which will be wrapped in an HTML <blockquote> tag pair in the page output. The following keyword arguments are accepted in addition to the standard ones:

Parameters:
  • required – If true (the default), the field cannot be left blank.
  • max_length – The maximum allowed length of the field.
  • min_length – The minimum allowed length of the field.
  • help_text – Help text to display alongside the field.
  • validators – A list of validation functions for the field (see Django Validators).
  • form_classname – A value to add to the form field’s class attribute when rendered on the page editing form.
class wagtail.core.blocks.ChoiceBlock

A dropdown select box for choosing one item from a list of choices. The following keyword arguments are accepted in addition to the standard ones:

Parameters:
  • choices – A list of choices, in any format accepted by Django’s choices parameter for model fields, or a callable returning such a list.
  • required – If true (the default), the field cannot be left blank.
  • help_text – Help text to display alongside the field.
  • widget – The form widget to render the field with (see Django Widgets).
  • validators – A list of validation functions for the field (see Django Validators).
  • form_classname – A value to add to the form field’s class attribute when rendered on the page editing form.

ChoiceBlock can also be subclassed to produce a reusable block with the same list of choices everywhere it is used. For example, a block definition such as:

blocks.ChoiceBlock(choices=[
    ('tea', 'Tea'),
    ('coffee', 'Coffee'),
], icon='cup')

could be rewritten as a subclass of ChoiceBlock:

class DrinksChoiceBlock(blocks.ChoiceBlock):
    choices = [
        ('tea', 'Tea'),
        ('coffee', 'Coffee'),
    ]

    class Meta:
        icon = 'cup'

StreamField definitions can then refer to DrinksChoiceBlock() in place of the full ChoiceBlock definition. Note that this only works when choices is a fixed list, not a callable.

class wagtail.core.blocks.MultipleChoiceBlock

A select box for choosing multiple items from a list of choices. The following keyword arguments are accepted in addition to the standard ones:

Parameters:
  • choices – A list of choices, in any format accepted by Django’s choices parameter for model fields, or a callable returning such a list.
  • required – If true (the default), the field cannot be left blank.
  • help_text – Help text to display alongside the field.
  • widget – The form widget to render the field with (see Django Widgets).
  • validators – A list of validation functions for the field (see Django Validators).
  • form_classname – A value to add to the form field’s class attribute when rendered on the page editing form.
class wagtail.core.blocks.PageChooserBlock

A control for selecting a page object, using Wagtail’s page browser. The following keyword arguments are accepted in addition to the standard ones:

Parameters:
  • required – If true (the default), the field cannot be left blank.
  • page_type – Restrict choices to one or more specific page types; by default, any page type may be selected. Can be specified as a page model class, model name (as a string), or a list or tuple of these.
  • can_choose_root – Defaults to false. If true, the editor can choose the tree root as a page. Normally this would be undesirable, since the tree root is never a usable page, but in some specialised cases it may be appropriate. For example, a block providing a feed of related articles could use a PageChooserBlock to select which subsection of the site articles will be taken from, with the root corresponding to ‘everywhere’.
class wagtail.documents.blocks.DocumentChooserBlock

A control to allow the editor to select an existing document object, or upload a new one. The following additional keyword argument is accepted:

Parameters:required – If true (the default), the field cannot be left blank.
class wagtail.images.blocks.ImageChooserBlock

A control to allow the editor to select an existing image, or upload a new one. The following additional keyword argument is accepted:

Parameters:required – If true (the default), the field cannot be left blank.
class wagtail.snippets.blocks.SnippetChooserBlock

A control to allow the editor to select a snippet object. Requires one positional argument: the snippet class to choose from. The following additional keyword argument is accepted:

Parameters:required – If true (the default), the field cannot be left blank.
class wagtail.embeds.blocks.EmbedBlock

A field for the editor to enter a URL to a media item (such as a YouTube video) to appear as embedded media on the page. The following keyword arguments are accepted in addition to the standard ones:

Parameters:
  • required – If true (the default), the field cannot be left blank.
  • max_width – The maximum width of the embed, in pixels; this will be passed to the provider when requesting the embed.
  • max_height – The maximum height of the embed, in pixels; this will be passed to the provider when requesting the embed.
  • max_length – The maximum allowed length of the field.
  • min_length – The minimum allowed length of the field.
  • help_text – Help text to display alongside the field.
Structural block types
class wagtail.core.blocks.StaticBlock

A block which doesn’t have any fields, thus passes no particular values to its template during rendering. This can be useful if you need the editor to be able to insert some content which is always the same or doesn’t need to be configured within the page editor, such as an address, embed code from third-party services, or more complex pieces of code if the template uses template tags. The following additional keyword argument is accepted:

Parameters:admin_text – A text string to display in the admin when this block is used. By default, some default text (which contains the label keyword argument if you pass it) will be displayed in the editor interface, so that the block doesn’t look empty, but this can be customised by passing admin_text:
blocks.StaticBlock(
    admin_text='Latest posts: no configuration needed.',
    # or admin_text=mark_safe('<b>Latest posts</b>: no configuration needed.'),
    template='latest_posts.html')

StaticBlock can also be subclassed to produce a reusable block with the same configuration everywhere it is used:

class LatestPostsStaticBlock(blocks.StaticBlock):
    class Meta:
        icon = 'user'
        label = 'Latest posts'
        admin_text = '{label}: configured elsewhere'.format(label=label)
        template = 'latest_posts.html'
class wagtail.core.blocks.StructBlock

A block consisting of a fixed group of sub-blocks to be displayed together. Takes a list of (name, block_definition) tuples as its first argument:

body = StreamField([
    # ...
    ('person', blocks.StructBlock([
        ('first_name', blocks.CharBlock()),
        ('surname', blocks.CharBlock()),
        ('photo', ImageChooserBlock(required=False)),
        ('biography', blocks.RichTextBlock()),
    ], icon='user')),
])

Alternatively, StructBlock can be subclassed to specify a reusable set of sub-blocks:

class PersonBlock(blocks.StructBlock):
    first_name = blocks.CharBlock()
    surname = blocks.CharBlock()
    photo = ImageChooserBlock(required=False)
    biography = blocks.RichTextBlock()

    class Meta:
        icon = 'user'

The Meta class supports the properties default, label, icon and template, which have the same meanings as when they are passed to the block’s constructor.

This defines PersonBlock() as a block type for use in StreamField definitions:

body = StreamField([
    ('heading', blocks.CharBlock(form_classname="full title")),
    ('paragraph', blocks.RichTextBlock()),
    ('image', ImageChooserBlock()),
    ('person', PersonBlock()),
])

The following additional options are available as either keyword arguments or Meta class attributes:

Parameters:
  • form_classname – An HTML class attribute to set on the root element of this block as displayed in the editing interface. Defaults to struct-block; note that the admin interface has CSS styles defined on this class, so it is advised to include struct-block in this value when overriding. See Custom editing interfaces for StructBlock.
  • form_template – Path to a Django template to use to render this block’s form. See Custom editing interfaces for StructBlock.
  • value_class – A subclass of wagtail.core.blocks.StructValue to use as the type of returned values for this block. See Additional methods and properties on StructBlock values.
  • label_format – Determines the label shown when the block is collapsed in the editing interface. By default, the value of the first sub-block in the StructBlock is shown, but this can be customised by setting a string here with block names contained in braces - e.g. label_format = "Profile for {first_name} {surname}"
class wagtail.core.blocks.ListBlock

A block consisting of many sub-blocks, all of the same type. The editor can add an unlimited number of sub-blocks, and re-order and delete them. Takes the definition of the sub-block as its first argument:

body = StreamField([
    # ...
    ('ingredients_list', blocks.ListBlock(blocks.CharBlock(label="Ingredient"))),
])

Any block type is valid as the sub-block type, including structural types:

body = StreamField([
    # ...
    ('ingredients_list', blocks.ListBlock(blocks.StructBlock([
        ('ingredient', blocks.CharBlock()),
        ('amount', blocks.CharBlock(required=False)),
    ]))),
])

The following additional options are available as either keyword arguments or Meta class attributes:

Parameters:
  • form_classname – An HTML class attribute to set on the root element of this block as displayed in the editing interface.
  • min_num – Minimum number of sub-blocks that the list must have.
  • max_num – Maximum number of sub-blocks that the list may have.
class wagtail.core.blocks.StreamBlock

A block consisting of a sequence of sub-blocks of different types, which can be mixed and reordered at will. Used as the overall mechanism of the StreamField itself, but can also be nested or used within other structural block types. Takes a list of (name, block_definition) tuples as its first argument:

body = StreamField([
    # ...
    ('carousel', blocks.StreamBlock(
        [
            ('image', ImageChooserBlock()),
            ('quotation', blocks.StructBlock([
                ('text', blocks.TextBlock()),
                ('author', blocks.CharBlock()),
            ])),
            ('video', EmbedBlock()),
        ],
        icon='cogs'
    )),
])

As with StructBlock, the list of sub-blocks can also be provided as a subclass of StreamBlock:

class CarouselBlock(blocks.StreamBlock):
    image = ImageChooserBlock()
    quotation = blocks.StructBlock([
        ('text', blocks.TextBlock()),
        ('author', blocks.CharBlock()),
    ])
    video = EmbedBlock()

    class Meta:
        icon='cogs'

Since StreamField accepts an instance of StreamBlock as a parameter, in place of a list of block types, this makes it possible to re-use a common set of block types without repeating definitions:

class HomePage(Page):
    carousel = StreamField(CarouselBlock(max_num=10, block_counts={'video': {'max_num': 2}}))

StreamBlock accepts the following additional options as either keyword arguments or Meta properties:

Parameters:
  • required – If true (the default), at least one sub-block must be supplied. This is ignored when using the StreamBlock as the top-level block of a StreamField; in this case the StreamField’s blank property is respected instead.
  • min_num – Minimum number of sub-blocks that the stream must have.
  • max_num – Maximum number of sub-blocks that the stream may have.
  • block_counts – Specifies the minimum and maximum number of each block type, as a dictionary mapping block names to dicts with (optional) min_num and max_num fields.
  • form_classname

    An HTML class attribute to set on the root element of this block as displayed in the editing interface.

    body = StreamField([
        # ...
        ('event_promotions', blocks.StreamBlock([
            ('hashtag', blocks.CharBlock()),
            ('post_date', blocks.DateBlock()),
        ], form_classname='event-promotions')),
    ])
    
    class EventPromotionsBlock(blocks.StreamBlock):
        hashtag = blocks.CharBlock()
        post_date = blocks.DateBlock()
    
        class Meta:
            form_classname = 'event-promotions'
    
Form widget client-side API

In order for the StreamField editing interface to dynamically create form fields, any Django form widgets used within StreamField blocks must have an accompanying JavaScript implementation, defining how the widget is rendered client-side and populated with data, and how to extract data from that field. Wagtail provides this implementation for widgets inheriting from django.forms.widgets.Input, django.forms.Textarea, django.forms.Select and django.forms.RadioSelect. For any other widget types, or ones which require custom client-side behaviour, you will need to provide your own implementation.

The telepath library is used to set up mappings between Python widget classes and their corresponding JavaScript implementations. To create a mapping, define a subclass of wagtail.core.widget_adapters.WidgetAdapter and register it with wagtail.core.telepath.register.

from wagtail.core.telepath import register
from wagtail.core.widget_adapters import WidgetAdapter

class FancyInputAdapter(WidgetAdapter):
    # Identifier matching the one registered on the client side
    js_constructor = 'myapp.widgets.FancyInput'

    # Arguments passed to the client-side object
    def js_args(self, widget):
        return [
            # Arguments typically include the widget's HTML representation
            # and label ID rendered with __NAME__ and __ID__ placeholders,
            # for use in the client-side render() method
            widget.render('__NAME__', None, attrs={'id': '__ID__'}),
            widget.id_for_label('__ID__'),
            widget.extra_options,
        ]

    class Media:
        # JS / CSS includes required in addition to the widget's own media;
        # generally this will include the client-side adapter definition
        js = ['myapp/js/fancy-input-adapter.js']


register(FancyInputAdapter(), FancyInput)

The JavaScript object associated with a widget instance should provide a single method:

render(placeholder, name, id, initialState)

Render a copy of this widget into the current page, and perform any initialisation required.

Arguments:
  • placeholder – An HTML DOM element to be replaced by the widget’s HTML.
  • name – A string to be used as the name attribute on the input element. For widgets that use multiple input elements (and have server-side logic for collating them back into a final value), this can be treated as a prefix, with further elements delimited by dashes. (For example, if name is 'person-0', the widget may create elements with names person-0-first_name and person-0-surname without risking collisions with other field names on the form.)
  • id – A string to be used as the id attribute on the input element. As with name, this can be treated as a prefix for any further identifiers.
  • initialState – The initial data to populate the widget with.

A widget’s state will often be the same as the form field’s value, but may contain additional data beyond what is processed in the form submission. For example, a page chooser widget consists of a hidden form field containing the page ID, and a read-only label showing the page title: in this case, the page ID by itself does not provide enough information to render the widget, and so the state is defined as a dictionary with id and title items.

The value returned by render is a ‘bound widget’ object allowing this widget instance’s data to be accessed. This object should implement the following attributes and methods:

idForLabel

The HTML ID to use as the for attribute of a label referencing this widget, or null if no suitable HTML element exists.

getValue()

Returns the submittable value of this widget (typically the same as the input element’s value).

getState()

Returns the internal state of this widget, as a value suitable for passing as the render method’s initialState argument.

setState(newState)

Optional: updates this widget’s internal state to the passed value.

focus(soft)

Sets the browser’s focus to this widget, so that it receives input events. Widgets that do not have a concept of focus should do nothing. If soft is true, this indicates that the focus event was not explicitly triggered by a user action (for example, when a new block is inserted, and the first field is focused as a convenience to the user) - in this case, the widget should avoid performing obtrusive UI actions such as opening modals.

StreamField block reference

Details the block types provided by Wagtail for use in StreamField and how they can be combined into new block types.

Form widget client-side API

Defines the JavaScript API that must be implemented for any form widget used within a StreamField block.

Contrib modules

Wagtail ships with a variety of extra optional modules.

Site settings

You can define settings for your site that are editable by administrators in the Wagtail admin. These settings can be accessed in code, as well as in templates.

To use these settings, you must add wagtail.contrib.settings to your INSTALLED_APPS:

INSTALLED_APPS += [
    'wagtail.contrib.settings',
]
Defining settings

Create a model that inherits from BaseSetting, and register it using the register_setting decorator:

from django.db import models
from wagtail.contrib.settings.models import BaseSetting, register_setting

@register_setting
class SocialMediaSettings(BaseSetting):
    facebook = models.URLField(
        help_text='Your Facebook page URL')
    instagram = models.CharField(
        max_length=255, help_text='Your Instagram username, without the @')
    trip_advisor = models.URLField(
        help_text='Your Trip Advisor page URL')
    youtube = models.URLField(
        help_text='Your YouTube channel or user account URL')

A ‘Social media settings’ link will appear in the Wagtail admin ‘Settings’ menu.

Edit handlers

Settings use edit handlers much like the rest of Wagtail. Add a panels setting to your model defining all the edit handlers required:

@register_setting
class ImportantPages(BaseSetting):
    donate_page = models.ForeignKey(
        'wagtailcore.Page', null=True, on_delete=models.SET_NULL, related_name='+')
    sign_up_page = models.ForeignKey(
        'wagtailcore.Page', null=True, on_delete=models.SET_NULL, related_name='+')

    panels = [
        PageChooserPanel('donate_page'),
        PageChooserPanel('sign_up_page'),
    ]

You can also customize the editor handlers like you would do for Page model with a custom edit_handler attribute:

from wagtail.admin.edit_handlers import TabbedInterface, ObjectList

@register_setting
class MySettings(BaseSetting):
    # ...
    first_tab_panels = [
        FieldPanel('field_1'),
    ]
    second_tab_panels = [
        FieldPanel('field_2'),
    ]

    edit_handler = TabbedInterface([
        ObjectList(first_tab_panels, heading='First tab'),
        ObjectList(second_tab_panels, heading='Second tab'),
    ])
Appearance

You can change the label used in the menu by changing the verbose_name of your model.

You can add an icon to the menu by passing an ‘icon’ argument to the register_setting decorator:

@register_setting(icon='placeholder')
class SocialMediaSettings(BaseSetting):
    class Meta:
        verbose_name = 'social media accounts'
    ...

For a list of all available icons, please see the UI Styleguide.

Using the settings

Settings are designed to be used both in Python code, and in templates.

Using in Python

If you require access to a setting in a view, the for_request() method allows you to retrieve the relevant settings for the current request:

def view(request):
    social_media_settings = SocialMediaSettings.for_request(request)
    ...

In places where the request is unavailable, but you know the Site you wish to retrieve settings for, you can use for_site() instead:

social_media_settings =  SocialMediaSettings.for_site(user.origin_site)
Using in Django templates

Add the settings context processor to your settings:

TEMPLATES = [
    {
        ...

        'OPTIONS': {
            'context_processors': [
                ...

                'wagtail.contrib.settings.context_processors.settings',
            ]
        }
    }
]

Then access the settings through {{ settings }}:

{{ settings.app_label.SocialMediaSettings.instagram }}

Note

Replace app_label with the label of the app containing your settings model.

If you are not in a RequestContext, then context processors will not have run, and the settings variable will not be available. To get the settings, use the provided {% get_settings %} template tag. If a request is in the template context, but for some reason it is not a RequestContext, just use {% get_settings %}:

{% load wagtailsettings_tags %}
{% get_settings %}
{{ settings.app_label.SocialMediaSettings.instagram }}

If there is no request available in the template at all, you can use the settings for the default Wagtail site instead:

{% load wagtailsettings_tags %}
{% get_settings use_default_site=True %}
{{ settings.app_label.SocialMediaSettings.instagram }}

Note

You can not reliably get the correct settings instance for the current site from this template tag if the request object is not available. This is only relevant for multisite instances of Wagtail.

By default, the tag will create or update a settings variable in the context. If you want to assign to a different context variable instead, use {% get_settings as other_variable_name %}:

{% load wagtailsettings_tags %}
{% get_settings as wagtail_settings %}
{{ wagtail_settings.app_label.SocialMediaSettings.instagram }}
Using in Jinja2 templates

Add wagtail.contrib.settings.jinja2tags.settings extension to your Jinja2 settings:

TEMPLATES = [
    # ...
    {
        'BACKEND': 'django.template.backends.jinja2.Jinja2',
        'APP_DIRS': True,
        'OPTIONS': {
            'extensions': [
                # ...
                'wagtail.contrib.settings.jinja2tags.settings',
            ],
        },
    }
]

Then access the settings through the settings() template function:

{{ settings("app_label.SocialMediaSettings").twitter }}

Note

Replace app_label with the label of the app containing your settings model.

This will look for a request variable in the template context, and find the correct site to use from that. If for some reason you do not have a request available, you can instead use the settings defined for the default site:

{{ settings("app_label.SocialMediaSettings", use_default_site=True).instagram }}

You can store the settings instance in a variable to save some typing, if you have to use multiple values from one model:

{% with social_settings=settings("app_label.SocialMediaSettings") %}
    Follow us on Twitter at @{{ social_settings.twitter }},
    or Instagram at @{{ social_settings.instagram }}.
{% endwith %}

Or, alternately, using the set tag:

{% set social_settings=settings("app_label.SocialMediaSettings") %}
Utilising the page_url setting shortcut

If, like in the previous section, your settings model references pages, and you often need to output the URLs of those pages in your project, you can likely use the setting model’s page_url shortcut to do that more cleanly. For example, instead of doing the following:

{% load wagtailcore_tags %}
{% pageurl settings.app_label.ImportantPages.donate_page %}
{% pageurl settings.app_label.ImportantPages.sign_up_page %}

You could write:

{{ settings.app_label.ImportantPages.page_url.donate_page }}
{{ settings.app_label.ImportantPages.page_url.sign_up_page }}

Using the page_url shortcut has a few of advantages over using the tag:

  1. The ‘specific’ page is automatically fetched to generate the URL, so you don’t have to worry about doing this (or forgetting to do this) yourself.
  2. The results are cached, so if you need to access the same page URL in more than one place (e.g. in a form and in footer navigation), using the page_url shortcut will be more efficient.
  3. It’s more concise, and the syntax is the same whether using it in templates or views (or other Python code), allowing you to write more consistent code.

When using the page_url shortcut, there are a couple of points worth noting:

  1. The same limitations that apply to the {% pageurl %} tag apply to the shortcut: If the settings are accessed from a template context where the current request is not available, all URLs returned will include the site’s scheme/domain, and URL generation will not be quite as efficient.
  2. If using the shortcut in views or other Python code, the method will raise an AttributeError if the attribute you request from page_url is not an attribute on the settings object.
  3. If the settings object DOES have the attribute, but the attribute returns a value of None (or something that is not a Page), the shortcut will return an empty string.
Form builder

The wagtailforms module allows you to set up single-page forms, such as a ‘Contact us’ form, as pages of a Wagtail site. It provides a set of base models that site implementers can extend to create their own FormPage type with their own site-specific templates. Once a page type has been set up in this way, editors can build forms within the usual page editor, consisting of any number of fields. Form submissions are stored for later retrieval through a new ‘Forms’ section within the Wagtail admin interface; in addition, they can be optionally e-mailed to an address specified by the editor.

Note

wagtailforms is not a replacement for Django’s form support. It is designed as a way for page authors to build general-purpose data collection forms without having to write code. If you intend to build a form that assigns specific behaviour to individual fields (such as creating user accounts), or needs a custom HTML layout, you will almost certainly be better served by a standard Django form, where the fields are fixed in code rather than defined on-the-fly by a page author. See the wagtail-form-example project for an example of integrating a Django form into a Wagtail page.

Usage

Add wagtail.contrib.forms to your INSTALLED_APPS:

INSTALLED_APPS = [
   ...
   'wagtail.contrib.forms',
]

Within the models.py of one of your apps, create a model that extends wagtail.contrib.forms.models.AbstractEmailForm:

from django.db import models
from modelcluster.fields import ParentalKey
from wagtail.admin.edit_handlers import (
    FieldPanel, FieldRowPanel,
    InlinePanel, MultiFieldPanel
)
from wagtail.core.fields import RichTextField
from wagtail.contrib.forms.models import AbstractEmailForm, AbstractFormField


class FormField(AbstractFormField):
    page = ParentalKey('FormPage', on_delete=models.CASCADE, related_name='form_fields')


class FormPage(AbstractEmailForm):
    intro = RichTextField(blank=True)
    thank_you_text = RichTextField(blank=True)

    content_panels = AbstractEmailForm.content_panels + [
        FieldPanel('intro', classname="full"),
        InlinePanel('form_fields', label="Form fields"),
        FieldPanel('thank_you_text', classname="full"),
        MultiFieldPanel([
            FieldRowPanel([
                FieldPanel('from_address', classname="col6"),
                FieldPanel('to_address', classname="col6"),
            ]),
            FieldPanel('subject'),
        ], "Email"),
    ]

AbstractEmailForm defines the fields to_address, from_address and subject, and expects form_fields to be defined. Any additional fields are treated as ordinary page content - note that FormPage is responsible for serving both the form page itself and the landing page after submission, so the model definition should include all necessary content fields for both of those views.

Date and datetime values in a form response will be formatted with the SHORT_DATE_FORMAT and SHORT_DATETIME_FORMAT respectively. (see Custom render_email method for how to customise the email content).

If you do not want your form page type to offer form-to-email functionality, you can inherit from AbstractForm instead of AbstractEmailForm, and omit the to_address, from_address and subject fields from the content_panels definition.

You now need to create two templates named form_page.html and form_page_landing.html (where form_page is the underscore-formatted version of the class name). form_page.html differs from a standard Wagtail template in that it is passed a variable form, containing a Django Form object, in addition to the usual page variable. A very basic template for the form would thus be:

{% load wagtailcore_tags %}
<html>
    <head>
        <title>{{ page.title }}</title>
    </head>
    <body>
        <h1>{{ page.title }}</h1>
        {{ page.intro|richtext }}
        <form action="{% pageurl page %}" method="POST">
            {% csrf_token %}
            {{ form.as_p }}
            <input type="submit">
        </form>
    </body>
</html>

form_page_landing.html is a standard Wagtail template, displayed after the user makes a successful form submission, form_submission will available in this template. If you want to dynamically override the landing page template, you can do so with the get_landing_page_template method (in the same way that you would with get_template).

Displaying form submission information

FormSubmissionsPanel can be added to your page’s panel definitions to display the number of form submissions and the time of the most recent submission, along with a quick link to access the full submission data:

from wagtail.contrib.forms.edit_handlers import FormSubmissionsPanel

class FormPage(AbstractEmailForm):
    # ...

    content_panels = AbstractEmailForm.content_panels + [
        FormSubmissionsPanel(),
        FieldPanel('intro', classname="full"),
        # ...
    ]
Index
Form builder customisation

For a basic usage example see Usage.

Custom form submission model

If you need to save additional data, you can use a custom form submission model. To do this, you need to:

  • Define a model that extends wagtail.contrib.forms.models.AbstractFormSubmission.
  • Override the get_submission_class and process_form_submission methods in your page model.

Example:

import json

from django.conf import settings
from django.core.serializers.json import DjangoJSONEncoder
from django.db import models
from modelcluster.fields import ParentalKey
from wagtail.admin.edit_handlers import (
    FieldPanel, FieldRowPanel,
    InlinePanel, MultiFieldPanel
)
from wagtail.core.fields import RichTextField
from wagtail.contrib.forms.models import AbstractEmailForm, AbstractFormField, AbstractFormSubmission


class FormField(AbstractFormField):
    page = ParentalKey('FormPage', on_delete=models.CASCADE, related_name='form_fields')


class FormPage(AbstractEmailForm):
    intro = RichTextField(blank=True)
    thank_you_text = RichTextField(blank=True)

    content_panels = AbstractEmailForm.content_panels + [
        FieldPanel('intro', classname="full"),
        InlinePanel('form_fields', label="Form fields"),
        FieldPanel('thank_you_text', classname="full"),
        MultiFieldPanel([
            FieldRowPanel([
                FieldPanel('from_address', classname="col6"),
                FieldPanel('to_address', classname="col6"),
            ]),
            FieldPanel('subject'),
        ], "Email"),
    ]

    def get_submission_class(self):
        return CustomFormSubmission

    def process_form_submission(self, form):
        self.get_submission_class().objects.create(
            form_data=json.dumps(form.cleaned_data, cls=DjangoJSONEncoder),
            page=self, user=form.user
        )


class CustomFormSubmission(AbstractFormSubmission):
    user = models.ForeignKey(settings.AUTH_USER_MODEL, on_delete=models.CASCADE)
Add custom data to CSV export

If you want to add custom data to the CSV export, you will need to:

  • Override the get_data_fields method in page model.
  • Override get_data in the submission model.

The following example shows how to add a username to the CSV export:

import json

from django.conf import settings
from django.core.serializers.json import DjangoJSONEncoder
from django.db import models
from modelcluster.fields import ParentalKey
from wagtail.admin.edit_handlers import (
    FieldPanel, FieldRowPanel,
    InlinePanel, MultiFieldPanel
)
from wagtail.core.fields import RichTextField
from wagtail.contrib.forms.models import AbstractEmailForm, AbstractFormField, AbstractFormSubmission


class FormField(AbstractFormField):
    page = ParentalKey('FormPage', on_delete=models.CASCADE, related_name='form_fields')


class FormPage(AbstractEmailForm):
    intro = RichTextField(blank=True)
    thank_you_text = RichTextField(blank=True)

    content_panels = AbstractEmailForm.content_panels + [
        FieldPanel('intro', classname="full"),
        InlinePanel('form_fields', label="Form fields"),
        FieldPanel('thank_you_text', classname="full"),
        MultiFieldPanel([
            FieldRowPanel([
                FieldPanel('from_address', classname="col6"),
                FieldPanel('to_address', classname="col6"),
            ]),
            FieldPanel('subject'),
        ], "Email"),
    ]

    def get_data_fields(self):
        data_fields = [
            ('username', 'Username'),
        ]
        data_fields += super().get_data_fields()

        return data_fields

    def get_submission_class(self):
        return CustomFormSubmission

    def process_form_submission(self, form):
        self.get_submission_class().objects.create(
            form_data=json.dumps(form.cleaned_data, cls=DjangoJSONEncoder),
            page=self, user=form.user
        )


class CustomFormSubmission(AbstractFormSubmission):
    user = models.ForeignKey(settings.AUTH_USER_MODEL, on_delete=models.CASCADE)

    def get_data(self):
        form_data = super().get_data()
        form_data.update({
            'username': self.user.username,
        })

        return form_data

Note that this code also changes the submissions list view.

Check that a submission already exists for a user

If you want to prevent users from filling in a form more than once, you need to override the serve method in your page model.

Example:

import json

from django.conf import settings
from django.core.serializers.json import DjangoJSONEncoder
from django.db import models
from django.shortcuts import render
from modelcluster.fields import ParentalKey
from wagtail.admin.edit_handlers import (
    FieldPanel, FieldRowPanel,
    InlinePanel, MultiFieldPanel
)
from wagtail.core.fields import RichTextField
from wagtail.contrib.forms.models import AbstractEmailForm, AbstractFormField, AbstractFormSubmission


class FormField(AbstractFormField):
    page = ParentalKey('FormPage', on_delete=models.CASCADE, related_name='form_fields')


class FormPage(AbstractEmailForm):
    intro = RichTextField(blank=True)
    thank_you_text = RichTextField(blank=True)

    content_panels = AbstractEmailForm.content_panels + [
        FieldPanel('intro', classname="full"),
        InlinePanel('form_fields', label="Form fields"),
        FieldPanel('thank_you_text', classname="full"),
        MultiFieldPanel([
            FieldRowPanel([
                FieldPanel('from_address', classname="col6"),
                FieldPanel('to_address', classname="col6"),
            ]),
            FieldPanel('subject'),
        ], "Email"),
    ]

    def serve(self, request, *args, **kwargs):
        if self.get_submission_class().objects.filter(page=self, user__pk=request.user.pk).exists():
            return render(
                request,
                self.template,
                self.get_context(request)
            )

        return super().serve(request, *args, **kwargs)

    def get_submission_class(self):
        return CustomFormSubmission

    def process_form_submission(self, form):
        self.get_submission_class().objects.create(
            form_data=json.dumps(form.cleaned_data, cls=DjangoJSONEncoder),
            page=self, user=form.user
        )


class CustomFormSubmission(AbstractFormSubmission):
    user = models.ForeignKey(settings.AUTH_USER_MODEL, on_delete=models.CASCADE)

    class Meta:
        unique_together = ('page', 'user')

Your template should look like this:

{% load wagtailcore_tags %}
<html>
    <head>
        <title>{{ page.title }}</title>
    </head>
    <body>
        <h1>{{ page.title }}</h1>

        {% if user.is_authenticated and user.is_active or request.is_preview %}
            {% if form %}
                <div>{{ page.intro|richtext }}</div>
                <form action="{% pageurl page %}" method="POST">
                    {% csrf_token %}
                    {{ form.as_p }}
                    <input type="submit">
                </form>
            {% else %}
                <div>You can fill in the from only one time.</div>
            {% endif %}
        {% else %}
            <div>To fill in the form, you must to log in.</div>
        {% endif %}
    </body>
</html>
Multi-step form

The following example shows how to create a multi-step form.

from django.core.paginator import Paginator, PageNotAnInteger, EmptyPage
from django.shortcuts import render
from modelcluster.fields import ParentalKey
from wagtail.admin.edit_handlers import (
    FieldPanel, FieldRowPanel,
    InlinePanel, MultiFieldPanel
)
from wagtail.core.fields import RichTextField
from wagtail.contrib.forms.models import AbstractEmailForm, AbstractFormField


class FormField(AbstractFormField):
    page = ParentalKey('FormPage', on_delete=models.CASCADE, related_name='form_fields')


class FormPage(AbstractEmailForm):
    intro = RichTextField(blank=True)
    thank_you_text = RichTextField(blank=True)

    content_panels = AbstractEmailForm.content_panels + [
        FieldPanel('intro', classname="full"),
        InlinePanel('form_fields', label="Form fields"),
        FieldPanel('thank_you_text', classname="full"),
        MultiFieldPanel([
            FieldRowPanel([
                FieldPanel('from_address', classname="col6"),
                FieldPanel('to_address', classname="col6"),
            ]),
            FieldPanel('subject'),
        ], "Email"),
    ]

    def get_form_class_for_step(self, step):
        return self.form_builder(step.object_list).get_form_class()

    def serve(self, request, *args, **kwargs):
        """
        Implements a simple multi-step form.

        Stores each step into a session.
        When the last step was submitted correctly, saves whole form into a DB.
        """

        session_key_data = 'form_data-%s' % self.pk
        is_last_step = False
        step_number = request.GET.get('p', 1)

        paginator = Paginator(self.get_form_fields(), per_page=1)
        try:
            step = paginator.page(step_number)
        except PageNotAnInteger:
            step = paginator.page(1)
        except EmptyPage:
            step = paginator.page(paginator.num_pages)
            is_last_step = True

        if request.method == 'POST':
            # The first step will be submitted with step_number == 2,
            # so we need to get a form from previous step
            # Edge case - submission of the last step
            prev_step = step if is_last_step else paginator.page(step.previous_page_number())

            # Create a form only for submitted step
            prev_form_class = self.get_form_class_for_step(prev_step)
            prev_form = prev_form_class(request.POST, page=self, user=request.user)
            if prev_form.is_valid():
                # If data for step is valid, update the session
                form_data = request.session.get(session_key_data, {})
                form_data.update(prev_form.cleaned_data)
                request.session[session_key_data] = form_data

                if prev_step.has_next():
                    # Create a new form for a following step, if the following step is present
                    form_class = self.get_form_class_for_step(step)
                    form = form_class(page=self, user=request.user)
                else:
                    # If there is no next step, create form for all fields
                    form = self.get_form(
                        request.session[session_key_data],
                        page=self, user=request.user
                    )

                    if form.is_valid():
                        # Perform validation again for whole form.
                        # After successful validation, save data into DB,
                        # and remove from the session.
                        form_submission = self.process_form_submission(form)
                        del request.session[session_key_data]
                        # render the landing page
                        return self.render_landing_page(request, form_submission, *args, **kwargs)
            else:
                # If data for step is invalid
                # we will need to display form again with errors,
                # so restore previous state.
                form = prev_form
                step = prev_step
        else:
            # Create empty form for non-POST requests
            form_class = self.get_form_class_for_step(step)
            form = form_class(page=self, user=request.user)

        context = self.get_context(request)
        context['form'] = form
        context['fields_step'] = step
        return render(
            request,
            self.template,
            context
        )

Your template for this form page should look like this:

{% load wagtailcore_tags %}
<html>
    <head>
        <title>{{ page.title }}</title>
    </head>
    <body>
        <h1>{{ page.title }}</h1>

        <div>{{ page.intro|richtext }}</div>
        <form action="{% pageurl page %}?p={{ fields_step.number|add:"1" }}" method="POST">
            {% csrf_token %}
            {{ form.as_p }}
            <input type="submit">
        </form>
    </body>
</html>

Note that the example shown before allows the user to return to a previous step, or to open a second step without submitting the first step. Depending on your requirements, you may need to add extra checks.

Show results

If you are implementing polls or surveys, you may want to show results after submission. The following example demonstrates how to do this.

First, you need to collect results as shown below:

from modelcluster.fields import ParentalKey
from wagtail.admin.edit_handlers import (
    FieldPanel, FieldRowPanel,
    InlinePanel, MultiFieldPanel
)
from wagtail.core.fields import RichTextField
from wagtail.contrib.forms.models import AbstractEmailForm, AbstractFormField


class FormField(AbstractFormField):
    page = ParentalKey('FormPage', on_delete=models.CASCADE, related_name='form_fields')


class FormPage(AbstractEmailForm):
    intro = RichTextField(blank=True)
    thank_you_text = RichTextField(blank=True)

    content_panels = AbstractEmailForm.content_panels + [
        FieldPanel('intro', classname="full"),
        InlinePanel('form_fields', label="Form fields"),
        FieldPanel('thank_you_text', classname="full"),
        MultiFieldPanel([
            FieldRowPanel([
                FieldPanel('from_address', classname="col6"),
                FieldPanel('to_address', classname="col6"),
            ]),
            FieldPanel('subject'),
        ], "Email"),
    ]

    def get_context(self, request, *args, **kwargs):
        context = super().get_context(request, *args, **kwargs)

        # If you need to show results only on landing page,
        # you may need check request.method

        results = dict()
        # Get information about form fields
        data_fields = [
            (field.clean_name, field.label)
            for field in self.get_form_fields()
        ]

        # Get all submissions for current page
        submissions = self.get_submission_class().objects.filter(page=self)
        for submission in submissions:
            data = submission.get_data()

            # Count results for each question
            for name, label in data_fields:
                answer = data.get(name)
                if answer is None:
                    # Something wrong with data.
                    # Probably you have changed questions
                    # and now we are receiving answers for old questions.
                    # Just skip them.
                    continue

                if type(answer) is list:
                    # Answer is a list if the field type is 'Checkboxes'
                    answer = u', '.join(answer)

                question_stats = results.get(label, {})
                question_stats[answer] = question_stats.get(answer, 0) + 1
                results[label] = question_stats

        context.update({
            'results': results,
        })
        return context

Next, you need to transform your template to display the results:

{% load wagtailcore_tags %}
<html>
    <head>
        <title>{{ page.title }}</title>
    </head>
    <body>
        <h1>{{ page.title }}</h1>

        <h2>Results</h2>
        {% for question, answers in results.items %}
            <h3>{{ question }}</h3>
            {% for answer, count in answers.items %}
                <div>{{ answer }}: {{ count }}</div>
            {% endfor %}
        {% endfor %}

        <div>{{ page.intro|richtext }}</div>
        <form action="{% pageurl page %}" method="POST">
            {% csrf_token %}
            {{ form.as_p }}
            <input type="submit">
        </form>
    </body>
</html>

You can also show the results on the landing page.

Custom landing page redirect

You can override the render_landing_page method on your FormPage to change what is rendered when a form submits.

In this example below we have added a thank_you_page field that enables custom redirects after a form submits to the selected page.

When overriding the render_landing_page method, we check if there is a linked thank_you_page and then redirect to it if it exists.

Finally, we add a URL param of id based on the form_submission if it exists.

from django.shortcuts import redirect
from wagtail.admin.edit_handlers import (
    FieldPanel, FieldRowPanel, InlinePanel, MultiFieldPanel, PageChooserPanel)
from wagtail.contrib.forms.models import AbstractEmailForm

class FormPage(AbstractEmailForm):

    # intro, thank_you_text, ...

    thank_you_page = models.ForeignKey(
        'wagtailcore.Page',
        null=True,
        blank=True,
        on_delete=models.SET_NULL,
        related_name='+',
    )

    def render_landing_page(self, request, form_submission=None, *args, **kwargs):
        if self.thank_you_page:
            url = self.thank_you_page.url
            # if a form_submission instance is available, append the id to URL
            # when previewing landing page, there will not be a form_submission instance
            if form_submission:
              url += '?id=%s' % form_submission.id
            return redirect(url, permanent=False)
        # if no thank_you_page is set, render default landing page
        return super().render_landing_page(request, form_submission, *args, **kwargs)

    content_panels = AbstractEmailForm.content_panels + [
        FieldPanel('intro', classname='full'),
        InlinePanel('form_fields'),
        FieldPanel('thank_you_text', classname='full'),
        PageChooserPanel('thank_you_page'),
        MultiFieldPanel([
            FieldRowPanel([
                FieldPanel('from_address', classname='col6'),
                FieldPanel('to_address', classname='col6'),
            ]),
            FieldPanel('subject'),
        ], 'Email'),
    ]
Customise form submissions listing in Wagtail Admin

The Admin listing of form submissions can be customised by setting the attribute submissions_list_view_class on your FormPage model.

The list view class must be a subclass of SubmissionsListView from wagtail.contrib.forms.views, which is a child class of Django’s class based ListView.

Example:

from wagtail.contrib.forms.models import AbstractEmailForm, AbstractFormField
from wagtail.contrib.forms.views import SubmissionsListView


class CustomSubmissionsListView(SubmissionsListView):
    paginate_by = 50  # show more submissions per page, default is 20
    ordering = ('submit_time',)  # order submissions by oldest first, normally newest first
    ordering_csv = ('-submit_time',)  # order csv export by newest first, normally oldest first

    # override the method to generate csv filename
    def get_csv_filename(self):
        """ Returns the filename for CSV file with page slug at start"""
        filename = super().get_csv_filename()
        return self.form_page.slug + '-' + filename


class FormField(AbstractFormField):
    page = ParentalKey('FormPage', related_name='form_fields')


class FormPage(AbstractEmailForm):
    """Form Page with customised submissions listing view"""

    # set custom view class as class attribute
    submissions_list_view_class = CustomSubmissionsListView

    intro = RichTextField(blank=True)
    thank_you_text = RichTextField(blank=True)

    # content_panels = ...
Adding a custom field type

First, make the new field type available in the page editor by changing your FormField model.

  • Create a new set of choices which includes the original FORM_FIELD_CHOICES along with new field types you want to make available.
  • Each choice must contain a unique key and a human readable name of the field, e.g. ('slug', 'URL Slug')
  • Override the field_type field in your FormField model with choices attribute using these choices.
  • You will need to run ./manage.py makemigrations and ./manage.py migrate after this step.

Then, create and use a new form builder class.

  • Define a new form builder class that extends the FormBuilder class.
  • Add a method that will return a created Django form field for the new field type.
  • Its name must be in the format: create_<field_type_key>_field, e.g. create_slug_field
  • Override the form_builder attribute in your form page model to use your new form builder class.

Example:

from django import forms
from django.db import models
from modelcluster.fields import ParentalKey
from wagtail.contrib.forms.forms import FormBuilder
from wagtail.contrib.forms.models import (
  AbstractEmailForm, AbstractFormField, FORM_FIELD_CHOICES)


class FormField(AbstractFormField):
    # extend the built in field type choices
    # our field type key will be 'ipaddress'
    CHOICES = FORM_FIELD_CHOICES + (('ipaddress', 'IP Address'),)

    page = ParentalKey('FormPage', related_name='form_fields')
    # override the field_type field with extended choices
    field_type = models.CharField(
        verbose_name='field type',
        max_length=16,
        # use the choices tuple defined above
        choices=CHOICES
    )


class CustomFormBuilder(FormBuilder):
    # create a function that returns an instanced Django form field
    # function name must match create_<field_type_key>_field
    def create_ipaddress_field(self, field, options):
        # return `forms.GenericIPAddressField(**options)` not `forms.SlugField`
        # returns created a form field with the options passed in
        return forms.GenericIPAddressField(**options)


class FormPage(AbstractEmailForm):
    # intro, thank_you_text, edit_handlers, etc...

    # use custom form builder defined above
    form_builder = CustomFormBuilder
Custom render_email method

If you want to change the content of the email that is sent when a form submits you can override the render_email method.

To do this, you need to:

  • Ensure you have your form model defined that extends wagtail.contrib.forms.models.AbstractEmailForm.
  • Override the render_email method in your page model.

Example:

from datetime import date
# ... additional wagtail imports
from wagtail.contrib.forms.models import AbstractEmailForm


class FormPage(AbstractEmailForm):
    # ... fields, content_panels, etc

    def render_email(self, form):
        # Get the original content (string)
        email_content = super().render_email(form)

        # Add a title (not part of original method)
        title = '{}: {}'.format('Form', self.title)

        content = [title, '', email_content, '']

        # Add a link to the form page
        content.append('{}: {}'.format('Submitted Via', self.full_url))

        # Add the date the form was submitted
        submitted_date_str = date.today().strftime('%x')
        content.append('{}: {}'.format('Submitted on', submitted_date_str))

        # Content is joined with a new line to separate each text line
        content = '\n'.join(content)

        return content
Custom send_mail method

If you want to change the subject or some other part of how an email is sent when a form submits you can override the send_mail method.

To do this, you need to:

  • Ensure you have your form model defined that extends wagtail.contrib.forms.models.AbstractEmailForm.
  • In your models.py file, import the wagtail.admin.mail.send_mail function.
  • Override the send_mail method in your page model.

Example:

from datetime import date
# ... additional wagtail imports
from wagtail.admin.mail import send_mail
from wagtail.contrib.forms.models import AbstractEmailForm


class FormPage(AbstractEmailForm):
    # ... fields, content_panels, etc

    def send_mail(self, form):
        # `self` is the FormPage, `form` is the form's POST data on submit

        # Email addresses are parsed from the FormPage's addresses field
        addresses = [x.strip() for x in self.to_address.split(',')]

        # Subject can be adjusted (adding submitted date), be sure to include the form's defined subject field
        submitted_date_str = date.today().strftime('%x')
        subject = f"{self.subject} - {submitted_date_str}"

        send_mail(subject, self.render_email(form), addresses, self.from_address,)
Sitemap generator

This document describes how to create XML sitemaps for your Wagtail website using the wagtail.contrib.sitemaps module.

Note

As of Wagtail 1.10 the Django contrib sitemap app is used to generate sitemaps. However since Wagtail requires the Site instance to be available during the sitemap generation you will have to use the views from the wagtail.contrib.sitemaps.views module instead of the views provided by Django (django.contrib.sitemaps.views).

The usage of these views is otherwise identical, which means that customisation and caching of the sitemaps are done using the default Django patterns. See the Django documentation for in-depth information.

Basic configuration

You firstly need to add "django.contrib.sitemaps" to INSTALLED_APPS in your Django settings file:

INSTALLED_APPS = [
    ...

    "django.contrib.sitemaps",
]

Then, in urls.py, you need to add a link to the wagtail.contrib.sitemaps.views.sitemap view which generates the sitemap:

from wagtail.contrib.sitemaps.views import sitemap

urlpatterns = [
    ...

    path('sitemap.xml', sitemap),

    ...

    # Ensure that the 'sitemap' line appears above the default Wagtail page serving route
    re_path(r'', include(wagtail_urls)),
]

You should now be able to browse to /sitemap.xml and see the sitemap working. By default, all published pages in your website will be added to the site map.

Setting the hostname

By default, the sitemap uses the hostname defined in the Wagtail Admin’s Sites area. If your default site is called localhost, then URLs in the sitemap will look like:

<url>
    <loc>http://localhost/about/</loc>
    <lastmod>2015-09-26</lastmod>
</url>

For tools like Google Search Tools to properly index your site, you need to set a valid, crawlable hostname. If you change the site’s hostname from localhost to mysite.com, sitemap.xml will contain the correct URLs:

<url>
    <loc>http://mysite.com/about/</loc>
    <lastmod>2015-09-26</lastmod>
</url>

If you change the site’s port to 443, the https scheme will be used. Find out more about working with Sites.

Customising
URLs

The Page class defines a get_sitemap_urls method which you can override to customise sitemaps per Page instance. This method must accept a request object and return a list of dictionaries, one dictionary per URL entry in the sitemap. You can exclude pages from the sitemap by returning an empty list.

Each dictionary can contain the following:

  • location (required) - This is the full URL path to add into the sitemap.
  • lastmod - A python date or datetime set to when the page was last modified.
  • changefreq
  • priority

You can add more but you will need to override the sitemap.xml template in order for them to be displayed in the sitemap.

Serving multiple sitemaps

If you want to support the sitemap indexes from Django then you will need to use the index view from wagtail.contrib.sitemaps.views instead of the index view from django.contrib.sitemaps.views. Please see the Django documentation for further details.

Frontend cache invalidator

Many websites use a frontend cache such as Varnish, Squid, Cloudflare or CloudFront to gain extra performance. The downside of using a frontend cache though is that they don’t respond well to updating content and will often keep an old version of a page cached after it has been updated.

This document describes how to configure Wagtail to purge old versions of pages from a frontend cache whenever a page gets updated.

Setting it up

Firstly, add "wagtail.contrib.frontend_cache" to your INSTALLED_APPS:

INSTALLED_APPS = [
  ...

  "wagtail.contrib.frontend_cache"
]

The wagtailfrontendcache module provides a set of signal handlers which will automatically purge the cache whenever a page is published or deleted. These signal handlers are automatically registered when the wagtail.contrib.frontend_cache app is loaded.

Varnish/Squid

Add a new item into the WAGTAILFRONTENDCACHE setting and set the BACKEND parameter to wagtail.contrib.frontend_cache.backends.HTTPBackend. This backend requires an extra parameter LOCATION which points to where the cache is running (this must be a direct connection to the server and cannot go through another proxy).

# settings.py

WAGTAILFRONTENDCACHE = {
    'varnish': {
        'BACKEND': 'wagtail.contrib.frontend_cache.backends.HTTPBackend',
        'LOCATION': 'http://localhost:8000',
    },
}
WAGTAILFRONTENDCACHE_LANGUAGES = []

Set WAGTAILFRONTENDCACHE_LANGUAGES to a list of languages (typically equal to [l[0] for l in settings.LANGUAGES]) to also purge the urls for each language of a purging url. This setting needs settings.USE_I18N to be True to work. Its default is an empty list.

Finally, make sure you have configured your frontend cache to accept PURGE requests:

Cloudflare

Firstly, you need to register an account with Cloudflare if you haven’t already got one. You can do this here: Cloudflare Sign up

Add an item into the WAGTAILFRONTENDCACHE and set the BACKEND parameter to wagtail.contrib.frontend_cache.backends.CloudflareBackend.

This backend can be configured to use an account-wide API key, or an API token with restricted access.

To use an account-wide API key, find the key as described in the Cloudflare documentation and specify EMAIL and API_KEY parameters.

To use a limited API token, create a token configured with the ‘Zone, Cache Purge’ permission and specify the BEARER_TOKEN parameter.

A ZONEID parameter will need to be set for either option. To find the ZONEID for your domain, read the Cloudflare API Documentation

With an API key:

# settings.py

WAGTAILFRONTENDCACHE = {
    'cloudflare': {
        'BACKEND': 'wagtail.contrib.frontend_cache.backends.CloudflareBackend',
        'EMAIL': 'your-cloudflare-email-address@example.com',
        'API_KEY': 'your cloudflare api key',
        'ZONEID': 'your cloudflare domain zone id',
    },
}

With an API token:

# settings.py

WAGTAILFRONTENDCACHE = {
    'cloudflare': {
        'BACKEND': 'wagtail.contrib.frontend_cache.backends.CloudflareBackend',
        'BEARER_TOKEN': 'your cloudflare bearer token',
        'ZONEID': 'your cloudflare domain zone id',
    },
}
Amazon CloudFront

Within Amazon Web Services you will need at least one CloudFront web distribution. If you don’t have one, you can get one here: CloudFront getting started

Add an item into the WAGTAILFRONTENDCACHE and set the BACKEND parameter to wagtail.contrib.frontend_cache.backends.CloudfrontBackend. This backend requires one extra parameter, DISTRIBUTION_ID (your CloudFront generated distribution id).

WAGTAILFRONTENDCACHE = {
    'cloudfront': {
        'BACKEND': 'wagtail.contrib.frontend_cache.backends.CloudfrontBackend',
        'DISTRIBUTION_ID': 'your-distribution-id',
    },
}

Configuration of credentials can done in multiple ways. You won’t need to store them in your Django settings file. You can read more about this here: Boto 3 Docs

In case you run multiple sites with Wagtail and each site has its CloudFront distribution, provide a mapping instead of a single distribution. Make sure the mapping matches with the hostnames provided in your site settings.

WAGTAILFRONTENDCACHE = {
    'cloudfront': {
        'BACKEND': 'wagtail.contrib.frontend_cache.backends.CloudfrontBackend',
        'DISTRIBUTION_ID': {
            'www.wagtail.io': 'your-distribution-id',
            'www.madewithwagtail.org': 'your-distribution-id',
        },
    },
}

Note

In most cases, absolute URLs with www prefixed domain names should be used in your mapping. Only drop the www prefix if you’re absolutely sure you’re not using it (e.g. a subdomain).

Advanced usage
Invalidating more than one URL per page

By default, Wagtail will only purge one URL per page. If your page has more than one URL to be purged, you will need to override the get_cached_paths method on your page type.

class BlogIndexPage(Page):
    def get_blog_items(self):
        # This returns a Django paginator of blog items in this section
        return Paginator(self.get_children().live().type(BlogPage), 10)

    def get_cached_paths(self):
        # Yield the main URL
        yield '/'

        # Yield one URL per page in the paginator to make sure all pages are purged
        for page_number in range(1, self.get_blog_items().num_pages + 1):
            yield '/?page=' + str(page_number)
Invalidating index pages

Pages that list other pages (such as a blog index) may need to be purged as well so any changes to a blog page are also reflected on the index (for example, a blog post was added, deleted or its title/thumbnail was changed).

To purge these pages, we need to write a signal handler that listens for Wagtail’s page_published and page_unpublished signals for blog pages (note, page_published is called both when a page is created and updated). This signal handler would trigger the invalidation of the index page using the PurgeBatch class which is used to construct and dispatch invalidation requests.

# models.py
from django.dispatch import receiver
from django.db.models.signals import pre_delete

from wagtail.core.signals import page_published
from wagtail.contrib.frontend_cache.utils import PurgeBatch

...

def blog_page_changed(blog_page):
    # Find all the live BlogIndexPages that contain this blog_page
    batch = PurgeBatch()
    for blog_index in BlogIndexPage.objects.live():
        if blog_page in blog_index.get_blog_items().object_list:
            batch.add_page(blog_index)

    # Purge all the blog indexes we found in a single request
    batch.purge()


@receiver(page_published, sender=BlogPage)
def blog_published_handler(instance, **kwargs):
    blog_page_changed(instance)


@receiver(pre_delete, sender=BlogPage)
def blog_deleted_handler(instance, **kwargs):
    blog_page_changed(instance)
Invalidating URLs

The PurgeBatch class provides a .add_url(url) and a .add_urls(urls) for adding individual URLs to the purge batch.

For example, this could be useful for purging a single page on a blog index:

from wagtail.contrib.frontend_cache.utils import PurgeBatch

# Purge the first page of the blog index
batch = PurgeBatch()
batch.add_url(blog_index.url + '?page=1')
batch.purge()
The PurgeBatch class

All of the methods available on PurgeBatch are listed below:

class wagtail.contrib.frontend_cache.utils.PurgeBatch(urls=None)

Represents a list of URLs to be purged in a single request

add_url(url)

Adds a single URL

add_urls(urls)

Adds multiple URLs from an iterable

This is equivalent to running .add_url(url) on each URL individually

add_page(page)

Adds all URLs for the specified page

This combines the page’s full URL with each path that is returned by the page’s .get_cached_paths method

add_pages(pages)

Adds multiple pages from a QuerySet or an iterable

This is equivalent to running .add_page(page) on each page individually

purge(backend_settings=None, backends=None)

Performs the purge of all the URLs in this batch

This method takes two optional keyword arguments: backend_settings and backends

  • backend_settings can be used to override the WAGTAILFRONTENDCACHE setting for just this call
  • backends can be set to a list of backend names. When set, the invalidation request will only be sent to these backends
RoutablePageMixin

The RoutablePageMixin mixin provides a convenient way for a page to respond on multiple sub-URLs with different views. For example, a blog section on a site might provide several different types of index page at URLs like /blog/2013/06/, /blog/authors/bob/, /blog/tagged/python/, all served by the same page instance.

A Page using RoutablePageMixin exists within the page tree like any other page, but URL paths underneath it are checked against a list of patterns. If none of the patterns match, control is passed to subpages as usual (or failing that, a 404 error is thrown).

By default a route for r'^$' exists, which serves the content exactly like a normal Page would. It can be overridden by using @route(r'^$') on any other method of the inheriting class.

Installation

Add "wagtail.contrib.routable_page" to your INSTALLED_APPS:

INSTALLED_APPS = [
  ...

  "wagtail.contrib.routable_page",
]
The basics

To use RoutablePageMixin, you need to make your class inherit from both wagtail.contrib.routable_page.models.RoutablePageMixin and wagtail.core.models.Page, then define some view methods and decorate them with wagtail.contrib.routable_page.models.route. These view methods behave like ordinary Django view functions, and must return an HttpResponse object; typically this is done through a call to django.shortcuts.render.

Here’s an example of an EventIndexPage with three views, assuming that an EventPage model with an event_date field has been defined elsewhere:

import datetime
from django.http import JsonResponse
from wagtail.core.fields import RichTextField
from wagtail.core.models import Page
from wagtail.contrib.routable_page.models import RoutablePageMixin, route


class EventIndexPage(RoutablePageMixin, Page):

    # Routable pages can have fields like any other - here we would
    # render the intro text on a template with {{ page.intro|richtext }}
    intro = RichTextField()

    @route(r'^$') # will override the default Page serving mechanism
    def current_events(self, request):
        """
        View function for the current events page
        """
        events = EventPage.objects.live().filter(event_date__gte=datetime.date.today())

        # NOTE: We can use the RoutablePageMixin.render() method to render
        # the page as normal, but with some of the context values overridden
        return self.render(request, context_overrides={
            'title': "Current events",
            'events': events,
        })

    @route(r'^past/$')
    def past_events(self, request):
        """
        View function for the past events page
        """
        events = EventPage.objects.live().filter(event_date__lt=datetime.date.today())

        # NOTE: We are overriding the template here, as well as few context values
        return self.render(
            request,
            context_overrides={
                'title': "Past events",
                'events': events,
            },
            template="events/event_index_historical.html",
        )

    # Multiple routes!
    @route(r'^year/(\d+)/$')
    @route(r'^year/current/$')
    def events_for_year(self, request, year=None):
        """
        View function for the events for year page
        """
        if year is None:
            year = datetime.date.today().year

        events = EventPage.objects.live().filter(event_date__year=year)

        return self.render(request, context_overrides={
            'title': "Events for %d" % year,
            'events': events,
        })

    @route(r'^year/(\d+)/count/$')
    def count_for_year(self, request, year=None):
        """
        View function that returns a simple JSON response that
        includes the number of events scheduled for a specific year
        """
        events = EventPage.objects.live().filter(event_date__year=year)

        # NOTE: The usual template/context rendering process is irrelevant
        # here, so we'll just return a HttpResponse directly
        return JsonResponse({'count': events.count()})
Rendering other pages

Another way of returning an HttpResponse is to call the serve method of another page. (Calling a page’s own serve method within a view method is not valid, as the view method is already being called within serve, and this would create a circular definition).

For example, EventIndexPage could be extended with a next/ route that displays the page for the next event:

@route(r'^next/$')
def next_event(self, request):
    """
    Display the page for the next event
    """
    future_events = EventPage.objects.live().filter(event_date__gt=datetime.date.today())
    next_event = future_events.order_by('event_date').first()

    return next_event.serve(request)
Reversing URLs

RoutablePageMixin adds a reverse_subpage() method to your page model which you can use for reversing URLs. For example:

# The URL name defaults to the view method name.
>>> event_page.reverse_subpage('events_for_year', args=(2015, ))
'year/2015/'

This method only returns the part of the URL within the page. To get the full URL, you must append it to the values of either the url or the full_url attribute on your page:

>>> event_page.url + event_page.reverse_subpage('events_for_year', args=(2015, ))
'/events/year/2015/'

>>> event_page.full_url + event_page.reverse_subpage('events_for_year', args=(2015, ))
'http://example.com/events/year/2015/'
Changing route names

The route name defaults to the name of the view. You can override this name with the name keyword argument on @route:

from wagtail.core.models import Page
from wagtail.contrib.routable_page.models import RoutablePageMixin, route


class EventPage(RoutablePageMixin, Page):
    ...

    @route(r'^year/(\d+)/$', name='year')
    def events_for_year(self, request, year):
        """
        View function for the events for year page
        """
        ...
>>> event_page.url + event_page.reverse_subpage('year', args=(2015, ))
'/events/year/2015/'
The RoutablePageMixin class
class wagtail.contrib.routable_page.models.RoutablePageMixin

This class can be mixed in to a Page model, allowing extra routes to be added to it.

render(request, *args, template=None, context_overrides=None, **kwargs)

New in version 2.11.

This method replicates what Page.serve() usually does when RoutablePageMixin is not used. By default, Page.get_template() is called to derive the template to use for rendering, and Page.get_context() is always called to gather the data to be included in the context.

You can use the context_overrides keyword argument as a shortcut to override or add new values to the context. For example:

@route(r'^$') # override the default route
def upcoming_events(self, request):
    return self.render(request, context_overrides={
        'title': "Current events",
        'events': EventPage.objects.live().future(),
    })

You can also use the template argument to specify an alternative template to use for rendering. For example:

@route(r'^past/$')
def past_events(self, request):
    return self.render(
        request,
        context_overrides={
            'title': "Past events",
            'events': EventPage.objects.live().past(),
        },
        template="events/event_index_historical.html",
    )
classmethod get_subpage_urls()
resolve_subpage(path)

This method takes a URL path and finds the view to call.

Example:

view, args, kwargs = page.resolve_subpage('/past/')
response = view(request, *args, **kwargs)
reverse_subpage(name, args=None, kwargs=None)

This method takes a route name/arguments and returns a URL path.

Example:

url = page.url + page.reverse_subpage('events_for_year', kwargs={'year': '2014'})
The routablepageurl template tag
wagtail.contrib.routable_page.templatetags.wagtailroutablepage_tags.routablepageurl(context, page, url_name, *args, **kwargs)

routablepageurl is similar to pageurl, but works with pages using RoutablePageMixin. It behaves like a hybrid between the built-in reverse, and pageurl from Wagtail.

page is the RoutablePage that URLs will be generated from.

url_name is a URL name defined in page.subpage_urls.

Positional arguments and keyword arguments should be passed as normal positional arguments and keyword arguments.

Example:

{% load wagtailroutablepage_tags %}

{% routablepageurl page "feed" %}
{% routablepageurl page "archive" 2014 08 14 %}
{% routablepageurl page "food" foo="bar" baz="quux" %}
ModelAdmin

The modeladmin module allows you to add any model in your project to the Wagtail admin. You can create customisable listing pages for a model, including plain Django models, and add navigation elements so that a model can be accessed directly from the Wagtail admin. Simply extend the ModelAdmin class, override a few attributes to suit your needs, register it with Wagtail using an easy one-line modeladmin_register method (you can copy and paste from the examples below), and you’re good to go. Your model doesn’t need to extend Page or be registered as a Snippet, and it won’t interfere with any of the existing admin functionality that Wagtail provides.

Summary of features
  • A customisable list view, allowing you to control what values are displayed for each row, available options for result filtering, default ordering, spreadsheet downloads and more.
  • Access your list views from the Wagtail admin menu easily with automatically generated menu items, with automatic ‘active item’ highlighting. Control the label text and icons used with easy-to-change attributes on your class.
  • An additional ModelAdminGroup class, that allows you to group your related models, and list them together in their own submenu, for a more logical user experience.
  • Simple, robust add and edit views for your non-Page models that use the panel configurations defined on your model using Wagtail’s edit panels.
  • For Page models, the system directs to Wagtail’s existing add and edit views, and returns you back to the correct list page, for a seamless experience.
  • Full respect for permissions assigned to your Wagtail users and groups. Users will only be able to do what you want them to!
  • All you need to easily hook your ModelAdmin classes into Wagtail, taking care of URL registration, menu changes, and registering any missing model permissions, so that you can assign them to Groups.
  • Built to be customisable - While modeladmin provides a solid experience out of the box, you can easily use your own templates, and the ModelAdmin class has a large number of methods that you can override or extend, allowing you to customise the behaviour to a greater degree.
Want to know more about customising ModelAdmin?
modeladmin customisation primer

The modeladmin app is designed to offer you as much flexibility as possible in how your model and its objects are represented in Wagtail’s CMS. This page aims to provide you with some background information to help you gain a better understanding of what the app can do, and to point you in the right direction, depending on the kind of customisations you’re looking to make.

Wagtail’s ModelAdmin class isn’t the same as Django’s

Wagtail’s ModelAdmin class is designed to be used in a similar way to Django’s class of the same name, and it often uses the same attribute and method names to achieve similar things. However, there are a few key differences:

Add & edit forms are still defined by panels and edit_handlers

In Wagtail, controlling which fields appear in add/edit forms for your Model, and defining how they are grouped and ordered, is achieved by adding a panels attribute, or edit_handler to your Model class. This remains the same whether your model is a Page type, a snippet, or just a standard Django Model. Because of this, Wagtail’s ModelAdmin class is mostly concerned with ‘listing’ configuration. For example, list_display, list_filter and search_fields attributes are present and support largely the same values as Django’s ModelAdmin class, while fields, fieldsets, exclude and other attributes you may be used to using to configure Django’s add/edit views, simply aren’t supported by Wagtail’s version.

‘Page type’ models need to be treated differently from other models

While modeladmin’s listing view and it’s supported customisation options work in exactly the same way for all types of Model, when it comes to the other management views, the treatment differs depending on whether your ModelAdmin class is representing a page type model (that extends wagtailcore.models.Page) or not.

Pages in Wagtail have some unique properties, and require additional views, interface elements and general treatment in order to be managed effectively. For example, they have a tree structure that must be preserved properly as pages are added, deleted and moved around. They also have a revisions system, their own permission considerations, and the facility to preview changes before saving changes. Because of this added complexity, Wagtail provides its own specific views for managing any custom page types you might add to your project (whether you create a ModelAdmin class for them or not).

In order to deliver a consistent user experience, modeladmin simply redirects users to Wagtail’s existing page management views wherever possible. You should bear this in mind if you ever find yourself wanting to change what happens when pages of a certain type are added, deleted, published, or have some other action applied to them. Customising the CreateView or EditView for your page type Model (even if just to add an additional stylesheet or JavaScript), simply won’t have any effect, as those views are not used.

If you do find yourself needing to customise the add, edit or other behaviour for a page type model, you should take a look at the following part of the documentation: Hooks.

Wagtail’s ModelAdmin class is ‘modular’

Unlike Django’s class of the same name, wagtailadmin’s ModelAmin acts primarily as a ‘controller’ class. While it does have a set of attributes and methods to enable you to configure how various components should treat your model, it has been deliberately designed to do as little work as possible by itself; it designates all of the real work to a set of separate, swappable components.

The theory is: If you want to do something differently, or add some functionality that modeladmin doesn’t already have, you can create new classes (or extend the ones provided by modeladmin) and easily configure your ModelAdmin class to use them instead of the defaults.

Changing what appears in the listing

You should familiarise yourself with the attributes and methods supported by the ModelAdmin class, that allow you to change what is displayed in the IndexView. The following page should give you everything you need to get going: Customising IndexView - the listing view

Adding additional stylesheets and/or JavaScript

The ModelAdmin class provides several attributes to enable you to easily add additional stylesheets and JavaScript to the admin interface for your model. Each attribute simply needs to be a list of paths to the files you want to include. If the path is for a file in your project’s static directory, then Wagtail will automatically prepend the path with STATIC_URL so that you don’t need to repeat it each time in your list of paths.

If you’d like to add styles or scripts to the IndexView, you should set the following attributes:

  • index_view_extra_css - Where each item is the path name of a pre-compiled stylesheet that you’d like to include.
  • index_view_extra_js - Where each item is the path name of a JavaScript file that you’d like to include.

If you’d like to do the same for CreateView and EditView, you should set the following attributes:

  • form_view_extra_css - Where each item is the path name of a pre-compiled stylesheet that you’d like to include.
  • form_view_extra_js - Where each item is the path name of a JavaScript file that you’d like to include.

And if you’re using the InspectView for your model, and want to do the same for that view, you should set the following attributes:

  • inspect_view_extra_css - Where each item is the path name of a pre-compiled stylesheet that you’d like to include.
  • inspect_view_extra_js - Where each item is the path name of a JavaScript file that you’d like to include.
Overriding templates

For all modeladmin views, Wagtail looks for templates in the following folders within your project or app, before resorting to the defaults:

  1. templates/modeladmin/app-name/model-name/
  2. templates/modeladmin/app-name/
  3. templates/modeladmin/

So, to override the template used by IndexView for example, you’d create a new index.html template and put it in one of those locations. For example, if you wanted to do this for an ArticlePage model in a news app, you’d add your custom template as news/templates/modeladmin/news/articlepage/index.html.

For reference, modeladmin looks for templates with the following names for each view:

  • 'index.html' for IndexView
  • 'inspect.html' for InspectView
  • 'create.html' for CreateView
  • 'edit.html' for EditView
  • 'delete.html' for DeleteView
  • 'choose_parent.html' for ChooseParentView

To add extra information to a block within one of the above Wagtail templates, use Django’s {{ block.super }} within the {% block ... %} that you wish to extend. For example, if you wish to display an image in an edit form below the fields of the model that is being edited, you could do the following:

{% extends "modeladmin/edit.html" %}
{% load static %}

{% block content %}
    {{ block.super }}
    <div class="object">
        <img src="{% get_media_prefix %}{{ instance.image }}"/>
    </div>
{% endblock %}

If for any reason you’d rather bypass the above behaviour and explicitly specify a template for a specific view, you can set either of the following attributes on your ModelAdmin class:

  • index_template_name to specify a template for IndexView
  • inspect_template_name to specify a template for InspectView
  • create_template_name to specify a template for CreateView
  • edit_template_name to specify a template for EditView
  • delete_template_name to specify a template for DeleteView
  • choose_parent_template_name to specify a template for ChooseParentView
Overriding views

For all of the views offered by ModelAdmin, the class provides an attribute that you can override in order to tell it which class you’d like to use:

  • index_view_class
  • inspect_view_class
  • create_view_class (not used for ‘page type’ models)
  • edit_view_class (not used for ‘page type’ models)
  • delete_view_class (not used for ‘page type’ models)
  • choose_parent_view_class (only used for ‘page type’ models)

For example, if you’d like to create your own view class and use it for the IndexView, you would do the following:

from wagtail.contrib.modeladmin.views import IndexView
from wagtail.contrib.modeladmin.options import ModelAdmin
from .models import MyModel

class MyCustomIndexView(IndexView):
    # New functionality and existing method overrides added here
    ...


class MyModelAdmin(ModelAdmin):
    model = MyModel
    index_view_class = MyCustomIndexView

Or, if you have no need for any of IndexView’s existing functionality in your view and would rather create your own view from scratch, modeladmin will support that too. However, it’s highly recommended that you use modeladmin.views.WMABaseView as a base for your view. It’ll make integrating with your ModelAdmin class much easier and will provide a bunch of useful attributes and methods to get you started.

You can also use the url_helper to easily reverse URLs for any ModelAdmin see Reversing ModelAdmin URLs.

Overriding helper classes

While ‘view classes’ are responsible for a lot of the work, there are also a number of other tasks that modeladmin must do regularly, that need to be handled in a consistent way, and in a number of different places. These tasks are designated to a set of simple classes (in modeladmin, these are termed ‘helper’ classes) and can be found in wagtail.contrib.modeladmin.helpers.

If you ever intend to write and use your own custom views with modeladmin, you should familiarise yourself with these helpers, as they are made available to views via the modeladmin.views.WMABaseView view.

There are three types of ‘helper class’:

  • URL helpers - That help with the consistent generation, naming and referencing of urls.
  • Permission helpers - That help with ensuring only users with sufficient permissions can perform certain actions, or see options to perform those actions.
  • Button helpers - That, with the help of the other two, helps with the generation of buttons for use in a number of places.

The ModelAdmin class allows you to define and use your own helper classes by setting values on the following attributes:

ModelAdmin.url_helper_class

By default, the modeladmin.helpers.url.PageAdminURLHelper class is used when your model extends wagtailcore.models.Page, otherwise modeladmin.helpers.url.AdminURLHelper is used.

If you find that the above helper classes don’t work for your needs, you can easily create your own helper class by sub-classing AdminURLHelper or PageAdminURLHelper (if your model extends Wagtail’s Page model), and making any necessary additions/overrides.

Once your class is defined, set the url_helper_class attribute on your ModelAdmin class to use your custom URLHelper, like so:

from wagtail.contrib.modeladmin.helpers import AdminURLHelper
from wagtail.contrib.modeladmin.options import ModelAdmin, modeladmin_register
from .models import MyModel


class MyURLHelper(AdminURLHelper):
    ...


class MyModelAdmin(ModelAdmin):
    model = MyModel
    url_helper_class = MyURLHelper

modeladmin_register(MyModelAdmin)

Or, if you have a more complicated use case, where simply setting that attribute isn’t possible (due to circular imports, for example) or doesn’t meet your needs, you can override the get_url_helper_class method, like so:

class MyModelAdmin(ModelAdmin):
    model = MyModel

    def get_url_helper_class(self):
        if self.some_attribute is True:
            return MyURLHelper
        return AdminURLHelper
ModelAdmin.permission_helper_class

By default, the modeladmin.helpers.permission.PagePermissionHelper class is used when your model extends wagtailcore.models.Page, otherwise modeladmin.helpers.permission.PermissionHelper is used.

If you find that the above helper classes don’t work for your needs, you can easily create your own helper class, by sub-classing PermissionHelper (or PagePermissionHelper if your model extends Wagtail’s Page model), and making any necessary additions/overrides. Once defined, you set the permission_helper_class attribute on your ModelAdmin class to use your custom class instead of the default, like so:

from wagtail.contrib.modeladmin.helpers import PermissionHelper
from wagtail.contrib.modeladmin.options import ModelAdmin, modeladmin_register
from .models import MyModel


class MyPermissionHelper(PermissionHelper):
    ...


class MyModelAdmin(ModelAdmin):
    model = MyModel
    permission_helper_class = MyPermissionHelper

modeladmin_register(MyModelAdmin)

Or, if you have a more complicated use case, where simply setting an attribute isn’t possible or doesn’t meet your needs, you can override the get_permission_helper_class method, like so:

class MyModelAdmin(ModelAdmin):
    model = MyModel

    def get_permission_helper_class(self):
        if self.some_attribute is True:
            return MyPermissionHelper
        return PermissionHelper
ModelAdmin.button_helper_class

By default, the modeladmin.helpers.button.PageButtonHelper class is used when your model extends wagtailcore.models.Page, otherwise modeladmin.helpers.button.ButtonHelper is used.

If you wish to add or change buttons for your model’s IndexView, you’ll need to create your own button helper class by sub-classing ButtonHelper or PageButtonHelper (if your model extend’s Wagtail’s Page model), and make any necessary additions/overrides. Once defined, you set the button_helper_class attribute on your ModelAdmin class to use your custom class instead of the default, like so:

from wagtail.contrib.modeladmin.helpers import ButtonHelper
from wagtail.contrib.modeladmin.options import ModelAdmin, modeladmin_register
from .models import MyModel


class MyButtonHelper(ButtonHelper):
    def add_button(self, classnames_add=None, classnames_exclude=None):
        if classnames_add is None:
            classnames_add = []
        if classnames_exclude is None:
            classnames_exclude = []
        classnames = self.add_button_classnames + classnames_add
        cn = self.finalise_classname(classnames, classnames_exclude)
        return {
            'url': self.url_helper.create_url,
            'label': _('Add %s') % self.verbose_name,
            'classname': cn,
            'title': _('Add a new %s') % self.verbose_name,
        }

    def inspect_button(self, pk, classnames_add=None, classnames_exclude=None):
        ...

    def edit_button(self, pk, classnames_add=None, classnames_exclude=None):
        ...

    def delete_button(self, pk, classnames_add=None, classnames_exclude=None):
        ...


class MyModelAdmin(ModelAdmin):
    model = MyModel
    button_helper_class = MyButtonHelper

modeladmin_register(MyModelAdmin)

To customise the buttons found in the ModelAdmin List View you can change the returned dictionary in the add_button, delete_button, edit_button or inspect_button methods. For example if you wanted to change the Delete button you could modify the delete_button method in your ButtonHelper like so:

class MyButtonHelper(ButtonHelper):
    ...
    def delete_button(self, pk, classnames_add=None, classnames_exclude=None):
        ...
        return {
            'url': reverse("your_custom_url"),
            'label': _('Delete'),
            'classname': "custom-css-class",
            'title': _('Delete this item')
        }

Or, if you have a more complicated use case, where simply setting an attribute isn’t possible or doesn’t meet your needs, you can override the get_button_helper_class method, like so:

class MyModelAdmin(ModelAdmin):
    model = MyModel

    def get_button_helper_class(self):
        if self.some_attribute is True:
            return MyButtonHelper
        return ButtonHelper
Using helpers in your custom views

As long as you sub-class modeladmin.views.WMABaseView (or one of the more ‘specific’ view classes) to create your custom view, instances of each helper should be available on instances of your class as:

  • self.url_helper
  • self.permission_helper
  • self.button_helper

Unlike the other two, self.button_helper isn’t populated right away when the view is instantiated. In order to show the right buttons for the right users, ButtonHelper instances need to be ‘request aware’, so self.button_helper is only set once the view’s dispatch() method has run, which takes a HttpRequest object as an argument, from which the current user can be identified.

Customising the menu item

You can use the following attributes and methods on the ModelAdmin class to alter the menu item used to represent your model in Wagtail’s admin area.

ModelAdmin.menu_label

Expected value: A string.

Set this attribute to a string value to override the label used for the menu item that appears in Wagtail’s sidebar. If not set, the menu item will use verbose_name_plural from your model’s Meta data.

ModelAdmin.menu_icon

Expected value: A string matching one of Wagtail’s icon class names.

If you want to change the icon used to represent your model, you can set the menu_icon attribute on your class to use one of the other icons available in Wagtail’s CMS. The same icon will be used for the menu item in Wagtail’s sidebar, and will also appear in the header on the list page and other views for your model. If not set, 'doc-full-inverse' will be used for page-type models, and 'snippet' for others.

If you’re using a ModelAdminGroup class to group together several ModelAdmin classes in their own sub-menu, and want to change the menu item used to represent the group, you should override the menu_icon attribute on your ModelAdminGroup class ('folder-open-inverse' is the default).

ModelAdmin.menu_order

Expected value: An integer between 1 and 999.

If you want to change the position of the menu item for your model (or group of models) in Wagtail’s sidebar, you do that by setting menu_order. The value should be an integer between 1 and 999. The lower the value, the higher up the menu item will appear.

Wagtail’s ‘Explorer’ menu item has an order value of 100, so supply a value greater than that if you wish to keep the explorer menu item at the top.

ModelAdmin.add_to_settings_menu

Expected value: True or False

If you’d like the menu item for your model to appear in Wagtail’s ‘Settings’ sub-menu instead of at the top level, add add_to_settings_menu = True to your ModelAdmin class.

This will only work for individual ModelAdmin classes registered with their own modeladmin_register call. It won’t work for members of a ModelAdminGroup.

Customising IndexView - the listing view

For the sake of consistency, this section of the docs will refer to the listing view as IndexView, because that is the view class that does all the heavy lifting.

You can use the following attributes and methods on the ModelAdmin class to alter how your model data is treated and represented by the IndexView.

ModelAdmin.list_display

Expected value: A list or tuple, where each item is the name of a field or single-argument callable on your model, or a similarly simple method defined on the ModelAdmin class itself.

Default value: ('__str__',)

Set list_display to control which fields are displayed in the IndexView for your model.

You have three possible values that can be used in list_display:

  • A field of the model. For example:

    from wagtail.contrib.modeladmin.options import ModelAdmin
    from .models import Person
    
    class PersonAdmin(ModelAdmin):
        model = Person
        list_display = ('first_name', 'last_name')
    
  • The name of a custom method on your ModelAdmin class, that accepts a single parameter for the model instance. For example:

    from wagtail.contrib.modeladmin.options import ModelAdmin
    from .models import Person
    
    
    class PersonAdmin(ModelAdmin):
        model = Person
        list_display = ('upper_case_name',)
    
        def upper_case_name(self, obj):
            return ("%s %s" % (obj.first_name, obj.last_name)).upper()
        upper_case_name.short_description = 'Name'
    
  • The name of a method on your Model class that accepts only self as an argument. For example:

    from django.db import models
    from wagtail.contrib.modeladmin.options import ModelAdmin
    
    class Person(models.Model):
        name = models.CharField(max_length=50)
        birthday = models.DateField()
    
        def decade_born_in(self):
            return self.birthday.strftime('%Y')[:3] + "0's"
        decade_born_in.short_description = 'Birth decade'
    
    
    class PersonAdmin(ModelAdmin):
        model = Person
        list_display = ('name', 'decade_born_in')
    

A few special cases to note about list_display:

  • If the field is a ForeignKey, Django will display the output of __str__() of the related object.

  • If the string provided is a method of the model or ModelAdmin class, Django will HTML-escape the output by default. To escape user input and allow your own unescaped tags, use format_html(). For example:

    from django.db import models
    from django.utils.html import format_html
    from wagtail.contrib.modeladmin.options import ModelAdmin
    
    class Person(models.Model):
        first_name = models.CharField(max_length=50)
        last_name = models.CharField(max_length=50)
        color_code = models.CharField(max_length=6)
    
        def colored_name(self):
            return format_html(
                '<span style="color: #{};">{} {}</span>',
                self.color_code,
                self.first_name,
                self.last_name,
            )
    
    
    class PersonAdmin(ModelAdmin):
        model = Person
        list_display = ('first_name', 'last_name', 'colored_name')
    
  • If the value of a field is None, an empty string, or an iterable without elements, Wagtail will display a dash (-) for that column. You can override this by setting empty_value_display on your ModelAdmin class. For example:

    from wagtail.contrib.modeladmin.options import ModelAdmin
    
    class PersonAdmin(ModelAdmin):
        empty_value_display = 'N/A'
        ...
    

    Or, if you’d like to change the value used depending on the field, you can override ModelAdmin’s get_empty_value_display() method, like so:

    from django.db import models
    from wagtail.contrib.modeladmin.options import ModelAdmin
    
    
    class Person(models.Model):
        name = models.CharField(max_length=100)
        nickname = models.CharField(blank=True, max_length=100)
        likes_cat_gifs = models.NullBooleanField()
    
    
    class PersonAdmin(ModelAdmin):
        model = Person
        list_display = ('name', 'nickname', 'likes_cat_gifs')
    
        def get_empty_value_display(self, field_name=None):
            if field_name == 'nickname':
                return 'None given'
            if field_name == 'likes_cat_gifs':
                return 'Unanswered'
            return super().get_empty_value_display(field_name)
    

    The __str__() method is just as valid in list_display as any other model method, so it’s perfectly OK to do this:

    list_display = ('__str__', 'some_other_field')
    

    By default, the ability to sort results by an item in list_display is only offered when it’s a field that has an actual database value (because sorting is done at the database level). However, if the output of the method is representative of a database field, you can indicate this fact by setting the admin_order_field attribute on that method, like so:

    from django.db import models
    from django.utils.html import format_html
    from wagtail.contrib.modeladmin.options import ModelAdmin
    
    class Person(models.Model):
        first_name = models.CharField(max_length=50)
        last_name = models.CharField(max_length=50)
        color_code = models.CharField(max_length=6)
    
        def colored_first_name(self):
            return format_html(
                '<span style="color: #{};">{}</span>',
                self.color_code,
                self.first_name,
            )
        colored_first_name.admin_order_field = 'first_name'
    
    
    class PersonAdmin(ModelAdmin):
        model = Person
        list_display = ('colored_first_name', 'last_name')
    

    The above will tell Wagtail to order by the first_name field when trying to sort by colored_first_name in the index view.

    To indicate descending order with admin_order_field you can use a hyphen prefix on the field name. Using the above example, this would look like:

    colored_first_name.admin_order_field = '-first_name'
    

    admin_order_field supports query lookups to sort by values on related models, too. This example includes an “author first name” column in the list display and allows sorting it by first name:

    from django.db import models
    
    
    class Blog(models.Model):
        title = models.CharField(max_length=255)
        author = models.ForeignKey(Person, on_delete=models.CASCADE)
    
        def author_first_name(self, obj):
            return obj.author.first_name
    
        author_first_name.admin_order_field = 'author__first_name'
    
  • Elements of list_display can also be properties. Please note however, that due to the way properties work in Python, setting short_description on a property is only possible when using the property() function and not with the @property decorator.

    For example:

    from django.db import models
    from wagtail.contrib.modeladmin.options import ModelAdmin
    
    class Person(models.Model):
        first_name = models.CharField(max_length=50)
        last_name = models.CharField(max_length=50)
    
        def full_name_property(self):
            return self.first_name + ' ' + self.last_name
        full_name_property.short_description = "Full name of the person"
    
        full_name = property(full_name_property)
    
    
    class PersonAdmin(ModelAdmin):
        list_display = ('full_name',)
    
ModelAdmin.list_export

Expected value: A list or tuple, where each item is the name of a field or single-argument callable on your model, or a similarly simple method defined on the ModelAdmin class itself.

Set list_export to set the fields you wish to be exported as columns when downloading a spreadsheet version of your index_view

class PersonAdmin(ModelAdmin):
    list_export = ('is_staff', 'company')
ModelAdmin.list_filter

Expected value: A list or tuple, where each item is the name of model field of type BooleanField, CharField, DateField, DateTimeField, IntegerField or ForeignKey.

Set list_filter to activate filters in the right sidebar of the list page for your model. For example:

class PersonAdmin(ModelAdmin):
    list_filter = ('is_staff', 'company')
ModelAdmin.export_filename

Expected value: A string specifying the filename of an exported spreadsheet, without file extensions.

class PersonAdmin(ModelAdmin):
    export_filename = 'people_spreadsheet'
ModelAdmin.search_fields

Expected value: A list or tuple, where each item is the name of a model field of type CharField, TextField, RichTextField or StreamField.

Set search_fields to enable a search box at the top of the index page for your model. You should add names of any fields on the model that should be searched whenever somebody submits a search query using the search box.

Searching is handled via Django’s QuerySet API by default, see ModelAdmin.search_handler_class about changing this behaviour. This means by default it will work for all models, whatever search backend your project is using, and without any additional setup or configuration.

ModelAdmin.search_handler_class

Expected value: A subclass of wagtail.contrib.modeladmin.helpers.search.BaseSearchHandler

The default value is DjangoORMSearchHandler, which uses the Django ORM to perform lookups on the fields specified by search_fields.

If you would prefer to use the built-in Wagtail search backend to search your models, you can use the WagtailBackendSearchHandler class instead. For example:

from wagtail.contrib.modeladmin.helpers import WagtailBackendSearchHandler

from .models import Person

class PersonAdmin(ModelAdmin):
    model = Person
    search_handler_class = WagtailBackendSearchHandler
Extra considerations when using WagtailBackendSearchHandler
ModelAdmin.search_fields is used differently

The value of search_fields is passed to the underlying search backend to limit the fields used when matching. Each item in the list must be indexed on your model using index.SearchField.

To allow matching on any indexed field, set the search_fields attribute on your ModelAdmin class to None, or remove it completely.

Indexing extra fields using index.FilterField

The underlying search backend must be able to interpret all of the fields and relationships used in the queryset created by IndexView, including those used in prefetch() or select_related() queryset methods, or used in list_display, list_filter or ordering.

Be sure to test things thoroughly in a development environment (ideally using the same search backend as you use in production). Wagtail will raise an IndexError if the backend encounters something it does not understand, and will tell you what you need to change.

ModelAdmin.extra_search_kwargs

Expected value: A dictionary of keyword arguments that will be passed on to the search() method of search_handler_class.

For example, to override the WagtailBackendSearchHandler default operator you could do the following:

from wagtail.contrib.modeladmin.helpers import WagtailBackendSearchHandler
from wagtail.search.utils import OR

from .models import IndexedModel

class DemoAdmin(ModelAdmin):
    model = IndexedModel
    search_handler_class = WagtailBackendSearchHandler
    extra_search_kwargs = {'operator': OR}
ModelAdmin.ordering

Expected value: A list or tuple in the same format as a model’s ordering parameter.

Set ordering to specify the default ordering of objects when listed by IndexView. If not provided, the model’s default ordering will be respected.

If you need to specify a dynamic order (for example, depending on user or language) you can override the get_ordering() method instead.

ModelAdmin.list_per_page

Expected value: A positive integer

Set list_per_page to control how many items appear on each paginated page of the index view. By default, this is set to 100.

ModelAdmin.get_queryset()

Must return: A QuerySet

The get_queryset method returns the ‘base’ QuerySet for your model, to which any filters and search queries are applied. By default, the all() method of your model’s default manager is used. But, if for any reason you only want a certain sub-set of objects to appear in the IndexView listing, overriding the get_queryset method on your ModelAdmin class can help you with that. The method takes an HttpRequest object as a parameter, so limiting objects by the current logged-in user is possible.

For example:

from django.db import models
from wagtail.contrib.modeladmin.options import ModelAdmin

class Person(models.Model):
    first_name = models.CharField(max_length=50)
    last_name = models.CharField(max_length=50)
    managed_by = models.ForeignKey('auth.User', on_delete=models.CASCADE)


class PersonAdmin(ModelAdmin):
    model = Person
    list_display = ('first_name', 'last_name')

    def get_queryset(self, request):
        qs = super().get_queryset(request)
        # Only show people managed by the current user
        return qs.filter(managed_by=request.user)
ModelAdmin.get_extra_attrs_for_row()

Must return: A dictionary

The get_extra_attrs_for_row method allows you to add html attributes to the opening <tr> tag for each result, in addition to the data-object_pk and class attributes already added by the result_row_display template tag.

If you want to add additional CSS classes, simply provide those class names as a string value using the 'class' key, and the odd/even will be appended to your custom class names when rendering.

For example, if you wanted to add some additional class names based on field values, you could do something like:

from decimal import Decimal
from django.db import models
from wagtail.contrib.modeladmin.options import ModelAdmin

class BankAccount(models.Model):
    name = models.CharField(max_length=50)
    account_number = models.CharField(max_length=50)
    balance = models.DecimalField(max_digits=5, num_places=2)


class BankAccountAdmin(ModelAdmin):
    list_display = ('name', 'account_number', 'balance')

    def get_extra_attrs_for_row(self, obj, context):
        if obj.balance < Decimal('0.00'):
            classname = 'balance-negative'
        else:
            classname = 'balance-positive'
        return {
            'class': classname,
        }
ModelAdmin.get_extra_class_names_for_field_col()

Must return: A list

The get_extra_class_names_for_field_col method allows you to add additional CSS class names to any of the columns defined by list_display for your model. The method takes two parameters:

  • obj: the object being represented by the current row
  • field_name: the item from list_display being represented by the current column

For example, if you’d like to apply some conditional formatting to a cell depending on the row’s value, you could do something like:

from decimal import Decimal
from django.db import models
from wagtail.contrib.modeladmin.options import ModelAdmin

class BankAccount(models.Model):
    name = models.CharField(max_length=50)
    account_number = models.CharField(max_length=50)
    balance = models.DecimalField(max_digits=5, num_places=2)


class BankAccountAdmin(ModelAdmin):
    list_display = ('name', 'account_number', 'balance')

    def get_extra_class_names_for_field_col(self, obj, field_name):
        if field_name == 'balance':
            if obj.balance <= Decimal('-100.00'):
                return ['brand-danger']
            elif obj.balance <= Decimal('-0.00'):
                return ['brand-warning']
            elif obj.balance <= Decimal('50.00'):
                return ['brand-info']
            else:
                return ['brand-success']
        return []
ModelAdmin.get_extra_attrs_for_field_col()

Must return: A dictionary

The get_extra_attrs_for_field_col method allows you to add additional HTML attributes to any of the columns defined in list_display. Like the get_extra_class_names_for_field_col method above, this method takes two parameters:

  • obj: the object being represented by the current row
  • field_name: the item from list_display being represented by the current column

For example, you might like to add some tooltip text to a certain column, to help give the value more context:

from django.db import models
from wagtail.contrib.modeladmin.options import ModelAdmin


class Person(models.Model):
    name = models.CharField(max_length=100)
    likes_cat_gifs = models.NullBooleanField()


class PersonAdmin(ModelAdmin):
    model = Person
    list_display = ('name', 'likes_cat_gifs')

    def get_extra_attrs_for_field_col(self, obj, field_name=None):
        attrs = super().get_extra_attrs_for_field_col(obj, field_name)
        if field_name == 'likes_cat_gifs' and obj.likes_cat_gifs is None:
            attrs.update({
                'title': (
                    'The person was shown several cat gifs, but failed to '
                    'indicate a preference.'
                ),
            })
        return attrs

Or you might like to add one or more data attributes to help implement some kind of interactivity using JavaScript:

from django.db import models
from wagtail.contrib.modeladmin.options import ModelAdmin


class Event(models.Model):
    title = models.CharField(max_length=255)
    start_date = models.DateField()
    end_date = models.DateField()
    start_time = models.TimeField()
    end_time = models.TimeField()


class EventAdmin(ModelAdmin):
    model = Event
    list_display = ('title', 'start_date', 'end_date')

    def get_extra_attrs_for_field_col(self, obj, field_name=None):
        attrs = super().get_extra_attrs_for_field_col(obj, field_name)
        if field_name == 'start_date':
            # Add the start time as data to the 'start_date' cell
            attrs.update({ 'data-time': obj.start_time.strftime('%H:%M') })
        elif field_name == 'end_date':
            # Add the end time as data to the 'end_date' cell
            attrs.update({ 'data-time': obj.end_time.strftime('%H:%M') })
        return attrs
wagtail.contrib.modeladmin.mixins.ThumbnailMixin

If you’re using wagtailimages.Image to define an image for each item in your model, ThumbnailMixin can help you add thumbnail versions of that image to each row in IndexView. To use it, simply extend ThumbnailMixin as well as ModelAdmin when defining your ModelAdmin class, and change a few attributes to change the thumbnail to your liking, like so:

from django.db import models
from wagtail.contrib.modeladmin.mixins import ThumbnailMixin
from wagtail.contrib.modeladmin.options import ModelAdmin

class Person(models.Model):
    name = models.CharField(max_length=255)
    avatar = models.ForeignKey('wagtailimages.Image', on_delete=models.SET_NULL, null=True)
    likes_cat_gifs = models.NullBooleanField()

class PersonAdmin(ThumbnailMixin, ModelAdmin):

    # Add 'admin_thumb' to list_display, where you want the thumbnail to appear
    list_display = ('admin_thumb', 'name', 'likes_cat_gifs')

    # Optionally tell IndexView to add buttons to a different column (if the
    # first column contains the thumbnail, the buttons are likely better off
    # displayed elsewhere)
    list_display_add_buttons = 'name'

    """
    Set 'thumb_image_field_name' to the name of the ForeignKey field that
    links to 'wagtailimages.Image'
    """
    thumb_image_field_name = 'avatar'

    # Optionally override the filter spec used to create each thumb
    thumb_image_filter_spec = 'fill-100x100' # this is the default

    # Optionally override the 'width' attribute value added to each `<img>` tag
    thumb_image_width = 50 # this is the default

    # Optionally override the class name added to each `<img>` tag
    thumb_classname = 'admin-thumb' # this is the default

    # Optionally override the text that appears in the column header
    thumb_col_header_text = 'image' # this is the default

    # Optionally specify a fallback image to be used when the object doesn't
    # have an image set, or the image has been deleted. It can an image from
    # your static files folder, or an external URL.
    thumb_default = 'https://lorempixel.com/100/100'
ModelAdmin.list_display_add_buttons

Expected value: A string matching one of the items in list_display.

If for any reason you’d like to change which column the action buttons appear in for each row, you can specify a different column using list_display_add_buttons on your ModelAdmin class. The value must match one of the items your class’s list_display attribute. By default, buttons are added to the first column of each row.

See the ThumbnailMixin example above to see how list_display_add_buttons can be used.

ModelAdmin.index_view_extra_css

Expected value: A list of path names of additional stylesheets to be added to the IndexView

See the following part of the docs to find out more: Adding additional stylesheets and/or JavaScript

ModelAdmin.index_view_extra_js

Expected value: A list of path names of additional js files to be added to the IndexView

See the following part of the docs to find out more: Adding additional stylesheets and/or JavaScript

ModelAdmin.index_template_name

Expected value: The path to a custom template to use for IndexView

See the following part of the docs to find out more: Overriding templates

ModelAdmin.index_view_class

Expected value: A custom view class to replace modeladmin.views.IndexView

See the following part of the docs to find out more: Overriding views

Customising CreateView, EditView and DeleteView

NOTE: modeladmin only provides ‘create’, ‘edit’ and ‘delete’ functionality for non page type models (i.e. models that do not extend wagtailcore.models.Page). If your model is a ‘page type’ model, customising any of the following will not have any effect:

Changing which fields appear in CreateView & EditView

edit_handler can be used on any Django models.Model class, just like it can be used for Page models or other models registered as Snippets in Wagtail.

To change the way your MyPageModel is displayed in the CreateView and the EditView, simply define an edit_handler or panels attribute on your model class.

class MyPageModel(models.Model):
    first_name = models.CharField(max_length=100)
    last_name = models.CharField(max_length=100)
    address = models.TextField()

    panels = [
        MultiFieldPanel([
            FieldRowPanel([
                FieldPanel('first_name', classname='fn'),
                FieldPanel('last_name', classname='ln'),
            ]),
            FieldPanel('address', classname='custom1',)
        ])
    ]

Or alternatively:

class MyPageModel(models.Model):
    first_name = models.CharField(max_length=100)
    last_name = models.CharField(max_length=100)
    address = models.TextField()

    custom_panels = [
        MultiFieldPanel([
            FieldRowPanel([
                FieldPanel('first_name', classname='fn'),
                FieldPanel('last_name', classname='ln'),
            ]),
            FieldPanel('address', classname='custom1',)
        ])
    ]
    edit_handler = ObjectList(custom_panels)
    # or
    edit_handler = TabbedInterface([
        ObjectList(custom_panels, heading='First Tab'),
        ObjectList(...)
    ])

edit_handler and panels can alternatively be defined on a ModelAdmin definition. This feature is especially useful for use cases where you have to work with models that are ‘out of reach’ (due to being part of a third-party package, for example).

class BookAdmin(ModelAdmin):
    model = Book

    panels = [
        FieldPanel('title'),
        FieldPanel('author'),
    ]

Or alternatively:

class BookAdmin(ModelAdmin):
    model = Book

    custom_panels = [
        FieldPanel('title'),
        FieldPanel('author'),
    ]
    edit_handler = ObjectList(custom_panels)
ModelAdmin.form_view_extra_css

Expected value: A list of path names of additional stylesheets to be added to CreateView and EditView

See the following part of the docs to find out more: Adding additional stylesheets and/or JavaScript

ModelAdmin.form_view_extra_js

Expected value: A list of path names of additional js files to be added to CreateView and EditView

See the following part of the docs to find out more: Adding additional stylesheets and/or JavaScript

ModelAdmin.create_template_name

Expected value: The path to a custom template to use for CreateView

See the following part of the docs to find out more: Overriding templates

ModelAdmin.create_view_class

Expected value: A custom view class to replace modeladmin.views.CreateView

See the following part of the docs to find out more: Overriding views

ModelAdmin.edit_template_name

Expected value: The path to a custom template to use for EditView

See the following part of the docs to find out more: Overriding templates

ModelAdmin.edit_view_class

Expected value: A custom view class to replace modeladmin.views.EditView

See the following part of the docs to find out more: Overriding views

ModelAdmin.delete_template_name

Expected value: The path to a custom template to use for DeleteView

See the following part of the docs to find out more: Overriding templates

ModelAdmin.delete_view_class

Expected value: A custom view class to replace modeladmin.views.DeleteView

See the following part of the docs to find out more: Overriding views

ModelAdmin.form_fields_exclude

Expected value: A list or tuple of fields names

When using CreateView or EditView to create or update model instances, this value will be passed to the edit form, so that any named fields will be excluded from the form. This is particularly useful when registering ModelAdmin classes for models from third-party apps, where defining panel configurations on the Model itself is more complicated.

ModelAdmin.prepopulated_fields

Expected value: A dict mapping prepopulated fields to a tuple of fields to prepopulate from

When using CreateView or EditView to create or update model instances, the fields corresponding to the keys in the dict are prepopulated using the fields in the corresponding tuple. The main use for this functionality is to automatically generate the value for SlugField fields from one or more other fields. The generated value is produced by concatenating the values of the source fields, and then by transforming that result into a valid slug (e.g. substituting dashes for spaces; lowercasing ASCII letters; and removing various English stop words such as ‘a’, ‘an’, ‘as’, and similar).

Prepopulated fields aren’t modified by JavaScript after a value has been saved. It’s usually undesired that slugs change (which would cause an object’s URL to change if the slug is used in it).

prepopulated_fields doesn’t accept DateTimeField, ForeignKey, OneToOneField, and ManyToManyField fields.

ModelAdmin.get_edit_handler()

Must return: An instance of wagtail.admin.edit_handlers.ObjectList

Returns the appropriate edit_handler for the modeladmin class. edit_handlers can be defined either on the model itself or on the modeladmin (as property edit_handler or panels). Falls back to extracting panel / edit handler definitions from the model class.

Enabling & customising InspectView

The InspectView is disabled by default, as it’s not often useful for most models. However, if you need a view that enables users to view more detailed information about an instance without the option to edit it, you can easily enable the inspect view by setting inspect_view_enabled=True on your ModelAdmin class.

When InspectView is enabled, an ‘Inspect’ button will automatically appear for each row in your index / listing view, linking to a new page that shows a list of field values for that particular object.

By default, all ‘concrete’ fields (where the field value is stored as a column in the database table for your model) will be shown. You can customise what values are displayed by adding the following attributes to your ModelAdmin class:

ModelAdmin.inspect_view_fields

Expected value: A list or tuple, where each item is the name of a field or attribute on the instance that you’d like InspectView to render.

A sensible value will be rendered for most field types.

If you have wagtail.images installed, and the value happens to be an instance of wagtailimages.models.Image (or a custom model that subclasses wagtailimages.models.AbstractImage), a thumbnail of that image will be rendered.

If you have wagtail.documents installed, and the value happens to be an instance of wagtaildocs.models.Document (or a custom model that subclasses wagtaildocs.models.AbstractDocument), a link to that document will be rendered, along with the document title, file extension and size.

ModelAdmin.inspect_view_fields_exclude

Expected value: A list or tuple, where each item is the name of a field that you’d like to exclude from InspectView

Note: If both inspect_view_fields and inspect_view_fields_exclude are set, inspect_view_fields_exclude will be ignored.

ModelAdmin.inspect_view_extra_css

Expected value: A list of path names of additional stylesheets to be added to the InspectView

See the following part of the docs to find out more: Adding additional stylesheets and/or JavaScript

ModelAdmin.inspect_view_extra_js

Expected value: A list of path names of additional js files to be added to the InspectView

See the following part of the docs to find out more: Adding additional stylesheets and/or JavaScript

ModelAdmin.inspect_template_name

Expected value: The path to a custom template to use for InspectView

See the following part of the docs to find out more: Overriding templates

ModelAdmin.inspect_view_class

Expected value: A custom view class to replace modeladmin.views.InspectView

See the following part of the docs to find out more: Overriding views

Customising ChooseParentView

When adding a new page via Wagtail’s explorer view, you essentially choose where you want to add a new page by navigating the relevant part of the page tree and choosing to ‘add a child page’ to your chosen parent page. Wagtail then asks you to select what type of page you’d like to add.

When adding a page from a ModelAdmin list page, we know what type of page needs to be added, but we might not automatically know where in the page tree it should be added. If there’s only one possible choice of parent for a new page (as defined by setting parent_page_types and subpage_types attributes on your models), then we skip a step and use that as the parent. Otherwise, the user must specify a parent page using modeladmin’s ChooseParentView.

It should be very rare that you need to customise this view, but in case you do, modeladmin offers the following attributes that you can override:

ModelAdmin.choose_parent_template_name

Expected value: The path to a custom template to use for ChooseParentView

See the following part of the docs to find out more: Overriding templates

ModelAdmin.choose_parent_view_class

Expected value: A custom view class to replace modeladmin.views.ChooseParentView

See the following part of the docs to find out more: Overriding views

Additional tips and tricks

This section explores some of modeladmin’s lesser-known features, and provides examples to help with modeladmin customisation. More pages will be added in future.

Reversing ModelAdmin URLs

It’s sometimes useful to be able to derive the index (listing) or create URLs for a model along with the edit, delete or inspect URL for a specific object in a model you have registered via the modeladmin app.

Wagtail itself does this by instantiating each ModelAdmin class you have registered, and using the url_helper attribute of each instance to determine what these URLs are.

You can take a similar approach in your own code too, by creating a ModelAdmin instance yourself, and using its url_helper to determine URLs.

See below for some examples:

Getting the edit or delete or inspect URL for an object

In this example, we will provide a quick way to edit the Author that is linked to a blog post from the admin page listing menu. We have defined an AuthorModelAdmin class and registered it with Wagtail to allow Author objects to be administered via the admin area. The BlogPage model has an author field (a ForeignKey to the Author model) to allow a single author to be specified for each post.

# file: wagtail_hooks.py

from wagtail.admin.widgets import PageListingButton
from wagtail.contrib.modeladmin.options import ModelAdmin, modeladmin_register
from wagtail.core import hooks

# Author & BlogPage model not shown in this example
from models import Author

# ensure our modeladmin is created
class AuthorModelAdmin(ModelAdmin):
    model = Author
    menu_order = 200

# Creating an instance of `AuthorModelAdmin`
author_modeladmin = AuthorModelAdmin()

@hooks.register('register_page_listing_buttons')
def add_author_edit_buttons(page, page_perms, is_parent=False, next_url=None):
    """
    For pages that have an author, add an additional button to the page listing,
    linking to the 'edit' page for that author.
    """
    author_id = getattr(page, 'author_id', None)
    if author_id:
        # the url helper will return something like: /admin/my-app/author/edit/2/
        author_edit_url = author_modeladmin.url_helper.get_action_url('edit', author_id)
        yield PageListingButton('Edit Author',  author_edit_url, priority=10)

modeladmin_register(AuthorModelAdmin)

As you can see from the example above, when using get_action_url() to generate object-specific URLs, the target object’s primary key value must be supplied so that it can be included in the resulting URL (e.g. "/admin/my-app/author/edit/2/"). The following object-specific action names are supported by get_action_url():

'edit'
Returns a URL for updating a specific object.
'delete'
Returns a URL for deleting a specific object.
'inspect'
Returns a URL for viewing details of a specific object. NOTE: This will only work if inspect_view_enabled is set to True on your ModelAdmin class.

Note

If you are using string values as primary keys for you model, you may need to handle cases where the key contains characters that are not URL safe. Only alphanumerics ([0-9a-zA-Z]), or the following special characters are safe: $, -, _, ., +, !, *, ', (, ).

django.contrib.admin.utils.quote() can be used to safely encode these primary key values before passing them to get_action_url(). Failure to do this may result in Wagtail not being able to recognise the primary key when the URL is visited, resulting in 404 errors.

Getting the index or create URL for a model

There are URLs available for the model listing view (action is 'index') and the create model view (action is 'create'). Each of these has an equivalent shortcut available; url_helper.index_url and url_helper.create_url.

For example:

from .wagtail_hooks import AuthorModelAdmin

url_helper = AuthorModelAdmin().url_helper

index_url = url_helper.get_action_url('index')
# OR we can use the 'index_url' shortcut
also_index_url = url_helper.index_url # note: do not call this property as a function
# both will output /admin/my-app/author

create_url = url_helper.get_action_url('create')
# OR we can use the 'create_url' shortcut
also_create_url = url_helper.create_url # note: do not call this property as a function
# both will output /admin/my-app/author/create

Note

If you have registered a page type with modeladmin (e.g. BlogPage), and pages of that type can be added to more than one place in the page tree, when a user visits the create URL, they’ll be automatically redirected to another view to choose a parent for the new page. So, this isn’t something you need to check or cater for in your own code.

To customise url_helper behaviour, see ModelAdmin.url_helper_class.

Installation

Add wagtail.contrib.modeladmin to your INSTALLED_APPS:

INSTALLED_APPS = [
   ...
   'wagtail.contrib.modeladmin',
]
How to use
A simple example

Let’s say your website is for a local library. They have a model called Book that appears across the site in many places. You can define a normal Django model for it, then use ModelAdmin to create a menu in Wagtail’s admin to create, view, and edit Book entries.

models.py looks like this:

from django.db import models
from wagtail.admin.edit_handlers import FieldPanel
from wagtail.images.edit_handlers import ImageChooserPanel

class Book(models.Model):
    title = models.CharField(max_length=255)
    author = models.CharField(max_length=255)
    cover_photo = models.ForeignKey(
        'wagtailimages.Image',
        null=True, blank=True,
        on_delete=models.SET_NULL,
        related_name='+'
    )

    panels = [
        FieldPanel('title'),
        FieldPanel('author'),
        ImageChooserPanel('cover_photo')
    ]

Tip

You can specify FieldPanels like ImageChooserPanel, PageChooserPanel, and DocumentChooserPanel within the panels attribute of the model. This lets you use Wagtail-specific features in an otherwise traditional Django model.

wagtail_hooks.py in your app directory would look something like this:

from wagtail.contrib.modeladmin.options import (
    ModelAdmin, modeladmin_register)
from .models import Book


class BookAdmin(ModelAdmin):
    model = Book
    menu_label = 'Book'  # ditch this to use verbose_name_plural from model
    menu_icon = 'pilcrow'  # change as required
    menu_order = 200  # will put in 3rd place (000 being 1st, 100 2nd)
    add_to_settings_menu = False  # or True to add your model to the Settings sub-menu
    exclude_from_explorer = False # or True to exclude pages of this type from Wagtail's explorer view
    list_display = ('title', 'author')
    list_filter = ('author',)
    search_fields = ('title', 'author')

# Now you just need to register your customised ModelAdmin class with Wagtail
modeladmin_register(BookAdmin)
A more complicated example

In addition to Book, perhaps we also want to add Author and Genre models to our app and display a menu item for each of them, too. Creating lots of menus can add up quickly, so it might be a good idea to group related menus together. This section show you how to create one menu called Library which expands to show submenus for Book, Author, and Genre.

Assume we’ve defined Book, Author, and Genre models in models.py.

wagtail_hooks.py in your app directory would look something like this:

from wagtail.contrib.modeladmin.options import (
    ModelAdmin, ModelAdminGroup, modeladmin_register)
from .models import (
    Book, Author, Genre)


class BookAdmin(ModelAdmin):
    model = Book
    menu_label = 'Book'  # ditch this to use verbose_name_plural from model
    menu_icon = 'pilcrow'  # change as required
    list_display = ('title', 'author')
    list_filter = ('genre', 'author')
    search_fields = ('title', 'author')


class AuthorAdmin(ModelAdmin):
    model = Author
    menu_label = 'Author'  # ditch this to use verbose_name_plural from model
    menu_icon = 'user'  # change as required
    list_display = ('first_name', 'last_name')
    list_filter = ('first_name', 'last_name')
    search_fields = ('first_name', 'last_name')


class GenreAdmin(ModelAdmin):
    model = Genre
    menu_label = 'Genre'  # ditch this to use verbose_name_plural from model
    menu_icon = 'group'  # change as required
    list_display = ('name',)
    list_filter = ('name',)
    search_fields = ('name',)


class LibraryGroup(ModelAdminGroup):
    menu_label = 'Library'
    menu_icon = 'folder-open-inverse'  # change as required
    menu_order = 200  # will put in 3rd place (000 being 1st, 100 2nd)
    items = (BookAdmin, AuthorAdmin, GenreAdmin)

# When using a ModelAdminGroup class to group several ModelAdmin classes together,
# you only need to register the ModelAdminGroup class with Wagtail:
modeladmin_register(LibraryGroup)
Registering multiple classes in one wagtail_hooks.py file

Each time you call modeladmin_register(MyAdmin) it creates a new top-level menu item in Wagtail’s left sidebar. You can call this multiple times within the same wagtail_hooks.py file if you want. The example below will create 3 top-level menus.

class BookAdmin(ModelAdmin):
    model = Book
    ...

class MovieAdmin(ModelAdmin):
    model = MovieModel
    ...

class MusicAdminGroup(ModelAdminGroup):
    menu_label = _("Music")
    items = (AlbumAdmin, ArtistAdmin)
    ...

modeladmin_register(BookAdmin)
modeladmin_register(MovieAdmin)
modeladmin_register(MusicAdminGroup)
PostgreSQL search engine

Warning

This search backend is deprecated, and has been replaced by wagtail.search.backends.database. See Backends.

This contrib module provides a search engine backend using PostgreSQL full-text search capabilities.

Warning

You can only use this module to index data from a PostgreSQL database.

Features:

  • It supports all the search features available in Wagtail.
  • Easy to install and adds no external dependency or service.
  • Excellent performance for sites with up to 200 000 pages and stays decent for sites up to a million pages.
  • Faster to reindex than Elasticsearch, if you use PostgreSQL 9.5 or higher.

Drawbacks:

  • Partial matching (SearchField(partial_match=True)) is not supported
  • SearchField(boost=…) is only partially respected as PostgreSQL only supports four different boosts. So if you use five or more distinct values for the boost in your site, slight inaccuracies may occur.
  • When Specifying the fields to search, the index is not used, so it will be slow on huge sites.
  • Still when Specifying the fields to search, you cannot search on a specific method.
Installation

Add 'wagtail.contrib.postgres_search', anywhere in your INSTALLED_APPS:

INSTALLED_APPS = [
    ...
    'wagtail.contrib.postgres_search',
    ...
]

Then configure Wagtail to use it as a search backend. Give it the alias ‘default’ if you want it to be the default search backend:

WAGTAILSEARCH_BACKENDS = {
    'default': {
        'BACKEND': 'wagtail.contrib.postgres_search.backend',
    },
}

After installing the module, run python manage.py migrate to create the necessary postgres_search_indexentry table.

You then need to index data inside this backend using the update_index command. You can reuse this command whenever you want. However, it should not be needed after a first usage since the search engine is automatically updated when data is modified. To disable this behaviour, see AUTO_UPDATE.

Configuration
Language / PostgreSQL search configuration

Use the additional 'SEARCH_CONFIG' key to define which PostgreSQL search configuration should be used. For example:

WAGTAILSEARCH_BACKENDS = {
    'default': {
        'BACKEND': 'wagtail.contrib.postgres_search.backend',
        'SEARCH_CONFIG': 'english',
    }
}

As you can deduce, a PostgreSQL search configuration is mostly used to define rules for a language, English in this case. A search configuration consists in a compilation of algorithms (parsers & analysers) and language specifications (stop words, stems, dictionaries, synonyms, thesauruses, etc.).

A few search configurations are already defined by default in PostgreSQL. You can list them using sudo -u postgres psql -c "\dF" in a Unix shell or by using this SQL query: SELECT cfgname FROM pg_catalog.pg_ts_config.

These already-defined search configurations are decent, but they’re basic compared to commercial search engines. If you want better support for your language, you will have to create your own PostgreSQL search configuration. See the PostgreSQL documentation for an example, the list of parsers, and a guide to use dictionaries.

Atomic rebuild

Like the Elasticsearch backend, this backend supports ATOMIC_REBUILD:

WAGTAILSEARCH_BACKENDS = {
    'default': {
        'BACKEND': 'wagtail.contrib.postgres_search.backend',
        'ATOMIC_REBUILD': True,
    }
}

This is nearly useless with this backend. In Elasticsearch, all data is removed before rebuilding the index. But in this PostgreSQL backend, only objects no longer in the database are removed. Then the index is progressively updated, with no moment where the index is empty.

However, if you want to be extra sure that nothing wrong happens while updating the index, you can use atomic rebuild. The index will be rebuilt, but nobody will have access to it until reindexing is complete. If any error occurs during the operation, all changes to the index are reverted as if reindexing was never started.

Promoted search results

The searchpromotions module provides the models and user interface for managing “Promoted search results” and displaying them in a search results page.

“Promoted search results” allow editors to explicitly link relevant content to search terms, so results pages can contain curated content in addition to results from the search engine.

Installation

The searchpromotions module is not enabled by default. To install it, add wagtail.contrib.search_promotions to INSTALLED_APPS in your project’s Django settings file.

INSTALLED_APPS = [
    ...

    'wagtail.contrib.search_promotions',
]

This app contains migrations so make sure you run the migrate django-admin command after installing.

Usage

Once installed, a new menu item called “Promoted search results” should appear in the “Settings” menu. This is where you can assign pages to popular search terms.

Displaying on a search results page

To retrieve a list of promoted search results for a particular search query, you can use the {% get_search_promotions %} template tag from the wagtailsearchpromotions_tags templatetag library:

{% load wagtailcore_tags wagtailsearchpromotions_tags %}

...

{% get_search_promotions search_query as search_promotions %}

<ul>
    {% for search_promotion in search_promotions %}
        <li>
            <a href="{% pageurl search_promotion.page %}">
                <h2>{{ search_promotion.page.title }}</h2>
                <p>{{ search_promotion.description }}</p>
            </a>
        </li>
    {% endfor %}
</ul>
Simple translation

The simple_translation module provides a user interface that allows users to copy pages and translatable snippets into another language.

  • Copies are created in the source language (not translated)
  • Copies of pages are in draft status

Content editors need to translate the content and publish the pages.

Note

Simple Translation is optional. It can be switched out by third-party packages. Like the more advanced wagtail-localize.

Basic configuration

Add "wagtail.contrib.simple_translation" to INSTALLED_APPS in your settings file:

INSTALLED_APPS = [
    ...
    "wagtail.contrib.simple_translation",
]

Run python manage.py migrate to create the necessary permissions.

In the Wagtail admin, go to settings and give some users or groups the “Can submit translations” permission.

Page tree synchronisation

Depending on your use case, it may be useful to keep the page trees in sync between different locales.

You can enable this feature by setting WAGTAILSIMPLETRANSLATION_SYNC_PAGE_TREE to True.

WAGTAILSIMPLETRANSLATION_SYNC_PAGE_TREE = True

When this feature is turned on, every time an editor creates a page, Wagtail creates an alias for that page under the page trees of all the other locales.

For example, when an editor creates the page “/en/blog/my-blog-post/”, Wagtail creates an alias of that page at “/fr/blog/my-blog-post/” and “/de/blog/my-blog-post/”.

TableBlock

The TableBlock module provides an HTML table block type for StreamField. This module uses handsontable 6.2.2 to provide users with the ability to create and edit HTML tables in Wagtail. Table blocks provides a caption field for accessibility.

_images/screen40_table_block.png
Installation

Add "wagtail.contrib.table_block" to your INSTALLED_APPS:

INSTALLED_APPS = [
  ...

  "wagtail.contrib.table_block",
]
Basic Usage

After installation, the TableBlock module can be used in a similar fashion to other StreamField blocks in the Wagtail core.

Import the TableBlock from wagtail.contrib.table_block.blocks import TableBlock and add it to your StreamField declaration.

class DemoStreamBlock(StreamBlock):
    ...
    table = TableBlock()

Then, on your page template, the {% include_block %} tag (called on either the individual block, or the StreamField value as a whole) will render any table blocks it encounters as an HTML <table> element:

{% load wagtailcore_tags %}

{% include_block page.body %}

Or:

{% load wagtailcore_tags %}

{% for block in page.body %}
    {% if block.block_type == 'table' %}
        {% include_block block %}
    {% else %}
        {# rendering for other block types #}
    {% endif %}
{% endfor %}
Advanced Usage
Default Configuration

When defining a TableBlock, Wagtail provides the ability to pass an optional table_options dictionary. The default TableBlock dictionary looks like this:

default_table_options = {
    'minSpareRows': 0,
    'startRows': 3,
    'startCols': 3,
    'colHeaders': False,
    'rowHeaders': False,
    'contextMenu': [
        'row_above',
        'row_below',
        '---------',
        'col_left',
        'col_right',
        '---------',
        'remove_row',
        'remove_col',
        '---------',
        'undo',
        'redo'
    ],
    'editor': 'text',
    'stretchH': 'all',
    'height': 108,
    'language': language,
    'renderer': 'text',
    'autoColumnSize': False,
}
Configuration Options

Every key in the table_options dictionary maps to a handsontable option. These settings can be changed to alter the behaviour of tables in Wagtail. The following options are available:

  • minSpareRows - The number of rows to append to the end of an empty grid. The default setting is 0.
  • startRows - The default number of rows for a new table.
  • startCols - The default number of columns for new tables.
  • colHeaders - Can be set to True or False. This setting designates if new tables should be created with column headers. Note: this only sets the behaviour for newly created tables. Page editors can override this by checking the the “Column header” checkbox in the table editor in the Wagtail admin.
  • rowHeaders - Operates the same as colHeaders to designate if new tables should be created with the first column as a row header. Just like colHeaders this option can be overridden by the page editor in the Wagtail admin.
  • contextMenu - Enables or disables the Handsontable right-click menu. By default this is set to True. Alternatively you can provide a list or a dictionary with [specific options](https://handsontable.com/docs/6.2.2/demo-context-menu.html#page-specific).
  • editor - Defines the editor used for table cells. The default setting is text.
  • stretchH - Sets the default horizontal resizing of tables. Options include, ‘none’, ‘last’, and ‘all’. By default TableBlock uses ‘all’ for the even resizing of columns.
  • height - The default height of the grid. By default TableBlock sets the height to 108 for the optimal appearance of new tables in the editor. This is optimized for tables with startRows set to 3. If you change the number of startRows in the configuration, you might need to change the height setting to improve the default appearance in the editor.
  • language - The default language setting. By default TableBlock tries to get the language from django.utils.translation.get_language. If needed, this setting can be overridden here.
  • renderer - The default setting Handsontable uses to render the content of table cells.
  • autoColumnSize - Enables or disables the autoColumnSize plugin. The TableBlock default setting is False.

A complete list of handsontable options can be found on the Handsontable website.

Changing the default table_options

To change the default table options just pass a new table_options dictionary when a new TableBlock is declared.

new_table_options = {
    'minSpareRows': 0,
    'startRows': 6,
    'startCols': 4,
    'colHeaders': False,
    'rowHeaders': False,
    'contextMenu': True,
    'editor': 'text',
    'stretchH': 'all',
    'height': 216,
    'language': 'en',
    'renderer': 'text',
    'autoColumnSize': False,
}

class DemoStreamBlock(StreamBlock):
    ...
    table = TableBlock(table_options=new_table_options)
Supporting cell alignment

You can activate the alignment option by setting a custom contextMenu which allows you to set the alignment on a cell selection. HTML classes set by handsontable will be kept on the rendered block. You’ll then be able to apply your own custom CSS rules to preserve the style. Those class names are:

  • Horizontal: htLeft, htCenter, htRight, htJustify
  • Vertical: htTop, htMiddle, htBottom
new_table_options = {
    'contextMenu': [
        'row_above',
        'row_below',
        '---------',
        'col_left',
        'col_right',
        '---------',
        'remove_row',
        'remove_col',
        '---------',
        'undo',
        'redo',
        '---------',
        'copy',
        'cut'
        '---------',
        'alignment',
    ],
}

  class DemoStreamBlock(StreamBlock):
      ...
      table = TableBlock(table_options=new_table_options)
Typed table block

The typed_table_block module provides a StreamField block type for building tables consisting of mixed data types. Developers can specify a set of block types (such as RichTextBlock or FloatBlock) to be available as column types; page authors can then build up tables of any size by choosing column types from that list, in much the same way that they would insert blocks into a StreamField. Within each column, authors enter data using the standard editing control for that field (such as the Draftail editor for rich text cells).

Installation

Add "wagtail.contrib.typed_table_block" to your INSTALLED_APPS:

INSTALLED_APPS = [
    ...
    "wagtail.contrib.typed_table_block",
]
Usage

TypedTableBlock can be imported from the module wagtail.contrib.typed_table_block.blocks and used within a StreamField definition. Just like StructBlock and StreamBlock, it accepts a list of (name, block_type) tuples to use as child blocks:

from wagtail.contrib.typed_table_block.blocks import TypedTableBlock
from wagtail.core import blocks
from wagtail.images.blocks import ImageChooserBlock

class DemoStreamBlock(blocks.StreamBlock):
    title = blocks.CharBlock()
    paragraph = blocks.RichTextBlock()
    table = TypedTableBlock([
        ('text', blocks.CharBlock()),
        ('numeric', blocks.FloatBlock()),
        ('rich_text', blocks.RichTextBlock()),
        ('image', ImageChooserBlock())
    ])

To keep the UI as simple as possible for authors, it’s generally recommended to use Wagtail’s basic built-in block types as column types, as above. However, all custom block types and parameters are supported. For example, to define a ‘country’ column type consisting of a dropdown of country choices:

    table = TypedTableBlock([
        ('text', blocks.CharBlock()),
        ('numeric', blocks.FloatBlock()),
        ('rich_text', blocks.RichTextBlock()),
        ('image', ImageChooserBlock()),
        ('country', ChoiceBlock(choices=[
            ('be', 'Belgium'),
            ('fr', 'France'),
            ('de', 'Germany'),
            ('nl', 'Netherlands'),
            ('pl', 'Poland'),
            ('uk', 'United Kingdom'),
        ])),
    ])

On your page template, the {% include_block %} tag (called on either the individual block, or the StreamField value as a whole) will render any typed table blocks as an HTML <table> element.

{% load wagtailcore_tags %}

{% include_block page.body %}

Or:

{% load wagtailcore_tags %}

{% for block in page.body %}
    {% if block.block_type == 'table' %}
        {% include_block block %}
    {% else %}
        {# rendering for other block types #}
    {% endif %}
{% endfor %}
Redirects

The redirects module provides the models and user interface for managing arbitrary redirection between urls and Pages or other urls.

Installation

The redirects module is not enabled by default. To install it, add wagtail.contrib.redirects to INSTALLED_APPS and wagtail.contrib.redirects.middleware.RedirectMiddleware to MIDDLEWARE in your project’s Django settings file.

INSTALLED_APPS = [
    # ...

    'wagtail.contrib.redirects',
]

MIDDLEWARE = [
    # ...
    # all other django middlware first

    'wagtail.contrib.redirects.middleware.RedirectMiddleware',
]

This app contains migrations so make sure you run the migrate django-admin command after installing.

Usage

Once installed, a new menu item called “Redirects” should appear in the “Settings” menu. This is where you can add arbitrary redirects to your site.

Page model recipe of to have redirects created automatically when changing a page’s slug, see Have redirects created automatically when changing page slug.

For an editor’s guide to the interface, see Managing Redirects.

Management commands
import_redirects
$ ./manage.py import_redirects

This command imports and creates redirects from a file supplied by the user.

Options:

  • src This is the path to the file you wish to import redirects from.
  • site This is the site for the site you wish to save redirects to.
  • permanent If the redirects imported should be permanent (True) or not (False). It’s True by default.
  • from The column index you want to use as redirect from value.
  • to The column index you want to use as redirect to value.
  • dry_run Lets you run a import without doing any changes.
  • ask Lets you inspect and approve each redirect before it is created.
The Redirect class
class wagtail.contrib.redirects.models.Redirect(id, old_path, site, is_permanent, redirect_page, redirect_link)
static add_redirect(old_path, redirect_to=None, is_permanent=True)

Create and save a Redirect instance with a single method.

Parameters:
  • old_path – the path you wish to redirect
  • redirect_to – a Page (instance) or path (string) where the redirect should point
  • is_permanent – whether the redirect should be indicated as permanent (i.e. 301 redirect)
Returns:

Redirect instance

Legacy richtext

Provides the legacy richtext wrapper.

Place wagtail.contrib.legacy.richtext before wagtail.core in INSTALLED_APPS.

INSTALLED_APPS = [
    ...
    "wagtail.contrib.legacy.richtext",
    "wagtail.core",
    ...
]

The {{ page.body|richtext }} template filter will now render:

<div class="rich-text">...</div>
Site settings

Site-wide settings that are editable by administrators in the Wagtail admin.

Form builder

Allows forms to be created by admins and provides an interface for browsing form submissions.

Sitemap generator

Provides a view that generates a Google XML sitemap of your public Wagtail content.

Frontend cache invalidator

A module for automatically purging pages from a cache (Varnish, Squid, Cloudflare or Cloudfront) when their content is changed.

RoutablePageMixin

Provides a way of embedding Django URLconfs into pages.

ModelAdmin

A module allowing for more customisable representation and management of custom models in Wagtail’s admin area.

Promoted search results

A module for managing “Promoted Search Results”

Simple translation

A module for copying translatables (pages and snippets) to another language.

TableBlock

Provides a TableBlock for adding HTML tables to pages.

Typed table block

Provides a StreamField block for authoring tables, where cells can be any block type including rich text.

Redirects

Provides a way to manage redirects.

Legacy richtext

Provides the legacy richtext wrapper (<div class="rich-text"></div>).

Management commands

publish_scheduled_pages
$ ./manage.py publish_scheduled_pages

This command publishes, updates or unpublishes pages that have had these actions scheduled by an editor. We recommend running this command once an hour.

fixtree
$ ./manage.py fixtree

This command scans for errors in your database and attempts to fix any issues it finds.

move_pages
$ manage.py move_pages from to

This command moves a selection of pages from one section of the tree to another.

Options:

  • from This is the id of the page to move pages from. All descendants of this page will be moved to the destination. After the operation is complete, this page will have no children.
  • to This is the id of the page to move pages to.
purge_revisions
$ manage.py purge_revisions [--days=<number of days>]

This command deletes old page revisions which are not in moderation, live, approved to go live, or the latest revision for a page. If the days argument is supplied, only revisions older than the specified number of days will be deleted.

update_index
$ ./manage.py update_index [--backend <backend name>]

This command rebuilds the search index from scratch.

It is recommended to run this command once a week and at the following times:

  • whenever any pages have been created through a script (after an import, for example)
  • whenever any changes have been made to models or search configuration

The search may not return any results while this command is running, so avoid running it at peak times.

Specifying which backend to update

By default, update_index will rebuild all the search indexes listed in WAGTAILSEARCH_BACKENDS.

If you have multiple backends and would only like to update one of them, you can use the --backend option.

For example, to update just the default backend:

$ python manage.py update_index --backend default

The --chunk_size option can be used to set the size of chunks that are indexed at a time. This defaults to 1000 but may need to be reduced for larger document sizes.

Indexing the schema only

You can prevent the update_index command from indexing any data by using the --schema-only option:

$ python manage.py update_index --schema-only
wagtail_update_index

An alias for the update_index command that can be used when another installed package (such as Haystack) provides a command named update_index. In this case, the other package’s entry in INSTALLED_APPS should appear above wagtail.search so that its update_index command takes precedence over Wagtail’s.

search_garbage_collect
$ ./manage.py search_garbage_collect

Wagtail keeps a log of search queries that are popular on your website. On high traffic websites, this log may get big and you may want to clean out old search queries. This command cleans out all search query logs that are more than one week old (or a number of days configurable through the WAGTAILSEARCH_HITS_MAX_AGE setting).

Hooks

On loading, Wagtail will search for any app with the file wagtail_hooks.py and execute the contents. This provides a way to register your own functions to execute at certain points in Wagtail’s execution, such as when a page is saved or when the main menu is constructed.

Note

Hooks are typically used to customise the view-level behaviour of the Wagtail admin and front-end. For customisations that only deal with model-level behaviour - such as calling an external service when a page or document is added - it is often better to use Django’s signal mechanism (see also: Wagtail signals), as these are not dependent on a user taking a particular path through the admin interface.

Registering functions with a Wagtail hook is done through the @hooks.register decorator:

from wagtail.core import hooks

@hooks.register('name_of_hook')
def my_hook_function(arg1, arg2...)
    # your code here

Alternatively, hooks.register can be called as an ordinary function, passing in the name of the hook and a handler function defined elsewhere:

hooks.register('name_of_hook', my_hook_function)

If you need your hooks to run in a particular order, you can pass the order parameter. If order is not specified then the hooks proceed in the order given by INSTALLED_APPS. Wagtail uses hooks internally, too, so you need to be aware of order when overriding built-in Wagtail functionality (i.e. removing default summary items):

@hooks.register('name_of_hook', order=1)  # This will run after every hook in the wagtail core
def my_hook_function(arg1, arg2...)
    # your code here

@hooks.register('name_of_hook', order=-1)  # This will run before every hook in the wagtail core
def my_other_hook_function(arg1, arg2...)
    # your code here

@hooks.register('name_of_hook', order=2)  # This will run after `my_hook_function`
def yet_another_hook_function(arg1, arg2...)
    # your code here
Unit testing hooks

Hooks are usually registered on startup and can’t be changed at runtime. But when writing unit tests, you might want to register a hook function just for a single test or block of code and unregister it so that it doesn’t run when other tests are run.

You can register hooks temporarily using the hooks.register_temporarily function, this can be used as both a decorator and a context manager. Here’s an example of how to register a hook function for just a single test:

def my_hook_function():
    ...

class MyHookTest(TestCase):

    @hooks.register_temporarily('name_of_hook', my_hook_function)
    def test_my_hook_function(self):
        # Test with the hook registered here
        ...

And here’s an example of registering a hook function for a single block of code:

def my_hook_function():
    ...

with hooks.register_temporarily('name_of_hook', my_hook_function):
    # Hook is registered here
    ..

# Hook is unregistered here

If you need to register multiple hooks in a with block, you can pass the hooks in as a list of tuples:

def my_hook(...):
    pass

def my_other_hook(...):
    pass

with hooks.register_temporarily([
    ('hook_name', my_hook),
    ('hook_name', my_other_hook),
]):
    # All hooks are registered here
    ..

# All hooks are unregistered here

The available hooks are listed below.

Admin modules

Hooks for building new areas of the admin interface (alongside pages, images, documents and so on).

construct_homepage_panels

Add or remove panels from the Wagtail admin homepage. The callable passed into this hook should take a request object and a list of panel objects, and should modify this list in-place as required. Panel objects are components with an additional order property, an integer that determines the panel’s position in the final ordered list. The default panels use integers between 100 and 300.

from django.utils.safestring import mark_safe

from wagtail.admin.ui.components import Component
from wagtail.core import hooks

class WelcomePanel(Component):
    order = 50

    def render_html(self, parent_context):
        return mark_safe("""
        <section class="panel summary nice-padding">
          <h3>No, but seriously -- welcome to the admin homepage.</h3>
        </section>
        """)

@hooks.register('construct_homepage_panels')
def add_another_welcome_panel(request, panels):
    panels.append(WelcomePanel())
construct_homepage_summary_items

Add or remove items from the ‘site summary’ bar on the admin homepage (which shows the number of pages and other object that exist on the site). The callable passed into this hook should take a request object and a list of summary item objects, and should modify this list in-place as required. Summary item objects are instances of wagtail.admin.site_summary.SummaryItem, which extends the Component class with the following additional methods and properties:

SummaryItem(request)

Constructor; receives the request object its argument

order

An integer that specifies the item’s position in the sequence.

is_shown()

Returns a boolean indicating whether the summary item should be shown on this request.

construct_main_menu

Called just before the Wagtail admin menu is output, to allow the list of menu items to be modified. The callable passed to this hook will receive a request object and a list of menu_items, and should modify menu_items in-place as required. Adding menu items should generally be done through the register_admin_menu_item hook instead - items added through construct_main_menu will be missing any associated JavaScript includes, and their is_shown check will not be applied.

from wagtail.core import hooks

@hooks.register('construct_main_menu')
def hide_explorer_menu_item_from_frank(request, menu_items):
  if request.user.username == 'frank':
    menu_items[:] = [item for item in menu_items if item.name != 'explorer']
describe_collection_contents
Called when Wagtail needs to find out what objects exist in a collection, if any. Currently this happens on the confirmation before deleting a collection, to ensure that non-empty collections cannot be deleted. The callable passed to this hook will receive a collection object, and should return either None (to indicate no objects in this collection), or a dict containing the following keys:
count
A numeric count of items in this collection
count_text
A human-readable string describing the number of items in this collection, such as “3 documents”. (Sites with multi-language support should return a translatable string here, most likely using the django.utils.translation.ngettext function.)
url (optional)
A URL to an index page that lists the objects being described.
register_account_settings_panel

Registers a new settings panel class to add to the “Account” view in the admin.

This hook can be added to a sub-class of BaseSettingsPanel. For example:

from wagtail.admin.views.account import BaseSettingsPanel
from wagtail.core import hooks

@hooks.register('register_account_settings_panel')
class CustomSettingsPanel(BaseSettingsPanel):
    name = 'custom'
    title = "My custom settings"
    order = 500
    form_class = CustomSettingsForm

Alternatively, it can also be added to a function. For example, this function is equivalent to the above:

from wagtail.admin.views.account import BaseSettingsPanel
from wagtail.core import hooks

class CustomSettingsPanel(BaseSettingsPanel):
    name = 'custom'
    title = "My custom settings"
    order = 500
    form_class = CustomSettingsForm

@hooks.register('register_account_settings_panel')
def register_custom_settings_panel(request, user, profile):
    return CustomSettingsPanel(request, user, profile)

More details about the options that are available can be found at Customising the user account settings form.

register_account_menu_item

Add an item to the “More actions” tab on the “Account” page within the Wagtail admin. The callable for this hook should return a dict with the keys url, label and help_text. For example:

from django.urls import reverse
from wagtail.core import hooks

@hooks.register('register_account_menu_item')
def register_account_delete_account(request):
    return {
        'url': reverse('delete-account'),
        'label': 'Delete account',
        'help_text': 'This permanently deletes your account.'
    }
register_admin_menu_item

Add an item to the Wagtail admin menu. The callable passed to this hook must return an instance of wagtail.admin.menu.MenuItem. New items can be constructed from the MenuItem class by passing in a label which will be the text in the menu item, and the URL of the admin page you want the menu item to link to (usually by calling reverse() on the admin view you’ve set up). Additionally, the following keyword arguments are accepted:

name:an internal name used to identify the menu item; defaults to the slugified form of the label.
icon_name:icon to display against the menu item
classnames:additional classnames applied to the link
attrs:additional HTML attributes to apply to the link
order:an integer which determines the item’s position in the menu

For menu items that are only available to superusers, the subclass wagtail.admin.menu.AdminOnlyMenuItem can be used in place of MenuItem.

MenuItem can be further subclassed to customise the HTML output, specify JavaScript files required by the menu item, or conditionally show or hide the item for specific requests (for example, to apply permission checks); see the source code (wagtail/admin/menu.py) for details.

from django.urls import reverse

from wagtail.core import hooks
from wagtail.admin.menu import MenuItem

@hooks.register('register_admin_menu_item')
def register_frank_menu_item():
  return MenuItem('Frank', reverse('frank'), icon_name='folder-inverse', order=10000)
register_admin_urls

Register additional admin page URLs. The callable fed into this hook should return a list of Django URL patterns which define the structure of the pages and endpoints of your extension to the Wagtail admin. For more about vanilla Django URLconfs and views, see url dispatcher.

from django.http import HttpResponse
from django.urls import path

from wagtail.core import hooks

def admin_view(request):
  return HttpResponse(
    "I have approximate knowledge of many things!",
    content_type="text/plain")

@hooks.register('register_admin_urls')
def urlconf_time():
  return [
    path('how_did_you_almost_know_my_name/', admin_view, name='frank'),
  ]
register_group_permission_panel
Add a new panel to the Groups form in the ‘settings’ area. The callable passed to this hook must return a ModelForm / ModelFormSet-like class, with a constructor that accepts a group object as its instance keyword argument, and which implements the methods save, is_valid, and as_admin_panel (which returns the HTML to be included on the group edit page).
register_settings_menu_item
As register_admin_menu_item, but registers menu items into the ‘Settings’ sub-menu rather than the top-level menu.
construct_settings_menu
As construct_main_menu, but modifies the ‘Settings’ sub-menu rather than the top-level menu.
register_reports_menu_item
As register_admin_menu_item, but registers menu items into the ‘Reports’ sub-menu rather than the top-level menu.
construct_reports_menu
As construct_main_menu, but modifies the ‘Reports’ sub-menu rather than the top-level menu.
register_admin_search_area

Add an item to the Wagtail admin search “Other Searches”. Behaviour of this hook is similar to register_admin_menu_item. The callable passed to this hook must return an instance of wagtail.admin.search.SearchArea. New items can be constructed from the SearchArea class by passing the following parameters:

label:text displayed in the “Other Searches” option box.
name:an internal name used to identify the search option; defaults to the slugified form of the label.
url:the URL of the target search page.
classnames:arbitrary CSS classnames applied to the link
icon_name:icon to display next to the label.
attrs:additional HTML attributes to apply to the link.
order:an integer which determines the item’s position in the list of options.

Setting the URL can be achieved using reverse() on the target search page. The GET parameter ‘q’ will be appended to the given URL.

A template tag, search_other is provided by the wagtailadmin_tags template module. This tag takes a single, optional parameter, current, which allows you to specify the name of the search option currently active. If the parameter is not given, the hook defaults to a reverse lookup of the page’s URL for comparison against the url parameter.

SearchArea can be subclassed to customise the HTML output, specify JavaScript files required by the option, or conditionally show or hide the item for specific requests (for example, to apply permission checks); see the source code (wagtail/admin/search.py) for details.

from django.urls import reverse
from wagtail.core import hooks
from wagtail.admin.search import SearchArea

@hooks.register('register_admin_search_area')
def register_frank_search_area():
    return SearchArea('Frank', reverse('frank'), icon_name='folder-inverse', order=10000)
register_permissions

Return a QuerySet of Permission objects to be shown in the Groups administration area.

from django.contrib.auth.models import Permission
from wagtail.core import hooks


@hooks.register('register_permissions')
def register_permissions():
    app = 'blog'
    model = 'extramodelset'

    return Permission.objects.filter(content_type__app_label=app, codename__in=[
        f"view_{model}", f"add_{model}", f"change_{model}", f"delete_{model}"
    ])
filter_form_submissions_for_user

Allows access to form submissions to be customised on a per-user, per-form basis.

This hook takes two parameters:
  • The user attempting to access form submissions
  • A QuerySet of form pages

The hook must return a QuerySet containing a subset of these form pages which the user is allowed to access the submissions for.

For example, to prevent non-superusers from accessing form submissions:

from wagtail.core import hooks


@hooks.register('filter_form_submissions_for_user')
def construct_forms_for_user(user, queryset):
    if not user.is_superuser:
        queryset = queryset.none()

    return queryset
Editor interface

Hooks for customising the editing interface for pages and snippets.

register_rich_text_features
Rich text fields in Wagtail work with a list of ‘feature’ identifiers that determine which editing controls are available in the editor, and which elements are allowed in the output; for example, a rich text field defined as RichTextField(features=['h2', 'h3', 'bold', 'italic', 'link']) would allow headings, bold / italic formatting and links, but not (for example) bullet lists or images. The register_rich_text_features hook allows new feature identifiers to be defined - see Limiting features in a rich text field for details.
insert_editor_css

Add additional CSS files or snippets to the page editor.

from django.templatetags.static import static
from django.utils.html import format_html

from wagtail.core import hooks

@hooks.register('insert_editor_css')
def editor_css():
    return format_html(
        '<link rel="stylesheet" href="{}">',
        static('demo/css/vendor/font-awesome/css/font-awesome.min.css')
    )
insert_global_admin_css

Add additional CSS files or snippets to all admin pages.

from django.utils.html import format_html
from django.templatetags.static import static

from wagtail.core import hooks

@hooks.register('insert_global_admin_css')
def global_admin_css():
    return format_html('<link rel="stylesheet" href="{}">', static('my/wagtail/theme.css'))
insert_editor_js

Add additional JavaScript files or code snippets to the page editor.

from django.utils.html import format_html_join
from django.utils.safestring import mark_safe
from django.templatetags.static import static

from wagtail.core import hooks

@hooks.register('insert_editor_js')
def editor_js():
    js_files = [
        'demo/js/jquery.raptorize.1.0.js',
    ]
    js_includes = format_html_join('\n', '<script src="{0}"></script>',
        ((static(filename),) for filename in js_files)
    )
    return js_includes + mark_safe(
        """
        <script>
            $(function() {
                $('button').raptorize();
            });
        </script>
        """
    )
insert_global_admin_js

Add additional JavaScript files or code snippets to all admin pages.

from django.utils.html import format_html

from wagtail.core import hooks

@hooks.register('insert_global_admin_js')
def global_admin_js():
    return format_html(
        '<script src="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/three.js/r74/three.js"></script>',
    )
Editor workflow

Hooks for customising the way users are directed through the process of creating page content.

after_create_page

Do something with a Page object after it has been saved to the database (as a published page or a revision). The callable passed to this hook should take a request object and a page object. The function does not have to return anything, but if an object with a status_code property is returned, Wagtail will use it as a response object. By default, Wagtail will instead redirect to the Explorer page for the new page’s parent.

from django.http import HttpResponse

from wagtail.core import hooks

@hooks.register('after_create_page')
def do_after_page_create(request, page):
    return HttpResponse("Congrats on making content!", content_type="text/plain")

If you set attributes on a Page object, you should also call save_revision(), since the edit and index view pick up their data from the revisions table rather than the actual saved page record.

@hooks.register('after_create_page')
def set_attribute_after_page_create(request, page):
   page.title = 'Persistent Title'
   new_revision = page.save_revision()
   if page.live:
       # page has been created and published at the same time,
       # so ensure that the updated title is on the published version too
       new_revision.publish()
before_create_page

Called at the beginning of the “create page” view passing in the request, the parent page and page model class.

The function does not have to return anything, but if an object with a status_code property is returned, Wagtail will use it as a response object and skip the rest of the view.

Unlike, after_create_page, this is run both for both GET and POST requests.

This can be used to completely override the editor on a per-view basis:

from wagtail.core import hooks

from .models import AwesomePage
from .admin_views import edit_awesome_page

@hooks.register('before_create_page')
def before_create_page(request, parent_page, page_class):
    # Use a custom create view for the AwesomePage model
    if page_class == AwesomePage:
        return create_awesome_page(request, parent_page)
after_delete_page
Do something after a Page object is deleted. Uses the same behaviour as after_create_page.
before_delete_page

Called at the beginning of the “delete page” view passing in the request and the page object.

Uses the same behaviour as before_create_page, is is run both for both GET and POST requests.

from django.shortcuts import redirect
from django.utils.html import format_html

from wagtail.admin import messages
from wagtail.core import hooks

from .models import AwesomePage


@hooks.register('before_delete_page')
def before_delete_page(request, page):
    """Block awesome page deletion and show a message."""

    if request.method == 'POST' and page.specific_class in [AwesomePage]:
        messages.warning(request, "Awesome pages cannot be deleted, only unpublished")
        return redirect('wagtailadmin_pages:delete', page.pk)
after_edit_page
Do something with a Page object after it has been updated. Uses the same behaviour as after_create_page.
before_edit_page

Called at the beginning of the “edit page” view passing in the request and the page object.

Uses the same behaviour as before_create_page.

after_publish_page

Do something with a Page object after it has been published via page create view or page edit view.

The function does not have to return anything, but if an object with a status_code property is returned, Wagtail will use it as a response object and skip the rest of the view.

before_publish_page

Do something with a Page object before it has been published via page create view or page edit view.

The function does not have to return anything, but if an object with a status_code property is returned, Wagtail will use it as a response object and skip the rest of the view.

after_unpublish_page

Called after unpublish action in “unpublish” view passing in the request and the page object.

The function does not have to return anything, but if an object with a status_code property is returned, Wagtail will use it as a response object and skip the rest of the view.

before_unpublish_page

Called before unpublish action in “unpublish” view passing in the request and the page object.

The function does not have to return anything, but if an object with a status_code property is returned, Wagtail will use it as a response object and skip the rest of the view.

after_copy_page
Do something with a Page object after it has been copied passing in the request, page object and the new copied page. Uses the same behaviour as after_create_page.
before_copy_page

Called at the beginning of the “copy page” view passing in the request and the page object.

Uses the same behaviour as before_create_page.

after_move_page
Do something with a Page object after it has been moved passing in the request and page object. Uses the same behaviour as after_create_page.
before_move_page

Called at the beginning of the “move page” view passing in the request, the page object and the destination page object.

Uses the same behaviour as before_create_page.

before_convert_alias_page

Called at the beginning of the convert_alias view, which is responsible for converting alias pages into normal Wagtail pages.

The request and the page being converted are passed in as arguments to the hook.

The function does not have to return anything, but if an object with a status_code property is returned, Wagtail will use it as a response object and skip the rest of the view.

after_convert_alias_page

Do something with a Page object after it has been converted from an alias.

The request and the page that was just converted are passed in as arguments to the hook.

The function does not have to return anything, but if an object with a status_code property is returned, Wagtail will use it as a response object and skip the rest of the view.

register_page_action_menu_item

Add an item to the popup menu of actions on the page creation and edit views. The callable passed to this hook must return an instance of wagtail.admin.action_menu.ActionMenuItem. ActionMenuItem is a subclass of Component and so the rendering of the menu item can be customised through template_name, get_context_data, render_html and Media. In addition, the following attributes and methods are available to be overridden:

order:an integer (default 100) which determines the item’s position in the menu. Can also be passed as a keyword argument to the object constructor. The lowest-numbered item in this sequence will be selected as the default menu item; as standard, this is “Save draft” (which has an order of 0).
label:the displayed text of the menu item
get_url:a method which returns a URL for the menu item to link to; by default, returns None which causes the menu item to behave as a form submit button instead
name:value of the name attribute of the submit button, if no URL is specified
icon_name:icon to display against the menu item
classname:a class attribute value to add to the button element
is_shown:a method which returns a boolean indicating whether the menu item should be shown; by default, true except when editing a locked page

The get_url, is_shown, get_context_data and render_html methods all accept a context dictionary containing the following fields:

view:name of the current view: 'create', 'edit' or 'revisions_revert'
page:For view = 'edit' or 'revisions_revert', the page being edited
parent_page:For view = 'create', the parent page of the page being created
request:The current request object
user_page_permissions:
 a UserPagePermissionsProxy object for the current user, to test permissions against
from wagtail.core import hooks
from wagtail.admin.action_menu import ActionMenuItem

class GuacamoleMenuItem(ActionMenuItem):
    name = 'action-guacamole'
    label = "Guacamole"

    def get_url(self, context):
        return "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dNJdJIwCF_Y"


@hooks.register('register_page_action_menu_item')
def register_guacamole_menu_item():
    return GuacamoleMenuItem(order=10)
construct_page_action_menu

Modify the final list of action menu items on the page creation and edit views. The callable passed to this hook receives a list of ActionMenuItem objects, a request object and a context dictionary as per register_page_action_menu_item, and should modify the list of menu items in-place.

@hooks.register('construct_page_action_menu')
def remove_submit_to_moderator_option(menu_items, request, context):
    menu_items[:] = [item for item in menu_items if item.name != 'action-submit']

The construct_page_action_menu hook is called after the menu items have been sorted by their order attributes, and so setting a menu item’s order will have no effect at this point. Instead, items can be reordered by changing their position in the list, with the first item being selected as the default action. For example, to change the default action to Publish:

@hooks.register('construct_page_action_menu')
def make_publish_default_action(menu_items, request, context):
    for (index, item) in enumerate(menu_items):
        if item.name == 'action-publish':
            # move to top of list
            menu_items.pop(index)
            menu_items.insert(0, item)
            break
construct_page_listing_buttons

Modify the final list of page listing buttons in the page explorer. The callable passed to this hook receives a list of PageListingButton objects, a page, a page perms object, and a context dictionary as per register_page_listing_buttons, and should modify the list of listing items in-place.

@hooks.register('construct_page_listing_buttons')
def remove_page_listing_button_item(buttons, page, page_perms, is_parent=False, context=None):
    if is_parent:
        buttons.pop() # removes the last 'more' dropdown button on the parent page listing buttons
construct_wagtail_userbar

Add or remove items from the wagtail userbar. Add, edit, and moderation tools are provided by default. The callable passed into the hook must take the request object and a list of menu objects, items. The menu item objects must have a render method which can take a request object and return the HTML string representing the menu item. See the userbar templates and menu item classes for more information.

from wagtail.core import hooks

class UserbarPuppyLinkItem:
    def render(self, request):
        return '<li><a href="http://cuteoverload.com/tag/puppehs/" ' \
            + 'target="_parent" role="menuitem" class="action icon icon-wagtail">Puppies!</a></li>'

@hooks.register('construct_wagtail_userbar')
def add_puppy_link_item(request, items):
    return items.append( UserbarPuppyLinkItem() )
Admin workflow

Hooks for customising the way admins are directed through the process of editing users.

after_create_user

Do something with a User object after it has been saved to the database. The callable passed to this hook should take a request object and a user object. The function does not have to return anything, but if an object with a status_code property is returned, Wagtail will use it as a response object. By default, Wagtail will instead redirect to the User index page.

from django.http import HttpResponse

from wagtail.core import hooks

@hooks.register('after_create_user')
def do_after_page_create(request, user):
    return HttpResponse("Congrats on creating a new user!", content_type="text/plain")
before_create_user

Called at the beginning of the “create user” view passing in the request.

The function does not have to return anything, but if an object with a status_code property is returned, Wagtail will use it as a response object and skip the rest of the view.

Unlike, after_create_user, this is run both for both GET and POST requests.

This can be used to completely override the user editor on a per-view basis:

from django.http import HttpResponse

from wagtail.core import hooks

from .models import AwesomePage
from .admin_views import edit_awesome_page

@hooks.register('before_create_user')
def before_create_page(request):
    return HttpResponse("A user creation form", content_type="text/plain")
after_delete_user
Do something after a User object is deleted. Uses the same behaviour as after_create_user.
before_delete_user

Called at the beginning of the “delete user” view passing in the request and the user object.

Uses the same behaviour as before_create_user.

after_edit_user
Do something with a User object after it has been updated. Uses the same behaviour as after_create_user.
before_edit_user

Called at the beginning of the “edit user” view passing in the request and the user object.

Uses the same behaviour as before_create_user.

Choosers
construct_page_chooser_queryset

Called when rendering the page chooser view, to allow the page listing QuerySet to be customised. The callable passed into the hook will receive the current page QuerySet and the request object, and must return a Page QuerySet (either the original one, or a new one).

from wagtail.core import hooks

@hooks.register('construct_page_chooser_queryset')
def show_my_pages_only(pages, request):
    # Only show own pages
    pages = pages.filter(owner=request.user)

    return pages
construct_document_chooser_queryset

Called when rendering the document chooser view, to allow the document listing QuerySet to be customised. The callable passed into the hook will receive the current document QuerySet and the request object, and must return a Document QuerySet (either the original one, or a new one).

from wagtail.core import hooks

@hooks.register('construct_document_chooser_queryset')
def show_my_uploaded_documents_only(documents, request):
    # Only show uploaded documents
    documents = documents.filter(uploaded_by_user=request.user)

    return documents
construct_image_chooser_queryset

Called when rendering the image chooser view, to allow the image listing QuerySet to be customised. The callable passed into the hook will receive the current image QuerySet and the request object, and must return an Image QuerySet (either the original one, or a new one).

from wagtail.core import hooks

@hooks.register('construct_image_chooser_queryset')
def show_my_uploaded_images_only(images, request):
    # Only show uploaded images
    images = images.filter(uploaded_by_user=request.user)

    return images
Page explorer
construct_explorer_page_queryset

Called when rendering the page explorer view, to allow the page listing QuerySet to be customised. The callable passed into the hook will receive the parent page object, the current page QuerySet, and the request object, and must return a Page QuerySet (either the original one, or a new one).

from wagtail.core import hooks

@hooks.register('construct_explorer_page_queryset')
def show_my_profile_only(parent_page, pages, request):
    # If we're in the 'user-profiles' section, only show the user's own profile
    if parent_page.slug == 'user-profiles':
        pages = pages.filter(owner=request.user)

    return pages
register_page_listing_buttons

Add buttons to the actions list for a page in the page explorer. This is useful when adding custom actions to the listing, such as translations or a complex workflow.

This example will add a simple button to the listing:

from wagtail.admin import widgets as wagtailadmin_widgets

@hooks.register('register_page_listing_buttons')
def page_listing_buttons(page, page_perms, is_parent=False, next_url=None):
    yield wagtailadmin_widgets.PageListingButton(
        'A page listing button',
        '/goes/to/a/url/',
        priority=10
    )

The arguments passed to the hook are as follows:

  • page - the page object to generate the button for
  • page_perms - a PagePermissionTester object that can be queried to determine the current user’s permissions on the given page
  • is_parent - if true, this button is being rendered for the parent page being displayed at the top of the listing
  • next_url - the URL that the linked action should redirect back to on completion of the action, if the view supports it

The priority argument controls the order the buttons are displayed in. Buttons are ordered from low to high priority, so a button with priority=10 will be displayed before a button with priority=20.

register_page_listing_more_buttons

Add buttons to the “More” dropdown menu for a page in the page explorer. This works similarly to the register_page_listing_buttons hook but is useful for lesser-used custom actions that are better suited for the dropdown.

This example will add a simple button to the dropdown menu:

from wagtail.admin import widgets as wagtailadmin_widgets

@hooks.register('register_page_listing_more_buttons')
def page_listing_more_buttons(page, page_perms, is_parent=False, next_url=None):
    yield wagtailadmin_widgets.Button(
        'A dropdown button',
        '/goes/to/a/url/',
        priority=60
    )

The arguments passed to the hook are as follows:

  • page - the page object to generate the button for
  • page_perms - a PagePermissionTester object that can be queried to determine the current user’s permissions on the given page
  • is_parent - if true, this button is being rendered for the parent page being displayed at the top of the listing
  • next_url - the URL that the linked action should redirect back to on completion of the action, if the view supports it

The priority argument controls the order the buttons are displayed in the dropdown. Buttons are ordered from low to high priority, so a button with priority=10 will be displayed before a button with priority=60.

Buttons with dropdown lists

The admin widgets also provide ButtonWithDropdownFromHook, which allows you to define a custom hook for generating a dropdown menu that gets attached to your button.

Creating a button with a dropdown menu involves two steps. Firstly, you add your button to the register_page_listing_buttons hook, just like the example above. Secondly, you register a new hook that yields the contents of the dropdown menu.

This example shows how Wagtail’s default admin dropdown is implemented. You can also see how to register buttons conditionally, in this case by evaluating the page_perms:

from wagtail.admin import widgets as wagtailadmin_widgets

@hooks.register('register_page_listing_buttons')
def page_custom_listing_buttons(page, page_perms, is_parent=False, next_url=None):
    yield wagtailadmin_widgets.ButtonWithDropdownFromHook(
        'More actions',
        hook_name='my_button_dropdown_hook',
        page=page,
        page_perms=page_perms,
        is_parent=is_parent,
        next_url=next_url,
        priority=50
    )

@hooks.register('my_button_dropdown_hook')
def page_custom_listing_more_buttons(page, page_perms, is_parent=False, next_url=None):
    if page_perms.can_move():
        yield wagtailadmin_widgets.Button('Move', reverse('wagtailadmin_pages:move', args=[page.id]), priority=10)
    if page_perms.can_delete():
        yield wagtailadmin_widgets.Button('Delete', reverse('wagtailadmin_pages:delete', args=[page.id]), priority=30)
    if page_perms.can_unpublish():
        yield wagtailadmin_widgets.Button('Unpublish', reverse('wagtailadmin_pages:unpublish', args=[page.id]), priority=40)

The template for the dropdown button can be customised by overriding wagtailadmin/pages/listing/_button_with_dropdown.html. The JavaScript that runs the dropdowns makes use of custom data attributes, so you should leave data-dropdown and data-dropdown-toggle in the markup if you customise it.

Page serving
before_serve_page

Called when Wagtail is about to serve a page. The callable passed into the hook will receive the page object, the request object, and the args and kwargs that will be passed to the page’s serve() method. If the callable returns an HttpResponse, that response will be returned immediately to the user, and Wagtail will not proceed to call serve() on the page.

from django.http import HttpResponse

from wagtail.core import hooks

@hooks.register('before_serve_page')
def block_googlebot(page, request, serve_args, serve_kwargs):
    if request.META.get('HTTP_USER_AGENT') == 'GoogleBot':
        return HttpResponse("<h1>bad googlebot no cookie</h1>")
Document serving
before_serve_document
Called when Wagtail is about to serve a document. The callable passed into the hook will receive the document object and the request object. If the callable returns an HttpResponse, that response will be returned immediately to the user, instead of serving the document. Note that this hook will be skipped if the WAGTAILDOCS_SERVE_METHOD setting is set to direct.
Snippets

Hooks for working with registered Snippets.

after_edit_snippet

Called when a Snippet is edited. The callable passed into the hook will receive the model instance, the request object. If the callable returns an HttpResponse, that response will be returned immediately to the user, and Wagtail will not proceed to call redirect() to the listing view.

from django.http import HttpResponse

from wagtail.core import hooks

@hooks.register('after_edit_snippet')
def after_snippet_update(request, instance):
    return HttpResponse(f"Congrats on editing a snippet with id {instance.pk}", content_type="text/plain")
before_edit_snippet

Called at the beginning of the edit snippet view. The callable passed into the hook will receive the model instance, the request object. If the callable returns an HttpResponse, that response will be returned immediately to the user, and Wagtail will not proceed to call redirect() to the listing view.

from django.http import HttpResponse

from wagtail.core import hooks

@hooks.register('before_edit_snippet')
def block_snippet_edit(request, instance):
    if isinstance(instance, RestrictedSnippet) and instance.prevent_edit:
        return HttpResponse("Sorry, you can't edit this snippet", content_type="text/plain")
after_create_snippet
Called when a Snippet is created. after_create_snippet and after_edit_snippet work in identical ways. The only difference is where the hook is called.
before_create_snippet
Called at the beginning of the create snippet view. Works in a similar way to before_edit_snippet except the model is passed as an argument instead of an instance.
after_delete_snippet

Called when a Snippet is deleted. The callable passed into the hook will receive the model instance(s) as a queryset along with the request object. If the callable returns an HttpResponse, that response will be returned immediately to the user, and Wagtail will not proceed to call redirect() to the listing view.

from django.http import HttpResponse

from wagtail.core import hooks

@hooks.register('after_delete_snippet')
def after_snippet_delete(request, instances):
    # "instances" is a QuerySet
    total = len(instances)
    return HttpResponse(f"{total} snippets have been deleted", content_type="text/plain")
before_delete_snippet

Called at the beginning of the delete snippet view. The callable passed into the hook will receive the model instance(s) as a queryset along with the request object. If the callable returns an HttpResponse, that response will be returned immediately to the user, and Wagtail will not proceed to call redirect() to the listing view.

from django.http import HttpResponse

from wagtail.core import hooks

@hooks.register('before_delete_snippet')
def before_snippet_delete(request, instances):
    # "instances" is a QuerySet
    total = len(instances)

    if request.method == 'POST':
      # Override the deletion behaviour
      instances.delete()

      return HttpResponse(f"{total} snippets have been deleted", content_type="text/plain")
register_snippet_action_menu_item

Add an item to the popup menu of actions on the snippet creation and edit views. The callable passed to this hook must return an instance of wagtail.snippets.action_menu.ActionMenuItem. ActionMenuItem is a subclass of Component and so the rendering of the menu item can be customised through template_name, get_context_data, render_html and Media. In addition, the following attributes and methods are available to be overridden:

order:an integer (default 100) which determines the item’s position in the menu. Can also be passed as a keyword argument to the object constructor. The lowest-numbered item in this sequence will be selected as the default menu item; as standard, this is “Save draft” (which has an order of 0).
label:the displayed text of the menu item
get_url:a method which returns a URL for the menu item to link to; by default, returns None which causes the menu item to behave as a form submit button instead
name:value of the name attribute of the submit button if no URL is specified
icon_name:icon to display against the menu item
classname:a class attribute value to add to the button element
is_shown:a method which returns a boolean indicating whether the menu item should be shown; by default, true except when editing a locked page

The get_url, is_shown, get_context_data and render_html methods all accept a context dictionary containing the following fields:

view:name of the current view: 'create' or 'edit'
model:The snippet’s model class
instance:For view = 'edit', the instance being edited
request:The current request object
from wagtail.core import hooks
from wagtail.snippets.action_menu import ActionMenuItem

class GuacamoleMenuItem(ActionMenuItem):
    name = 'action-guacamole'
    label = "Guacamole"

    def get_url(self, context):
        return "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dNJdJIwCF_Y"


@hooks.register('register_snippet_action_menu_item')
def register_guacamole_menu_item():
    return GuacamoleMenuItem(order=10)
construct_snippet_action_menu

Modify the final list of action menu items on the snippet creation and edit views. The callable passed to this hook receives a list of ActionMenuItem objects, a request object and a context dictionary as per register_snippet_action_menu_item, and should modify the list of menu items in-place.

@hooks.register('construct_snippet_action_menu')
def remove_delete_option(menu_items, request, context):
    menu_items[:] = [item for item in menu_items if item.name != 'delete']

The construct_snippet_action_menu hook is called after the menu items have been sorted by their order attributes, and so setting a menu item’s order will have no effect at this point. Instead, items can be reordered by changing their position in the list, with the first item being selected as the default action. For example, to change the default action to Delete:

@hooks.register('construct_snippet_action_menu')
def make_delete_default_action(menu_items, request, context):
    for (index, item) in enumerate(menu_items):
        if item.name == 'delete':
            # move to top of list
            menu_items.pop(index)
            menu_items.insert(0, item)
            break
register_snippet_listing_buttons

Add buttons to the actions list for a snippet in the snippets listing. This is useful when adding custom actions to the listing, such as translations or a complex workflow.

This example will add a simple button to the listing:

from wagtail.snippets import widgets as wagtailsnippets_widgets

@hooks.register('register_snippet_listing_buttons')
def snippet_listing_buttons(snippet, user, next_url=None):
    yield wagtailsnippets_widgets.SnippetListingButton(
        'A page listing button',
        '/goes/to/a/url/',
        priority=10
    )

The arguments passed to the hook are as follows:

  • snippet - the snippet object to generate the button for
  • user - the user who is viewing the snippets listing
  • next_url - the URL that the linked action should redirect back to on completion of the action, if the view supports it

The priority argument controls the order the buttons are displayed in. Buttons are ordered from low to high priority, so a button with priority=10 will be displayed before a button with priority=20.

construct_snippet_listing_buttons

Modify the final list of snippet listing buttons. The callable passed to this hook receives a list of SnippetListingButton objects, a user, and a context dictionary as per register_snippet_listing_buttons, and should modify the list of menu items in-place.

@hooks.register('construct_snippet_listing_buttons')
def remove_snippet_listing_button_item(buttons, snippet, user, context=None):
    buttons.pop()  # Removes the 'delete' button
Bulk actions

Hooks for registering and customising bulk actions. See here on how to write custom bulk actions.

register_bulk_action

Registers a new bulk action to add to the list of bulk actions in the explorer

This hook must be registered with a sub-class of BulkAction . For example:

from wagtail.admin.views.bulk_action import BulkAction
from wagtail.core import hooks


@hooks.register("register_bulk_action")
class CustomBulkAction(BulkAction):
    display_name = _("Custom Action")
    action_type = "action"
    aria_label = _("Do custom action")
    template_name = "/path/to/template"
    models = [...]  # list of models the action should execute upon


    @classmethod
    def execute_action(cls, objects, **kwargs):
        for object in objects:
            do_something(object)
        return num_parent_objects, num_child_objects  # return the count of updated objects
before_bulk_action

Do something right before a bulk action is executed (before the execute_action method is called)

This hook can be used to return an HTTP response. For example:

from wagtail.core import hooks

@hooks.register("before_bulk_action")
def hook_func(request, action_type, objects, action_class_instance):
  if action_type == 'delete':
    return HttpResponse(f"{len(objects)} objects would be deleted", content_type="text/plain")
after_bulk_action

Do something right after a bulk action is executed (after the execute_action method is called)

This hook can be used to return an HTTP response. For example:

from wagtail.core import hooks

@hooks.register("after_bulk_action")
def hook_func(request, action_type, objects, action_class_instance):
  if action_type == 'delete':
    return HttpResponse(f"{len(objects)} objects have been deleted", content_type="text/plain")
Audit log
register_log_actions

See Audit log

To add new actions to the registry, call the register_action method with the action type, its label and the message to be displayed in administrative listings.

from django.utils.translation import gettext_lazy as _

from wagtail.core import hooks

@hooks.register('register_log_actions')
def additional_log_actions(actions):
    actions.register_action('wagtail_package.echo', _('Echo'), _('Sent an echo'))

Alternatively, for a log message that varies according to the log entry’s data, create a subclass of wagtail.core.log_actions.LogFormatter that overrides the format_message method, and use register_action as a decorator on that class:

from django.utils.translation import gettext_lazy as _

from wagtail.core import hooks
from wagtail.core.log_actions import LogFormatter

@hooks.register('register_log_actions')
def additional_log_actions(actions):
    @actions.register_action('wagtail_package.greet_audience')
    class GreetingActionFormatter(LogFormatter):
        label = _('Greet audience')

        def format_message(self, log_entry):
            return _('Hello %(audience)s') % {
                'audience': log_entry.data['audience'],
            }

Changed in version 2.15: The LogFormatter class was introduced. Previously, dynamic messages were achieved by passing a callable as the message argument to register_action.

Signals

Wagtail’s PageRevision and Page implement Signals from django.dispatch. Signals are useful for creating side-effects from page publish/unpublish events.

For example, you could use signals to send publish notifications to a messaging service, or POST messages to another app that’s consuming the API, such as a static site generator.

page_published

This signal is emitted from a PageRevision when a revision is set to published.

sender:The page class.
instance:The specific Page instance.
revision:The PageRevision that was published.
kwargs:Any other arguments passed to page_published.send().

To listen to a signal, implement page_published.connect(receiver, sender, **kwargs). Here’s a simple example showing how you might notify your team when something is published:

from wagtail.core.signals import page_published
import requests


# Let everyone know when a new page is published
def send_to_slack(sender, **kwargs):
    instance = kwargs['instance']
    url = 'https://hooks.slack.com/services/T00000000/B00000000/XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX'
    values = {
        "text" : "%s was published by %s " % (instance.title, instance.owner.username),
        "channel": "#publish-notifications",
        "username": "the squid of content",
        "icon_emoji": ":octopus:"
    }

    response = requests.post(url, values)

# Register a receiver
page_published.connect(send_to_slack)
Receiving specific model events

Sometimes you’re not interested in receiving signals for every model, or you want to handle signals for specific models in different ways. For instance, you may wish to do something when a new blog post is published:

from wagtail.core.signals import page_published
from mysite.models import BlogPostPage

# Do something clever for each model type
def receiver(sender, **kwargs):
    # Do something with blog posts
    pass

# Register listeners for each page model class
page_published.connect(receiver, sender=BlogPostPage)

Wagtail provides access to a list of registered page types through the get_page_models() function in wagtail.core.models.

Read the Django documentation for more information about specifying senders.

page_unpublished

This signal is emitted from a Page when the page is unpublished.

sender:The page class.
instance:The specific Page instance.
kwargs:Any other arguments passed to page_unpublished.send()
pre_page_move and post_page_move

These signals are emitted from a Page immediately before and after it is moved.

Subscribe to pre_page_move if you need to know values BEFORE any database changes are applied. For example: Getting the page’s previous URL, or that of its descendants.

Subscribe to post_page_move if you need to know values AFTER database changes have been applied. For example: Getting the page’s new URL, or that of its descendants.

The following arguments are emitted for both signals:

sender:The page class.
instance:The specific Page instance.
parent_page_before:
 The parent page of instance before moving.
parent_page_after:
 The parent page of instance after moving.
url_path_before:
 The value of instance.url_path before moving.
url_path_after:The value of instance.url_path after moving.
kwargs:Any other arguments passed to pre_page_move.send() or post_page_move.send().
Distinguishing between a ‘move’ and a ‘reorder’

The signal can be emitted as a result of a page being moved to a different section (a ‘move’), or as a result of a page being moved to a different position within the same section (a ‘reorder’). Knowing the difference between the two can be particularly useful, because only a ‘move’ affects a page’s URL (and that of its descendants), whereas a ‘reorder’ only affects the natural page order; which is probably less impactful.

The best way to distinguish between a ‘move’ and ‘reorder’ is to compare the url_path_before and url_path_after values. For example:

from wagtail.core.signals import pre_page_move
from wagtail.contrib.frontend_cache.utils import purge_page_from_cache

# Clear a page's old URLs from the cache when it moves to a different section
def clear_page_url_from_cache_on_move(sender, **kwargs):

    if kwargs['url_path_before'] == kwargs['url_path_after']:
        # No URLs are changing :) nothing to do here!
        return

    # The page is moving to a new section (possibly even a new site)
    # so clear old URL(s) from the cache
    purge_page_from_cache(kwargs['instance'])

# Register a receiver
pre_page_move.connect(clear_old_page_urls_from_cache)
workflow_submitted

This signal is emitted from a WorkflowState when a page is submitted to a workflow.

sender:WorkflowState
instance:The specific WorkflowState instance.
user:The user who submitted the workflow
kwargs:Any other arguments passed to workflow_submitted.send()
workflow_rejected

This signal is emitted from a WorkflowState when a page is rejected from a workflow.

sender:WorkflowState
instance:The specific WorkflowState instance.
user:The user who rejected the workflow
kwargs:Any other arguments passed to workflow_rejected.send()
workflow_approved

This signal is emitted from a WorkflowState when a page’s workflow completes successfully

sender:WorkflowState
instance:The specific WorkflowState instance.
user:The user who last approved the workflow
kwargs:Any other arguments passed to workflow_approved.send()
workflow_cancelled

This signal is emitted from a WorkflowState when a page’s workflow is cancelled

sender:WorkflowState
instance:The specific WorkflowState instance.
user:The user who cancelled the workflow
kwargs:Any other arguments passed to workflow_cancelled.send()
task_submitted

This signal is emitted from a TaskState when a page is submitted to a task.

sender:TaskState
instance:The specific TaskState instance.
user:The user who submitted the page to the task
kwargs:Any other arguments passed to task_submitted.send()
task_rejected

This signal is emitted from a TaskState when a page is rejected from a task.

sender:TaskState
instance:The specific TaskState instance.
user:The user who rejected the task
kwargs:Any other arguments passed to task_rejected.send()
task_approved

This signal is emitted from a TaskState when a page’s task is approved

sender:TaskState
instance:The specific TaskState instance.
user:The user who approved the task
kwargs:Any other arguments passed to task_approved.send()
task_cancelled

This signal is emitted from a TaskState when a page’s task is cancelled.

sender:TaskState
instance:The specific TaskState instance.
user:The user who cancelled the task
kwargs:Any other arguments passed to task_cancelled.send()

Settings

Wagtail makes use of the following settings, in addition to Django’s core settings:

Site Name
WAGTAIL_SITE_NAME
WAGTAIL_SITE_NAME = 'Stark Industries Skunkworks'

This is the human-readable name of your Wagtail install which welcomes users upon login to the Wagtail admin.

Append Slash
WAGTAIL_APPEND_SLASH
# Don't add a trailing slash to Wagtail-served URLs
WAGTAIL_APPEND_SLASH = False

Similar to Django’s APPEND_SLASH, this setting controls how Wagtail will handle requests that don’t end in a trailing slash.

When WAGTAIL_APPEND_SLASH is True (default), requests to Wagtail pages which omit a trailing slash will be redirected by Django’s CommonMiddleware to a URL with a trailing slash.

When WAGTAIL_APPEND_SLASH is False, requests to Wagtail pages will be served both with and without trailing slashes. Page links generated by Wagtail, however, will not include trailing slashes.

Note

If you use the False setting, keep in mind that serving your pages both with and without slashes may affect search engines’ ability to index your site. See this Google Search Central Blog post for more details.

Internationalisation

Wagtail supports internationalisation of content by maintaining separate trees of pages for each language.

For a guide on how to enable internationalisation on your site, see the configuration guide.

WAGTAIL_I18N_ENABLED

(boolean, default False)

When set to True, Wagtail’s internationalisation features will be enabled:

WAGTAIL_I18N_ENABLED = True
WAGTAIL_CONTENT_LANGUAGES

(list, default [])

A list of languages and/or locales that Wagtail content can be authored in.

For example:

WAGTAIL_CONTENT_LANGUAGES = [
    ('en', _("English")),
    ('fr', _("French")),
]

Each item in the list is a 2-tuple containing a language code and a display name. The language code can either be a language code on its own (such as en, fr), or it can include a region code (such as en-gb, fr-fr). You can mix the two formats if you only need to localize in some regions but not others.

This setting follows the same structure of Django’s LANGUAGES setting, so they can both be set to the same value:

LANGUAGES = WAGTAIL_CONTENT_LANGUAGES = [
    ('en-gb', _("English (United Kingdom)")),
    ('en-us', _("English (United States)")),
    ('es-es', _("Spanish (Spain)")),
    ('es-mx', _("Spanish (Mexico)")),
]

However having them separate allows you to configure many different regions on your site yet have them share Wagtail content (but defer on things like date formatting, currency, etc):

LANGUAGES = [
    ('en', _("English (United Kingdom)")),
    ('en-us', _("English (United States)")),
    ('es', _("Spanish (Spain)")),
    ('es-mx', _("Spanish (Mexico)")),
]


WAGTAIL_CONTENT_LANGUAGES = [
    ('en', _("English")),
    ('es', _("Spanish")),
]

This would mean that your site will respond on the https://www.mysite.com/es/ and https://www.mysite.com/es-MX/ URLs, but both of them will serve content from the same “Spanish” tree in Wagtail.

Note

WAGTAIL_CONTENT_LANGUAGES must be a subset of LANGUAGES

Note that all languages that exist in WAGTAIL_CONTENT_LANGUAGES must also exist in your LANGUAGES setting. This is so that Wagtail can generate a live URL to these pages from an untranslated context (e.g. the admin interface).

Embeds

Wagtail supports generating embed code from URLs to content on an external providers such as Youtube or Twitter. By default, Wagtail will fetch the embed code directly from the relevant provider’s site using the oEmbed protocol. Wagtail has a builtin list of the most common providers.

The embeds fetching can be fully configured using the WAGTAILEMBEDS_FINDERS setting. This is fully documented in Configuring embed “finders”.

WAGTAILEMBEDS_RESPONSIVE_HTML
WAGTAILEMBEDS_RESPONSIVE_HTML = True

Adds class="responsive-object" and an inline padding-bottom style to embeds, to assist in making them responsive. See Responsive Embeds for details.

Dashboard
WAGTAILADMIN_RECENT_EDITS_LIMIT
WAGTAILADMIN_RECENT_EDITS_LIMIT = 5

This setting lets you change the number of items shown at ‘Your most recent edits’ on the dashboard.

WAGTAILADMIN_USER_LOGIN_FORM
WAGTAILADMIN_USER_LOGIN_FORM = 'users.forms.LoginForm'

Allows the default LoginForm to be extended with extra fields.

WAGTAIL_GRAVATAR_PROVIDER_URL
WAGTAIL_GRAVATAR_PROVIDER_URL = '//www.gravatar.com/avatar'

If a user has not uploaded a profile picture, Wagtail will look for an avatar linked to their email address on gravatar.com. This setting allows you to specify an alternative provider such as like robohash.org, or can be set to None to disable the use of remote avatars completely.

WAGTAIL_MODERATION_ENABLED
WAGTAIL_MODERATION_ENABLED = True

Changes whether the Submit for Moderation button is displayed in the action menu.

Comments

New in version 2.13.

WAGTAILADMIN_COMMENTS_ENABLED
# Disable commenting
WAGTAILADMIN_COMMENTS_ENABLED = False

Sets whether commenting is enabled for pages (True by default).

Images
WAGTAILIMAGES_IMAGE_MODEL
WAGTAILIMAGES_IMAGE_MODEL = 'myapp.MyImage'

This setting lets you provide your own image model for use in Wagtail, which should extend the built-in AbstractImage class.

WAGTAILIMAGES_IMAGE_FORM_BASE
WAGTAILIMAGES_IMAGE_FORM_BASE = 'myapp.forms.MyImageBaseForm'

This setting lets you provide your own image base form for use in Wagtail, which might extend the built-in BaseImageForm class or replace it entirely. You can use it to specify or override the widgets to use in the admin form.

WAGTAILIMAGES_MAX_UPLOAD_SIZE
WAGTAILIMAGES_MAX_UPLOAD_SIZE = 20 * 1024 * 1024  # i.e. 20MB

This setting lets you override the maximum upload size for images (in bytes). If omitted, Wagtail will fall back to using its 10MB default value.

WAGTAILIMAGES_MAX_IMAGE_PIXELS
WAGTAILIMAGES_MAX_IMAGE_PIXELS = 128000000  # i.e. 128 megapixels

This setting lets you override the maximum number of pixels an image can have. If omitted, Wagtail will fall back to using its 128 megapixels default value. The pixel count takes animation frames into account - for example, a 25-frame animation of size 100x100 is considered to have 100 * 100 * 25 = 250000 pixels.

WAGTAILIMAGES_FEATURE_DETECTION_ENABLED
WAGTAILIMAGES_FEATURE_DETECTION_ENABLED = True

This setting enables feature detection once OpenCV is installed, see all details on the Feature Detection documentation.

WAGTAILIMAGES_INDEX_PAGE_SIZE
WAGTAILIMAGES_INDEX_PAGE_SIZE = 20

Specifies the number of images per page shown on the main Images listing in the Wagtail admin.

WAGTAILIMAGES_USAGE_PAGE_SIZE
WAGTAILIMAGES_USAGE_PAGE_SIZE = 20

Specifies the number of items per page shown when viewing an image’s usage (see WAGTAIL_USAGE_COUNT_ENABLED).

WAGTAILIMAGES_CHOOSER_PAGE_SIZE
WAGTAILIMAGES_CHOOSER_PAGE_SIZE = 12

Specifies the number of images shown per page in the image chooser modal.

Documents
WAGTAILDOCS_DOCUMENT_MODEL
WAGTAILDOCS_DOCUMENT_MODEL = 'myapp.MyDocument'

This setting lets you provide your own document model for use in Wagtail, which should extend the built-in AbstractDocument class.

WAGTAILDOCS_DOCUMENT_FORM_BASE
WAGTAILDOCS_DOCUMENT_FORM_BASE = 'myapp.forms.MyDocumentBaseForm'

This setting lets you provide your own Document base form for use in Wagtail, which might extend the built-in BaseDocumentForm class or replace it entirely. You can use it to specify or override the widgets to use in the admin form.

WAGTAILDOCS_SERVE_METHOD
WAGTAILDOCS_SERVE_METHOD = 'redirect'

Determines how document downloads will be linked to and served. Normally, requests for documents are sent through a Django view, to perform permission checks (see Image / document permissions) and potentially other housekeeping tasks such as hit counting. To fully protect against users bypassing this check, it needs to happen in the same request where the document is served; however, this incurs a performance hit as the document then needs to be served by the Django server. In particular, this cancels out much of the benefit of hosting documents on external storage, such as S3 or a CDN.

For this reason, Wagtail provides a number of serving methods which trade some of the strictness of the permission check for performance:

  • 'direct' - links to documents point directly to the URL provided by the underlying storage, bypassing the Django view that provides the permission check. This is most useful when deploying sites as fully static HTML (e.g. using wagtail-bakery or Gatsby).
  • 'redirect' - links to documents point to a Django view which will check the user’s permission; if successful, it will redirect to the URL provided by the underlying storage to allow the document to be downloaded. This is most suitable for remote storage backends such as S3, as it allows the document to be served independently of the Django server. Note that if a user is able to guess the latter URL, they will be able to bypass the permission check; some storage backends may provide configuration options to generate a random or short-lived URL to mitigate this.
  • 'serve_view' - links to documents point to a Django view which both checks the user’s permission, and serves the document. Serving will be handled by django-sendfile, if this is installed and supported by your server configuration, or as a streaming response from Django if not. When using this method, it is recommended that you configure your webserver to disallow serving documents directly from their location under MEDIA_ROOT, as this would provide a way to bypass the permission check.

If WAGTAILDOCS_SERVE_METHOD is unspecified or set to None, the default method is 'redirect' when a remote storage backend is in use (i.e. one that exposes a URL but not a local filesystem path), and 'serve_view' otherwise. Finally, some storage backends may not expose a URL at all; in this case, serving will proceed as for 'serve_view'.

WAGTAILDOCS_CONTENT_TYPES
WAGTAILDOCS_CONTENT_TYPES = {
    'pdf': 'application/pdf',
    'txt': 'text/plain',
}

Specifies the MIME content type that will be returned for the given file extension, when using the serve_view method. Content types not listed here will be guessed using the Python mimetypes.guess_type function, or application/octet-stream if unsuccessful.

WAGTAILDOCS_INLINE_CONTENT_TYPES
WAGTAILDOCS_INLINE_CONTENT_TYPES = ['application/pdf', 'text/plain']

A list of MIME content types that will be shown inline in the browser (by serving the HTTP header Content-Disposition: inline) rather than served as a download, when using the serve_view method. Defaults to application/pdf.

WAGTAILDOCS_EXTENSIONS
WAGTAILDOCS_EXTENSIONS = ['pdf', 'docx']

A list of allowed document extensions that will be validated during document uploading. If this isn’t supplied all document extensions are allowed. Warning: this doesn’t always ensure that the uploaded file is valid as files can be renamed to have an extension no matter what data they contain.

Password Management
WAGTAIL_PASSWORD_MANAGEMENT_ENABLED
WAGTAIL_PASSWORD_MANAGEMENT_ENABLED = True

This specifies whether users are allowed to change their passwords (enabled by default).

WAGTAIL_PASSWORD_RESET_ENABLED
WAGTAIL_PASSWORD_RESET_ENABLED = True

This specifies whether users are allowed to reset their passwords. Defaults to the same as WAGTAIL_PASSWORD_MANAGEMENT_ENABLED. Password reset emails will be sent from the address specified in Django’s DEFAULT_FROM_EMAIL setting.

WAGTAILUSERS_PASSWORD_ENABLED
WAGTAILUSERS_PASSWORD_ENABLED = True

This specifies whether password fields are shown when creating or editing users through Settings -> Users (enabled by default). Set this to False (along with WAGTAIL_PASSWORD_MANAGEMENT_ENABLED and WAGTAIL_PASSWORD_RESET_ENABLED) if your users are authenticated through an external system such as LDAP.

WAGTAILUSERS_PASSWORD_REQUIRED
WAGTAILUSERS_PASSWORD_REQUIRED = True

This specifies whether password is a required field when creating a new user. True by default; ignored if WAGTAILUSERS_PASSWORD_ENABLED is false. If this is set to False, and the password field is left blank when creating a user, then that user will have no usable password; in order to log in, they will have to reset their password (if WAGTAIL_PASSWORD_RESET_ENABLED is True) or use an alternative authentication system such as LDAP (if one is set up).

WAGTAIL_EMAIL_MANAGEMENT_ENABLED
WAGTAIL_EMAIL_MANAGEMENT_ENABLED = True

This specifies whether users are allowed to change their email (enabled by default).

Email Notifications
WAGTAILADMIN_NOTIFICATION_FROM_EMAIL
WAGTAILADMIN_NOTIFICATION_FROM_EMAIL = 'wagtail@myhost.io'

Wagtail sends email notifications when content is submitted for moderation, and when the content is accepted or rejected. This setting lets you pick which email address these automatic notifications will come from. If omitted, Wagtail will fall back to using Django’s DEFAULT_FROM_EMAIL setting if set, or webmaster@localhost if not.

WAGTAILADMIN_NOTIFICATION_USE_HTML
WAGTAILADMIN_NOTIFICATION_USE_HTML = True

Notification emails are sent in text/plain by default, change this to use HTML formatting.

WAGTAILADMIN_NOTIFICATION_INCLUDE_SUPERUSERS
WAGTAILADMIN_NOTIFICATION_INCLUDE_SUPERUSERS = False

Notification emails are sent to moderators and superusers by default. You can change this to exclude superusers and only notify moderators.

Wagtail update notifications
WAGTAIL_ENABLE_UPDATE_CHECK
WAGTAIL_ENABLE_UPDATE_CHECK = True

For admins only, Wagtail performs a check on the dashboard to see if newer releases are available. This also provides the Wagtail team with the hostname of your Wagtail site. If you’d rather not receive update notifications, or if you’d like your site to remain unknown, you can disable it with this setting.

Private pages / documents
PASSWORD_REQUIRED_TEMPLATE
PASSWORD_REQUIRED_TEMPLATE = 'myapp/password_required.html'

This is the path to the Django template which will be used to display the “password required” form when a user accesses a private page. For more details, see the Private pages documentation.

DOCUMENT_PASSWORD_REQUIRED_TEMPLATE
DOCUMENT_PASSWORD_REQUIRED_TEMPLATE = 'myapp/document_password_required.html'

As above, but for password restrictions on documents. For more details, see the Private pages documentation.

Login page
WAGTAIL_FRONTEND_LOGIN_TEMPLATE

The basic login page can be customised with a custom template.

WAGTAIL_FRONTEND_LOGIN_TEMPLATE = 'myapp/login.html'
WAGTAIL_FRONTEND_LOGIN_URL

Or the login page can be a redirect to an external or internal URL.

WAGTAIL_FRONTEND_LOGIN_URL = '/accounts/login/'

For more details, see the Setting up a login page documentation.

Case-Insensitive Tags
TAGGIT_CASE_INSENSITIVE
TAGGIT_CASE_INSENSITIVE = True

Tags are case-sensitive by default (‘music’ and ‘Music’ are treated as distinct tags). In many cases the reverse behaviour is preferable.

Multi-word tags
TAG_SPACES_ALLOWED
TAG_SPACES_ALLOWED = False

Tags can only consist of a single word, no spaces allowed. The default setting is True (spaces in tags are allowed).

Tag limit
TAG_LIMIT
TAG_LIMIT = 5

Limit the number of tags that can be added to (django-taggit) Tag model. Default setting is None, meaning no limit on tags.

Unicode Page Slugs
WAGTAIL_ALLOW_UNICODE_SLUGS
WAGTAIL_ALLOW_UNICODE_SLUGS = True

By default, page slugs can contain any alphanumeric characters, including non-Latin alphabets. Set this to False to limit slugs to ASCII characters.

Auto update preview
WAGTAIL_AUTO_UPDATE_PREVIEW
WAGTAIL_AUTO_UPDATE_PREVIEW = False

When enabled, data from an edited page is automatically sent to the server on each change, even without saving. That way, users don’t have to click on “Preview” to update the content of the preview page. However, the preview page tab is not refreshed automatically, users have to do it manually. This behaviour is disabled by default.

Custom User Edit Forms

See Custom user models.

WAGTAIL_USER_EDIT_FORM
WAGTAIL_USER_EDIT_FORM = 'users.forms.CustomUserEditForm'

Allows the default UserEditForm class to be overridden with a custom form when a custom user model is being used and extra fields are required in the user edit form.

WAGTAIL_USER_CREATION_FORM
WAGTAIL_USER_CREATION_FORM = 'users.forms.CustomUserCreationForm'

Allows the default UserCreationForm class to be overridden with a custom form when a custom user model is being used and extra fields are required in the user creation form.

WAGTAIL_USER_CUSTOM_FIELDS
WAGTAIL_USER_CUSTOM_FIELDS = ['country']

A list of the extra custom fields to be appended to the default list.

Usage for images, documents and snippets
WAGTAIL_USAGE_COUNT_ENABLED
WAGTAIL_USAGE_COUNT_ENABLED = True

When enabled Wagtail shows where a particular image, document or snippet is being used on your site. This is disabled by default because it generates a query which may run slowly on sites with large numbers of pages.

A link will appear on the edit page (in the rightmost column) showing you how many times the item is used. Clicking this link takes you to the “Usage” page, which shows you where the snippet, document or image is used.

The link is also shown on the delete page, above the “Delete” button.

Note

The usage count only applies to direct (database) references. Using documents, images and snippets within StreamFields or rich text fields will not be taken into account.

Date and DateTime inputs
WAGTAIL_DATE_FORMAT, WAGTAIL_DATETIME_FORMAT, WAGTAIL_TIME_FORMAT
WAGTAIL_DATE_FORMAT = '%d.%m.%Y.'
WAGTAIL_DATETIME_FORMAT = '%d.%m.%Y. %H:%M'
WAGTAIL_TIME_FORMAT = '%H:%M'

Specifies the date, time and datetime format to be used in input fields in the Wagtail admin. The format is specified in Python datetime module syntax, and must be one of the recognised formats listed in the DATE_INPUT_FORMATS, TIME_INPUT_FORMATS, or DATETIME_INPUT_FORMATS setting respectively (see DATE_INPUT_FORMATS).

Time zones

Logged-in users can choose their current time zone for the admin interface in the account settings. If is no time zone selected by the user, then TIME_ZONE will be used. (Note that time zones are only applied to datetime fields, not to plain time or date fields. This is a Django design decision.)

WAGTAIL_USER_TIME_ZONES

The list of time zones is by default the common_timezones list from pytz. It is possible to override this list via the WAGTAIL_USER_TIME_ZONES setting. If there is zero or one time zone permitted, the account settings form will be hidden.

WAGTAIL_USER_TIME_ZONES = ['America/Chicago', 'Australia/Sydney', 'Europe/Rome']
Admin languages

Users can choose between several languages for the admin interface in the account settings. The list of languages is by default all the available languages in Wagtail with at least 90% coverage. To change it, set WAGTAILADMIN_PERMITTED_LANGUAGES:

WAGTAILADMIN_PERMITTED_LANGUAGES
WAGTAILADMIN_PERMITTED_LANGUAGES = [('en', 'English'),
                                    ('pt', 'Portuguese')]

Since the syntax is the same as Django LANGUAGES, you can do this so users can only choose between front office languages:

LANGUAGES = WAGTAILADMIN_PERMITTED_LANGUAGES = [('en', 'English'),
                                                ('pt', 'Portuguese')]
Static files
WAGTAILADMIN_STATIC_FILE_VERSION_STRINGS
WAGTAILADMIN_STATIC_FILE_VERSION_STRINGS = False

Static file URLs within the Wagtail admin are given a version-specific query string of the form ?v=1a2b3c4d, to prevent outdated cached copies of JavaScript and CSS files from persisting after a Wagtail upgrade. To disable these, set WAGTAILADMIN_STATIC_FILE_VERSION_STRINGS to False.

API Settings

For full documentation on API configuration, including these settings, see Wagtail API v2 Configuration Guide documentation.

WAGTAILAPI_BASE_URL
WAGTAILAPI_BASE_URL = 'http://api.example.com/'

Required when using frontend cache invalidation, used to generate absolute URLs to document files and invalidating the cache.

WAGTAILAPI_LIMIT_MAX
WAGTAILAPI_LIMIT_MAX = 500

Default is 20, used to change the maximum number of results a user can request at a time, set to None for no limit.

WAGTAILAPI_SEARCH_ENABLED
WAGTAILAPI_SEARCH_ENABLED = False

Default is true, setting this to false will disable full text search on all endpoints.

WAGTAILAPI_USE_FRONTENDCACHE
WAGTAILAPI_USE_FRONTENDCACHE = True

Requires wagtailfrontendcache app to be installed, indicates the API should use the frontend cache.

Frontend cache

For full documentation on frontend cache invalidation, including these settings, see Frontend cache invalidator.

WAGTAILFRONTENDCACHE
WAGTAILFRONTENDCACHE = {
    'varnish': {
        'BACKEND': 'wagtail.contrib.frontend_cache.backends.HTTPBackend',
        'LOCATION': 'http://localhost:8000',
    },
}

See documentation linked above for full options available.

Note

WAGTAILFRONTENDCACHE_LOCATION is no longer the preferred way to set the cache location, instead set the LOCATION within the WAGTAILFRONTENDCACHE item.

WAGTAILFRONTENDCACHE_LANGUAGES
WAGTAILFRONTENDCACHE_LANGUAGES = [l[0] for l in settings.LANGUAGES]

Default is an empty list, must be a list of languages to also purge the urls for each language of a purging url. This setting needs settings.USE_I18N to be True to work.

Rich text
WAGTAILADMIN_RICH_TEXT_EDITORS
WAGTAILADMIN_RICH_TEXT_EDITORS = {
    'default': {
        'WIDGET': 'wagtail.admin.rich_text.DraftailRichTextArea',
        'OPTIONS': {
            'features': ['h2', 'bold', 'italic', 'link', 'document-link']
        }
    },
    'legacy': {
        'WIDGET': 'wagtail.admin.rich_text.HalloRichTextArea',
    }
}

Customise the behaviour of rich text fields. By default, RichTextField and RichTextBlock use the configuration given under the 'default' key, but this can be overridden on a per-field basis through the editor keyword argument, e.g. body = RichTextField(editor='legacy'). Within each configuration block, the following fields are recognised:

  • WIDGET: The rich text widget implementation to use. Wagtail provides two implementations: wagtail.admin.rich_text.DraftailRichTextArea (a modern extensible editor which enforces well-structured markup) and wagtail.admin.rich_text.HalloRichTextArea (deprecated; works directly at the HTML level). Other widgets may be provided by third-party packages.
  • OPTIONS: Configuration options to pass to the widget. Recognised options are widget-specific, but both DraftailRichTextArea and HalloRichTextArea accept a features list indicating the active rich text features (see Limiting features in a rich text field).

If a 'default' editor is not specified, rich text fields that do not specify an editor argument will use the Draftail editor with the default feature set enabled.

Page locking
WAGTAILADMIN_GLOBAL_PAGE_EDIT_LOCK

WAGTAILADMIN_GLOBAL_PAGE_EDIT_LOCK can be set to True to prevent users from editing pages that they have locked.

Redirects
WAGTAIL_REDIRECTS_FILE_STORAGE
WAGTAIL_REDIRECTS_FILE_STORAGE = 'tmp_file'

By default the redirect importer keeps track of the uploaded file as a temp file, but on certain environments (load balanced/cloud environments), you cannot keep a shared file between environments. For those cases you can use the built-in cache to store the file instead.

WAGTAIL_REDIRECTS_FILE_STORAGE = 'cache'
Form builder
WAGTAILFORMS_HELP_TEXT_ALLOW_HTML
WAGTAILFORMS_HELP_TEXT_ALLOW_HTML = True

When true, HTML tags in form field help text will be rendered unescaped (default: False).

Warning

Enabling this option will allow editors to insert arbitrary HTML into the page, such as scripts that could allow the editor to acquire administrator privileges when another administrator views the page. Do not enable this setting unless your editors are fully trusted.

Workflow
WAGTAIL_WORKFLOW_ENABLED
WAGTAIL_WORKFLOW_ENABLED = False

Specifies whether moderation workflows are enabled (default: True). When disabled, editors will no longer be given the option to submit pages to a workflow, and the settings areas for admins to configure workflows and tasks will be unavailable.

WAGTAIL_WORKFLOW_REQUIRE_REAPPROVAL_ON_EDIT
WAGTAIL_WORKFLOW_REQUIRE_REAPPROVAL_ON_EDIT = True

Moderation workflows can be used in two modes. The first is to require that all tasks must approve a specific page revision for the workflow to complete. As a result, if edits are made to a page while it is in moderation, any approved tasks will need to be re-approved for the new revision before the workflow finishes. This is the default, WAGTAIL_WORKFLOW_REQUIRE_REAPPROVAL_ON_EDIT = True . The second mode does not require reapproval: if edits are made when tasks have already been approved, those tasks do not need to be reapproved. This is more suited to a hierarchical workflow system. To use workflows in this mode, set WAGTAIL_WORKFLOW_REQUIRE_REAPPROVAL_ON_EDIT = False.

WAGTAIL_FINISH_WORKFLOW_ACTION
WAGTAIL_FINISH_WORKFLOW_ACTION = 'wagtail.core.workflows.publish_workflow_state'

This sets the function to be called when a workflow completes successfully - by default, wagtail.core.workflows.publish_workflow_state, which publishes the page. The function must accept a WorkflowState object as its only positional argument.

WAGTAIL_WORKFLOW_CANCEL_ON_PUBLISH
WAGTAIL_WORKFLOW_CANCEL_ON_PUBLISH = True

This determines whether publishing a page with an ongoing workflow will cancel the workflow (if true) or leave the workflow unaffected (false). Disabling this could be useful if your site has long, multi-step workflows, and you want to be able to publish urgent page updates while the workflow continues to provide less urgent feedback.

The project template

mysite/
    home/
        migrations/
            __init__.py
            0001_initial.py
            0002_create_homepage.py
        templates/
            home/
                home_page.html
        __init__.py
        models.py
    search/
        templates/
            search/
                search.html
        __init__.py
        views.py
    mysite/
        settings/
            __init__.py
            base.py
            dev.py
            production.py
        static/
            css/
                mysite.css
            js/
                mysite.js
        templates/
            404.html
            500.html
            base.html
        __init__.py
        urls.py
        wsgi.py
    Dockerfile
    manage.py
    requirements.txt
The “home” app

Location: /mysite/home/

This app is here to help get you started quicker by providing a HomePage model with migrations to create one when you first set up your app.

Default templates and static files

Location: /mysite/mysite/templates/ and /mysite/mysite/static/

The templates directory contains base.html, 404.html and 500.html. These files are very commonly needed on Wagtail sites to they have been added into the template.

The static directory contains an empty JavaScript and CSS file.

Django settings

Location: /mysite/mysite/settings/

The Django settings files are split up into base.py, dev.py, production.py and local.py.

base.py
This file is for global settings that will be used in both development and production. Aim to keep most of your configuration in this file.
dev.py
This file is for settings that will only be used by developers. For example: DEBUG = True
production.py
This file is for settings that will only run on a production server. For example: DEBUG = False
local.py

This file is used for settings local to a particular machine. This file should never be tracked by a version control system.

Tip

On production servers, we recommend that you only store secrets in local.py (such as API keys and passwords). This can save you headaches in the future if you are ever trying to debug why a server is behaving badly. If you are using multiple servers which need different settings then we recommend that you create a different production.py file for each one.

Dockerfile

Location: /mysite/Dockerfile

Contains configuration for building and deploying the site as a Docker container. To build and use the Docker image for your project, run:

docker build -t mysite .
docker run -p 8000:8000 mysite

Jinja2 template support

Wagtail supports Jinja2 templating for all front end features. More information on each of the template tags below can be found in the Writing templates documentation.

Configuring Django

Django needs to be configured to support Jinja2 templates. As the Wagtail admin is written using standard Django templates, Django has to be configured to use both templating engines. Add the Jinja2 template backend configuration to the TEMPLATES setting for your app as shown here:

TEMPLATES = [
    {
        "BACKEND": "django.template.backends.django.DjangoTemplates",
        # ... the rest of the existing Django template configuration ...
    },
    {
        'BACKEND': 'django.template.backends.jinja2.Jinja2',
        'APP_DIRS': True,
        'OPTIONS': {
            'extensions': [
                'wagtail.core.jinja2tags.core',
                'wagtail.admin.jinja2tags.userbar',
                'wagtail.images.jinja2tags.images',
            ],
        },
    }
]

Jinja templates must be placed in a jinja2/ directory in your app. For example, the standard template location for an EventPage model in an events app would be events/jinja2/events/event_page.html.

By default, the Jinja environment does not have any Django functions or filters. The Django documentation has more information on configuring Jinja for Django.

self in templates

In Django templates, self can be used to refer to the current page, stream block, or field panel. In Jinja, self is reserved for internal use. When writing Jinja templates, use page to refer to pages, value for stream blocks, and field_panel for field panels.

Template tags, functions & filters
pageurl()

Generate a URL for a Page instance:

<a href="{{ pageurl(page.more_information) }}">More information</a>

See pageurl for more information

slugurl()

Generate a URL for a Page with a slug:

<a href="{{ slugurl("about") }}">About us</a>

See slugurl for more information

image()

Resize an image, and print an <img> tag:

{# Print an image tag #}
{{ image(page.header_image, "fill-1024x200", class="header-image") }}

{# Resize an image #}
{% set background=image(page.background_image, "max-1024x1024") %}
<div class="wrapper" style="background-image: url({{ background.url }});">

See How to use images in templates for more information

|richtext

Transform Wagtail’s internal HTML representation, expanding internal references to pages and images.

{{ page.body|richtext }}

See Rich text (filter) for more information

wagtailuserbar()

Output the Wagtail contextual flyout menu for editing pages from the front end

{{ wagtailuserbar() }}

See Wagtail User Bar for more information

{% include_block %}

Output the HTML representation for the stream content as a whole, as well as for each individual block.

Allows to pass template context (by default) to the StreamField template.

{% include_block page.body %}
{% include_block page.body with context %} {# The same as the previous #}
{% include_block page.body without context %}

See StreamField template rendering for more information.

Note

The {% include_block %} tag is designed to closely follow the syntax and behaviour of Jinja’s {% include %}, so it does not implement the Django version’s feature of only passing specified variables into the context.

Support

If you have any problems or questions about working with Wagtail, you are invited to visit any of the following support channels, where volunteer members of the Wagtail community will be happy to assist.

Please respect the time and effort of volunteers, by not asking the same question in multiple places. At best, you’ll be spamming the same set of people each time; at worst, you’ll waste the effort of volunteers who spend time answering a question unaware that it has already been answered elsewhere. If you absolutely must ask a question on multiple forums, post it on Stack Overflow first and include the Stack Overflow link in your subsequent posts.

Stack Overflow

Stack Overflow is the best place to find answers to your questions about working with Wagtail - there is an active community of Wagtail users and developers responding to questions there. When posting questions, please read Stack Overflow’s advice on how to ask questions and remember to tag your question with “wagtail”.

Mailing list

For topics and discussions that do not fit Stack Overflow’s question-and-answer format, there is a Wagtail Support mailing list at groups.google.com/d/forum/wagtail.

Slack

The Wagtail Slack workspace is open to all users and developers of Wagtail. To join, head to: https://wagtail.io/slack/

Please use the #support channel for support questions. Support is provided by members of the Wagtail community on a voluntary basis, and we cannot guarantee that questions will be answered quickly (or at all). If you want to see this resource succeed, please consider sticking around to help out! Also, please keep in mind that many of Wagtail’s core and expert developers prefer to handle support queries on a non-realtime basis through Stack Overflow, and questions asked there may well get a better response.

GitHub discussions

Our Github discussion boards are open for sharing ideas and plans for the Wagtail project.

Issues

If you think you’ve found a bug in Wagtail, or you’d like to suggest a new feature, please check the current list at github.com/wagtail/wagtail/issues. If your bug or suggestion isn’t there, raise a new issue, providing as much relevant context as possible.

If your bug report is a security issue, do not report it with an issue. Please read our ​guide to reporting security issues.

Torchbox

Finally, if you have a query which isn’t relevant for any of the above forums, feel free to contact the Wagtail team at Torchbox directly, on hello@wagtail.io or @wagtailcms.

Using Wagtail: an Editor’s guide

This section of the documentation is written for the users of a Wagtail-powered site. That is, the content editors, moderators and administrators who will be running things on a day-to-day basis.

Introduction

Wagtail is an open source content management system (CMS) developed by Torchbox. It is built on the Django framework and designed to be super easy to use for both developers and editors.

This documentation will explain how to:

  • navigate the main user interface of Wagtail
  • create pages of all different types
  • modify, save, publish and unpublish pages
  • set up users, and provide them with specific roles to create a publishing workflow
  • upload, edit and include images and documents
  • … and more!

Getting started

The Wagtail demo site

The examples in this document are based on Torchbox.com. However, the instructions are general enough as to be applicable to any Wagtail site.

For the purposes of this documentation we will be using the URL, www.example.com, to represent the root (homepage) of your website.

Logging in
  • The first port of call for an editor is the login page for the administrator interface.
  • Access this by adding /admin onto the end of your root URL (e.g. www.example.com/admin).
  • Enter your username and password and click Sign in.
_images/screen01_login.png

Finding your way around

This section describes the different pages that you will see as you navigate around the CMS, and how you can find the content that you are looking for.

The Dashboard

The Dashboard provides information on:

  • The number of pages, images, and documents currently held in the Wagtail CMS
  • Any pages currently awaiting moderation (if you have these privileges)
  • Any pages that you’ve locked (if your administrator has enabled author-specific locking)
  • Your most recently edited pages

You can return to the Dashboard at any time by clicking the Wagtail logo in the top-left of the screen.

_images/screen02_dashboard_editor.png
  • Clicking the logo returns you to your Dashboard.
  • The stats at the top of the page describe the total amount of content on the CMS (just for fun!).
  • The Your pages in a workflow panel shows you any pages in moderation that you own or submitted for moderation yourself, along with which moderation tasks they are awaiting, and how long they’ve been on that task.
  • The Awaiting your review panel will only be displayed if you are able to perform moderation actions.
    • Clicking the name of a page will take you to the ‘Edit page’ interface for this page.
    • Clicking approve or request changes will either progress the page to the next task in the moderation workflow (or publish if it’s the final stage) or mark the page as needing changes and return it to normal editing. An email will be sent to the creator of the page giving the result of the overall workflow when it completes.
    • The status indicator circles show the progress through the workflow: a tick for a completed task, or an empty circle for an incomplete one. Tooltips provide more details on the status of each.
    • The time this page has been waiting for review on this task is also shown to the right.
  • The Your locked pages panel shows the pages you’ve locked so that only you can edit them.
    • The date you locked the page is displayed to the right.
    • Clicking the name of a page will take you to the ‘Edit page’ interface for this page.
  • The Your most recent edits table displays the five pages that you most recently edited.
    • The date that you edited the page is displayed. Hover your mouse over the date for a more exact time/date.
    • The current status of the page is displayed. A page will have one of a number of statuses:
      • Live: Published and accessible to website visitors
      • Draft: Not live on the website
      • In Moderation: In the middle of a moderation workflow
      • Scheduled: Not live, but has a publication date set
      • Expired: Not live - this page was unpublished as it had an expiry date set which has now passed
      • Live + Draft: A version of the page is live, but a newer version is in draft mode.
      • Live + (another status): A version of the page is live, but a newer version has another status.
The Explorer menu
_images/screen03_explorer_menu.png
  • Click the Pages button in the sidebar to open the explorer. This allows you to navigate through the sections of the site.
  • Clicking the name of a page will take you to the Explorer page for that section.
  • Clicking the edit icon for a page will take you to its edit screen.
  • Clicking the arrow takes you to the sub-section.
  • Clicking the section title takes you back to where you were.
The Explorer page

The Explorer page allows you to view a page’s children and perform actions on them. From here you can publish/unpublish pages, move pages to other sections, drill down further into the content tree, or reorder pages under the parent for the purposes of display in menus.

_images/screen05_explorer_page.png
  • The name of the section you are looking at is displayed below the breadcrumb (the row of page names beginning with the home icon). Each section is also itself a page (in this case the homepage). Clicking the title of the section takes you to the Edit screen for the section page.
  • As the heading suggests, below are the child pages of the section. Clicking the titles of each child page will take you to its Edit screen.
_images/screen06_explorer_page_arrow.png
  • Clicking the arrows will display a further level of child pages.
_images/screen07_explorer_page_breadcrumb.png
  • As you drill down through the site the breadcrumb (the row of pages beginning with the home icon) will display the path you have taken. Clicking on the page titles in the breadcrumb will take you to the Explorer screen for that page.
_images/screen08_add_page_button.png
  • To add further child pages press the Add child page button below the parent page title. You can view the parent page on the live site by pressing the View live button. The Edit button will take you to the page edit screen.
_images/screen09.1_page_more_dropdown.png
  • Clicking on More dropdown will show a list of actions for the parent page, like Move, Copy, Delete, Unpublish, History. There will also be a Sort menu order button that will take you to the ordering page (see below)
_images/screen09.2_bulk_action_checkboxes.png
  • There is a checkbox on the left of each page row, hovering over the row will make it visible. There is also a checkbox at the top left of the header, used to select or deselect all other checkboxes.
_images/screen09.3_bulk_action_bar.png
  • Selecting at least one checkbox will popup an action bar at the bottom, which will list all the available bulk actions for pages.
  • Clicking on any action will take you to a separate view with all the selected pages, for confirmation
  • Similar buttons are available for each child page. These are made visible on hover.
Reordering pages
_images/screen08.5_reorder_page_handles.png
  • Clicking the “Sort menu order” button in the More dropdown will take you to a page with the reordering handles. This allows you to reorder the way that content displays in the main menu of your website.
  • Reorder by dragging the pages by the handles on the far left (the icon made up of 6 dots).
  • Your new order will be automatically saved each time you drag and drop an item.

Creating new pages

_images/screen08_add_page_button1.png

Create new pages by clicking the Add child page button. This creates a child page of the section you are currently in. In this case a child page of the ‘School of Fine Art’ page.

Selecting a page type
_images/screen09_page_type_selection.png
  • On the left of the page chooser screen are listed all the types of pages that you can create. Clicking the page type name will take you to the Create new page screen for that page type (see below).
  • Clicking the Pages using … Page links on the right will display all the pages that exist on the website of this type. This is to help you judge what type of page you will need to complete your task.
_images/screen10_blank_page_edit_screen.png
  • Once you’ve selected a page type you will be presented with a blank New page screen.
  • Click into the areas below each field’s heading to start entering content.
Creating page body content

Wagtail supports a number of basic fields for creating content, as well as our unique StreamField feature which allows you to construct complex layouts by combining these basic fields in any order.

StreamField

StreamField allows you to create complex layouts of content on a page by combining a number of different arrangements of content, ‘blocks’, in any order.

_images/screen11_empty_streamfield.png

When you first edit a page, you will be presented with the empty StreamField area, with the option to choose one of several block types. The block types on your website may be different from the screenshot here, but the principles are the same.

Click the block type, and the options will disappear, revealing the entry field for that block.

Depending on the block you chose, the field will display differently, and there might even be more than one field! There are a few common field types though that we will talk about here.

  • Basic text field
  • Rich text field
  • Image field
Basic text field

Basic text fields have no formatting options. How these display will be determined by the style of the page in which they are being inserted. Just click into the field and type!

Rich text fields

Most of the time though, you need formatting options to create beautiful looking pages. Wagtail provides “rich text” fields, which have formatting options similar to those of word processors.

_images/screen11.1_streamfield_richtext.png

Those fields present a set of tools which allow you to format and style your text. These tools also allow you to insert links, images, videos clips and links to documents. If you want to know more about a specific tool, hover your mouse on the corresponding button so the tooltip appears:

_images/screen11.2_toolbar_tooltips.png

This tooltip shows a longer description of the tool, and displays its keyboard shortcut if there is one. If the keyboard shortcut does not start with CTRL or ⌘, it’s a Markdown shortcut to type directly in the editor:

_images/screen11.3_keyboard_shortcuts_.gif

That’s the gist of it! If you want more information about the editor, please have a look at its dedicated user guide. It also contains a list of all of the available keyboard shortcuts, and some tricks and gotchas.

Adding further blocks in StreamField _images/screen11.8_adding_new_blocks.png
  • To add new blocks, click the ‘+’ icons above or below the existing blocks.
  • You’ll then be presented once again with the different blocks from which you may choose.
  • You can cancel the addition of a new block by clicking the cross at the top of the block selection interface.
  • You can duplicate a block (including the content) using the button towards the top right corner of an existing block.
Reordering and deleting content in StreamField _images/screen11.9_streamfield_reordering.png
  • Click the arrows on the right-hand side of each block to move blocks up and down in the StreamField order of content.
  • The blocks will be displayed in the front-end in the order that they are placed in this interface.
  • Click the rubbish bin on the far right to delete a field

Warning

Once a StreamField field is deleted it cannot be retrieved if the page has not been saved. Save your pages regularly so that if you accidentally delete a field you can reload the page to undo your latest edit.

Inserting images in a page

There will obviously be many instances in which you will want to add images to a page. There are two main ways to add images to pages, either via a specific image chooser field, or via the rich text field image button. Which of these you use will be dependent on the individual setup of your site.

Inserting images using the image chooser field

Often a specific image field will be used for a main image on a page, or for an image to be used when sharing the page on social media. For the standard page on Torchbox.com, the former is used.

_images/screen14_add_main_image.png
  • You insert an image by clicking the Choose an image button.
Choosing an image to insert

You have two options when selecting an image to insert:

  1. Selecting an image from the existing image library, or…
  2. Uploading a new image to the CMS

When you click the Choose an image button you will be presented with a pop-up with two tabs at the top. The first, Search, allows you to search and select from the library. The second, Upload, allows you to upload a new image.

Choosing an image from the image library

The image below demonstrates finding and inserting an image that is already present in the CMS image library.

_images/screen16_selecting_image_from_library.png
  1. Typing into the search box will automatically display the results below.
  2. Clicking one of the Popular tags will filter the search results by that tag.
  3. Clicking an image will take you to the Choose a format window (see image below).

Uploading a new image to the CMS

_images/screen17_upload_image.png
  1. You must include an image title for your uploaded image
  2. Click the Choose file button to choose an image from your computer.
  3. Tags allows you to associate tags with the image you are uploading. This allows them to be more easily found when searching. Each tag should be separated by a space. Good practice for creating multiple word tags is to use an underscore between each word (e.g. western_yellow_wagtail).
  4. Click Upload to insert the uploaded image into the carousel. The image will also be added to the main CMS image library for reuse in other content.
Inserting images using the rich text field

Images can also be inserted into the body text of a page via the rich text editor. When working in a rich text field, click the Image control. You will then be presented with the same options as for inserting images into the main carousel.

In addition, Wagtail allows you to choose the format of your image.

_images/screen18_image_format.png
  1. You can select how the image is displayed by selecting one of the format options.
  2. You can choose if the image is decorative, in which case you will not need to enter alt text for your image.
  3. If you do not choose for the image to be decorative, you must provide specific alt text for your image.

The format options available are described below:

  • Full width: Image will be inserted using the full width of the text area.
  • Half-width left/right aligned: Inserts the image at half the width of the text area. If inserted in a block of text, the text will wrap around the image. If two half-width images are inserted together, they will display next to each other.

Note

The display of images formatted in this way is dependent on your implementation of Wagtail, so you may get slightly different results.

Inserting videos into body content

It is possible to embed media into the body text of a web page by clicking the Embed button in rich text toolbar.

_images/screen20_insert_video_form.png
  • Copy and paste the web address for the media into the URL field and click Insert.
_images/screen21_video_in_editor.png
  • A placeholder of the media will be inserted into the text area.

The embed button can be used to import media from a number of supported providers, you can see the full list of supported providers in Wagtail’s source code.

Adding multiple items

A common feature of Wagtail is the ability to add more than one of a particular type of field or item. For example, you can add as many carousel items or related links as you wish.

_images/screen24_multiple_items_closed.png
  • Whenever you see the white cross in the green circle illustrated here, it means you can add multiple objects or items to a page. Clicking the icon will display the fields required for that piece of content. The image below demonstrates this with a Related link item.
_images/screen25_multiple_items_open.png
  • You can delete an individual item by pressing the trash can in the top-right.
  • You can add more items by clicking the link with the white cross again.
_images/screen26_reordering_multiple_items.png
  • You can reorder your multiple items using the up and down arrows. Doing this will affect the order in which they are displayed on the live page.
Required fields
  • Fields marked with an asterisk are required. You will not be able to save a draft or submit the page for moderation without these fields being completed.
_images/screen22_required_field.png
  • If you try to save/submit the page with some required fields not filled out, you will see the error displayed here.
  • The number of validation errors for each of the Promote and Content tabs will appear in a red circle, and the text, ‘This field is required’, will appear below each field that must be completed.
_images/screen23_validation_error.png
Edit Page tabs

A common feature of the Edit pages for all page types is the three tabs at the top of the screen. The first, Content, is where you build the content of the page itself.

The Promote tab

The Promote tab is where you can configure a page’s metadata, to help search engines find and index it. Below is a description of all the default fields under this tab.

For Search Engines

  • Slug: The section of the URL that appears after your website’s domain e.g. http://domain.com/blog/[my-slug]/. This is automatically generated from the main page title, which is set in the Content tab. Slugs should be entirely lowercase, with words separated by hyphens (-). It is recommended that you don’t change a page’s slug once a page is published.
  • Title tag: This is the bold headline that often shows up search engine results. This is one of the most significant elements of how search engines rank the page. The keywords used here should align with the keywords you wish to be found for. If you don’t think this field is working, ask your developers to check they have configured the site to output the appropriate tags on the frontend.
  • Meta description: This is the descriptive text displayed underneath a headline in search engine results. It is designed to explain what this page is about. It has no impact on how search engines rank your content, but it can impact on the likelihood that a user will click your result. Ideally 140 to 155 characters in length. If you don’t think this field is working, ask your developers to check they have configured the site to output the appropriate tags on the frontend.

For Site Menus

  • Show in menus: Ticking this box will ensure that the page is included in automatically generated menus on your site. Note: A page will only display in menus if all of its parent pages also have Show in menus ticked.
_images/screen26.5_promote_tab.png

Note

You may see more fields than this in your promote tab. These are just the default fields, but you are free to add other fields to this section as necessary.

The Settings Tab

The Settings tab has three fields by default.

  • Go Live date/time: Sets the date and time at which the changes should go live when published. See Scheduled Publishing for more details.
  • Expiry date/time: Sets the date and time at which this page should be unpublished.
  • Privacy: Sets restrictions for who can view the page on the frontend. Also applies to all child pages.
Previewing and submitting pages for moderation

The Save/Preview/Submit for moderation menu is always present at the bottom of the page edit/creation screen. The menu allows you to perform the following actions, dependent on whether you are an editor, moderator or administrator:

  • Save draft: Saves your current changes but doesn’t submit the page for moderation and so won’t be published. (all roles)
  • Submit for moderation: Saves your current changes and submits the page for moderation. The page will then enter a moderation workflow: a set of tasks which, when all are approved, will publish the page (by default, depending on your site settings). This button may be missing if the site administrator has disabled moderation, or hasn’t assigned a workflow to this part of the site. (all roles)
  • Preview: Opens a new window displaying the page as it would look if published, but does not save your changes or submit the page for moderation. (all roles)
  • Publish/Unpublish: Clicking the Publish button will publish this page. Clicking the Unpublish button will take you to a confirmation screen asking you to confirm that you wish to unpublish this page. If a page is published it will be accessible from its specific URL and will also be displayed in site search results. (moderators and administrators only)
  • Delete: Clicking this button will take you to a confirmation screen asking you to confirm that you wish to delete the current page. Be sure that this is actually what you want to do, as deleted pages are not recoverable. In many situations simply unpublishing the page will be enough. (moderators and administrators only)
_images/screen13_publish_menu.png

Editing existing pages

Here is how you can access the edit screen of an existing page:

  • Clicking the title of the page in an Explorer page or in search results.
  • Clicking the Edit link below the title in either of the situations above.
  • Clicking the Edit icon for a page in the explorer menu.
_images/screen12_edit_screen_overview.png
  • When editing an existing page the title of the page being edited is displayed at the top of the page.
  • Underneath the title, you can find the page type and a link to the page history.
  • If published, a link to the live version of the page is shown on the top right.
  • You can toggle commenting mode by clicking the icon in the top right, which also shows the number of comments.
  • You can change the title of the page by clicking into the title field.
  • When you’re typing into a field, help text is often displayed on the right-hand side of the screen.
Workflow

If the page is currently in a workflow, you’ll see an additional indicator underneath the title, showing the current workflow task. Clicking this will show more information about the page’s progress through the workflow, as well as any comments left by reviewers.

_images/screen12.5_edit_screen_in_moderation.png

If you can perform moderation actions (for example, approval or requesting changes) on the current task, you’ll see additional options in the action menu at the bottom of the page.

Commenting

Use the comment icon at the top right to enable commenting mode. If there are comments on the page, the number of comments is shown alongside the icon.

When in commenting mode, hovering over a commentable field or block will reveal a comment button.

_images/screen49_new_comment_icon.png

If there is no pre-existing comment on the field, you can use this to create a new comment.

_images/screen52_new_comment.png

If there is an existing comment, clicking either the field button or the comment will bring the comment thread into focus, allowing you to add new replies.

_images/screen48_comment_thread.png

Within a rich text field, you can highlight text and click the comment button to add an inline comment.

_images/screen51_draftail_comment.png

All of these actions can also be performed using the comment shortcut, Ctrl + Alt + M / + Alt + M.

Clicking the three dots in the top right of an existing comment will open its menu. This allows you to resolve a comment, as well as to edit or delete any of your own comments.

_images/screen50_comment_menu.png

Any comments or changes to comments will only be saved when the page is saved.

Note

Currently, fields inside InlinePanels and ListBlocks are uncommentable.

The arrow to the right of the comments icon shows the comment notifications panel, where you can enable or disable email notifications for other users’ comments on the page.

_images/screen53_commenting_notifications.png

Note

You will always receive email notifications for threads you are part of, unless you opt out of all comment notifications in your account settings. All participants in a thread will receive email notifications for new replies, even if they no longer have permission to edit the page.

Copying and creating aliases to existing pages

Copying Pages

Sometimes you might not need to create a new page from scratch. For example, you could have several pages that are very similar in terms of structure, but differ in content. In that case, you can copy an existing page and only change the required parts.

Here is how to copy an existing page:

  • When you hover over a page in an Explorer page, click on More and then Copy.
Copy action available when hovering over a page in an explorer page
  • You are then taken to a form where you can enter the copy’s title, slug and choose the parent page (if you want to change it). You then get the option to publish the copied page right away and an option to mark the copy as an alias of the original page (see Aliasing pages for more information about aliasing pages).
Copy page form with the options to change the title, slug, parent page, published status and option to create an alias.
  • Once you completed this form, press Copy this page. The page will then be copied and appear in the Explorer page.
Successful copying of a page results in it being available in the Explorer page.
Aliasing pages

When copying a page, you also have the option to mark it as an alias. The content of an aliased page will stay in sync with the original. This is particularly useful when a page is required to be available in multiple places. For example, let’s say you have a page about Brioche in the Breads section. You then want to also make this page available in the Pastries section. One way to do this is to create a copy of the Brioche page and change the parent page to the Pastries page. However you now need to remember to update this copy each time the original is modified. If a copy is marked as an alias Wagtail will do this for you each time a modification to the original page is published.

Here is how to create an alias to an existing page:

  • The first step is the same as it is for Copying Pages. When you hover over a page in the Explorer page, click on More and then Copy.
  • When you get to the copy page form, you can then choose another page as the parent page. Click the Choose another page button.
Clicking the choose another page button during the copy page form in order to change the parent of the copied page.
  • Select and click on the desired parent page.
Selecting and clicking the desired parent page.
  • Make sure the Alias checkbox is ticked.
  • You can then complete the page aliasing by clicking on the Copy this page button.
Clicking on the Copy this page button to confirm aliasing.
  • The aliased page will then appear under the new parent in the Explorer.
The aliased page appearing under the new parent page in the Explorer page.
  • When you try to edit the aliased page, you are notified that it is an alias of another page. You will then be offered two options: edit the original page (with changes appearing in both places) or convert the alias page into an ordinary page (i.e. a conventional copy, not updated when the original changes).
Editing an alias page notifies it is an alias and offers to either edit the original page or change the alias to an ordinary page.

Managing documents, images, snippets and collections

Wagtail allows you to manage all of your documents and images through their own dedicated interfaces. See below for information on each of these elements.

Documents

Documents such as PDFs can be managed from the Documents interface, available in the left-hand menu. This interface allows you to add documents to and remove documents from the CMS.

_images/screen29_documents_page.png
  • Add documents by clicking the Add document button in the top-right.
  • Search for documents in the CMS by entering your search term in the search bar. The results will be automatically updated as you type.
  • You can also filter the results by Collection by selecting one from the collections dropdown above the documents list.
_images/screen29.5_documents_bulk_actions.png
  • Select multiple documents by checking the checkbox on the left of each row, then use the bulk actions bar at the bottom to perform an action on all selected documents.
  • Edit the details of a document by clicking the document title.
_images/screen30_documents_edit_page.png
  • When editing a document you can replace the file associated with that document record. This means you can update documents without having to update the pages on which they are placed. Changing the file will change it on all pages that use the document.
  • Change the document’s collection using the collection dropdown.
  • Add or remove tags using the Tags field.
  • Save or delete documents using the buttons at the bottom of the interface.

Warning

Deleted documents cannot be recovered.

Images

If you want to edit, add or remove images from the CMS outside of the individual pages you can do so from the Images interface. This is accessed from the left-hand menu.

_images/screen31_images_page.png
  • Select multiple images by checking the checkbox on the top left of each image block, then use the bulk actions bar at the bottom to perform an action on all selected images.
_images/screen31.5_images_bulk_actions.png
  • Clicking an image will allow you to edit the data associated with it. This includes the title, the focal point of the image and much more.
_images/screen32_image_edit_page.png
Changing the image
  • When editing an image you can replace the file associated with that image record. This means you can update images without having to update the pages on which they are placed.

Warning

Changing the file will change it on all pages that use the image.

Focal area
  • This interface allows you to select a focal area which can effect how your image displays to visitors on the front-end.
  • If your images are cropped in some way to make them fit to a specific shape, then the focal area will define the centre point from which the image is cropped.
  • To set the focal area, drag a marquee around the most important element of the image.
  • To remove the focal area, hit the button below the image.
  • If the feature is set up in your website, then on the front-end you will see the crop of this image focusing on your selection.
Snippets

Snippets allow you to create elements on a website once and reuse them in multiple places. Then, if you want to change something on the snippet, you only need to change it once, and it will change across all the occurrences of the snippet.

How snippets are used can vary widely between websites. Here are a few examples of things Torchbox have used snippets for on our clients’ websites:

  • For staff contact details, so that they can be added to many pages but managed in one place
  • For Adverts, either to be applied sitewide or on individual pages
  • To manage links in a global area of the site, for example in the footer
  • For Calls to Action, such as Newsletter sign up blocks, that may be consistent across many different pages
The Snippets menu
_images/screen33_snippet_menu.png
  • You can access the Snippets menu by clicking on the ‘Snippets’ link in the left-hand menu bar.
  • To add or edit a snippet, click on the snippet type you are interested in (often help text will be included to help you in selecting the right type)
  • Click on an individual snippet to edit, or click ‘Add …’ in the top right to add a new snippet
  • To delete snippets, select one or more snippets with the tickbox on the left and then click the delete button near the top right

Warning

Editing a snippet will change it on all of the pages on which it has been used. In the top-right of the Snippet edit screen you will see a label saying how many times the snippet has been used. Clicking this label will display a listing of all of these pages.

_images/screen34_snippet_used_times.png
Adding snippets whilst editing a page

If you are editing a page, and you find yourself in need of a new snippet, do not fear! You can create a new one without leaving the page you are editing:

  • Whilst editing the page, open the snippets interface in a new tab, either by Ctrl+click (cmd+click on Mac) or by right clicking it and selecting ‘Open in new tab’ from the resulting menu.
  • Add the snippet in this new tab as you normally would.
  • Return to your existing tab and reopen the Snippet chooser window.
  • You should now see your new snippet, even though you didn’t leave the edit page.

Note

Even though this is possible, it is worth saving your page as a draft as often as possible, to avoid your changes being lost by navigating away from the edit page accidentally.

Collections

Access to specific sets of images and documents can be controlled by setting up ‘collections’. By default all images and documents belong to the ‘root’ collection, but users with appropriate permissions can create new collections through the Settings -> Collections area of the admin interface.

_images/collections_list.png
Add a collection
  • Clicking the add a collection button will allow you to create a collection. Name your collection and click save .
_images/collections_create_collection.png
Add images / documents to a collection
  • Navigate to the Images or Documents section and select a collection from the dropdown menu.
_images/collections_create_collection_upload_images.png _images/collections_add_to_collection.png
  • You can also edit an image or document directly by clicking on it to assign it to a collection.
_images/collections_edit_img_view.png
Privacy settings
  • To set permissions determining who is able to view documents within a collection, navigate to Settings > Collections and select a collection. Then click the privacy button above the collection name.
_images/collections_privacy_button.png
  • Within the privacy settings overlay, select the level of privacy for the collection.
_images/collections_privacy_overlay.png

Note

Permissions set on a collection apply to that collection and all collections below it in the hierarchy. So if you make the ‘root’ collection private, all documents on the site will be private.

Managing Redirects

About redirects

When dealing with publishing and unpublishing pages you will eventually need to make redirects. A redirect ensures that when a page is no longer available (404), the visitor and search engines are sent to a new page. Therefore the visitor won’t end up in a breaking journey which would result in a page not found.

Wagtail considers two types of configurable redirects depending on whether Permanent is checked or not:

  • Permanent redirect (checked by default)
  • Temporary redirect

For both redirects the visitor won’t experience a difference when visiting a page, but the search engine will react to these two type of redirects differently.

  • In the case of a temporary redirect a search engine will keep track of your old page and will index the redirected page as well.
  • With a permanent redirect, the search engine will mark the old page as obsolete and considers the new page as a replacement.

Note

As a best practice Wagtail will check redirects as permanent by default, in order to prevent the undermining of your search engine ranking.

Configuring redirects
_images/screen41_redirects_menu_item.png

To configure redirects head over to ‘Redirects’, which can be found in the Settings menu, accessible via the left-hand menu bar.

_images/screen42_redirects_interface.png
  • Add a redirect by clicking the Add redirect button in the top-right.
  • Search for redirects already configured by entering your search term in the search bar. The results will be automatically updated as you type.
  • Edit the details of a redirect by clicking the URL path in the listing.
_images/screen43_redirects_edit_redirect.png
  • Set Redirect from to the URL pattern which is no longer available on your site.
  • Set the From site if applicable (for eg: a multisite environment).
  • Check whether the redirect is Permanent or temporary (unchecked).

As a last step you can either redirect to a new page within Wagtail or you can redirect the page to a different domain outside of Wagtail.

  • Select your page from the explorer for Redirect to a page.
  • Set a full-domain and path for Redirect to any URL.

Note

Keep in mind a redirect will only be initiated if the page is not found. It will not be applied to existing pages (200) which will resolve on your site.

Administrator tasks

This section of the guide documents how to perform common tasks as an administrator of a Wagtail site.

Managing users and roles

As an administrator, a common task will be adding, modifying or removing user profiles.

This is done via the ‘Users’ interface, which can be found in the Settings menu, accessible via the left-hand menu bar.

_images/screen35_users_menu_item.png

In this interface you can see all of your users, their usernames, their ‘level’ of access (otherwise known as their ‘role’), and their status, either active or inactive.

You can sort this listing either via Name or Username.

_images/screen36_users_interface.png
  • Select multiple users by checking the checkbox on the left of each row, then use the bulk actions bar at the bottom to perform an action on all selected users.
_images/screen36.5_users_bulk_actions.png

Clicking on a user’s name will open their profile details. From here you can then edit that users details.

Note

It is possible to change user’s passwords in this interface, but it is worth encouraging your users to use the ‘Forgotten password’ link on the login screen instead. This should save you some time!

Click the ‘Roles’ tab to edit the level of access your users have. By default there are three roles:

Role Create/view drafts Publish content Access Settings
Editor Yes No No
Moderator Yes Yes No
Administrator Yes Yes Yes
Managing Workflows

Workflows allow you to configure how moderation works on your site. Workflows are sequences of tasks, all of which must be approved before the workflow completes (by default, this results in the publication of the page, but depends on your site settings).

The workflow management interface is accessed via the Workflows item in the Settings submenu, found in the left menu bar.

_images/screen45_workflow_index.png

In this interface you can see all of the workflows on your site, and the order of tasks in each. You can click on a workflow to edit it or to assign it to part of the page tree, or use the Add a workflow button to create a new workflow. The number of pages each workflow applies to is also shown, and can be clicked for a complete listing.

Editing workflows
_images/screen44_workflow_edit1.png

Under Add tasks to your workflow, you can add, remove, or reorder tasks in a workflow. When adding a task to a workflow, you will be given the option to create a new task, or reuse an existing one.

Under Assign your workflow to pages, you can see a list of the pages to which the workflow has been assigned: any child pages will also have the same workflow, so if a workflow is assigned to the root page, it becomes the default workflow. You may remove it from pages using the Delete button to the right of each entry, or assign it to a page using the Choose a page button.

The action menu at the bottom allows you to save your changes, or to disable the workflow, which will cancel all pages currently in moderation on this workflow, and prevent others from starting it. On a previously disabled workflow, there is also the option to enable it again.

Creating and editing tasks
_images/screen46_task_index.png

In the tasks interface, accessible via the Workflow Tasks item in the Settings submenu, you can see a list of the tasks currently available, as well as which workflows use each task. Similarly to workflows, you can click an existing task to edit it, or the Add a task button to create a new task.

When creating a task, if you have multiple task types available, these will be offered as options. By default, only group approval tasks are available. Creating a group approval task, you will be able to select one or multiple groups: members of any of these, as well as administrators, will be able to approve or reject moderation for this task.

_images/screen47_task_create.png

When editing a task, you may find that some fields - including the name - are uneditable. This is to ensure workflow history remains consistent - if you find yourself needing to change the name, it is recommended that you disable the old task, and create a new one with the name you need. Disabling a task will cause any pages currently in moderation on that task to skip to the next task.

Browser issues

Some issues with Wagtail may come from the browser. Try clearing the browser cache and cookies, or you can also try using Wagtail with another browser to see if the problem persists.

JavaScript is required to use Wagtail – make sure it is enabled in your browser.

Supported browsers

For the best experience and security, we recommend that you keep your browser up to date. Go to Browse Happy for more information.

IE11

Wagtail has officially removed support for the legacy Internet Explorer browser in 2.15.

  • In Wagtail 2.11 (LTS), there was be a warning message displayed on the Wagtail dashboard for IE11 users with administrator role.
  • In Wagtail 2.12, the message was displayed to all users regardless of their role.
  • In Wagtail 2.13, the message was displayed at the top of all pages.
  • Wagtail will no longer support IE11 as of version 2.15 and beyond.

If this affects you or your organisation, consider which alternative browsers you may be able to use. Wagtail is fully compatible with Microsoft Edge, Microsoft’s replacement for Internet Explorer. You may consider using its IE mode to keep access to IE11-only sites, while other sites and apps like Wagtail can leverage modern browser capabilities.

Assistive technologies

We want Wagtail to be accessible for users of a wide range of assistive technologies, but are aware of many blockers currently. For an overview, see our public accessibility audit.

Contributing to Wagtail

Issues

The easiest way to contribute to Wagtail is to tell us how to improve it! First, check to see if your bug or feature request has already been submitted at github.com/wagtail/wagtail/issues. If it has, and you have some supporting information which may help us deal with it, comment on the existing issue. If not, please create a new one, providing as much relevant context as possible. For example, if you’re experiencing problems with installation, detail your environment and the steps you’ve already taken. If something isn’t displaying correctly, tell us what browser you’re using, and include a screenshot if possible.

If your bug report is a security issue, do not report it with an issue. Please read our ​guide to reporting security issues.

Issue tracking

We welcome bug reports, feature requests and pull requests through Wagtail’s Github issue tracker.

Issues

An issue must always correspond to a specific action with a well-defined completion state: fixing a bug, adding a new feature, updating documentation, cleaning up code. Open-ended issues where the end result is not immediately clear (“come up with a way of doing translations”) are fine, as long as there’s a clear way to progress the issue and identify when it has been completed (not e.g. “make rich text fields suck less”).

Do not use issues for support queries or other questions (“How do I do X?” - although “Implement a way of doing X” or “Document how to do X” could well be valid issues). These should be asked on Stack Overflow, or for discussions that do not fit Stack Overflow’s question-and-answer format, the Wagtail Support Google group.

As soon as a ticket is opened - ideally within one day - a member of the core team will give it an initial classification, by either closing it as invalid or assigning it to a milestone. Don’t be discouraged if you feel that your ticket has been given a lower priority than it deserves - this decision isn’t permanent. We will consider all feedback, and reassign or reopen tickets where appropriate.

(From the other side, this means that the core team member doing the classification should feel free to make bold unilateral decisions - there’s no need to seek consensus first. If they make the wrong judgement call, that can always be reversed later.)

The possible milestones that it might be assigned to are as follows:

  • invalid (closed): this issue doesn’t identify a specific action to be taken, or the action is not one that we want to take. For example - a bug report for something that’s working as designed, or a feature request for something that’s actively harmful.
  • some-day: the issue is accepted as valid (i.e. it’s a bug report for a legitimate bug, or a useful feature request) but not deemed a priority to work on (in the opinion of the core team). For example - a bug that’s only cosmetic, or a feature that would be kind of neat but not really essential. There are no resources allocated to it - feel free to take it on!
  • real-soon-now: no-one on the core team has resources allocated to work on this right now, but we know it’s a pain point, and it will be prioritised whenever we next get a chance to choose something new to work on. In practice, that kind of free choice doesn’t happen very often - there are lots of pressures determining what we work on from day to day - so if this is a feature or fix you need, we encourage you to work on it and contribute a pull request, rather than waiting for the core team to get round to it!
  • A specific version number (eg. 1.6): the issue is important enough that it needs to be fixed in this version. There are resources allocated and/or plans to work on the issue in the given version.

On some occasions it may take longer for the core team to classify an issue into a milestone. For example:

  • It may require a non-trivial amount of work to confirm the presence of a bug. In this case, feedback and further details from other contributors, whether or not they can replicate the bug, would be particularly welcomed.
  • It may require further discussion to decide whether the proposal is a good idea or not - if so, it will be tagged “design decision needed”.

We will endeavour to make sure that issues don’t remain in this state for prolonged periods. Issues and PRs tagged “design decision needed” will be revisited regularly and discussed with at least two core contributors - we aim to review each ticket at least once per release cycle (= 6 weeks) as part of weekly core team meetings.

Pull requests

As with issues, the core team will classify pull requests as soon as they are opened, usually within one day. Unless the change is invalid or particularly contentious (in which case it will be closed or marked as “design decision needed”), it will generally be classified under the next applicable version - the next minor release for new features, or the next patch release for bugfixes - and marked as ‘Needs review’.

  • All contributors, core and non-core, are invited to offer feedback on the pull request.
  • Core team members are invited to assign themselves to the pull request for review.

Subsequently (ideally within a week or two, but possibly longer for larger submissions) a core team member will merge it if it is ready to be merged, or tag it as requiring further work (‘needs work’ / ‘needs tests’ / ‘needs docs’). In the latter case, they may also reassign it to a later milestone (‘real-soon-now’ or ‘some-day’). Pull requests that require further work are handled and prioritised in the same way as issues - anyone is welcome to pick one up from the backlog, whether or not they were the original committer.

Rebasing / squashing of pull requests is welcome, but not essential. When doing so, do not squash commits that need reviewing into previous ones and make sure to preserve the sequence of changes. To fix mistakes in earlier commits, use git commit --fixup so that the final merge can be done with git rebase -i --autosquash.

Core team members working on Wagtail are expected to go through the same process with their own fork of the project.

Release schedule

We aim to release a new version every 2 months. To keep to this schedule, we will tend to ‘bump’ issues and PRs to a future release where necessary, rather than let them delay the present one. For this reason, an issue being tagged under a particular release milestone should not be taken as any kind of guarantee that the feature will actually be shipped in that release.

Pull requests

If you’re a Python or Django developer, fork it and read the developing docs to get stuck in! We welcome all contributions, whether they solve problems which are specific to you or they address existing issues. If you’re stuck for ideas, pick something from the issue list, or email us directly on hello@wagtail.io if you’d like us to suggest something!

For large-scale changes, we’d generally recommend breaking them down into smaller pull requests that achieve a single well-defined task and can be reviewed individually. If this isn’t possible, we recommend opening a pull request on the Wagtail RFCs repository, so that there’s a chance for the community to discuss the change before it gets implemented.

Development

Setting up a local copy of the Wagtail git repository is slightly more involved than running a release package of Wagtail, as it requires Node.js and NPM for building JavaScript and CSS assets. (This is not required when running a release version, as the compiled assets are included in the release package.)

If you’re happy to develop on a virtual machine, the vagrant-wagtail-develop and docker-wagtail-develop setup scripts are the fastest way to get up and running. They will provide you with a running instance of the Wagtail Bakery demo site, with the Wagtail and bakerydemo codebases available as shared folders for editing on your host machine.

(Build scripts for other platforms would be very much welcomed - if you create one, please let us know via the Slack workspace!)

If you’d prefer to set up all the components manually, read on. These instructions assume that you’re familiar with using pip and virtualenv to manage Python packages.

Setting up the Wagtail codebase

Install Node.js, version 14. You can also use Node version manager (nvm) since Wagtail supplies a .nvmrc file in the root of the project with the minimum required Node version - see nvm’s installation instructions.

You will also need to install the libjpeg and zlib libraries, if you haven’t done so already - see Pillow’s platform-specific installation instructions.

Clone a copy of the Wagtail codebase:

$ git clone https://github.com/wagtail/wagtail.git
$ cd wagtail

With your preferred virtualenv activated, install the Wagtail package in development mode with the included testing and documentation dependencies:

$ pip install -e .[testing,docs] -U
$ # or if using zsh as your shell:
$ #    pip install -e '.[testing,docs]' -U

Install Node through nvm (optional):

$ nvm install

Install the tool chain for building static assets:

$ npm install --no-save

Compile the assets:

$ npm run build

Any Wagtail sites you start up in this virtualenv will now run against this development instance of Wagtail. We recommend using the Wagtail Bakery demo site as a basis for developing Wagtail. Keep in mind that the setup steps for a Wagtail site may include installing a release version of Wagtail, which will override the development version you’ve just set up. In this case, you should install the site before running the pip install -e step, or re-run that step after the site is installed.

Testing

From the root of the Wagtail codebase, run the following command to run all the tests:

$ python runtests.py
Running only some of the tests

At the time of writing, Wagtail has well over 2500 tests, which takes a while to run. You can run tests for only one part of Wagtail by passing in the path as an argument to runtests.py or tox:

$ # Running in the current environment
$ python runtests.py wagtail.core

$ # Running in a specified Tox environment
$ tox -e py36-dj22-sqlite-noelasticsearch wagtail.core

$ # See a list of available Tox environments
$ tox -l

You can also run tests for individual TestCases by passing in the path as an argument to runtests.py

$ # Running in the current environment
$ python runtests.py wagtail.core.tests.test_blocks.TestIntegerBlock

$ # Running in a specified Tox environment
$ tox -e py36-dj22-sqlite-noelasticsearch wagtail.core.tests.test_blocks.TestIntegerBlock
Running migrations for the test app models

You can create migrations for the test app by running the following from the Wagtail root.

$ django-admin makemigrations --settings=wagtail.tests.settings
Testing against PostgreSQL

Note

In order to run these tests, you must install the required modules for PostgreSQL as described in Django’s Databases documentation.

By default, Wagtail tests against SQLite. You can switch to using PostgreSQL by using the --postgres argument:

$ python runtests.py --postgres

If you need to use a different user, password, host or port, use the PGUSER, PGPASSWORD, PGHOST and PGPORT environment variables respectively.

Testing against a different database

Note

In order to run these tests, you must install the required client libraries and modules for the given database as described in Django’s Databases documentation or 3rd-party database backend’s documentation.

If you need to test against a different database, set the DATABASE_ENGINE environment variable to the name of the Django database backend to test against:

$ DATABASE_ENGINE=django.db.backends.mysql python runtests.py

This will create a new database called test_wagtail in MySQL and run the tests against it.

If you need to use different connection settings, use the following environment variables which correspond to the respective keys within Django’s DATABASES settings dictionary:

  • DATABASE_ENGINE
  • DATABASE_NAME
  • DATABASE_PASSWORD
  • DATABASE_HOST
    • Note that for MySQL, this must be 127.0.0.1 rather than localhost if you need to connect using a TCP socket
  • DATABASE_PORT

It is also possible to set DATABASE_DRIVER, which corresponds to the driver value within OPTIONS if an SQL Server engine is used.

Testing Elasticsearch

You can test Wagtail against Elasticsearch by passing the --elasticsearch argument to runtests.py:

$ python runtests.py --elasticsearch

Wagtail will attempt to connect to a local instance of Elasticsearch (http://localhost:9200) and use the index test_wagtail.

If your Elasticsearch instance is located somewhere else, you can set the ELASTICSEARCH_URL environment variable to point to its location:

$ ELASTICSEARCH_URL=http://my-elasticsearch-instance:9200 python runtests.py --elasticsearch
Browser and device support

Wagtail is meant to be used on a wide variety of devices and browsers. Supported browser / device versions include:

Browser Device/OS Version(s)
Mobile Safari iOS Phone Last 2
Mobile Safari iOS Tablet Last 2
Chrome Android Last 2
Chrome Desktop Last 2
MS Edge Desktop Last 2
Firefox Desktop Latest
Firefox ESR Desktop Latest
Safari macOS Last 2

We aim for Wagtail to work in those environments. Our development standards ensure that the site is usable on other browsers and will work on future browsers.

IE 11 support has been officially dropped in 2.15 as it is gradually falling out of use. Features already known not to work include:

  • Rich text copy-paste in the rich text editor.
  • Sticky toolbar in the rich text editor.
  • Focus outline styles in the main menu & explorer menu.
  • Keyboard access to the actions in page listing tables.

Unsupported browsers / devices include:

Browser Device/OS Version(s)
Stock browser Android All
IE Desktop All
Safari Windows All
Accessibility targets

We want to make Wagtail accessible for users of a wide variety of assistive technologies. The specific standard we aim for is WCAG2.1, AA level. Here are specific assistive technologies we aim to test for, and ultimately support:

We aim for Wagtail to work in those environments. Our development standards ensure that the site is usable with other assistive technologies. In practice, testing with assistive technology can be a daunting task that requires specialised training – here are tools we rely on to help identify accessibility issues, to use during development and code reviews:

  • react-axe integrated directly in our build tools, to identify actionable issues. Logs its results in the browser console.
  • Axe Chrome extension for more comprehensive automated tests of a given page.
  • Accessibility Insights for Web Chrome extension for semi-automated tests, and manual audits.
Known accessibility issues

Wagtail’s administration interface isn’t fully accessible at the moment. We actively work on fixing issues both as part of ongoing maintenance and bigger overhauls. To learn about known issues, check out:

The audit also states which parts of Wagtail have and haven’t been tested, how issues affect WCAG 2.1 compliance, and the likely impact on users.

Compiling static assets

All static assets such as JavaScript, CSS, images, and fonts for the Wagtail admin are compiled from their respective sources by gulp. The compiled assets are not committed to the repository, and are compiled before packaging each new release. Compiled assets should not be submitted as part of a pull request.

To compile the assets, run:

$ npm run build

This must be done after every change to the source files. To watch the source files for changes and then automatically recompile the assets, run:

$ npm start
Compiling the documentation

The Wagtail documentation is built by Sphinx. To install Sphinx and compile the documentation, run:

$ cd /path/to/wagtail
$ # Install the documentation dependencies
$ pip install -e .[docs]
$ # or if using zsh as your shell:
$ #    pip install -e '.[docs]' -U
$ # Compile the docs
$ cd docs/
$ make html

The compiled documentation will now be in docs/_build/html. Open this directory in a web browser to see it. Python comes with a module that makes it very easy to preview static files in a web browser. To start this simple server, run the following commands:

$ cd docs/_build/html/
$ python -mhttp.server 8080

Now you can open <http://localhost:8080/> in your web browser to see the compiled documentation.

Sphinx caches the built documentation to speed up subsequent compilations. Unfortunately, this cache also hides any warnings thrown by unmodified documentation source files. To clear the built HTML and start fresh, so you can see all warnings thrown when building the documentation, run:

$ cd docs/
$ make clean
$ make html

Wagtail also provides a way for documentation to be compiled automatically on each change. To do this, you can run the following command to see the changes automatically at localhost:4000:

$ cd docs/
$ make livehtml
Committing code

This section is for the core team of Wagtail, or for anyone interested in the process of getting code committed to Wagtail.

Code should only be committed after it has been reviewed by at least one other reviewer or committer, unless the change is a small documentation change or fixing a typo. If additional code changes are made after the review, it is OK to commit them without further review if they are uncontroversial and small enough that there is minimal chance of introducing new bugs.

Most code contributions will be in the form of pull requests from Github. Pull requests should not be merged from Github, apart from small documentation fixes, which can be merged with the ‘Squash and merge’ option. Instead, the code should be checked out by a committer locally, the changes examined and rebased, the CHANGELOG.txt and release notes updated, and finally the code should be pushed to the main branch. This process is covered in more detail below.

Check out the code locally

If the code has been submitted as a pull request, you should fetch the changes and check them out in your Wagtail repository. A simple way to do this is by adding the following git alias to your ~/.gitconfig (assuming upstream is wagtail/wagtail):

[alias]
    pr = !sh -c \"git fetch upstream pull/${1}/head:pr/${1} && git checkout pr/${1}\"

Now you can check out pull request number xxxx by running git pr xxxx.

Rebase on to main

Now that you have the code, you should rebase the commits on to the main branch. Rebasing is preferred over merging, as merge commits make the commit history harder to read for small changes.

You can fix up any small mistakes in the commits, such as typos and formatting, as part of the rebase. git rebase --interactive is an excellent tool for this job.

Ideally, use this as an opportunity to squash the changes to a few commits, so each commit is making a single meaningful change (and not breaking anything). If this is not possible because of the nature of the changes, it’s acceptable to either squash into a commit or leave all commits unsquashed, depending on which will be more readable in the commit history.

$ # Get the latest commits from Wagtail
$ git fetch upstream
$ git checkout main
$ git merge --ff-only upstream/main
$ # Rebase this pull request on to main
$ git checkout pr/xxxx
$ git rebase main
$ # Update main to this commit
$ git checkout main
$ git merge --ff-only pr/xxxx
Update CHANGELOG.txt and release notes

Note

This should only be done by core committers, once the changes have been reviewed and accepted.

Every significant change to Wagtail should get an entry in the CHANGELOG.txt, and the release notes for the current version.

The CHANGELOG.txt contains a short summary of each new feature, refactoring, or bug fix in each release. Each summary should be a single line. Bug fixes should be grouped together at the end of the list for each release, and be prefixed with “Fix:”. The name of the contributor should be added at the end of the summary, in brackets. For example:

* Fix: Tags added on the multiple image uploader are now saved correctly (Alex Smith)

The release notes for each version contain a more detailed description of each change. Backwards compatibility notes should also be included. Large new features or changes should get their own section, while smaller changes and bug fixes should be grouped together in their own section. See previous release notes for examples. The release notes for each version are found in docs/releases/x.x.x.rst.

If the contributor is a new person, and this is their first contribution to Wagtail, they should be added to the CONTRIBUTORS.rst list. Contributors are added in chronological order, with new contributors added to the bottom of the list. Use their preferred name. You can usually find the name of a contributor on their Github profile. If in doubt, or if their name is not on their profile, ask them how they want to be named.

If the changes to be merged are small enough to be a single commit, amend this single commit with the additions to the CHANGELOG.txt, release notes, and contributors:

$ git add CHANGELOG.txt docs/releases/x.x.x.rst CONTRIBUTORS.rst
$ git commit --amend --no-edit

If the changes do not fit in a single commit, make a new commit with the updates to the CHANGELOG.txt, release notes, and contributors. The commit message should say Release notes for #xxxx:

$ git add CHANGELOG.txt docs/releases/x.x.x.rst CONTRIBUTORS.rst
$ git commit -m 'Release notes for #xxxx'
Push to main

The changes are ready to be pushed to main now.

$ # Check that everything looks OK
$ git log upstream/main..main --oneline
$ git push --dry-run upstream main
$ # Push the commits!
$ git push upstream main
$ git branch -d pr/xxxx
When you have made a mistake

It’s ok! Everyone makes mistakes. If you realise that recent merged changes have a negative impact, create a new pull request with a revert of the changes and merge it without waiting for a review. The PR will serve as additional documentation for the changes, and will run through the CI tests.

Add commits to someone else’s pull request

Github users with write access to wagtail/wagtail (core members) can add commits to the pull request branch of the contributor.

Given that the contributor username is johndoe and his pull request branch is called foo:

$ git clone git@github.com:wagtail/wagtail.git
$ cd wagtail
$ git remote add johndoe git@github.com:johndoe/wagtail.git
$ git fetch johndoe foo
$ git checkout johndoe/foo
# Make changes
# Commit changes
$ git push johndoe HEAD:foo

Translations

Wagtail has internationalisation support so if you are fluent in a non-English language you can contribute by localising the interface.

Translation work should be submitted through Transifex.

Other contributions

We welcome contributions to all aspects of Wagtail. If you would like to improve the design of the user interface, or extend the documentation, please submit a pull request as above. If you’re not familiar with Github or pull requests, contact us directly and we’ll work something out.

Developing packages for Wagtail

If you are developing packages for Wagtail, you can add the following PyPI classifiers:

You can also find a curated list of awesome packages, articles, and other cool resources from the Wagtail community at Awesome Wagtail.

More information

UI Styleguide

Developers working on the Wagtail UI or creating new UI components may wish to test their work against our Styleguide, which is provided as the contrib module “wagtailstyleguide”.

To install the styleguide module on your site, add it to the list of INSTALLED_APPS in your settings:

INSTALLED_APPS = (
    ...
    'wagtail.contrib.styleguide',
    ...
)

This will add a ‘Styleguide’ item to the Settings menu in the admin.

At present the styleguide is static: new UI components must be added to it manually, and there are no hooks into it for other modules to use. We hope to support hooks in the future.

The styleguide doesn’t currently provide examples of all the core interface components; notably the Page, Document, Image and Snippet chooser interfaces are not currently represented.

General coding guidelines
Language

British English is preferred for user-facing text; this text should also be marked for translation (using the django.utils.translation.gettext function and {% trans %} template tag, for example). However, identifiers within code should use American English if the British or international spelling would conflict with built-in language keywords; for example, CSS code should consistently use the spelling color to avoid inconsistencies like background-color: $colour-red.

Python coding guidelines
PEP8

We ask that all Python contributions adhere to the PEP8 style guide, apart from the restriction on line length (E501) and some minor docstring-related issues. The list of PEP8 violations to ignore is in the setup.cfg file, under the [flake8] header. You might want to configure the flake8 linter in your editor/IDE to use the configuration in this file.

In addition, import lines should be sorted according to isort 5.6.4 rules. If you have installed Wagtail’s testing dependencies (pip install -e .[testing]), you can check your code by running make lint.

Django compatibility

Wagtail is written to be compatible with multiple versions of Django. Sometimes, this requires running one piece of code for recent version of Django, and another piece of code for older versions of Django. In these cases, always check which version of Django is being used by inspecting django.VERSION:

import django

if django.VERSION >= (1, 9):
    # Use new attribute
    related_field = field.rel
else:
    # Use old, deprecated attribute
    related_field = field.related

Always compare against the version using greater-or-equals (>=), so that code for newer versions of Django is first.

Do not use a try ... except when seeing if an object has an attribute or method introduced in a newer versions of Django, as it does not clearly express why the try ... except is used. An explicit check against the Django version makes the intention of the code very clear.

# Do not do this
try:
    related_field = field.rel
except AttributeError:
    related_field = field.related

If the code needs to use something that changed in a version of Django many times, consider making a function that encapsulates the check:

import django

def related_field(field):
    if django.VERSION >= (1, 9):
        return field.rel
    else:
        return field.related

If a new function has been introduced by Django that you think would be very useful for Wagtail, but is not available in older versions of Django that Wagtail supports, that function can be copied over in to Wagtail. If the user is running a new version of Django that has the function, the function should be imported from Django. Otherwise, the version bundled with Wagtail should be used. A link to the Django source code where this function was taken from should be included:

import django

if django.VERSION >= (1, 9):
    from django.core.validators import validate_unicode_slug
else:
    # Taken from https://github.com/django/django/blob/1.9/django/core/validators.py#L230
    def validate_unicode_slug(value):
        # Code left as an exercise to the reader
        pass
Tests

Wagtail has a suite of tests, which we are committed to improving and expanding. See Testing.

We run continuous integration to ensure that no commits or pull requests introduce test failures. If your contributions add functionality to Wagtail, please include the additional tests to cover it; if your contributions alter existing functionality, please update the relevant tests accordingly.

HTML coding guidelines

We use Django templates to author HTML.

Linting HTML

We use jinjalint to lint templates. If you have installed Wagtail’s testing dependencies (pip install -e .[testing]), you can check your code by running make lint.

Principles
CSS coding guidelines

Our CSS is written in Sass, using the SCSS syntax.

Compiling

The SCSS source files are compiled to CSS using the gulp build system. This requires Node.js to run. To install the libraries required for compiling the SCSS, run the following from the Wagtail repository root:

$ npm install --no-save

To compile the assets, run:

$ npm run build

Alternatively, the SCSS files can be monitored, automatically recompiling when any changes are observed, by running:

$ npm start
Linting and formatting SCSS

Wagtail uses the stylelint linter. You’ll need Node.js and npm on your development machine. Ensure project dependencies are installed by running npm install --no-save

Linting code

Run the linter from the wagtail project root:

$ npm run lint:css

The linter is configured to check your code for adherence to the guidelines below, plus a little more.

Formatting code

If you want to autofix errors, you can run that command directly with:

$ npm run lint:css -- --fix
Changing the linter configuration

The configuration for the linting rules is managed in an external repository so that it can be easily shared across other Wagtail projects or plugins. This configuration can be found at stylelint-config-wagtail.

Styleguide Reference
Spacing
  • Use soft-tabs with a four space indent. Spaces are the only way to guarantee code renders the same in any person’s environment.
  • Put spaces after : in property declarations.
  • Put spaces before { in rule declarations.
  • Put line breaks between rulesets.
  • When grouping selectors, put each selector on its own line.
  • Place closing braces of declaration blocks on a new line.
  • Each declaration should appear on its own line for more accurate error reporting.
  • Add a newline at the end of your .scss files.
  • Strip trailing whitespace from your rules.
  • Add a space after the comma, in comma-delimited property values e.g rgba()
Formatting
  • Use hex color codes #000 unless using rgba() in raw CSS (SCSS’ rgba() function is overloaded to accept hex colors as a param, e.g., rgba(#000, .5)).
  • Use // for comment blocks (instead of /* */).
  • Use single quotes for string values background: url('my/image.png')
  • Avoid specifying units for zero values, e.g., margin: 0; instead of margin: 0px;.
  • Strive to limit use of shorthand declarations to instances where you must explicitly set all the available values.
Sass imports

Leave off underscores and file extensions in includes:

// Bad
@import 'components/_widget.scss'

// Better
@import 'components/widget'
Pixels vs. ems

Use rems for font-size, because they offer absolute control over text. Additionally, unit-less line-height is preferred because it does not inherit a percentage value of its parent element, but instead is based on a multiplier of the font-size.

Specificity (classes vs. ids)

Always use classes instead of IDs in CSS code. IDs are overly specific and lead to duplication of CSS.

When styling a component, start with an element + class namespace, prefer direct descendant selectors by default, and use as little specificity as possible. Here is a good example:

<ul class="category-list">
    <li class="item">Category 1</li>
    <li class="item">Category 2</li>
    <li class="item">Category 3</li>
</ul>
.category-list { // element + class namespace

    // Direct descendant selector > for list items
    > li {
        list-style-type: disc;
    }

    // Minimal specificity for all links
    a {
        color: #f00;
    }
}
Class naming conventions

Never reference js- prefixed class names from CSS files. js- are used exclusively from JS files.

Use the SMACSS is- prefix for state rules that are shared between CSS and JS.

Misc

As a rule of thumb, avoid unnecessary nesting in SCSS. At most, aim for three levels. If you cannot help it, step back and rethink your overall strategy (either the specificity needed, or the layout of the nesting).

Examples

Here are some good examples that apply the above guidelines:

// Example of good basic formatting practices
.styleguide-format {
    color: #000;
    background-color: rgba(0, 0, 0, .5);
    border: 1px solid #0f0;
}

// Example of individual selectors getting their own lines (for error reporting)
.multiple,
.classes,
.get-new-lines {
    display: block;
}

// Avoid unnecessary shorthand declarations
.not-so-good {
    margin: 0 0 20px;
}
.good {
    margin-bottom: 20px;
}
JavaScript coding guidelines

Write JavaScript according to the Airbnb Styleguide, with some exceptions:

  • Use soft-tabs with a two space indent. Spaces are the only way to guarantee code renders the same in any person’s environment.
  • We accept snake_case in object properties, such as ajaxResponse.page_title, however camelCase or UPPER_CASE should be used everywhere else.
Linting and formatting code

Wagtail uses the ESLint linter to help check your code meets the styleguide. You’ll need node.js and npm on your development machine. Ensure project dependencies are installed by running npm install --no-save

Linting code
$ npm run lint:js

This will lint all the JS in the wagtail project, excluding vendor files and compiled libraries.

Some of the modals are generated via server-side scripts. These include template tags that upset the linter, so modal workflow JavaScript is excluded from the linter.

Formatting code
$ npm run lint:js -- --fix

This will perform safe edits to conform your JS code to the styleguide. It won’t touch the line-length, or convert quotemarks from double to single.

Run the linter after you’ve formatted the code to see what manual fixes you need to make to the codebase.

Changing the linter configuration

The configuration for the linting rules is managed in an external repository so that it can be easily shared across other Wagtail projects or plugins. This configuration can be found at eslint-config-wagtail.

Documentation guidelines
Formatting recommendations

Wagtail’s documentation uses a mixture of Markdown and reStructuredText. We encourage writing documentation in Markdown first, and only reaching for more advanced reStructuredText formatting if there is a compelling reason.

Here are formats we encourage using when writing documentation for Wagtail.

Paragraphs

It all starts here. Keep your sentences short, varied in length.

Separate text with an empty line to create a new paragraph.

Heading levels

Use heading levels to create sections, and allow users to link straight to a specific section. Start documents with an # h1, and proceed with ## h2 and further sub-sections without skipping levels.

# Heading level 1

## Heading level 2

### Heading level 3
Lists

Use bullets for unordered lists, numbers when ordered. Prefer dashes - for bullets. Nest by indenting with 4 spaces.

- Bullet 1
- Bullet 2
    - Nested bullet 2
- Bullet 3

1. Numbered list 1
2. Numbered list 2
3. Numbered list 3
Rendered output
  • Bullet 1
  • Bullet 2
    • Nested bullet 2
  • Bullet 3
  1. Numbered list 1
  2. Numbered list 2
  3. Numbered list 3
Inline styles

Use bold and italic sparingly, inline code when relevant.

Use **bold** and _italic_ sparingly, inline `code` when relevant.
Code blocks

Make sure to include the correct language code for syntax highlighting, and to format your code according to our coding guidelines. Frequently used: python, css, html, html+django, javascript, console.

```python
INSTALLED_APPS = [
    ...
    "wagtail.core",
    ...
]
```
Note and warning call-outs

Use notes and warnings sparingly, as they rely on reStructuredText syntax which is more complicated for future editors.

```eval_rst note:: Notes can provide complementary information.
```

```eval_rst warning:: Warnings can be scary.
```
Rendered output

Note

Notes can provide complementary information.

Warning

Warnings can be scary.

Images

Images are hard to keep up-to-date as documentation evolves, but can be worthwhile nonetheless. Here are guidelines when adding images:

  • All images should have meaningful alt text unless they are decorative.
  • Images are served as-is – pick the correct format, and losslessly compress all images.
  • Use absolute paths for image files so they are more portable.
![Screenshot of the workflow editing interface, with fields to change the workflow name, tasks, and assigned pages](/_static/images/screen44_workflow_edit.png)
Rendered output

_images/screen44_workflow_edit.pngScreenshot of the workflow editing interface, with fields to change the workflow name, tasks, and assigned pages

Autodoc

With its autodoc feature, Sphinx supports writing documentation in Python docstrings for subsequent integration in the project’s documentation pages. This is a very powerful feature which we highly recommend using to document Wagtail’s APIs.

```eval_rst
.. module:: wagtail.core.utils

.. autofunction:: cautious_slugify
```
Rendered output
wagtail.core.utils.cautious_slugify(value)

Convert a string to ASCII exactly as Django’s slugify does, with the exception that any non-ASCII alphanumeric characters (that cannot be ASCIIfied under Unicode normalisation) are escaped into codes like ‘u0421’ instead of being deleted entirely.

This ensures that the result of slugifying e.g. Cyrillic text will not be an empty string, and can thus be safely used as an identifier (albeit not a human-readable one).

Tables

Only use tables when needed, with the “simple” reStructuredText syntax, which is hard enough to format as it is.

```eval_rst
=============  =============
Browser        Device/OS    
=============  =============
Stock browser  Android      
IE             Desktop      
Safari         Windows      
=============  =============
```
Rendered output
Browser Device/OS
Stock browser Android
IE Desktop
Safari Windows
Tables of content

toctree and contents can be used as reStructuredText embeds.

```eval_rst
.. toctree::
    :maxdepth: 2
    :titlesonly:

    getting_started/index
    topics/index
```

```eval_rst
.. contents::
```
Version added, changed, deprecations

Sphinx offers release-metadata directives to generate this information consistently. Use as appropriate.

```eval_rst
.. versionadded:: 2.15
```

```eval_rst
.. versionchanged:: 2.15
```
Rendered output

New in version 2.15.

Changed in version 2.15.

Progressive disclosure

We can add supplementary information in documentation with the HTML <details> element. This relies on HTML syntax, which can be hard to author consistently, so keep this type of formatting to a minimum.

<details>

<summary>Supplementary information</summary>

This will be visible when expanding the content.

</details>

Example:

Supplementary information

This will be visible when expanding the content.

Formatting to avoid

There is some formatting in the documentation which is technically supported, but we recommend avoiding unless there is a clear necessity.

Call-outs

We only use note:: and warning:: call-outs. Avoid important::, topic::, and tip::. If you find one of these, please replace it with note::.

Glossary

Sphinx glossaries (.. glossary::) generate definition lists. Use plain bullet or number lists instead, or sections with headings, or a table.

Comments

Avoid documentation source comments in committed documentation.

Figure

reStructuredText figures (.. figure::) only offer very marginal improvements over vanilla images. If your figure has a caption, add it as an italicised paragraph underneath the image.

Other reStructuredText syntax and Sphinx directives

We generally want to favour Markdown over reStructuredText, to make it as simple as possible for newcomers to make documentation contributions to Wagtail. Always prefer Markdown, unless the document’s formatting highly depends on reStructuredText syntax.

If you want to use a specific Sphinx directive, consult with core contributors to see whether its usage is justified, and document its expected usage on this page.

Arbitrary HTML

While our documentation tooling offers some support for embedding arbitrary HTML, this is frowned upon. Only do so if there is a necessity, and if the formatting is unlikely to need updates.

Writing documentation

Wagtail documentation is written in four modes of information delivery. Each type of information delivery has a purpose and targets a specific audience.

We are following Daniele Procida’s Diátaxis documentation framework.

Choose a writing mode

Each page of the Wagtail documentation should be written in single mode of information delivery. Single pages with mixed modes are harder to understand. If you have documents that mix the types of information delivery, it’s best to split them up. Add links to the first section of each document to cross reference other documents on the same topic.

Writing documentation in a specific mode will help our users to understand and quickly find what they are looking for.

Tutorial

Tutorials are designed to be learning-oriented resources which guide newcomers through a specific topic. To help effective learning, tutorials should provide examples to illustrate the subjects they cover.

Tutorials may not necessarily follow best practices. They are designed to make it easier to get started. A tutorial is concrete and particular. It must be repeatable, instil confidence, and should result in success, every time, for every learner.

Do
  • Use conversational language
  • Use contractions, speak in the first person plural, be reassuring. For example: “We’re going to do this.”
  • Use pictures or concrete outputs of code to reassure people that they’re on the right track. For example: “Your new login page should look like this:” or “Your directory should now have three files”.
Don’t
  • Tell people what they’re going to learn. Instead, tell them what tasks they’re going to complete.
  • Use optionality in a tutorial. The word ‘if’ is a sign of danger! For example: “If you want to do this…” The expected actions and outcomes should be unambiguous.
  • Assume that learners have a prior understanding of the subject.

More about tutorials

How-to guide

A guide offers advice on how best to achieve a given task. How-to guides are task-oriented with a clear goal or objective.

Do
  • Name the guide well - ensure that the learner understands what exactly the guide does.
  • Focus on actions and outcomes. For example: “If you do X, Y should happen.”
  • Assume that the learner has a basic understanding of the general concepts
  • Point the reader to additional resources
Don’t
  • Use an unnecessarily strict tone of voice. For example: “You must absolutely NOT do X.”

More about how-to guides

Reference

Reference material is information-oriented. A reference is well-structured and allows the reader to find information about a specific topic. They should be short and to the point. Boring is fine! Use an imperative voice. For example: “Inherit from the Page model”.

Most references will be auto-generated based on doc-strings in the Python code.

More about reference

Explanation

Explanations are understanding-oriented. They are high-level and offer context to concepts and design decisions. There is little or no code involved in explanations, which are used to deepen the theoretical understanding of a practical draft. Explanations are used to establish connections and may require some prior knowledge of the principles being explored.

More about explanation

Reporting security issues

Note

Please report security issues only to security@wagtail.io.

Most normal bugs in Wagtail are reported as GitHub issues, but due to the sensitive nature of security issues, we ask that they not be publicly reported in this fashion.

Instead, if you believe you’ve found something in Wagtail which has security implications, please send a description of the issue via email to security@wagtail.io. Mail sent to that address reaches a subset of the core team, who can forward security issues to other core team members for broader discussion if needed.

Once you’ve submitted an issue via email, you should receive an acknowledgement from a member of the security team within 48 hours, and depending on the action to be taken, you may receive further followup emails.

If you want to send an encrypted email (optional), the public key ID for security@wagtail.io is 0x6ba1e1a86e0f8ce8, and this public key is available from most commonly-used keyservers.

Django security issues should be reported directly to the Django Project, following Django’s security policies (upon which Wagtail’s own policies are based).

Supported versions

At any given time, the Wagtail team provides official security support for several versions of Wagtail:

  • The main development branch, hosted on GitHub, which will become the next release of Wagtail, receives security support.
  • The two most recent Wagtail release series receive security support. For example, during the development cycle leading to the release of Wagtail 2.6, support will be provided for Wagtail 2.5 and Wagtail 2.4. Upon the release of Wagtail 2.6, Wagtail 2.4’s security support will end.
  • The latest long-term support release will receive security updates.

When new releases are issued for security reasons, the accompanying notice will include a list of affected versions. This list is comprised solely of supported versions of Wagtail: older versions may also be affected, but we do not investigate to determine that, and will not issue patches or new releases for those versions.

How Wagtail discloses security issues

Our process for taking a security issue from private discussion to public disclosure involves multiple steps.

There is no fixed period of time by which a confirmed security issue will be resolved as this is dependent on the issue, however it will be a priority of the Wagtail team to issue a security release as soon as possible.

The reporter of the issue will receive notification of the date on which we plan to take the issue public. On the day of disclosure, we will take the following steps:

  1. Apply the relevant patch(es) to Wagtail’s codebase. The commit messages for these patches will indicate that they are for security issues, but will not describe the issue in any detail; instead, they will warn of upcoming disclosure.
  2. Issue the relevant release(s), by placing new packages on the Python Package Index, tagging the new release(s) in Wagtail’s GitHub repository and updating Wagtail’s release notes.
  3. Post a public entry on Wagtail’s blog, describing the issue and its resolution in detail, pointing to the relevant patches and new releases, and crediting the reporter of the issue (if the reporter wishes to be publicly identified).
  4. Post a notice to the Wagtail support forum and Twitter feed (@WagtailCMS) that links to the blog post.

If a reported issue is believed to be particularly time-sensitive – due to a known exploit in the wild, for example – the time between advance notification and public disclosure may be shortened considerably.

CSV export security considerations

In various places Wagtail provides the option to export data in CSV format, and several reporters have raised the possibility of a malicious user inserting data that will be interpreted as a formula when loaded into a spreadsheet package such as Microsoft Excel. We do not consider this to be a security vulnerability in Wagtail. CSV as defined by RFC 4180 is purely a data format, and makes no assertions about how that data is to be interpreted; the decision made by certain software to treat some strings as executable code has no basis in the specification. As such, Wagtail cannot be responsible for the data it generates being loaded into a software package that interprets it insecurely, any more than it would be responsible for its data being loaded into a missile control system. This is consistent with the Google security team’s position.

Since the CSV format has no concept of formulae or macros, there is also no agreed-upon convention for escaping data to prevent it from being interpreted in that way; commonly-suggested approaches such as prefixing the field with a quote character would corrupt legitimate data (such as phone numbers beginning with ‘+’) when interpreted by software correctly following the CSV specification.

Wagtail’s data exports default to XLSX, which can be loaded into spreadsheet software without any such issues. This minimises the risk of a user handling CSV files insecurely, as they would have to explicitly choose CSV over the more familiar XLSX format.

Wagtail’s release process
Official releases

Release numbering works as follows:

  • Versions are numbered in the form A.B or A.B.C.
  • A.B is the feature release version number. Each version will be mostly backwards compatible with the previous release. Exceptions to this rule will be listed in the release notes.
  • C is the patch release version number, which is incremented for bugfix and security releases. These releases will be 100% backwards-compatible with the previous patch release. The only exception is when a security or data loss issue can’t be fixed without breaking backwards-compatibility. If this happens, the release notes will provide detailed upgrade instructions.
  • Before a new feature release, we’ll make at least one release candidate release. These are of the form A.BrcN, which means the Nth release candidate of version A.B.

In git, each Wagtail release will have a tag indicating its version number. Additionally, each release series has its own branch, called stable/A.B.x, and bugfix/security releases will be issued from those branches.

Feature release
Feature releases (A.B, A.B+1, etc.) happen every three months – see release process for details. These releases will contain new features and improvements to existing features.
Patch release

Patch releases (A.B.C, A.B.C+1, etc.) will be issued as needed, to fix bugs and/or security issues.

These releases will be 100% compatible with the associated feature release, unless this is impossible for security reasons or to prevent data loss. So the answer to “should I upgrade to the latest patch release?” will always be “yes.”

Long-term support release
Certain feature releases will be designated as long-term support (LTS) releases. These releases will get security and data loss fixes applied for a guaranteed period of time, typically six months.
Release cadence

Wagtail uses a loose form of semantic versioning. SemVer makes it easier to see at a glance how compatible releases are with each other. It also helps to anticipate when compatibility shims will be removed. It’s not a pure form of SemVer as each feature release will continue to have a few documented backwards incompatibilities where a deprecation path isn’t possible or not worth the cost.

Deprecation policy

A feature release may deprecate certain features from previous releases. If a feature is deprecated in feature release A.B, it will continue to work in the following version but raise warnings. Features deprecated in release A.B will be removed in the A.B+2 release to ensure deprecations are done over at least 2 feature releases.

So, for example, if we decided to start the deprecation of a function in Wagtail 1.4:

  • Wagtail 1.4 will contain a backwards-compatible replica of the function which will raise a RemovedInWagtail16Warning.
  • Wagtail 1.5 will still contain the backwards-compatible replica.
  • Wagtail 1.6 will remove the feature outright.

The warnings are silent by default. You can turn on display of these warnings with the python -Wd option.

Supported versions

At any moment in time, Wagtail’s developer team will support a set of releases to varying levels.

  • The current development main will get new features and bug fixes requiring non-trivial refactoring.

  • Patches applied to the main branch must also be applied to the last feature release branch, to be released in the next patch release of that feature series, when they fix critical problems:

    • Security issues.
    • Data loss bugs.
    • Crashing bugs.
    • Major functionality bugs in newly-introduced features.
    • Regressions from older versions of Wagtail.

    The rule of thumb is that fixes will be backported to the last feature release for bugs that would have prevented a release in the first place (release blockers).

  • Security fixes and data loss bugs will be applied to the current main, the last feature release branch, and any other supported long-term support release branches.

  • Documentation fixes generally will be more freely backported to the last release branch. That’s because it’s highly advantageous to have the docs for the last release be up-to-date and correct, and the risk of introducing regressions is much less of a concern.

As a concrete example, consider a moment in time halfway between the release of Wagtail 1.6 and 1.7. At this point in time:

  • Features will be added to main, to be released as Wagtail 1.7.
  • Critical bug fixes will be applied to the stable/1.6.x branch, and released as 1.6.1, 1.6.2, etc.
  • Security fixes and bug fixes for data loss issues will be applied to main and to the stable/1.6.x and stable/1.4.x (LTS) branches. They will trigger the release of 1.6.1, 1.4.8, etc.
  • Documentation fixes will be applied to main, and, if easily backported, to the latest stable branch, 1.6.x.
Supported versions of Django

Each release of Wagtail declares which versions of Django it supports.

Typically, a new Wagtail feature release supports the last long-term support version and all following versions of Django.

For example, consider a moment in time before release of Wagtail 1.5 and after the following releases:

  • Django 1.8 (LTS)
  • Django 1.9
  • Wagtail 1.4 (LTS) - Released before Django 1.10 and supports Django 1.8 and 1.9
  • Django 1.10

Wagtail 1.5 will support Django 1.8 (LTS), 1.9, 1.10. Wagtail 1.4 will still support only Django 1.8 (LTS) and 1.9.

Release process

Wagtail uses a time-based release schedule, with feature releases every three months.

After each feature release, the release manager will announce a timeline for the next feature release.

Release cycle

Each release cycle consists of three parts:

Phase one: feature proposal

The first phase of the release process will include figuring out what major features to include in the next version. This should include a good deal of preliminary work on those features – working code trumps grand design.

Phase two: development

The second part of the release schedule is the “heads-down” working period. Using the roadmap produced at the end of phase one, we’ll all work very hard to get everything on it done.

At the end of phase two, any unfinished features will be postponed until the next release.

At this point, the stable/A.B.x branch will be forked from main.

Phase three: bugfixes

The last part of a release cycle is spent fixing bugs – no new features will be accepted during this time.

Once all known blocking bugs have been addressed, a release candidate will be made available for testing. The final release will usually follow two weeks later, although this period may be extended if the further release blockers are found.

During this phase, committers will be more and more conservative with backports, to avoid introducing regressions. After the release candidate, only release blockers and documentation fixes should be backported.

Developers should avoid adding any new translatable strings after the release candidate - this ensures that translators have the full period between the release candidate and the final release to bring translations up to date. Translations will be re-imported immediately before the final release.

In parallel to this phase, main can receive new features, to be released in the A.B+1 cycle.

Bug-fix releases

After a feature release (e.g. A.B), the previous release will go into bugfix mode.

The branch for the previous feature release (e.g. stable/A.B-1.x) will include bugfixes. Critical bugs fixed on main must also be fixed on the bugfix branch; this means that commits need to cleanly separate bug fixes from feature additions. The developer who commits a fix to main will be responsible for also applying the fix to the current bugfix branch.

Release notes

Upgrading Wagtail

Version numbers

New feature releases of Wagtail are released every three months. These releases provide new features, improvements and bugfixes, and are marked by incrementing the second part of the version number (for example, 2.6 to 2.7).

Additionally, patch releases will be issued as needed, to fix bugs and security issues. These are marked by incrementing the third part of the version number (for example, 2.6 to 2.6.1). Wherever possible, these releases will remain fully backwards compatible with the corresponding feature and not introduce any breaking changes.

A feature release will usually stop receiving patch release updates when the next feature release comes out. However, selected feature releases are designated as Long Term Support (LTS) releases, and will continue to receive maintenance updates to address any security and data-loss related issues that arise. Typically, a Long Term Support release will happen once every four feature releases and receive updates for five feature releases, giving a support period of fifteen months with a three month overlap.

Also, Long Term Support releases will ensure compatibility with at least one Django Long Term Support release.

For dates of past and upcoming releases and support periods, see Release Schedule.

Deprecation policy

Sometimes it is necessary for a feature release to deprecate features from previous releases. This will be noted in the “Upgrade considerations” section of the release notes.

When a feature is deprecated, it will continue to work in that feature release and the one after it, but will raise a warning. The feature will then be removed in the subsequent feature release. For example, a feature marked as deprecated in version 1.8 will continue to work in versions 1.8 and 1.9, and be dropped in version 1.10.

Upgrade process

We recommend upgrading one feature release at a time, even if your project is several versions behind the current one. This has a number of advantages over skipping directly to the newest release:

  • If anything breaks as a result of the upgrade, you will know which version caused it, and will be able to troubleshoot accordingly;
  • Deprecation warnings shown in the console output will notify you of any code changes you need to make before upgrading to the following version;
  • Some releases make database schema changes that need to be reflected on your project by running ./manage.py makemigrations - this is liable to fail if too many schema changes happen in one go.

Before upgrading to a new feature release:

  • Check your project’s console output for any deprecation warnings, and fix them where necessary;
  • Check the new version’s release notes, and the Compatible Django / Python versions table below, for any dependencies that need upgrading first;
  • Make a backup of your database.

To upgrade:

  • Update the wagtail line in your project’s requirements.txt file to specify the latest patch release of the version you wish to install. For example, to upgrade to version 1.8.x, the line should read:

    wagtail>=1.8,<1.9
    
  • Run:

    pip install -r requirements.txt
    ./manage.py makemigrations
    ./manage.py migrate
    
  • Make any necessary code changes as directed in the “Upgrade considerations” section of the release notes.

  • Test that your project is working as expected.

Remember that the JavaScript and CSS files used in the Wagtail admin may have changed between releases - if you encounter erratic behaviour on upgrading, ensure that you have cleared your browser cache. When deploying the upgrade to a production server, be sure to run ./manage.py collectstatic to make the updated static files available to the web server. In production, we recommend enabling ManifestStaticFilesStorage in the STATICFILES_STORAGE setting - this ensures that different versions of files are assigned distinct URLs.

Compatible Django / Python versions

New feature releases frequently add support for newer versions of Django and Python, and drop support for older ones. We recommend always carrying out upgrades to Django and Python as a separate step from upgrading Wagtail.

The compatible versions of Django and Python for each Wagtail release are:

Wagtail release Compatible Django versions Compatible Python versions
0.1 1.6 2.7
0.2 1.6 2.7
0.3 1.6 2.6, 2.7
0.4 1.6 2.6, 2.7, 3.2, 3.3, 3.4
0.5 1.6 2.6, 2.7, 3.2, 3.3, 3.4
0.6 1.6, 1.7 2.6, 2.7, 3.2, 3.3, 3.4
0.7 1.6, 1.7 2.6, 2.7, 3.2, 3.3, 3.4
0.8 LTS 1.6, 1.7 2.6, 2.7, 3.2, 3.3, 3.4
1.0 1.7, 1.8 2.7, 3.3, 3.4
1.1 1.7, 1.8 2.7, 3.3, 3.4
1.2 1.7, 1.8 2.7, 3.3, 3.4, 3.5
1.3 1.7, 1.8, 1.9 2.7, 3.3, 3.4, 3.5
1.4 LTS 1.8, 1.9 2.7, 3.3, 3.4, 3.5
1.5 1.8, 1.9 2.7, 3.3, 3.4, 3.5
1.6 1.8, 1.9, 1.10 2.7, 3.3, 3.4, 3.5
1.7 1.8, 1.9, 1.10 2.7, 3.3, 3.4, 3.5
1.8 LTS 1.8, 1.9, 1.10 2.7, 3.3, 3.4, 3.5
1.9 1.8, 1.9, 1.10 2.7, 3.3, 3.4, 3.5
1.10 1.8, 1.10, 1.11 2.7, 3.4, 3.5, 3.6
1.11 1.8, 1.10, 1.11 2.7, 3.4, 3.5, 3.6
1.12 LTS 1.8, 1.10, 1.11 2.7, 3.4, 3.5, 3.6
1.13 LTS 1.8, 1.10, 1.11 2.7, 3.4, 3.5, 3.6
2.0 1.11, 2.0 3.4, 3.5, 3.6
2.1 1.11, 2.0 3.4, 3.5, 3.6
2.2 1.11, 2.0 3.4, 3.5, 3.6
2.3 LTS 1.11, 2.0, 2.1 3.4, 3.5, 3.6
2.4 2.0, 2.1 3.4, 3.5, 3.6, 3.7
2.5 2.0, 2.1, 2.2 3.4, 3.5, 3.6, 3.7
2.6 2.0, 2.1, 2.2 3.5, 3.6, 3.7
2.7 LTS 2.0, 2.1, 2.2 3.5, 3.6, 3.7, 3.8
2.8 2.1, 2.2, 3.0 3.5, 3.6, 3.7, 3.8
2.9 2.2, 3.0 3.5, 3.6, 3.7, 3.8
2.10 2.2, 3.0, 3.1 3.6, 3.7, 3.8
2.11 LTS 2.2, 3.0, 3.1 3.6, 3.7, 3.8
2.12 2.2, 3.0, 3.1 3.6, 3.7, 3.8, 3.9
2.13 2.2, 3.0, 3.1, 3.2 3.6, 3.7, 3.8, 3.9
2.14 3.0, 3.1, 3.2 3.6, 3.7, 3.8, 3.9
2.15 LTS 3.0, 3.1, 3.2 3.6, 3.7, 3.8, 3.9, 3.10

Wagtail 2.15.2 release notes

What’s new
CVE-2022-21683: Comment reply notifications sent to incorrect users

This release addresses an information disclosure issue in Wagtail’s commenting feature. Previously, when notifications for new replies in comment threads were sent, they were sent to all users who had replied or commented anywhere on the site, rather than only in the relevant threads. This meant that a user could listen in to new comment replies on pages they did not have editing access to, as long as they had left a comment or reply somewhere on the site.

Many thanks to Ihor Marhitych for reporting this issue. For further details, please see the CVE-2022-21683 security advisory.

Bug fixes
  • Fixed transform operations in Filter.run() when image has been re-oriented (Justin Michalicek)
  • Remove extraneous header action buttons when creating or editing workflows and tasks (Matt Westcott)
  • Ensure that bulk publish actions pick up the latest draft revision (Matt Westcott)
  • Ensure the checkbox_aria_label is used correctly in the Bulk Actions checkboxes (Vu Pham)
  • Prevent error on MySQL search backend when searching three or more terms (Aldán Creo)
  • Allow wagtail.search app migrations to complete on versions of SQLite without full-text search support (Matt Westcott)
  • Update Pillow dependency to allow 9.x (Matt Westcott)
Upgrade considerations
Support for SQLite without full-text search support

This release restores the ability to run Wagtail against installations of SQLite that do not include the fts5 extension for full-text search support. On these installations, the fallback search backend (without support for full-text queries) will be used, and the database table for storing indexed content will not be created.

If SQLite is subsequently upgraded to a version with fts5 support, existing databases will still be missing this table, and full-text search will continue to be unavailable until it is created. To correct this, first make a backup copy of the database (since rolling back the migration could potentially reverse other schema changes), then run:

./manage.py migrate wagtailsearch 0005
./manage.py migrate
./manage.py update_index

Additionally, since the database search backend now needs to run a query on initialisation to check for the presence of this table, calling wagtail.search.backends.get_search_backend during application startup may now fail with a “Models aren’t loaded yet” error. Code that does this should be updated to only call get_search_backend at the point when a search query is to be performed.

Wagtail 2.15.1 release notes

What’s new
Bug fixes
  • Fix syntax when logging image rendition generation (Jake Howard)
  • Increase version range for django-filter dependency (Serafeim Papastefanos)
  • Prevent bulk action checkboxes from displaying on page reports and other non-explorer listings (Matt Westcott)
  • Fix errors on publishing pages via bulk actions (Matt Westcott)
  • Fix csrf_token issue when using the Approve or Unlock buttons on pages on the Wagtail admin home (Matt Westcott)

Wagtail 2.15 release notes

Wagtail 2.15 is designated a Long Term Support (LTS) release. Long Term Support releases will continue to receive maintenance updates as necessary to address security and data-loss related issues, up until the next LTS release (typically a period of 12 months).

What’s new
New database search backend

Wagtail has a new search backend that uses the full-text search features of the database in use. It supports SQLite, PostgreSQL, MySQL, and MariaDB.

This new search backend replaces both the existing generic database and PostgreSQL-specific search backends.

To switch to this new backend, see the upgrade considerations below.

This feature was developed by Aldán Creo as part of Google Summer of Code.

Bulk actions

Bulk actions are now available for Page, User, Image and Document models in the Wagtail Admin, allowing users to perform actions like publication or deletion on groups of objects at once.

This feature was developed by Shohan Dutta Roy, mentored by Dan Braghis, Jacob Topp-Mugglestone, and Storm Heg.

Audit logging for all models

Audit logging has been extended so that all models (not just pages) can have actions logged against them. The Site History report now includes logs from all object types, and snippets and ModelAdmin provide a history view showing previous edits to an object. This feature was developed by Matt Westcott, and sponsored by The Motley Fool.

Collection management permissions

Permission for managing collections can now be assigned to individual subtrees of the collection hierarchy, allowing sub-teams within a site to control how their images and documents are organised. For more information, see Collection management permissions. This feature was developed by Cynthia Kiser.

Typed table block

A new TypedTableBlock block type is available for StreamField, allowing authors to create tables where the cell values are any StreamField block type, including rich text. For more information, see Typed table block. This feature was developed by Matt Westcott, Coen van der Kamp and Scott Cranfill, and sponsored by YouGov.

Windows high contrast support

As part of a broad push to improve the accessibility of the administration interface, Wagtail now supports Windows high contrast mode. There are remaining known issues but we are confident Wagtail is now much more usable for people relying on this assistive technology.

Individual fixes were implemented by a large number of first-time and seasoned contributors:

  • Comments icon now matches link colour (Dmitrii Faiazov, LB (Ben Johnston))
  • Sidebar logo is now visible in high contrast mode (Dmitrii Faiazov, LB (Ben Johnston))
  • Icons in links and buttons now use the appropriate “active control” color (Dmitrii Faiazov, LB (Ben Johnston))
  • Comments dropdown now has a border (Shariq Jamil, LB (Ben Johnston))
  • Make StreamField block chooser menu buttons appear as buttons (Dmitrii Faiazov, LB (Ben Johnston))
  • Add a separator to identify the search forms (Dmitrii Faiazov, LB (Ben Johnston))
  • Update tab styles so the active tab can be identified (Dmitrii Faiazov, LB (Ben Johnston))
  • Make hamburger menu a button for tab and high contrast accessibility (Amy Chan, Dan Braghis)
  • Tag fields now have the correct background (Desai Akshata, LB (Ben Johnston))
  • Added sidebar vertical seperation with main content (Onkar Apte, LB (Ben Johnston))
  • Added vertical separation between field panels (Chakita Muttaraju, LB (Ben Johnston))
  • Switch widgets on/off states are now visually distinguishable (Sakshi Uppoor, Thibaud Colas)
  • Checkbox widgets on/off states are now visually distinguishable (Thibaud Colas, Jacob Topp-Mugglestone, LB (Ben Johnston))

Particular thanks to LB, who reviewed almost all of those contributions, and Kyle Bayliss, who did the initial audit to identify High contrast mode issues.

Other features
  • Add the ability for the page chooser to convert external urls that match a page to internal links, see WAGTAILADMIN_EXTERNAL_LINK_CONVERSION (Jacob Topp-Mugglestone. Sponsored by The Motley Fool)
  • Added “Extending Wagtail” section to documentation (Matt Westcott)
  • Introduced template components, a standard mechanism for renderable objects in the admin (Matt Westcott)
  • Support min_num / max_num options on ListBlock (Matt Westcott)
  • Implemented automatic tree synchronisation for contrib.simple_translation (Mitchel Cabuloy)
  • Added a background_position_style property to renditions. This can be used to crop images using its focal point in the browser. See Setting the background-position inline style based on the focal point (Karl Hobley)
  • Added a distinct wagtail.copy_for_translation log action type (Karl Hobley)
  • Add a debug logger around image rendition generation (Jake Howard)
  • Convert Documents and Images to class based views for easier overriding (Matt Westcott)
  • Isolate admin URLs for Documents and Images search listing results with the name ‘listing_results’ (Matt Westcott)
  • Removed request.is_ajax() usage in Documents, Image and Snippet views (Matt Westcott)
  • Simplify generic admin view templates plus ensure page_title and page_subtitle are used consistently (Matt Westcott)
  • Extend support for collapsing edit panels from just MultiFieldPanels to all kinds of panels (Fabien Le Frapper, Robbie Mackay)
  • Add object count to header within modeladmin listing view (Jonathan “Yoni” Knoll)
  • Add ability to return HTML in multiple image upload errors (Gordon Pendleton)
  • Upgrade internal JS tooling; Node v14 plus other smaller package upgrades (LB (Ben Johnston))
  • Add support for non_field_errors rendering in Workflow action modal (LB (Ben Johnston))
  • Support calling get_image_model and get_document_model at import time (Matt Westcott)
  • When copying a page, default the ‘Publish copied page’ field to false (Justin Slay)
  • Open Preview and Live page links in the same tab, except where it would interrupt editing a Page (Sagar Agarwal)
  • Added ExcelDateFormatter to wagtail.admin.views.mixins so that dates in Excel exports will appear in the locale’s SHORT_DATETIME_FORMAT (Andrew Stone)
  • Add TIDAL support to the list of oEmbed providers (Wout De Puysseleir)
  • Add label_format attribute to customise the label shown for a collapsed StructBlock (Matt Westcott)
  • User Group permissions editing in the admin will now show all custom object permissions in one row instead of a separate table (Kamil Marut)
  • Create ImageFileMixin to extract shared file handling methods from AbstractImage and AbstractRendition (Fabien Le Frapper)
  • Add before_delete_page and register_permissions examples to Hooks documentation (Jane Liu, Daniel Fairhead)
  • Add clarity to modeladmin template override behaviour in the documentation (Joe Howard, Dan Swain)
  • Add section about CSV exports to security documentation (Matt Westcott)
  • Add initial support for Django 4.0 deprecations (Matt Westcott, Jochen Wersdörfer)
  • Translations in nl_NL are moved to the nl po files. nl_NL translation files are deleted. Projects that use LANGUAGE_CODE = 'nl-nl' will automatically fallback to nl. (Loïc Teixeira, Coen van der Kamp)
  • Add documentation for how to redirect to a separate page on Form builder submissions using RoutablePageMixin (Nick Smith)
  • Refactored index listing views and made column sort-by headings more consistent (Matt Westcott)
  • The title field on Image and Document uploads will now default to the filename without the file extension and this behaviour can be customised (LB Johnston)
  • Add support for Python 3.10 (Matt Westcott)
  • Introduce, autocomplete, a separate method which performs partial matching on specific autocomplete fields. This is useful for suggesting pages to the user in real-time as they type their query. (Karl Hobley, Matt Westcott)
  • Use SVG icons in modeladmin headers and StreamField buttons/headers (Jérôme Lebleu)
  • Add tags to existing Django registered checks (LB Johnston)
  • Upgrade admin frontend JS libraries jQuery to 3.6.0 (Fabien Le Frapper)
  • Added request.preview_mode so that template rendering can vary based on preview mode (Andy Chosak)
Bug fixes
  • Delete button is now correct colour on snippets and modeladmin listings (Brandon Murch)
  • Ensure that StreamBlock / ListBlock-level validation errors are counted towards error counts (Matt Westcott)
  • InlinePanel add button is now keyboard navigatable (Jesse Menn)
  • Remove redundant ‘clear’ button from site root page chooser (Matt Westcott)
  • Make ModelAdmin IndexView keyboard-navigable (Saptak Sengupta)
  • Prevent error on refreshing page previews when multiple preview tabs are open (Alex Tomkins)
  • Menu sidebar hamburger icon on smaller viewports now correctly indicates it is a button to screen readers and can be accessed via keyboard (Amy Chan, Dan Braghis)
  • blocks.MultipleChoiceBlock, forms.CheckboxSelectMultiple and ArrayField checkboxes will now stack instead of display inline to align with all other checkboxes fields (Seb Brown)
  • Screen readers can now access login screen field labels (Amy Chan)
  • Admin breadcrumbs home icon now shows for users with access to a subtree only (Stefan Hammer)
  • Add handling of invalid inline styles submitted to RichText so ConfigException is not thrown (Alex Tomkins)
  • Ensure comment notifications dropdown handles longer translations without overflowing content (Krzysztof Jeziorny)
  • Set default_auto_field in postgres_search AppConfig (Nick Moreton)
  • Ensure admin tab JS events are handled on page load (Andrew Stone)
  • EmailNotificationMixin and send_notification should only send emails to active users (Bryan Williams)
  • Disable Task confirmation now shows the correct value for quantity of tasks in progress (LB Johnston)
  • Page history now works correctly when it contains changes by a deleted user (Dan Braghis)
  • Add gettext_lazy to ModelAdmin built in view titles so that language settings are correctly used (Matt Westcott)
  • Tabbing and keyboard interaction on the Wagtail userbar now aligns with ARIA best practices (Storm Heg)
  • Add full support for custom edit_handler usage by adding missing bind_to call to PreviewOnEdit view (Stefan Hammer)
  • Only show active (not disabled) tasks in the workflow task chooser (LB Johnston)
  • CSS build scripts now output to the correct directory paths on Windows (Vince Salvino)
  • Capture log output from style fallback to avoid noise in unit tests (Matt Westcott)
  • Nested InlinePanel usage no longer fails to save when creating two or more items (Indresh P, Rinish Sam, Anirudh V S)
  • Changed relation name used for admin commenting from comments to wagtail_admin_comments to avoid conflicts with third-party commenting apps (Matt Westcott)
  • CSS variables are now correctly used for the filtering menu in modeladmin (Noah H)
  • Panel heading attribute is no longer ignored when nested inside a MultiFieldPanel (Jérôme Lebleu)
Upgrade considerations
Database search backends replaced

The following search backends (configured in WAGTAILSEARCH_BACKENDS) have been deprecated:

  • wagtail.search.backends.db (the default if WAGTAILSEARCH_BACKENDS is not specified)
  • wagtail.contrib.postgres_search.backend

Both of these backends have now been replaced by wagtail.search.backends.database. This new backend supports all of the features of the PostgreSQL backend, and also supports other databases. It will be made the default backend in Wagtail 2.17. To enable the new backend, edit (or add) the WAGTAILSEARCH_BACKENDS setting as follows:

WAGTAILSEARCH_BACKENDS = {
    'default': {
        'BACKEND': 'wagtail.search.backends.database',
    }
}

Also remove 'wagtail.contrib.postgres_search' from INSTALLED_APPS if this was previously set.

After switching to this backend, you will need to run the manage.py update_index management command to populate the search index (see update_index).

If you have used the PostgreSQL-specific SEARCH_CONFIG, this will continue to work as before with the new backend. For example:

WAGTAILSEARCH_BACKENDS = {
    'default': {
        'BACKEND': 'wagtail.search.backends.database',
        'SEARCH_CONFIG': 'english',
    }
}

However, as a PostgreSQL specific feature, this will be ignored when using a different database.

Admin homepage panels, summary items and action menu items now use components

Several Wagtail hooks provide a mechanism for passing Python objects to be rendered as HTML inside admin views, and the APIs for these objects have been updated to adopt a common template components pattern. The affected objects are:

User code that creates these objects should be updated to follow the component API. This will typically require the following changes:

  • Homepage panels should be made subclasses of wagtail.admin.ui.components.Component, and the render(self) method should be changed to render_html(self, parent_context). (Alternatively, rather than defining render_html, it may be more convenient to reimplement it with a template, as per Creating components.)
  • Summary item classes can continue to inherit from wagtail.admin.site_summary.SummaryItem (which is now a subclass of Component) as before, but:
    • Any template attribute should be changed to template_name;
    • Any place where the render(self) method is overridden should be changed to render_html(self, parent_context);
    • Any place where the get_context(self) method is overridden should be changed to get_context_data(self, parent_context).
  • Action menu items for pages and snippets can continue to inherit from wagtail.admin.action_menu.ActionMenuItem and wagtail.snippets.action_menu.ActionMenuItem respectively - these are now subclasses of Component - but:
    • Any template attribute should be changed to template_name;
    • Any get_context method should be renamed to get_context_data;
    • The get_url, is_shown, get_context_data and render_html methods no longer accept a request parameter. The request object is available in the context dictionary as context['request'].
Passing callables as messages in register_log_actions is deprecated

When defining new action types for audit logging with the register_log_actions hook, it was previously possible to pass a callable as the message. This is now deprecated - to define a message that depends on the log entry’s data, you should now create a subclass of wagtail.core.log_actions.LogFormatter. For example:

from django.utils.translation import gettext_lazy as _
from wagtail.core import hooks

@hooks.register('register_log_actions')
def additional_log_actions(actions):

    def greeting_message(data):
        return _('Hello %(audience)s') % {
            'audience': data['audience'],
        }
    actions.register_action('wagtail_package.greet_audience', _('Greet audience'), greeting_message)

should now be rewritten as:

from django.utils.translation import gettext_lazy as _
from wagtail.core import hooks
from wagtail.core.log_actions import LogFormatter

@hooks.register('register_log_actions')
def additional_log_actions(actions):

    @actions.register_action('wagtail_package.greet_audience')
    class GreetingActionFormatter(LogFormatter):
        label = _('Greet audience')

        def format_message(self, log_entry):
            return _('Hello %(audience)s') % {
                'audience': log_entry.data['audience'],
            }
PageLogEntry.objects.log_action is deprecated

Audit logging is now supported on all model types, not just pages, and so the PageLogEntry.objects.log_action method for logging actions performed on pages is deprecated in favour of the general-purpose log function. Code that calls PageLogEntry.objects.log_action should now import the log function from wagtail.core.log_actions and call this instead (all arguments are unchanged).

Additionally, for logging actions on non-Page models, it is generally no longer necessary to subclass BaseLogEntry; see Audit log for further details.

Removed support for Internet Explorer (IE11)

If this affects you or your organisation, consider which alternative browsers you may be able to use. Wagtail is fully compatible with Microsoft Edge, Microsoft’s replacement for Internet Explorer. You may consider using its IE mode to keep access to IE11-only sites, while other sites and apps like Wagtail can leverage modern browser capabilities.

search() method partial match future deprecation

Before the autocomplete() method was introduced, the search method also did partial matching. This behaviour is will be deprecated in a future release and you should either switch to the new autocomplete() method or pass partial_match=False into the search method to opt-in to the new behaviour. The partial matching in search() will be completely removed in a future release. See: Searching QuerySets

Change of relation name for admin comments

The related_name of the relation linking the Page and User models to admin comments has been changed from comments to wagtail_admin_comments, to avoid conflicts with third-party apps that implement commenting. If you have any code that references the comments relation (including fixture files), this should be updated to refer to wagtail_admin_comments instead. If this is not feasible, the previous behaviour can be restored by adding WAGTAIL_COMMENTS_RELATION_NAME = 'comments' to your project’s settings.

Reusable library code that needs to preserve backwards compatibility with previous Wagtail versions can find out the relation name as follows:

try:
    from wagtail.core.models import COMMENTS_RELATION_NAME
except ImportError:
    COMMENTS_RELATION_NAME = 'comments'
Bulk action views not covered by existing hooks

Bulk action views provide alternative routes to actions like publishing or copying a page. If your site relies on hooks like before_publish_page or before_copy_page to perform checks, or add additional functionality, those hooks will not be called on the corresponding bulk action views. If you want to add this to the bulk action views as well, use the new bulk action hooks: before_bulk_action and after_bulk_action.

Wagtail 2.14.2 release notes

What’s new
Bug fixes
  • Allow relation name used for admin commenting to be overridden to avoid conflicts with third-party commenting apps (Matt Westcott)
  • Corrected badly-formed format strings in translations (Matt Westcott)
  • Page history now works correctly when it contains changes by a deleted user (Dan Braghis)
Upgrade considerations
Customising relation name for admin comments

The admin commenting feature introduced in Wagtail 2.13 added a relation named comments to the Page and User models. This can cause conflicts with third-party apps that implement commenting functionality, and so this will be renamed to wagtail_admin_comments in Wagtail 2.15. Developers who are affected by this issue, and have thus been unable to upgrade to Wagtail 2.13 or above, can now “opt in” to the Wagtail 2.15 behaviour by adding the following line to their project settings:

WAGTAIL_COMMENTS_RELATION_NAME = 'wagtail_admin_comments'

This will allow third-party commenting apps to work in Wagtail 2.14.2 alongside Wagtail’s admin commenting functionality.

Reusable library code that needs to preserve backwards compatibility with previous Wagtail versions can find out the relation name as follows:

try:
    from wagtail.core.models import COMMENTS_RELATION_NAME
except ImportError:
    COMMENTS_RELATION_NAME = 'comments'

Wagtail 2.14.1 release notes

What’s new
Bug fixes
  • Prevent failure on Twitter embeds and others which return cache_age as a string (Matt Westcott)
  • Fix Uncaught ReferenceError when editing links in Hallo (Cynthia Kiser)

Wagtail 2.14 release notes

What’s new
New features
  • Added ancestor_of API filter. See Filtering by tree position (pages only). (Jaap Roes)
  • Added support for customising group management views. See Customising group edit/create views. (Jan Seifert)
  • Added full_url property to image renditions (Shreyash Srivastava)
  • Added locale selector when choosing translatable snippets (Karl Hobley)
  • Added WAGTAIL_WORKFLOW_ENABLED setting for enabling / disabling moderation workflows globally (Matt Westcott)
  • Allow specifying max_width and max_height on EmbedBlock (Petr Dlouhý)
  • Add warning when StreamField is used without a StreamFieldPanel (Naomi Morduch Toubman)
  • Added keyboard and screen reader support to Wagtail user bar (LB Johnston, Storm Heg)
  • Added instructions on copying and aliasing pages to the editor’s guide in documentation (Vlad Podgurschi)
  • Add Google Data Studio to the list of oEmbed providers (Petr Dlouhý)
  • Allow ListBlock to raise validation errors that are not attached to an individual child block (Matt Westcott)
  • Use DATETIME_FORMAT for localization in templates (Andrew Stone)
  • Added documentation on multi site, multi instance and multi tenancy setups (Coen Van Der Kamp)
  • Updated Facebook / Instagram oEmbed endpoints to v11.0 (Thomas Kremmel)
  • Performance improvements for admin listing pages (Jake Howard, Dan Braghis, Tom Usher)
Bug fixes
  • Invalid filter values for foreign key fields in the API now give an error instead of crashing (Tidjani Dia)
  • Ordering specified in the construct_explorer_page_queryset hook is now taken into account again by the page explorer API (Andre Fonseca)
  • Deleting a page from its listing view no longer results in a 404 error (Tidjani Dia)
  • The Wagtail admin urls will now respect the APPEND_SLASH setting (Tidjani Dia)
  • Prevent “Forgotten password” link from overlapping with field on mobile devices (Helen Chapman)
  • Snippet admin urls are now namespaced to avoid ambiguity with the primary key component of the url (Matt Westcott)
  • Prevent error on copying pages with ClusterTaggableManager relations and multi-level inheritance (Chris Pollard)
  • Prevent failure on root page when registering the Page model with ModelAdmin (Jake Howard)
  • Prevent error when filtering page search results with a malformed content_type (Chris Pollard)
  • Prevent multiple submissions of “update” form when uploading images / documents (Mike Brown)
  • Ensure HTML title is populated on project template 404 page (Matt Westcott)
  • Respect cache_age parameters on embeds (Gordon Pendleton)
  • Page comparison view now reflects request-level customisations to edit handlers (Matt Westcott)
  • Add block.super to remaining extra_js & extra_css blocks (Andrew Stone)
  • Ensure that editor and features arguments on RichTextField are preserved by clone() (Daniel Fairhead)
  • Rename ‘spin’ CSS animation to avoid clashes with other libraries (Kevin Gutiérrez)
  • Prevent crash when copying a page from a section where the user has no publish permission (Karl Hobley)
  • Ensure that rich text conversion correctly handles images / embeds inside links or inline styles (Matt Westcott)
Upgrade considerations
Removed support for Django 2.2

Django 2.2 is no longer supported as of this release; please upgrade to Django 3.0 or above before upgrading Wagtail.

User bar with keyboard and screen reader support

The Wagtail user bar (“edit bird”) widget now supports keyboard and screen reader navigation. To make the most of this, we now recommend placing the widget near the top of the page <body>, so users can reach it without having to go through the whole page. See Wagtail User Bar for more information.

For implementers of custom user bar menu items, we also now require the addition of role="menuitem" on the a element to provide the correct semantics. See construct_wagtail_userbar for more information.

Deprecation of Facebook / Instagram oEmbed product

As of June 2021, the procedure for setting up a Facebook app to handle Facebook / Instagram embedded content (see Facebook and Instagram) has changed. It is now necessary to activate the “oEmbed Read” feature on the app, and submit it to Facebook for review. Apps that activated the oEmbed Product before June 8, 2021 must be migrated to oEmbed Read by September 7, 2021 to continue working. No change to the Wagtail code or configuration is required.

Wagtail 2.13.5 release notes

What’s new
Bug fixes
  • Allow relation name used for admin commenting to be overridden to avoid conflicts with third-party commenting apps (Matt Westcott)
  • Corrected badly-formed format strings in translations (Matt Westcott)
  • Correctly handle non-numeric user IDs for deleted users in reports (Dan Braghis)
Upgrade considerations
Customising relation name for admin comments

The admin commenting feature introduced in Wagtail 2.13 added a relation named comments to the Page and User models. This can cause conflicts with third-party apps that implement commenting functionality, and so this will be renamed to wagtail_admin_comments in Wagtail 2.15. Developers who are affected by this issue, and have thus been unable to upgrade to Wagtail 2.13 or above, can now “opt in” to the Wagtail 2.15 behaviour by adding the following line to their project settings:

WAGTAIL_COMMENTS_RELATION_NAME = 'wagtail_admin_comments'

This will allow third-party commenting apps to work in Wagtail 2.13.5 alongside Wagtail’s admin commenting functionality.

Reusable library code that needs to preserve backwards compatibility with previous Wagtail versions can find out the relation name as follows:

try:
    from wagtail.core.models import COMMENTS_RELATION_NAME
except ImportError:
    COMMENTS_RELATION_NAME = 'comments'

Wagtail 2.13.4 release notes

What’s new
Bug fixes
  • Prevent embed thumbnail_url migration from failing on URLs longer than 200 characters (Matt Westcott)

Wagtail 2.13.3 release notes

What’s new
Bug fixes
  • Prevent error when using rich text on views where commenting is unavailable (Jacob Topp-Mugglestone)
  • Include form media on account settings page (Matt Westcott)
  • Avoid error when rendering validation error messages on ListBlock children (Matt Westcott)
  • Prevent comments CSS from overriding admin UI colour customisations (Matt Westcott)
  • Avoid validation error when editing rich text content preceding a comment (Jacob Topp-Mugglestone)

Wagtail 2.13.2 release notes

What’s new
CVE-2021-32681: Improper escaping of HTML (‘Cross-site Scripting’) in Wagtail StreamField blocks

This release addresses a cross-site scripting (XSS) vulnerability in StreamField. When the {% include_block %} template tag is used to output the value of a plain-text StreamField block (CharBlock, TextBlock or a similar user-defined block derived from FieldBlock), and that block does not specify a template for rendering, the tag output is not properly escaped as HTML. This could allow users to insert arbitrary HTML or scripting. This vulnerability is only exploitable by users with the ability to author StreamField content (i.e. users with ‘editor’ access to the Wagtail admin).

Site implementors who wish to retain the existing behaviour of allowing editors to insert HTML content in these blocks (and are willing to accept the risk of untrusted editors inserting arbitrary code) may disable the escaping by surrounding the relevant {% include_block %} tag in {% autoescape off %}...{% endautoescape %}.

Many thanks to Karen Tracey for reporting this issue. For further details, please see the CVE-2021-32681 security advisory.

Wagtail 2.13.1 release notes

What’s new
Bug fixes
  • Ensure comment notification checkbox is fully hidden when commenting is disabled (Karl Hobley)
  • Prevent commenting from failing for user models with UUID primary keys (Jacob Topp-Mugglestone)
  • Fix incorrect link in comment notification HTML email (Matt Westcott)

Wagtail 2.13 release notes

What’s new
StreamField performance and functionality updates

The StreamField editing interface has been rebuilt on a client-side rendering model, powered by the telepath library. This provides better performance, increased customisability and UI enhancements including the ability to duplicate blocks. For further background, see the blog post Telepath - the next evolution of StreamField.

This feature was developed by Matt Westcott and Karl Hobley and sponsored by YouGov, inspired by earlier work on react-streamfield completed by Bertrand Bordage through the Wagtail’s First Hatch crowdfunder.

Simple translation module

In Wagtail 2.12 we shipped the new localisation support, but in order to translate content an external library had to be used, such as wagtail-localize.

In this release, a new contrib app has been introduced called simple_translation. This allows you to create copies of pages and translatable snippets in other languages and translate them as regular Wagtail pages. It does not include any more advanced translation features such as using external services, PO files, or an interface that helps keep translations in sync with the original language.

This module was contributed by Coen van der Kamp.

Commenting

The page editor now supports leaving comments on fields and StreamField blocks, by entering commenting mode (using the button in the top right of the editor). Inline comments are available in rich text fields using the Draftail editor.

This feature was developed by Jacob Topp-Mugglestone, Karl Hobley and Simon Evans and sponsored by The Motley Fool.

Combined account settings

The “Account settings” section available at the bottom of the admin menu has been updated to include all settings on a single form. This feature was developed by Karl Hobley.

Redirect export

The redirects module now includes support for exporting the list of redirects to XLSX or CSV. This feature was developed by Martin Sandström.

Sphinx Wagtail Theme

The documentation now uses our brand new Sphinx Wagtail Theme, with a search feature powered by Algolia DocSearch.

Feedback and feature requests for the theme may be reported to the sphinx_wagtail_theme issue list, and to Wagtail’s issues for the search.

Thank you to Storm Heg, Tibor Leupold, Thibaud Colas, Coen van der Kamp, Olly Willans, Naomi Morduch Toubman, Scott Cranfill, and Andy Chosak for making this happen!

Django 3.2 support

Django 3.2 is formally supported in this release. Note that Wagtail 2.13 will be the last release to support Django 2.2.

Other features
  • Support passing min_num, max_num and block_counts arguments directly to StreamField (Haydn Greatnews, Matt Westcott)
  • Add the option to set rich text images as decorative, without alt text (Helen Chapman, Thibaud Colas)
  • Add support for __year filter in Elasticsearch queries (Seb Brown)
  • Add PageQuerySet.defer_streamfields() (Andy Babic)
  • Utilize PageQuerySet.defer_streamfields() to improve efficiency in a few key places (Andy Babic)
  • Support passing multiple models as arguments to type(), not_type(), exact_type() and not_exact_type() methods on PageQuerySet (Andy Babic)
  • Update default attribute copying behaviour of Page.get_specific() and added the copy_attrs_exclude option (Andy Babic)
  • Update PageQueryset.specific(defer=True) to only perform a single database query (Andy Babic)
  • Switched register_setting, register_settings_menu_item to use SVG icons (Thibaud Colas)
  • Add support to SVG icons for SearchArea subclasses in register_admin_search_area (Thibaud Colas)
  • Add specialized wagtail.reorder page audit log action. This was previously covered by the wagtail.move action (Storm Heg)
  • get_settings template tag now supports specifying the variable name with {% get_settings as var %} (Samir Shah)
  • Reinstate submitter’s name on moderation notification email (Matt Westcott)
  • Add a new switch input widget as an alternative to checkboxes (Karl Hobley)
  • Allow {% pageurl %} fallback to be a direct URL or an object with a get_absolute_url method (Andy Babic)
  • Support slicing on StreamField / StreamBlock values (Matt Westcott)
  • Switch Wagtail choosers to use SVG icons instead of font icon (Storm Heg)
  • Save revision when restart workflow (Ihor Marhitych)
  • Add a visible indicator of unsaved changes to the page editor (Jacob Topp-Mugglestone)
Bug fixes
  • StreamField required status is now consistently handled by the blank keyword argument (Matt Westcott)
  • Show ‘required’ asterisks for blocks inside required StreamFields (Matt Westcott)
  • Make image chooser “Select format” fields translatable (Helen Chapman, Thibaud Colas)
  • Fix pagination on ‘view users in a group’ (Sagar Agarwal)
  • Prevent page privacy menu from being triggered by pressing enter on a char field (Sagar Agarwal)
  • Validate host/scheme of return URLs on password authentication forms (Susan Dreher)
  • Reordering a page now includes the correct user in the audit log (Storm Heg)
  • Fix reverse migration errors in images and documents (Mike Brown)
  • Make “Collection” and “Parent” form field labels translatable (Thibaud Colas)
  • Apply enough chevron padding to all applicable select elements (Scott Cranfill)
  • Reduce database queries in the page edit view (Ihor Marhitych)
Upgrade considerations
End of Internet Explorer 11 support

Wagtail 2.13 will be the last Wagtail release to support IE11. Users accessing the admin with IE11 will be shown a warning message advising that support is being phased out.

Updated handling of non-required StreamFields

The rules for determining whether a StreamField is required (i.e. at least one block must be provided) have been simplified and made consistent with other field types. Non-required fields are now indicated by blank=True on the StreamField definition; the default is blank=False (the field is required). In previous versions, to make a field non-required, it was necessary to define a top-level StreamBlock with required=False (which applied the validation rule) as well as setting blank=True (which removed the asterisk from the form field). You should review your use of StreamField to check that blank=True is used on the fields you wish to make optional.

New client-side implementation for custom StreamField blocks

For the majority of cases, the new StreamField implementation in this release will be a like-for-like upgrade, and no code changes will be necessary - this includes projects where custom block types have been defined by extending StructBlock, ListBlock and StreamBlock. However, certain complex customisations may need to be reimplemented to work with the new client-side rendering model:

  • When customising the form template for a StructBlock using the form_template attribute, the HTML of each child block must be enclosed in an element with a data-contentpath attribute equal to the block’s name. This attribute is used by the commenting framework to attach comments to the correct fields. See Custom editing interfaces for StructBlock.
  • If a StructBlock subclass overrides the get_form_context method as part of customising the form template, and that method contains logic that causes the returned context to vary depending on the block value, this will no longer work as intended. This is because get_form_context is now invoked once with the block’s default (blank) value in order to construct a template for the client-side rendering to use; previously it was called for each block in the stream. In the new implementation, any Python-side processing that needs to happen on a per-block-value basis can be performed in the block’s get_form_state method; the data returned from that method will then be available in the client-side render method.
  • If FieldBlock is used to wrap a Django widget with non-standard client-side behaviour - such as requiring a JavaScript function to be called on initialisation, or combining multiple HTML elements such that it is not possible to read or write its data by accessing a single element’s value property - then you will need to supply a JavaScript handler object to define how the widget is rendered and populated, and how to extract data from it.
  • Packages that replace the StreamField interface at a low level, such as wagtail-react-streamfield, are likely to be incompatible (but the new StreamField implementation will generally offer equivalent functionality).

For further details, see How to build custom StreamField blocks.

Switched register_setting, register_settings_menu_item to use SVG icons

Setting menu items now use SVG icons by default. For sites reusing built-in Wagtail icons, no changes should be required. For sites using custom font icons, update the menu items’ definition to use the classnames attribute:

# With register_setting,
# Before:
@register_setting(icon='custom-cog')
# After:
@register_setting(icon='', classnames='icon icon-custom-cog')

# Or with register_settings_menu_item,
@hooks.register('register_settings_menu_item')
def register_frank_menu_item():
    # Before:
    return SettingMenuItem(CustomSetting, icon='custom-cog')
    # After:
    return SettingMenuItem(CustomSetting, icon='', classnames='icon icon-custom-cog')
CommentPanel

Page.settings_panels now includes CommentPanel, which is used to save and load comments. If you are overriding page settings edit handlers without directly extending Page.settings_panels (ie settings_panels = Page.settings_panels + [ FieldPanel('my_field') ] would need no change here) and want to use the new commenting system, your list of edit handlers should be updated to include CommentPanel. For example:

from django.db import models

from wagtail.core.models import Page
from wagtail.admin.edit_handlers import CommentPanel


class HomePage(Page):
    settings_panels = [
        # My existing panels here
        CommentPanel(),
    ]
Feedback

We would love to receive your feedback on this release.

Wagtail 2.12.6 release notes

What’s new
Bug fixes
  • Prevent embed thumbnail_url migration from failing on URLs longer than 200 characters (Matt Westcott)

Wagtail 2.12.5 release notes

What’s new
CVE-2021-32681: Improper escaping of HTML (‘Cross-site Scripting’) in Wagtail StreamField blocks

This release addresses a cross-site scripting (XSS) vulnerability in StreamField. When the {% include_block %} template tag is used to output the value of a plain-text StreamField block (CharBlock, TextBlock or a similar user-defined block derived from FieldBlock), and that block does not specify a template for rendering, the tag output is not properly escaped as HTML. This could allow users to insert arbitrary HTML or scripting. This vulnerability is only exploitable by users with the ability to author StreamField content (i.e. users with ‘editor’ access to the Wagtail admin).

Site implementors who wish to retain the existing behaviour of allowing editors to insert HTML content in these blocks (and are willing to accept the risk of untrusted editors inserting arbitrary code) may disable the escaping by surrounding the relevant {% include_block %} tag in {% autoescape off %}...{% endautoescape %}.

Many thanks to Karen Tracey for reporting this issue. For further details, please see the CVE-2021-32681 security advisory.

Wagtail 2.12.4 release notes

What’s new
CVE-2021-29434: Improper validation of URLs (‘Cross-site Scripting’) in rich text fields

This release addresses a cross-site scripting (XSS) vulnerability in rich text fields. When saving the contents of a rich text field in the admin interface, Wagtail did not apply server-side checks to ensure that link URLs use a valid protocol. A malicious user with access to the admin interface could thus craft a POST request to publish content with javascript: URLs containing arbitrary code. The vulnerability is not exploitable by an ordinary site visitor without access to the Wagtail admin.

Many thanks to Kevin Breen for reporting this issue.

Bug fixes
  • Prevent reverse migration errors in images and documents (Mike Brown)
  • Avoid wagtailembeds migration failure on MySQL 8.0.13+ (Matt Westcott)

Wagtail 2.12.3 release notes

What’s new
Bug fixes
  • Un-pin django-treebeard following upstream fix for migration issue (Matt Westcott)
  • Prevent crash when copying an alias page (Karl Hobley)
  • Prevent errors on page editing after changing LANGUAGE_CODE (Matt Westcott)
  • Correctly handle model inheritance and ClusterableModel on copy_for_translation (Karl Hobley)

Wagtail 2.12.2 release notes

What’s new
Bug fixes
  • Pin django-treebeard to <4.5 to prevent migration conflicts (Matt Westcott)

Wagtail 2.12.1 release notes

What’s new
Bug fixes
  • Ensure aliases are published when the source page is published (Karl Hobley)
  • Make page privacy rules apply to aliases (Karl Hobley)
  • Prevent error when saving embeds that do not include a thumbnail URL (Cynthia Kiser)
  • Ensure that duplicate embed records are deleted when upgrading (Matt Westcott)
  • Prevent failure when running manage.py dumpdata with no arguments (Matt Westcott)

Wagtail 2.12 release notes

What’s new
Image / document choose permission

Images and documents now support a distinct ‘choose’ permission type, to control the set of items displayed in the chooser interfaces when inserting images and documents into a page, and allow setting up collections that are only available for use by specific user groups. This feature was developed by Robert Rollins.

In-place StreamField updating

StreamField values now formally support being updated in-place from Python code, allowing blocks to be inserted, modified and deleted rather than having to assign a new list of blocks to the field. For further details, see Modifying StreamField data. This feature was developed by Matt Westcott.

Admin color themes

Wagtail’s admin now uses CSS custom properties for its primary teal color. Applying brand colors for the whole user interface only takes a few lines of CSS, and third-party extensions can reuse Wagtail’s CSS variables to support the same degree of customization. Read on Custom user interface colors. This feature was developed by Joshua Marantz.

Other features
  • Added support for Python 3.9
  • Added WAGTAILIMAGES_IMAGE_FORM_BASE and WAGTAILDOCS_DOCUMENT_FORM_BASE settings to customise the forms for images and documents (Dan Braghis)
  • Switch pagination icons to use SVG instead of icon fonts (Scott Cranfill)
  • Added string representation to image Format class (Andreas Nüßlein)
  • Support returning None from register_page_action_menu_item and register_snippet_action_menu_item to skip registering an item (Vadim Karpenko)
  • Fields on a custom image model can now be defined as required / blank=False (Matt Westcott)
  • Add combined index for Postgres search backend (Will Giddens)
  • Add Page.specific_deferred property for accessing specific page instance without up-front database queries (Andy Babic)
  • Add hash lookup to embeds to support URLs longer than 255 characters (Coen van der Kamp)
Bug fixes
  • Stop menu icon overlapping the breadcrumb on small viewport widths in page editor (Karran Besen)
  • Make sure document chooser pagination preserves the selected collection when moving between pages (Alex Sa)
  • Gracefully handle oEmbed endpoints returning non-JSON responses (Matt Westcott)
  • Fix unique constraint on WorkflowState for SQL Server compatibility (David Beitey)
  • Reinstate chevron on collection dropdown (Mike Brown)
  • Prevent delete button showing on collection / workflow edit views when delete permission is absent (Helder Correia)
  • Move labels above the form field in the image format chooser, to avoid styling issues at tablet size (Helen Chapman)
  • {% include_block with context %} now passes local variables into the block template (Jonny Scholes)
Upgrade considerations
Removed support for Elasticsearch 2

Elasticsearch version 2 is no longer supported as of this release; please upgrade to Elasticsearch 5 or above before upgrading Wagtail.

stream_data on StreamField values is deprecated

The stream_data property of StreamValue is commonly used to access the underlying data of a StreamField. However, this is discouraged, as it is an undocumented internal attribute and has different data representations depending on whether the value originated from the database or in memory, typically leading to errors on preview if this has not been properly accounted for. As such, stream_data is now deprecated.

The recommended alternative is to index the StreamField value directly as a list; for example, page.body[0].block_type and page.body[0].value instead of page.body.stream_data[0]['type'] and page.body.stream_data[0]['value']. This has the advantage that it will return the same Python objects as when the StreamField is used in template code (such as Page instances for PageChooserBlock). However, in most cases, existing code using stream_data is written to expect the raw JSON-like representation of the data, and for this the new property raw_data (added in Wagtail 2.12) can be used as a drop-in replacement for stream_data.

Wagtail 2.11.8 release notes

What’s new
CVE-2021-32681: Improper escaping of HTML (‘Cross-site Scripting’) in Wagtail StreamField blocks

This release addresses a cross-site scripting (XSS) vulnerability in StreamField. When the {% include_block %} template tag is used to output the value of a plain-text StreamField block (CharBlock, TextBlock or a similar user-defined block derived from FieldBlock), and that block does not specify a template for rendering, the tag output is not properly escaped as HTML. This could allow users to insert arbitrary HTML or scripting. This vulnerability is only exploitable by users with the ability to author StreamField content (i.e. users with ‘editor’ access to the Wagtail admin).

Site implementors who wish to retain the existing behaviour of allowing editors to insert HTML content in these blocks (and are willing to accept the risk of untrusted editors inserting arbitrary code) may disable the escaping by surrounding the relevant {% include_block %} tag in {% autoescape off %}...{% endautoescape %}.

Many thanks to Karen Tracey for reporting this issue. For further details, please see the CVE-2021-32681 security advisory.

Wagtail 2.11.7 release notes

What’s new
CVE-2021-29434: Improper validation of URLs (‘Cross-site Scripting’) in rich text fields

This release addresses a cross-site scripting (XSS) vulnerability in rich text fields. When saving the contents of a rich text field in the admin interface, Wagtail did not apply server-side checks to ensure that link URLs use a valid protocol. A malicious user with access to the admin interface could thus craft a POST request to publish content with javascript: URLs containing arbitrary code. The vulnerability is not exploitable by an ordinary site visitor without access to the Wagtail admin.

Many thanks to Kevin Breen for reporting this issue.

Wagtail 2.11.6 release notes

What’s new
Bug fixes
  • Un-pin django-treebeard following upstream fix for migration issue (Matt Westcott)
  • Prevent crash when copying an alias page (Karl Hobley)
  • Prevent errors on page editing after changing LANGUAGE_CODE (Matt Westcott)
  • Correctly handle model inheritance and ClusterableModel on copy_for_translation (Karl Hobley)

Wagtail 2.11.5 release notes

What’s new
Bug fixes
  • Pin django-treebeard to <4.5 to prevent migration conflicts (Matt Westcott)

Wagtail 2.11.4 release notes

What’s new
Bug fixes
  • Prevent delete button showing on collection / workflow edit views when delete permission is absent (Helder Correia)
  • Ensure aliases are published when the source page is published (Karl Hobley)
  • Make page privacy rules apply to aliases (Karl Hobley)

Wagtail 2.11.3 release notes

What’s new
Bug fixes
  • Updated project template migrations to ensure that initial homepage creation runs before addition of locale field (Dan Braghis)
  • Restore ability to use translatable strings in LANGUAGES / WAGTAIL_CONTENT_LANGUAGES settings (Andreas Morgenstern)
  • Allow locale / translation_of API filters to be used in combination with search (Matt Westcott)
  • Prevent error on create_log_entries_from_revisions when checking publish state on a revision that cannot be restored (Kristin Riebe)
Upgrade considerations
run_before declaration needed in initial homepage migration

The migration that creates the initial site homepage needs to be updated to ensure that will continue working under Wagtail 2.11. If you have kept the home app from the original project layout generated by the wagtail start command, this will be home/migrations/0002_create_homepage.py. Inside the Migration class, add the line run_before = [('wagtailcore', '0053_locale_model')] - for example:

# ...

class Migration(migrations.Migration):

    run_before = [
        ('wagtailcore', '0053_locale_model'),  # added for Wagtail 2.11 compatibility
    ]

    dependencies = [
        ('home', '0001_initial'),
    ]

    operations = [
        migrations.RunPython(create_homepage, remove_homepage),
    ]

This fix applies to any migration that creates page instances programmatically. If you installed Wagtail into an existing Django project by following the instructions at Integrating Wagtail into a Django project, you most likely created the initial homepage manually, and no change is required in this case.

Further background: Wagtail 2.11 adds a locale field to the Page model, and since the existing migrations in your project pre-date this, they are designed to run against a version of the Page model that has no locale field. As a result, they need to run before the new migrations that have been added to wagtailcore within Wagtail 2.11. However, in the old version of the homepage migration, there is nothing to ensure that this sequence is followed. The actual order chosen is an internal implementation detail of Django, and in particular is liable to change as you continue developing your project under Wagtail 2.11 and create new migrations that depend on the current state of wagtailcore. In this situation, a user installing your project on a clean database may encounter the following error when running manage.py migrate:

django.db.utils.IntegrityError: NOT NULL constraint failed: wagtailcore_page.locale_id

Adding the run_before directive will ensure that the migrations run in the intended order, avoiding this error.

Wagtail 2.11.2 release notes

What’s new
Facebook and Instagram embed finders

Two new embed finders have been added for Facebook and Instagram, to replace the previous configuration using Facebook’s public oEmbed endpoint which was retired in October 2020. These require a Facebook developer API key - for details of configuring this, see Facebook and Instagram. This feature was developed by Cynthia Kiser and Luis Nell.

Bug fixes
  • Improve performance of permission check on translations for edit page (Karl Hobley)
  • Gracefully handle missing Locale records on Locale.get_active and .localized (Matt Westcott)
  • Handle get_supported_language_variant returning a language variant not in LANGUAGES (Matt Westcott)
  • Reinstate missing icon on settings edit view (Jérôme Lebleu)
  • Avoid performance and pagination logic issues with a large number of languages (Karl Hobley)
  • Allow deleting the default locale (Matt Westcott)

Wagtail 2.11.1 release notes

What’s new
Bug fixes
  • Ensure that cached wagtail_site_root_paths structures from older Wagtail versions are invalidated (Sævar Öfjörð Magnússon)
  • Avoid circular import between wagtail.admin.auth and custom user models (Matt Westcott)
  • Prevent error on resolving page URLs when a locale outside of WAGTAIL_CONTENT_LANGUAGES is active (Matt Westcott)

Wagtail 2.11 release notes

Wagtail 2.11 is designated a Long Term Support (LTS) release. Long Term Support releases will continue to receive maintenance updates as necessary to address security and data-loss related issues, up until the next LTS release (typically a period of 12 months).

What’s new
Multi-lingual content

With this release, Wagtail now has official support for authoring content for multiple languages/regions.

To find out more about this feature, see Multi-language content.

We have also developed a new plugin for translating content between different locales called wagtail-localize. You can find details about wagtail-localize on its GitHub page.

This feature was sponsored by The Mozilla Foundation and Torchbox.

Page aliases

This release introduces support for creating page aliases.

Page aliases are exact copies of another page that sit in another part of the tree. They remain in sync with the original page until this link is removed by converting them into a regular page, or deleting the original page.

A page alias can be created through the “Copy Page” UI by selecting the “Alias” checkbox when creating a page copy.

This feature was sponsored by The Mozilla Foundation.

Collections hierarchy

Collections (for organising images, documents or other media) can now be managed as a hierarchy rather than a flat list. This feature was developed by Robert Rollins.

Other features
  • Add before_edit_snippet, before_create_snippet and before_delete_snippet hooks and documentation (Karl Hobley. Sponsored by the Mozilla Foundation)
  • Add register_snippet_listing_buttons and construct_snippet_listing_buttons hooks and documentation (Karl Hobley. Sponsored by the Mozilla Foundation)
  • Add wagtail --version to available Wagtail CLI commands (Kalob Taulien)
  • Add hooks.register_temporarily utility function for testing hooks (Karl Hobley. Sponsored by the Mozilla Foundation)
  • Remove unidecode and use anyascii in for Unicode to ASCII conversion (Robbie Mackay)
  • Add render helper to RoutablePageMixin to support serving template responses according to Wagtail conventions (Andy Babic)
  • Specify minimum Python version in setup.py (Vince Salvino)
  • Extend treebeard’s fix_tree method with the ability to non-destructively fix path issues and add a –full option to apply path fixes (Matt Westcott)
  • Add support for hierarchical/nested Collections (Robert Rollins)
  • Show user’s full name in report views (Matt Westcott)
  • Improve Wagtail admin page load performance by caching SVG icons sprite in localStorage (Coen van der Kamp)
  • Support SVG icons in ModelAdmin menu items (Scott Cranfill)
  • Support SVG icons in admin breadcrumbs (Coen van der Kamp)
  • Serve PDFs inline in the browser (Matt Westcott)
  • Make document content-type and content-disposition configurable via WAGTAILDOCS_CONTENT_TYPES and WAGTAILDOCS_INLINE_CONTENT_TYPES (Matt Westcott)
  • Slug generation no longer removes stopwords (Andy Chosak, Scott Cranfill)
  • Add check to disallow StreamField block names that do not match Python variable syntax (François Poulain)
  • The BASE_URL setting is now converted to a string, if it isn’t already, when constructing API URLs (thenewguy)
  • Preview from ‘pages awaiting moderation’ now opens in a new window (Cynthia Kiser)
  • Add document extension validation if WAGTAIL_DOCS_EXTENSIONS is set to a list of allowed extensions (Meghana Bhange)
  • Use django-admin command in place of django-admin.py (minusf)
  • Add register_snippet_action_menu_item and construct_snippet_action_menu hooks to modify the actions available when creating / editing a snippet (Karl Hobley)
  • Moved generate_signature and verify_signature functions into wagtail.images.utils (Noah H)
  • Implement bulk_to_python on all structural StreamField block types (Matt Westcott)
  • Add natural key support to GroupCollectionPermission (Jim Jazwiecki)
  • Implement prepopulated_fields for wagtail.contrib.modeladmin (David Bramwell)
  • Change classname keyword argument on basic StreamField blocks to form_classname (Meghana Bhange)
  • Replace page explorer pushPage/popPage with gotoPage for more flexible explorer navigation (Karl Hobley)
Bug fixes
  • Make page-level actions accessible to keyboard users in page listing tables (Jesse Menn)
  • WAGTAILFRONTENDCACHE_LANGUAGES was being interpreted incorrectly. It now accepts a list of strings, as documented (Karl Hobley)
  • Update oEmbed endpoints to use https where available (Matt Westcott)
  • Revise edit_handler bind order in ModelAdmin views and fix duplicate form instance creation (Jérôme Lebleu)
  • Properly distinguish child blocks when comparing revisions with nested StreamBlocks (Martin Mena)
  • Correctly handle Turkish ‘İ’ characters in client-side slug generation (Matt Westcott)
  • Page chooser widgets now reflect custom get_admin_display_title methods (Saptak Sengupta)
  • Page.copy() now raises an error if the page being copied is unsaved (Anton Zhyltsou)
  • Page.copy() now triggers a page_published if the copied page is live (Anton Zhyltsou)
  • The Elasticsearch URLS setting can now take a string on its own instead of a list (Sævar Öfjörð Magnússon)
  • Avoid retranslating month / weekday names that Django already provides (Matt Westcott)
  • Fixed padding around checkbox and radio inputs (Cole Maclean)
  • Fix spacing around the privacy indicator panel (Sævar Öfjörð Magnússon, Dan Braghis)
  • Consistently redirect to admin home on permission denied (Matt Westcott, Anton Zhyltsou)
Upgrade considerations
run_before declaration needed in initial homepage migration

The migration that creates the initial site homepage needs to be updated to ensure that will continue working under Wagtail 2.11. If you have kept the home app from the original project layout generated by the wagtail start command, this will be home/migrations/0002_create_homepage.py. Inside the Migration class, add the line run_before = [('wagtailcore', '0053_locale_model')] - for example:

# ...

class Migration(migrations.Migration):

    run_before = [
        ('wagtailcore', '0053_locale_model'),  # added for Wagtail 2.11 compatibility
    ]

    dependencies = [
        ('home', '0001_initial'),
    ]

    operations = [
        migrations.RunPython(create_homepage, remove_homepage),
    ]

This fix applies to any migration that creates page instances programmatically. If you installed Wagtail into an existing Django project by following the instructions at Integrating Wagtail into a Django project, you most likely created the initial homepage manually, and no change is required in this case.

Further background: Wagtail 2.11 adds a locale field to the Page model, and since the existing migrations in your project pre-date this, they are designed to run against a version of the Page model that has no locale field. As a result, they need to run before the new migrations that have been added to wagtailcore within Wagtail 2.11. However, in the old version of the homepage migration, there is nothing to ensure that this sequence is followed. The actual order chosen is an internal implementation detail of Django, and in particular is liable to change as you continue developing your project under Wagtail 2.11 and create new migrations that depend on the current state of wagtailcore. In this situation, a user installing your project on a clean database may encounter the following error when running manage.py migrate:

django.db.utils.IntegrityError: NOT NULL constraint failed: wagtailcore_page.locale_id

Adding the run_before directive will ensure that the migrations run in the intended order, avoiding this error.

IE11 support being phased out

This release begins the process of phasing out support for Internet Explorer. Please see IE11 for details of the timeline over which support will be dropped.

SiteMiddleware moved to wagtail.contrib.legacy

The SiteMiddleware class (which provides the request.site property, and has been deprecated since Wagtail 2.9) has been moved to the wagtail.contrib.legacy namespace. On projects where this is still in use, the 'wagtail.core.middleware.SiteMiddleware' entry in MIDDLEWARE should be changed to 'wagtail.contrib.legacy.sitemiddleware.SiteMiddleware'.

Collection model enforces alphabetical ordering

As part of the hierarchical collections support, the path field on the Collection model now enforces alphabetical ordering. Previously, collections were stored in the order in which they were created - and then sorted by name where displayed in the CMS. This change will be handled automatically through migrations when upgrading to Wagtail 2.11.

However, if your project creates new collections programmatically after migrations have run, and assigns the path field directly - for example, by loading from a fixture file - this code will need to be updated to insert them in alphabetical order. Otherwise, errors may occur when subsequently adding new collections through the Wagtail admin. This can be done as follows:

  • Update paths to match alphabetical order. For example, if you have a fixture that creates the collections Zebras and Aardvarks with paths 00010001 and 00010002 respectively, these paths should be swapped.

  • Alternatively, after creating the collections, run the Python code:

    from wagtail.core.models import Collection
    Collection.fix_tree(fix_paths=True)
    

    or the management command:

    python manage.py fixtree --full
    
Site.get_site_root_paths now returns language code

In previous releases, Site.get_site_root_paths returned a list of (site_id, root_path, root_url) tuples. To support the new internationalisation model, this has now been changed to a list of named tuples with the fields: site_id, root_path, root_url and language_code. Existing code that handled this as a 3-tuple should be updated accordingly.

classname argument on StreamField blocks is now form_classname

Basic StreamField block types such as CharBlock previously accepted a classname keyword argument, to specify a class attribute to appear on the page editing form. For consistency with StructBlock, this has now been changed to form_classname. The classname argument is still recognised, but deprecated.

Wagtail 2.10.2 release notes

What’s new
Bug fixes
  • Avoid use of icon class name on userbar icon to prevent clashes with front-end styles (Karran Besen)
  • Prevent focused button labels from displaying as white on white (Karran Bessen)
  • Avoid showing preview button on moderation dashboard for page types with preview disabled (Dino Perovic)
  • Prevent oversized buttons in moderation dashboard panel (Dan Braghis)
  • create_log_entries_from_revisions now handles revisions that cannot be restored due to foreign key constraints (Matt Westcott)

Wagtail 2.10.1 release notes

What’s new
Bug fixes
  • Prevent create_log_entries_from_revisions command from failing when page model classes are missing (Dan Braghis)
  • Prevent page audit log views from failing for user models without a username field (Vyacheslav Matyukhin)
  • Fix icon alignment on menu items (Coen van der Kamp)
  • Page editor header bar now correctly shows ‘Published’ or ‘Draft’ status when no revisions exist (Matt Westcott)
  • Prevent page editor from failing when USE_TZ is false (Matt Westcott)
  • Ensure whitespace between block-level elements is preserved when stripping tags from rich text for search indexing (Matt Westcott)

Wagtail 2.10 release notes

What’s new
Moderation workflow

This release introduces a configurable moderation workflow system to replace the single-step “submit for moderation” feature. Workflows can be set up on specific subsections of the page tree and consist of any number of tasks to be completed by designated user groups. To support this, numerous UI improvements have been made to Wagtail’s page editor, including a new log viewer to track page history.

For further details, see Managing Workflows and Adding new Task types.

This feature was developed by Jacob Topp-Mugglestone, Karl Hobley, Matt Westcott and Dan Braghis, and sponsored by The Motley Fool.

Django 3.1 support

This release adds support for Django 3.1. Compatibility fixes were contributed by Matt Westcott and Karl Hobley.

Search query expressions

Search queries can now be constructed as structured expressions in the manner of the Django ORM’s Q() values, allowing for complex queries that combine individual terms, phrases and boosting. A helper function parse_query_string is provided to convert “natural” queries containing quoted phrases into these expressions. For complete documentation, see Complex search queries. This feature was developed by Karl Hobley and sponsored by The Motley Fool.

Redirect importing

Redirects can now be imported from an uploaded CSV, TSV, XLS or XLSX file. This feature was developed by Martin Sandström.

Accessibility and usability

This release contains a number of improvements to the accessibility and general usability of the Wagtail admin, fixing long-standing issues. Some of the changes come from our January 2020 sprint in Bristol, and some from our brand new accessibility team:

  • Remove sticky footer on small devices, so that content is not blocked and more easily editable (Saeed Tahmasebi)
  • Add SVG icons to resolve accessibility and customisation issues and start using them in a subset of Wagtail’s admin (Coen van der Kamp, Scott Cranfill, Thibaud Colas, Dan Braghis)
  • Switch userbar and header H1s to use SVG icons (Coen van der Kamp)
  • Add skip link for keyboard users to bypass Wagtail navigation in the admin (Martin Coote)
  • Add missing dropdown icons to image upload, document upload, and site settings screens (Andreas Bernacca)
  • Prevent snippets’ bulk delete button from being present for screen reader users when it’s absent for sighted users (LB (Ben Johnston))
Other features
  • Added webpquality and format-webp-lossless image filters and WAGTAILIMAGES_WEBP_QUALITY setting. See Output image format and Image quality (Nikolay Lukyanov)
  • Reorganised Dockerfile in project template to follow best practices (Tomasz Knapik, Jannik Wempe)
  • Added filtering to locked pages report (Karl Hobley)
  • Adds ability to view a group’s users via standalone admin URL and a link to this on the group edit view (Karran Besen)
  • Redirect to previous url when deleting/copying/unpublish a page and modify this url via the relevant hooks (Ascani Carlo)
  • Added next_url keyword argument on register_page_listing_buttons and register_page_listing_more_buttons hooks (Ascani Carlo, Matt Westcott, LB (Ben Johnston))
  • AbstractEmailForm will use SHORT_DATETIME_FORMAT and SHORT_DATE_FORMAT Django settings to format date/time values in email (Haydn Greatnews)
  • AbstractEmailForm now has a separate method (render_email) to build up email content on submission emails. See Custom render_email method. (Haydn Greatnews)
  • Add pre_page_move and post_page_move signals. (Andy Babic)
  • Add ability to sort search promotions on listing page (Chris Ranjana, LB (Ben Johnston))
  • Upgrade internal JS tooling; Node v10, Gulp v4 & Jest v23 (Jim Jazwiecki, Kim LaRocca, Thibaud Colas)
  • Add after_publish_page, before_publish_page, after_unpublish_page & before_unpublish_page hooks (Jonatas Baldin, Coen van der Kamp)
  • Add convenience page_url shortcut to improve how page URLs can be accessed from site settings in Django templates (Andy Babic)
  • Show more granular error messages from Pillow when uploading images (Rick van Hattem)
  • Add ordering to Site object, so that index page and Site switcher will be sorted consistently (Coen van der Kamp, Tim Leguijt)
  • Add Reddit to oEmbed provider list (Luke Hardwick)
  • Add ability to replace the default Wagtail logo in the userbar, via branding_logo block (Meteor0id)
  • Add alt property to ImageRenditionField api representation (Liam Mullens)
  • Add purge_revisions management command to purge old page revisions (Jacob Topp-Mugglestone, Tom Dyson)
  • Render the Wagtail User Bar on non Page views (Caitlin White, Coen van der Kamp)
  • Add ability to define form_classname on ListBlock & StreamBlock (LB (Ben Johnston))
  • Add documentation about how to use Rustface for image feature detection (Neal Todd)
  • Improve performance of public/not_public queries in PageQuerySet (Timothy Bautista)
  • Add add_redirect static method to Redirect class for programmatic redirect creation (Brylie Christopher Oxley, Lacey Williams Henschel)
  • Add reference documentation for wagtail.contrib.redirects See Redirects. (LB (Ben Johnston))
  • bulk_delete page permission is no longer required to move pages, even if those pages have children (Robert Rollins, LB (Ben Johnston))
  • Add after_edit_snippet, after_create_snippet and after_delete_snippet hooks and documentation (Kalob Taulien)
  • Improve performance of empty search results by avoiding downloading the entire search index in these scenarios (Lars van de Kerkhof, Coen van der Kamp)
  • Replace gulp-sass with gulp-dart-sass to improve core development across different platforms (Thibaud Colas)
  • Remove markup around rich text rendering by default, provide a way to use old behaviour via wagtail.contrib.legacy.richtext. See Legacy richtext. (Coen van der Kamp, Dan Braghis)
  • Add WAGTAIL_TIME_FORMAT setting (Jacob Topp-Mugglestone)
  • Apply title length normalisation to improve ranking on PostgreSQL search (Karl Hobley)
  • Allow omitting the default editor from WAGTAILADMIN_RICH_TEXT_EDITORS (Gassan Gousseinov)
  • Disable password auto-completion on user creation form (Samir Shah)
  • Upgrade jQuery to version 3.5.1 to reduce penetration testing false positives (Matt Westcott)
  • Add ability to extend EditHandler without a children attribute (Seb Brown)
  • Page.objects.specific now gracefully handles pages with missing specific records (Andy Babic)
  • StreamField ‘add’ buttons are now disabled when maximum count is reached (Max Gabrielsson)
  • Use underscores for form builder field names to allow use as template variables (Ashia Zawaduk, LB (Ben Johnston))
  • Deprecate use of unidecode within form builder field names (Michael van Tellingen, LB (Ben Johnston))
  • Improve error feedback when editing a page with a missing model class (Andy Babic)
  • Change Wagtail tabs implementation to only allow slug-formatted tab identifiers, reducing false positives from security audits (Matt Westcott)
  • Ensure errors during Postgres search indexing are left uncaught to assist troubleshooting (Karl Hobley)
  • Add ability to edit images and embeds in rich text editor (Maylon Pedroso, Samuel Mendes, Gabriel Peracio)
Bug fixes
  • Ensure link to add a new user works when no users are visible in the users list (LB (Ben Johnston))
  • AbstractEmailForm saved submission fields are now aligned with the email content fields, form.cleaned_data will be used instead of form.fields (Haydn Greatnews)
  • Removed ARIA role="table" from TableBlock output (Thibaud Colas)
  • Set Cache-Control header to prevent page preview responses from being cached (Tomas Walch)
  • Accept unicode characters in slugs on the “copy page” form (François Poulain)
  • Support IPv6 domain (Alex Gleason, Coen van der Kamp)
  • Remove top padding when FieldRowPanel is used inside a MultiFieldPanel (Jérôme Lebleu)
  • Add Wagtail User Bar back to page previews and ensure moderation actions are available (Coen van der Kamp)
  • Fix issue where queryset annotations were lost (e.g. .annotate_score()) when using specific models in page query (Dan Bentley)
  • Prevent date/time picker from losing an hour on losing focus when 12-hour times are in use (Jacob Topp-Mugglestone)
  • Strip out HTML tags from RichTextField & RichTextBlock search index content (Timothy Bautista)
  • Avoid using null on string Site.site_name blank values to avoid different values for no name (Coen van der Kamp)
  • Fix deprecation warnings on Elasticsearch 7 (Yngve Høiseth)
  • Remove use of Node.forEach for IE 11 compatibility in admin menu items (Thibaud Colas)
  • Fix incorrect method name in SiteMiddleware deprecation warning (LB (Ben Johnston))
  • wagtail.contrib.sitemaps no longer depends on SiteMiddleware (Matt Westcott)
  • Purge image renditions cache when renditions are deleted (Pascal Widdershoven, Matt Westcott)
  • Image / document forms now display non-field errors such as unique_together constraints (Matt Westcott)
  • Make “Site” chooser in site settings translatable (Andreas Bernacca)
  • Fix group permission checkboxes not being clickable in IE11 (LB (Ben Johnston))
Upgrade considerations
Removed support for Python 3.5

Python 3.5 is no longer supported as of this release; please upgrade to Python 3.6 or above before upgrading Wagtail.

Move to new configurable moderation system (workflow)

A new workflow system has been introduced for moderation. Task types are defined as models in code, and instances - tasks - are created in the Wagtail Admin, then chained together to form workflows: sequences of moderation stages through which a page must pass prior to publication.

Key points:

  • Prior to 2.10, moderation in Wagtail was performed on a per-revision basis: once submitted, the moderator would approve or reject the submitted revision only, which would not include subsequent changes. Moderation is now performed per page, with moderators always seeing the latest revision.
  • PageRevision.submitted_for_moderation will return True for revisions passing through the old moderation system, but not for the new system
  • Pages undergoing moderation in the old system will not have their moderation halted, and can still be approved/rejected. As a result, you may see two sets of moderation dashboard panels until there are no longer any pages in moderation in the old system
  • No pages can be submitted for moderation in the old system: “Submit for moderation” now submits to the new Workflow system
  • You no longer need the publish permission to perform moderation actions on a page - actions available to each user are now configured per task. With the built in GroupApprovalTask, anybody in a specific set of groups can approve or reject the task.
  • A data migration is provided to recreate your existing publish-permission based moderation workflow in the new system. If you have made no permissions changes, this should simply create a task approvable by anybody in the Moderators group, and assign a workflow with this task to the root page, creating a standard workflow for the entire page tree. However, if you have a complex nested set of publish page permissions, the created set of workflows will be more complex as well - you may wish to inspect the created workflows and tasks in the new Settings/Workflows admin area and potentially simplify them. See Managing Workflows for the administrator guide.
<div class="rich-text"> wrappers removed from rich text

In previous releases, rich text values were enclosed in a <div class="rich-text"> element when rendered; this element has now been removed. To restore the old behaviour, see Legacy richtext.

Prepopulating data for site history report

This release introduces logging of user actions, viewable through the “Site history” report. To pre-populate these logs with data from page revision history, run the management command: ./manage.py create_log_entries_from_revisions.

clean_name field added to form builder form field models

A clean_name field has been added to form field models that extend AbstractForm. This is used as the name attribute of the HTML form field, and the dictionary key that the submitted form data is stored under. Storing this on the model (rather than calculating it on-the-fly as was done previously) ensures that if the algorithm for generating the clean name changes in future, the existing data will not become inaccessible. A future version of Wagtail will drop the unidecode library currently used for this.

For forms created through the Wagtail admin interface, no action is required, as the new field will be populated on server startup. However, any process that creates form pages through direct insertion on the database (such as loading from fixtures) should now be updated to populate clean_name.

New next_url keyword argument on register_page_listing_buttons and register_page_listing_more_buttons hooks

Functions registered through the hooks register_page_listing_buttons and register_page_listing_more_buttons now accept an additional keyword argument next_url. A hook function currently written as:

@hooks.register('register_page_listing_buttons')
def page_listing_more_buttons(page, page_perms, is_parent=False):
    yield wagtailadmin_widgets.Button(
        'My button', '/goes/to/a/url/', priority=60
    )

should now become:

@hooks.register('register_page_listing_buttons')
def page_listing_more_buttons(page, page_perms, is_parent=False, next_url=None):
    yield wagtailadmin_widgets.Button(
        'My button', '/goes/to/a/url/', priority=60
    )

The next_url argument specifies a URL to redirect back to after the action is complete, and can be passed as a query parameter to the linked URL, if the view supports it.

Wagtail 2.9.3 release notes

CVE-2020-15118: HTML injection through form field help text

This release addresses an HTML injection vulnerability through help text in the wagtail.contrib.forms form builder app. When a form page type is made available to Wagtail editors, and the page template is built using Django’s standard form rendering helpers such as form.as_p (as directed in the documentation), any HTML tags used within a form field’s help text will be rendered unescaped in the page. Allowing HTML within help text is an intentional design decision by Django; however, as a matter of policy Wagtail does not allow editors to insert arbitrary HTML by default, as this could potentially be used to carry out cross-site scripting attacks, including privilege escalation. This functionality should therefore not have been made available to editor-level users.

The vulnerability is not exploitable by an ordinary site visitor without access to the Wagtail admin.

Site owners who wish to re-enable the use of HTML within help text (and are willing to accept the risk of this being exploited by editors) may set WAGTAILFORMS_HELP_TEXT_ALLOW_HTML = True in their configuration settings.

Many thanks to Timothy Bautista for reporting this issue.

Wagtail 2.9.2 release notes

What’s new
Bug fixes
  • Prevent startup failure when wagtail.contrib.sitemaps is in INSTALLED_APPS (Matt Westcott)

Wagtail 2.9.1 release notes

What’s new
Bug fixes
  • Fix incorrect method name in SiteMiddleware deprecation warning (LB (Ben Johnston))
  • wagtail.contrib.sitemaps no longer depends on SiteMiddleware (Matt Westcott)
  • Purge image renditions cache when renditions are deleted (Pascal Widdershoven, Matt Westcott)

Wagtail 2.9 release notes

What’s new
Report data exports

Data from reports, form submissions and ModelAdmin can now be exported to both XLSX and CSV format. For ModelAdmin, this is enabled by specifying a list_export attribute on the ModelAdmin class. This feature was developed by Jacob Topp-Mugglestone and sponsored by The Motley Fool.

CVE-2020-11037: Potential timing attack on password-protected private pages

This release addresses a potential timing attack on pages or documents that have been protected with a shared password through Wagtail’s “Privacy” controls. This password check is performed through a character-by-character string comparison, and so an attacker who is able to measure the time taken by this check to a high degree of accuracy could potentially use timing differences to gain knowledge of the password. (This is understood to be feasible on a local network, but not on the public internet.)

Many thanks to Thibaud Colas for reporting this issue.

Other features
  • Added support for creating custom reports (Jacob Topp-Mugglestone)
  • Skip page validation when unpublishing a page (Samir Shah)
  • Added MultipleChoiceBlock block type for StreamField (James O’Toole)
  • ChoiceBlock now accepts a widget keyword argument (James O’Toole)
  • Reduced contrast of rich text toolbar (Jack Paine)
  • Support the rel attribute on custom ModelAdmin buttons (Andy Chosak)
  • Server-side page slug generation now respects WAGTAIL_ALLOW_UNICODE_SLUGS (Arkadiusz Michał Ryś)
  • Wagtail admin no longer depends on SiteMiddleware, avoiding incompatibility with Django sites framework and redundant database queries (aritas1, timmysmalls, Matt Westcott)
  • Tag field autocompletion now handles custom tag models (Matt Westcott)
  • wagtail_serve URL route can now be omitted for headless sites (Storm Heg)
  • Allow free tagging to be disabled on custom tag models (Matt Westcott)
  • Allow disabling page preview by setting preview_modes to an empty list (Casper Timmers)
  • Add Vidyard to oEmbed provider list (Steve Lyall)
  • Optimise compiling media definitions for complex StreamBlocks (pimarc)
  • FieldPanel now accepts a ‘heading’ argument (Jacob Topp-Mugglestone)
  • Replaced deprecated ugettext / ungettext calls with gettext / ngettext (Mohamed Feddad)
  • ListBlocks now call child block bulk_to_python if defined (Andy Chosak)
  • Site settings are now identifiable/cacheable by request as well as site (Andy Babic)
  • Added select_related attribute to site settings to enable more efficient fetching of foreign key values (Andy Babic)
  • Add caching of image renditions (Tom Dyson, Tim Kamanin)
  • Add documentation for reporting security issues and internationalisation (Matt Westcott)
  • Fields on a custom image model can now be defined as required blank=False (Matt Westcott)
Bug fixes
  • Added ARIA alert role to live search forms in the admin (Casper Timmers)
  • Reordered login form elements to match expected tab order (Kjartan Sverrisson)
  • Re-added ‘Close Explorer’ button on mobile viewports (Sævar Öfjörð Magnússon)
  • Added a more descriptive label to Password reset link for screen reader users (Casper Timmers, Martin Coote)
  • Improved Wagtail logo contrast by adding a background (Brian Edelman, Simon Evans, Ben Enright)
  • Prevent duplicate notification messages on page locking (Jacob Topp-Mugglestone)
  • Rendering of non field errors for InlinePanel items (Storm Heg)
  • {% image ... as var %} now clears the context variable when passed None as an image (Maylon Pedroso)
  • refresh_index method on Elasticsearch no longer fails (Lars van de Kerkhof)
  • Document tags no longer fail to update when replacing the document file at the same time (Matt Westcott)
  • Prevent error from very tall / wide images being resized to 0 pixels (Fidel Ramos)
  • Remove excess margin when editing snippets (Quadric)
  • Added scope attribute to table headers in TableBlock output (Quadric)
  • Prevent KeyError when accessing a StreamField on a deferred queryset (Paulo Alvarado)
  • Hide empty ‘view live’ links (Karran Besen)
  • Mark up a few strings for translation (Luiz Boaretto)
  • Invalid focal_point attribute on image edit view (Michał (Quadric) Sieradzki)
  • No longer expose the .delete() method on the default Page.objects manager (Nick Smith)
  • exclude_fields_in_copy on Page models will now work for for modelcluster parental / many to many relations (LB (Ben Johnston))
  • Response header (content disposition) now correctly handles filenames with non-ascii characters when using a storage backend (Rich Brennan)
  • Improved accessibility fixes for main, header and footer elements in the admin page layout (Mitchel Cabuloy)
  • Prevent version number from obscuring long settings menus (Naomi Morduch Toubman)
  • Admin views using TemplateResponse now respect the user’s language setting (Jacob Topp-Mugglestone)
  • Fixed incorrect language code for Japanese in language setting dropdown (Tomonori Tanabe)
Upgrade considerations
Removed support for Django 2.1

Django 2.1 is no longer supported as of this release; please upgrade to Django 2.2 or above before upgrading Wagtail.

SiteMiddleware and request.site deprecated

Wagtail’s SiteMiddleware, which makes the current site object available as the property request.site, is now deprecated as it clashes with Django’s sites framework and makes unnecessary database queries on non-Wagtail views. References to request.site in your code should be removed; the recommended way of retrieving the current site is Site.find_for_request(request) in Python code, and the {% wagtail_site %} tag within Django templates.

For example:

# old version

def get_menu_items(request):
    return request.site.root_page.get_children().live()

# new version

from wagtail.core.models import Site

def get_menu_items(request):
    return Site.find_for_request(request).root_page.get_children().live()
{# old version #}

<h1>Welcome to the {{ request.site.site_name }} website!</h1>


{# new version #}
{% load wagtailcore_tags %}
{% wagtail_site as current_site %}

<h1>Welcome to the {{ current_site.site_name }} website!</h1>

Once these are removed, 'wagtail.core.middleware.SiteMiddleware' can be removed from your project’s MIDDLEWARE setting.

Page / Collection managers no longer expose a delete method

For consistency with standard Django models, the delete() method is no longer available on the default Page and Collection managers. Code such as Page.objects.delete() should be changed to Page.objects.all().delete().

Wagtail 2.8.2 release notes

CVE-2020-11037: Potential timing attack on password-protected private pages

This release addresses a potential timing attack on pages or documents that have been protected with a shared password through Wagtail’s “Privacy” controls. This password check is performed through a character-by-character string comparison, and so an attacker who is able to measure the time taken by this check to a high degree of accuracy could potentially use timing differences to gain knowledge of the password. (This is understood to be feasible on a local network, but not on the public internet.)

Many thanks to Thibaud Colas for reporting this issue.

Wagtail 2.8.1 release notes

CVE-2020-11001: Possible XSS attack via page revision comparison view

This release addresses a cross-site scripting (XSS) vulnerability on the page revision comparison view within the Wagtail admin interface. A user with a limited-permission editor account for the Wagtail admin could potentially craft a page revision history that, when viewed by a user with higher privileges, could perform actions with that user’s credentials. The vulnerability is not exploitable by an ordinary site visitor without access to the Wagtail admin.

Many thanks to Vlad Gerasimenko for reporting this issue.

Wagtail 2.8 release notes

What’s new
Django 3.0 support

This release is compatible with Django 3.0. Compatibility fixes were contributed by Matt Westcott and Mads Jensen.

Improved page locking

The page locking feature has been revised so that the editor locking a page is given exclusive edit access to it, rather than it becoming read-only to everyone. A new Reports menu allows admin / moderator level users to see the currently locked pages, and unlock them if required.

This feature was developed by Karl Hobley and Jacob Topp-Mugglestone. Thanks to The Motley Fool for sponsoring this feature.

Other features
  • Removed leftover Python 2.x compatibility code (Sergey Fedoseev)
  • Combine flake8 configurations (Sergey Fedoseev)
  • Improve diffing behavior for text fields (Aliosha Padovani)
  • Improve contrast of disabled inputs (Nick Smith)
  • Added get_document_model_string function (Andrey Smirnov)
  • Added support for Cloudflare API tokens for frontend cache invalidation (Tom Usher)
  • Cloudflare frontend cache invalidation requests are now sent in chunks of 30 to fit within API limits (Tom Usher)
  • Added ancestors field to the pages endpoint in admin API (Karl Hobley)
  • Removed Django admin management of Page & Site models (Andreas Bernacca)
  • Cleaned up Django docs URLs in documentation (Pete Andrew)
  • Add StreamFieldPanel to available panel types in documentation (Dan Swain)
  • Add {{ block.super }} example to ModelAdmin customisation in documentation (Dan Swain)
  • Add ability to filter image index by a tag (Benedikt Willi)
  • Add partial experimental support for nested InlinePanels (Matt Westcott, Sam Costigan, Andy Chosak, Scott Cranfill)
  • Added cache control headers when serving documents (Johannes Vogel)
  • Use sensitive_post_parameters on password reset form (Dan Braghis)
  • Add WAGTAILEMBEDS_RESPONSIVE_HTML setting to remove automatic addition of responsive-object around embeds (Kalob Taulien)
Bug fixes
  • Rename documents listing column ‘uploaded’ to ‘created’ (LB (Ben Johnston))
  • Unbundle the l18n library as it was bundled to avoid installation errors which have been resolved (Matt Westcott)
  • Prevent error when comparing pages that reference a model with a custom primary key (Fidel Ramos)
  • Moved get_document_model location so it can be imported when Models are not yet loaded (Andrey Smirnov)
  • Use correct HTML escaping of Jinja2 form templates for StructBlocks (Brady Moe)
  • All templates with wagtailsettings and modeladmin now use block.super for extra_js & extra_css (Timothy Bautista)
  • Layout issue when using FieldRowPanel with a heading (Andreas Bernacca)
  • file_size and file_hash now updated when Document file changed (Andreas Bernacca)
  • Fixed order of URLs in project template so that static / media URLs are not blocked (Nick Smith)
  • Added verbose_name_plural to form submission model (Janneke Janssen)
  • Prevent update_index failures and incorrect front-end rendering on blank TableBlock (Carlo Ascani)
  • Dropdown initialisation on the search page after AJAX call (Eric Sherman)
  • Make sure all modal chooser search results correspond to the latest search by cancelling previous requests (Esper Kuijs)
Upgrade considerations
Removed support for Django 2.0

Django 2.0 is no longer supported as of this release; please upgrade to Django 2.1 or above before upgrading Wagtail.

Edit locking behaviour changed

The behaviour of the page locking feature in the admin interface has been changed. In past versions, the page lock would apply to all users including the user who locked the page. Now, the user who locked the page can still edit it but all other users cannot.

Pages that were locked before this release will continue to be locked in the same way as before, so this only applies to newly locked pages. If you would like to restore the previous behaviour, you can set the WAGTAILADMIN_GLOBAL_PAGE_EDIT_LOCK setting to True.

Responsive HTML for embeds no longer added by default

In previous versions of Wagtail, embedded media elements were given a class name of responsive-object and an inline padding-bottom style to assist in styling them responsively. These are no longer added by default. To restore the previous behaviour, add WAGTAILEMBEDS_RESPONSIVE_HTML = True to your project settings.

API endpoint classes have moved

For consistency with Django REST Framework, the PagesAPIEndpoint, ImagesAPIEndpoint and DocumentsAPIEndpoint classes have been renamed to PagesAPIViewSet, ImagesAPIViewSet and DocumentsAPIViewSet and moved to the views module in their respective packages. Projects using the Wagtail API should update their registration code accordingly.

Old code:

from wagtail.api.v2.endpoints import PagesAPIEndpoint
from wagtail.api.v2.router import WagtailAPIRouter
from wagtail.images.api.v2.endpoints import ImagesAPIEndpoint
from wagtail.documents.api.v2.endpoints import DocumentsAPIEndpoint

api_router = WagtailAPIRouter('wagtailapi')
api_router.register_endpoint('pages', PagesAPIEndpoint)
api_router.register_endpoint('images', ImagesAPIEndpoint)
api_router.register_endpoint('documents', DocumentsAPIEndpoint)

New code:

from wagtail.api.v2.views import PagesAPIViewSet
from wagtail.api.v2.router import WagtailAPIRouter
from wagtail.images.api.v2.views import ImagesAPIViewSet
from wagtail.documents.api.v2.views import DocumentsAPIViewSet

api_router = WagtailAPIRouter('wagtailapi')
api_router.register_endpoint('pages', PagesAPIViewSet)
api_router.register_endpoint('images', ImagesAPIViewSet)
api_router.register_endpoint('documents', DocumentsAPIViewSet)
wagtail.documents.models.get_document_model has moved

The get_document_model function should now be imported from wagtail.documents rather than wagtail.documents.models. See Custom document model.

Removed Page and Site models from Django admin

The Page and Site models are no longer editable through the Django admin backend. If required these models can be re-registered within your own project using Django’s ModelAdmin:

# my_app/admin.py
from django.contrib import admin

from wagtail.core.models import Page, Site

admin.site.register(Site)
admin.site.register(Page)

Wagtail 2.7.4 release notes

CVE-2020-15118: HTML injection through form field help text

This release addresses an HTML injection vulnerability through help text in the wagtail.contrib.forms form builder app. When a form page type is made available to Wagtail editors, and the page template is built using Django’s standard form rendering helpers such as form.as_p (as directed in the documentation), any HTML tags used within a form field’s help text will be rendered unescaped in the page. Allowing HTML within help text is an intentional design decision by Django; however, as a matter of policy Wagtail does not allow editors to insert arbitrary HTML by default, as this could potentially be used to carry out cross-site scripting attacks, including privilege escalation. This functionality should therefore not have been made available to editor-level users.

The vulnerability is not exploitable by an ordinary site visitor without access to the Wagtail admin.

Site owners who wish to re-enable the use of HTML within help text (and are willing to accept the risk of this being exploited by editors) may set WAGTAILFORMS_HELP_TEXT_ALLOW_HTML = True in their configuration settings.

Many thanks to Timothy Bautista for reporting this issue.

Additional fixes
  • Expand Pillow dependency range to include 7.x (Harris Lapiroff, Matt Westcott)

Wagtail 2.7.3 release notes

CVE-2020-11037: Potential timing attack on password-protected private pages

This release addresses a potential timing attack on pages or documents that have been protected with a shared password through Wagtail’s “Privacy” controls. This password check is performed through a character-by-character string comparison, and so an attacker who is able to measure the time taken by this check to a high degree of accuracy could potentially use timing differences to gain knowledge of the password. (This is understood to be feasible on a local network, but not on the public internet.)

Many thanks to Thibaud Colas for reporting this issue.

Wagtail 2.7.2 release notes

CVE-2020-11001: Possible XSS attack via page revision comparison view

This release addresses a cross-site scripting (XSS) vulnerability on the page revision comparison view within the Wagtail admin interface. A user with a limited-permission editor account for the Wagtail admin could potentially craft a page revision history that, when viewed by a user with higher privileges, could perform actions with that user’s credentials. The vulnerability is not exploitable by an ordinary site visitor without access to the Wagtail admin.

Many thanks to Vlad Gerasimenko for reporting this issue.

Wagtail 2.7.1 release notes

What’s new
Bug fixes
  • Management command startup checks under ManifestStaticFilesStorage no longer fail if collectstatic has not been run first (Alex Tomkins)

Wagtail 2.7 release notes

Wagtail 2.7 is designated a Long Term Support (LTS) release. Long Term Support releases will continue to receive maintenance updates as necessary to address security and data-loss related issues, up until the next LTS release (typically a period of 12 months).

What’s new
Improved StreamField design
_images/releasenotes_2_7_streamfield_styles.png

The design of the StreamField user interface has been updated to improve clarity and usability, including better handling of nested blocks. This work was completed by Bertrand Bordage as part of the Wagtail’s First Hatch crowdfunding campaign. We would like to thank all supporters of the campaign.

WebP image support

Images can now be uploaded and rendered in WebP format; see Image file formats for details. This feature was developed by frmdstryr, Karl Hobley and Matt Westcott.

Other features
  • Added Elasticsearch 7 support (pySilver)
  • Added Python 3.8 support (John Carter, Matt Westcott)
  • Added construct_page_listing_buttons hook (Michael van Tellingen)
  • Added more detailed documentation and troubleshooting for installing OpenCV for feature detection (Daniele Procida)
  • Move and refactor upgrade notification JS (Jonny Scholes)
  • Remove need for Elasticsearch update_all_types workaround, upgrade minimum release to 6.4.0 or above (Jonathan Liuti)
  • Add ability to insert internal anchor links/links with fragment identifiers in Draftail (rich text) fields (Iman Syed)
  • Added Table Block caption for accessibility (Rahmi Pruitt)
  • Add ability for users to change their own name via the account settings page (Kevin Howbrook)
  • Add ability to insert telephone numbers as links in Draftail (rich text) fields (Mikael Engström and Liam Brenner)
  • Increase delay before search in the snippet chooser, to prevent redundant search request round trips (Robert Rollins)
  • Add WAGTAIL_EMAIL_MANAGEMENT_ENABLED setting to determine whether users can change their email address (Janne Alatalo)
  • Recognise Soundcloud artist URLs as embeddable (Kiril Staikov)
  • Add WAGTAILDOCS_SERVE_METHOD setting to determine how document downloads will be linked to and served (Tobias McNulty, Matt Westcott)
  • Add WAGTAIL_MODERATION_ENABLED setting to enable / disable the ‘Submit for Moderation’ option (Jacob Topp-Mugglestone) - thanks to The Motley Fool for sponsoring this feature
  • Added settings to customise pagination page size for the Images admin area (Brian Whitton)
  • Added ARIA role to TableBlock output (Matt Westcott)
  • Added cache-busting query parameters to static files within the Wagtail admin (Matt Westcott)
  • Allow register_page_action_menu_item and construct_page_action_menu hooks to override the default menu action (Rahmi Pruitt, Matt Westcott) - thanks to The Motley Fool for sponsoring review of this feature
  • WAGTAILIMAGES_MAX_IMAGE_PIXELS limit now takes the number of animation frames into account (Karl Hobley)
Bug fixes
  • Added line breaks to long filenames on multiple image / document uploader (Kevin Howbrook)
  • Added https support for Scribd oEmbed provider (Rodrigo)
  • Changed StreamField group label color so labels are visible (Catherine Farman)
  • Prevented images with a very wide aspect ratio from being displayed distorted in the rich text editor (Iman Syed)
  • Prevent exception when deleting a model with a protected One-to-one relationship (Neal Todd)
  • Added labels to snippet bulk edit checkboxes for screen reader users (Martey Dodoo)
  • Middleware responses during page preview are now properly returned to the user (Matt Westcott)
  • Default text of page links in rich text uses the public page title rather than the admin display title (Andy Chosak)
  • Specific page permission checks are now enforced when viewing a page revision (Andy Chosak)
  • pageurl and slugurl tags no longer fail when request.site is None (Samir Shah)
  • Output form media on add/edit image forms with custom models (Matt Westcott)
  • Output form media on add/edit document forms with custom models (Sergey Fedoseev)
  • Fixes layout for the clear checkbox in default FileField widget (Mikalai Radchuk)
  • Remove ASCII conversion from Postgres search backend, to support stemming in non-Latin alphabets (Pavel Denisov)
  • Prevent tab labels on page edit view from being cut off on very narrow screens (Kevin Howbrook)
  • Very long words in page listings are now broken where necessary (Kevin Howbrook)
  • Language chosen in user preferences no longer persists on subsequent requests (Bojan Mihelac)
  • Prevent new block IDs from being assigned on repeated calls to StreamBlock.get_prep_value (Colin Klein)
  • Prevent broken images in notification emails when static files are hosted on a remote domain (Eduard Luca)
  • Replace styleguide example avatar with default image to avoid issues when custom user model is used (Matt Westcott)
  • DraftailRichTextArea is no longer treated as a hidden field by Django’s form logic (Sergey Fedoseev)
  • Replace format() placeholders in translatable strings with % formatting (Matt Westcott)
  • Altering Django REST Framework’s DEFAULT_AUTHENTICATION_CLASSES setting no longer breaks the page explorer menu and admin API (Matt Westcott)
  • Regression - missing label for external link URL field in link chooser (Stefani Castellanos)
Upgrade considerations
Query strings added to static file URLs within the admin

To avoid problems caused by outdated cached JavaScript / CSS files following a Wagtail upgrade, URLs to static files within the Wagtail admin now include a version-specific query parameter of the form ?v=1a2b3c4d. Under certain front-end cache configurations (such as Cloudflare’s ‘No Query String’ caching level), the presence of this parameter may prevent the file from being cached at all. If you are using such a setup, and have some other method in place to expire outdated files (e.g. clearing the cache on deployment), you can disable the query parameter by setting WAGTAILADMIN_STATIC_FILE_VERSION_STRINGS to False in your project settings. (Note that this is automatically disabled when ManifestStaticFilesStorage is in use.)

Page.dummy_request is deprecated

The internal Page.dummy_request method (which generates an HTTP request object simulating a real page request, for use in previews) has been deprecated, as it did not correctly handle errors generated during middleware processing. Any code that calls this method to render page previews should be updated to use the new method Page.make_preview_request(original_request=None, preview_mode=None), which builds the request and calls Page.serve_preview as a single operation.

Changes to document serving on remote storage backends (Amazon S3 etc)

This release introduces a new setting WAGTAILDOCS_SERVE_METHOD to control how document downloads are served. On previous versions of Wagtail, document files would always be served through a Django view, to allow permission checks to be applied. When using a remote storage backend such as Amazon S3, this meant that the document would be downloaded to the Django server on every download request.

In Wagtail 2.7, the default behaviour on remote storage backends is to redirect to the storage’s underlying URL after performing the permission check. If this is unsuitable for your project (for example, your storage provider is configured to block public access, or revealing its URL would be a security risk) you can revert to the previous behaviour by setting WAGTAILDOCS_SERVE_METHOD to 'serve_view'.

Template change for page action menu hooks

When customising the action menu on the page edit view through the register_page_action_menu_item or construct_page_action_menu hook, the ActionMenuItem object’s template attribute or render_html method can be overridden to customise the menu item’s HTML. As of Wagtail 2.7, the HTML returned from these should not include the enclosing <li> element.

Any add-on library that uses this feature and needs to preserve backward compatibility with previous Wagtail versions can conditionally reinsert the <li> wrapper through its render_html method - for example:

from django.utils.html import format_html
from wagtail import VERSION as WAGTAIL_VERSION
from wagtail.admin.action_menu import ActionMenuItem

class CustomMenuItem(ActionMenuItem):
    template = 'myapp/my_menu_item.html'

    def render_html(self, request, parent_context):
        html = super().render_html(request, parent_context)
        if WAGTAIL_VERSION < (2, 7):
            html = format_html('<li>{}</li>', html)
        return html
wagtail.admin.utils and wagtail.admin.decorators modules deprecated

The modules wagtail.admin.utils and wagtail.admin.decorators have been deprecated. The helper functions defined here exist primarily for Wagtail’s internal use; however, some of them (particularly send_mail and permission_required) may be found in user code, and import lines will need to be updated. The new locations for these definitions are as follows:

Definition Old location New location
any_permission_required wagtail.admin.utils wagtail.admin.auth
permission_denied wagtail.admin.utils wagtail.admin.auth
permission_required wagtail.admin.utils wagtail.admin.auth
PermissionPolicyChecker wagtail.admin.utils wagtail.admin.auth
user_has_any_page_permission wagtail.admin.utils wagtail.admin.auth
user_passes_test wagtail.admin.utils wagtail.admin.auth
users_with_page_permission wagtail.admin.utils wagtail.admin.auth
reject_request wagtail.admin.decorators wagtail.admin.auth
require_admin_access wagtail.admin.decorators wagtail.admin.auth
get_available_admin_languages wagtail.admin.utils wagtail.admin.localization
get_available_admin_time_zones wagtail.admin.utils wagtail.admin.localization
get_js_translation_strings wagtail.admin.utils wagtail.admin.localization
WAGTAILADMIN_PROVIDED_LANGUAGES wagtail.admin.utils wagtail.admin.localization
send_mail wagtail.admin.utils wagtail.admin.mail
send_notification wagtail.admin.utils wagtail.admin.mail
get_object_usage wagtail.admin.utils wagtail.admin.models
popular_tags_for_model wagtail.admin.utils wagtail.admin.models
get_site_for_user wagtail.admin.utils wagtail.admin.navigation

Wagtail 2.6.3 release notes

What’s new
Bug fixes
  • Altering Django REST Framework’s DEFAULT_AUTHENTICATION_CLASSES setting no longer breaks the page explorer menu and admin API (Matt Westcott)

Wagtail 2.6.2 release notes

What’s new
Bug fixes
  • Prevent search indexing failures on Postgres 9.4 and Django >= 2.2.1 (Matt Westcott)

Wagtail 2.6.1 release notes

What’s new
Bug fixes
  • Prevent JavaScript errors caused by unescaped quote characters in translation strings (Matt Westcott)

Wagtail 2.6 release notes

What’s new
Accessibility targets and improvements

Wagtail now has official accessibility support targets: we are aiming for compliance with WCAG2.1, AA level. WCAG 2.1 is the international standard which underpins many national accessibility laws.

Wagtail isn’t fully compliant just yet, but we have made many changes to the admin interface to get there. We thank the UK Government (in particular the CMS team at the Department for International Trade), who commissioned many of these improvements.

Here are changes which should make Wagtail more usable for all users regardless of abilities:

  • Increase font-size across the whole admin (Beth Menzies, Katie Locke)
  • Improved text color contrast across the whole admin (Beth Menzies, Katie Locke)
  • Added consistent focus outline styles across the whole admin (Thibaud Colas)
  • Ensured the ‘add child page’ button displays when focused (Helen Chapman, Katie Locke)

This release also contains many big improvements for screen reader users:

  • Added more ARIA landmarks across the admin interface and welcome page for screen reader users to navigate the CMS more easily (Beth Menzies)
  • Improved heading structure for screen reader users navigating the CMS admin (Beth Menzies, Helen Chapman)
  • Make icon font implementation more screen-reader-friendly (Thibaud Colas)
  • Removed buggy tab order customisations in the CMS admin (Jordan Bauer)
  • Screen readers now treat page-level action dropdowns as navigation instead of menus (Helen Chapman)
  • Fixed occurrences of invalid HTML across the CMS admin (Thibaud Colas)
  • Add empty alt attributes to all images in the CMS admin (Andreas Bernacca)
  • Fixed focus not moving to the pages explorer menu when open (Helen Chapman)

We’ve also had a look at how controls are labelled across the UI for screen reader users:

  • Add image dimensions in image gallery and image choosers for screen reader users (Helen Chapman)
  • Add more contextual information for screen readers in the explorer menu’s links (Helen Chapman)
  • Make URL generator preview image alt translatable (Thibaud Colas)
  • Screen readers now announce “Dashboard” for the main nav’s logo link instead of Wagtail’s version number (Thibaud Colas)
  • Remove duplicate labels in image gallery and image choosers for screen reader users (Helen Chapman)
  • Added a label to the modals’ “close” button for screen reader users (Helen Chapman, Katie Locke)
  • Added labels to permission checkboxes for screen reader users (Helen Chapman, Katie Locke)
  • Improve screen-reader labels for action links in page listing (Helen Chapman, Katie Locke)
  • Add screen-reader labels for table headings in page listing (Helen Chapman, Katie Locke)
  • Add screen reader labels for page privacy toggle, edit lock, status tag in page explorer & edit views (Helen Chapman, Katie Locke)
  • Add screen-reader labels for dashboard summary cards (Helen Chapman, Katie Locke)
  • Add screen-reader labels for privacy toggle of collections (Helen Chapman, Katie Locke)

Again, this is still a work in progress – if you are aware of other existing accessibility issues, please do open an issue if there isn’t one already.

Other features
  • Added support for short_description for field labels in modeladmin’s InspectView (Wesley van Lee)
  • Rearranged SCSS folder structure to the client folder and split them approximately according to ITCSS. (Naomi Morduch Toubman, Jonny Scholes, Janneke Janssen, Hugo van den Berg)
  • Added support for specifying cell alignment on TableBlock (Samuel Mendes)
  • Added more informative error when a non-image object is passed to the image template tag (Deniz Dogan)
  • Added ButtonHelper examples in the modelAdmin primer page within documentation (Kalob Taulien)
  • Multiple clarifications, grammar and typo fixes throughout documentation (Dan Swain)
  • Use correct URL in API example in documentation (Michael Bunsen)
  • Move datetime widget initialiser JS into the widget’s form media instead of page editor media (Matt Westcott)
  • Add form field prefixes for input forms in chooser modals (Matt Westcott)
  • Removed version number from the logo link’s title. The version can now be found under the Settings menu (Thibaud Colas)
  • Added “don’t delete” option to confirmation screen when deleting images, documents and modeladmin models (Kevin Howbrook)
  • Added branding_title template block for the admin title prefix (Dillen Meijboom)
  • Added support for custom search handler classes to modeladmin’s IndexView, and added a class that uses the default Wagtail search backend for searching (Seb Brown, Andy Babic)
  • Update group edit view to expose the Permission object for each checkbox (George Hickman)
  • Improve performance of Pages for Moderation panel (Fidel Ramos)
  • Added process_child_object and exclude_fields arguments to Page.copy() to make it easier for third-party apps to customise copy behavior (Karl Hobley)
  • Added Page.with_content_json(), allowing revision content loading behaviour to be customised on a per-model basis (Karl Hobley)
  • Added construct_settings_menu hook (Jordan Bauer, Quadric)
  • Fixed compatibility of date / time choosers with wagtail-react-streamfield (Mike Hearn)
  • Performance optimization of several admin functions, including breadcrumbs, home and index pages (Fidel Ramos)
Bug fixes
  • ModelAdmin no longer fails when filtering over a foreign key relation (Jason Dilworth, Matt Westcott)
  • The Wagtail version number is now visible within the Settings menu (Kevin Howbrook)
  • Scaling images now rounds values to an integer so that images render without errors (Adrian Brunyate)
  • Revised test decorator to ensure TestPageEditHandlers test cases run correctly (Alex Tomkins)
  • Wagtail bird animation in admin now ends correctly on all browsers (Deniz Dogan)
  • Explorer menu no longer shows sibling pages for which the user does not have access (Mike Hearn)
  • Admin HTML now includes the correct dir attribute for the active language (Andreas Bernacca)
  • Fix type error when using --chunk_size argument on ./manage.py update_index (Seb Brown)
  • Avoid rendering entire form in EditHandler’s repr method (Alex Tomkins)
  • Add empty alt attributes to HTML output of Embedly and oEmbed embed finders (Andreas Bernacca)
  • Clear pending AJAX request if error occurs on page chooser (Matt Westcott)
  • Prevent text from overlapping in focal point editing UI (Beth Menzies)
  • Restore custom “Date” icon for scheduled publishing panel in Edit page’s Settings tab (Helen Chapman)
  • Added missing form media to user edit form template (Matt Westcott)
  • Page.copy() no longer copies child objects when the accessor name is included in exclude_fields_in_copy (Karl Hobley)
  • Clicking the privacy toggle while the page is still loading no longer loads the wrong data in the page (Helen Chapman)
  • Added missing is_stored_locally method to AbstractDocument (jonny5532)
  • Query model no longer removes punctuation as part of string normalisation (William Blackie)
  • Make login test helper work with user models with non-default username fields (Andrew Miller)
  • Delay dirty form check to prevent “unsaved changes” warning from being wrongly triggered (Thibaud Colas)
Upgrade considerations
Removed support for Python 3.4

Python 3.4 is no longer supported as of this release; please upgrade to Python 3.5 or above before upgrading Wagtail.

Icon font implementation changes

The icon font implementation has been changed to be invisible for screen-reader users, by switching to using Private Use Areas Unicode code points. All of the icon classes (icon-user, icon-search, etc) should still work the same, except for two which have been removed because they were duplicates:

  • icon-picture is removed. Use icon-image instead (same visual).
  • icon-file-text-alt is removed. Use icon-doc-full instead (same visual).

For a list of all available icons, please see the UI Styleguide.

Wagtail 2.5.2 release notes

What’s new
Bug fixes
  • Delay dirty form check to prevent “unsaved changes” warning from being wrongly triggered (Thibaud Colas)

Wagtail 2.5.1 release notes

What’s new
Bug fixes
  • Prevent crash when comparing StructBlocks in revision history (Adrian Turjak, Matt Westcott)

Wagtail 2.5 release notes

What’s new
Django 2.2 support

This release is compatible with Django 2.2. Compatibility fixes were contributed by Matt Westcott and Andy Babic.

New Markdown shortcuts in rich text

Wagtail’s rich text editor now supports using Markdown shortcuts for inline formatting:

  • ** for bold
  • _ for italic
  • ~ for strikethrough (if enabled)
  • ` for code (if enabled)

To learn other shortcuts, have a look at the keyboard shortcuts reference.

Other features
  • Added support for customising EditHandler-based forms on a per-request basis (Bertrand Bordage)
  • Added more informative error message when |richtext filter is applied to a non-string value (mukesh5)
  • Automatic search indexing can now be disabled on a per-model basis via the search_auto_update attribute (Karl Hobley)
  • Improved diffing of StreamFields when comparing page revisions (Karl Hobley)
  • Highlight broken links to pages and missing documents in rich text (Brady Moe)
  • Preserve links when copy-pasting rich text content from Wagtail to other tools (Thibaud Colas)
  • Rich text to contentstate conversion now prioritises more specific rules, to accommodate <p> and <br> elements with attributes (Matt Westcott)
  • Added limit image upload size by number of pixels (Thomas Elliott)
  • Added manage.py wagtail_update_index alias to avoid clashes with update_index commands from other packages (Matt Westcott)
  • Renamed target_model argument on PageChooserBlock to page_type (Loic Teixeira)
  • edit_handler and panels can now be defined on a ModelAdmin definition (Thomas Kremmel)
  • Add Learn Wagtail to third-party tutorials in documentation (Matt Westcott)
  • Add a Django setting TAG_LIMIT to limit number of tags that can be added to any taggit model (Mani)
  • Added instructions on how to generate urls for ModelAdmin to documentation (LB (Ben Johnston), Andy Babic)
  • Added option to specify a fallback URL on {% pageurl %} (Arthur Holzner)
  • Add support for more rich text formats, disabled by default: blockquote, superscript, subscript, strikethrough, code (Md Arifin Ibne Matin)
  • Added max_count_per_parent option on page models to limit the number of pages of a given type that can be created under one parent page (Wesley van Lee)
  • StreamField field blocks now accept a validators argument (Tom Usher)
  • Added edit / delete buttons to snippet index and “don’t delete” option to confirmation screen, for consistency with pages (Kevin Howbrook)
  • Added name attributes to all built-in page action menu items (LB (Ben Johnston))
  • Added validation on the filter string to the Jinja2 image template tag (Jonny Scholes)
  • Changed the pages reordering UI toggle to make it easier to find (Katie Locke, Thibaud Colas)
  • Added support for rich text link rewrite handlers for external and email links (Md Arifin Ibne Matin)
  • Clarify installation instructions in documentation, especially regarding virtual environments. (Naomi Morduch Toubman)
Bug fixes
  • Set SERVER_PORT to 443 in Page.dummy_request() for HTTPS sites (Sergey Fedoseev)
  • Include port number in Host header of Page.dummy_request() (Sergey Fedoseev)
  • Validation error messages in InlinePanel no longer count towards max_num when disabling the ‘add’ button (Todd Dembrey, Thibaud Colas)
  • Rich text to contentstate conversion now ignores stray closing tags (frmdstryr)
  • Escape backslashes in postgres_search queries (Hammy Goonan)
  • Parent page link in page chooser search results no longer navigates away (Asanka Lihiniyagoda, Sævar Öfjörð Magnússon)
  • routablepageurl tag now correctly omits domain part when multiple sites exist at the same root (Gassan Gousseinov)
  • Added missing collection column specifier on document listing template (Sergey Fedoseev)
  • Page Copy will now also copy ParentalManyToMany field relations (LB (Ben Johnston))
  • Admin HTML header now includes correct language code (Matt Westcott)
  • Unclear error message when saving image after focal point edit (Hugo van den Berg)
  • Increase max length on Embed.thumbnail_url to 255 characters (Kevin Howbrook)
  • send_mail now correctly uses the html_message kwarg for HTML messages (Tiago Requeijo)
  • Page copying no longer allowed if page model has reached its max_count (Andy Babic)
  • Don’t show page type on page chooser button when multiple types are allowed (Thijs Kramer)
  • Make sure page chooser search results correspond to the latest search by cancelling previous requests (Esper Kuijs)
  • Inform user when moving a page from one parent to another where there is an already existing page with the same slug (Casper Timmers)
  • User add/edit forms now support form widgets with JS/CSS media (Damian Grinwis)
  • Rich text processing now preserves non-breaking spaces instead of converting them to normal spaces (Wesley van Lee)
  • Prevent autocomplete dropdowns from appearing over date choosers on Chrome (Kevin Howbrook)
  • Prevent crash when logging HTTP errors on Cloudflare cache purging (Kevin Howbrook)
  • Prevent rich text editor crash when filtering copy-pasted content and the last block is to be removed, e.g. unsupported image (Thibaud Colas)
  • Removing rich text links / documents now also works when the text selection is backwards (Thibaud Colas)
  • Prevent the rich text editor from crashing when copy-paste filtering removes all of its content (Thibaud Colas)
  • Page chooser now respects custom get_admin_display_title methods on parent page and breadcrumb (Haydn Greatnews)
  • Added consistent whitespace around sortable table headings (Matt Westcott)
  • Moved locale names for Chinese (Simplified) and Chinese (Traditional) to zh_Hans and zh_Hant (Matt Westcott)
Upgrade considerations
EditHandler.bind_to_model and EditHandler.bind_to_instance deprecated

The internal EditHandler methods bind_to_model and bind_to_instance have been deprecated, in favour of a new combined bind_to method which accepts model, instance, request and form as optional keyword arguments. Any user code which calls EditHandler.bind_to_model(model) should be updated to use EditHandler.bind_to(model=model) instead; any user code which calls EditHandler.bind_to_instance(instance, request, form) should be updated to use EditHandler.bind_to(instance=instance, request=request, form=form).

Changes to admin pagination helpers

A number of changes have been made to pagination handling within the Wagtail admin; these are internal API changes, but may affect applications and third-party packages that add new paginated object listings, including chooser modals, to the admin. The paginate function in wagtail.utils.pagination has been deprecated in favour of the django.core.paginator.Paginator.get_page method introduced in Django 2.0 - a call such as:

from wagtail.utils.pagination import paginate

paginator, page = paginate(request, object_list, per_page=25)

should be replaced with:

from django.core.paginator import Paginator

paginator = Paginator(object_list, per_page=25)
page = paginator.get_page(request.GET.get('p'))

Additionally, the is_ajax flag on the template wagtailadmin/shared/pagination_nav.html has been deprecated in favour of a new template wagtailadmin/shared/ajax_pagination_nav.html:

{% include "wagtailadmin/shared/pagination_nav.html" with items=page_obj is_ajax=1 %}

should become:

{% include "wagtailadmin/shared/ajax_pagination_nav.html" with items=page_obj %}
New rich text formats

Wagtail now has built-in support for new rich text formats, disabled by default:

  • blockquote, using the blockquote Draft.js block type, saved as a <blockquote> tag.
  • superscript, using the SUPERSCRIPT Draft.js inline style, saved as a <sup> tag.
  • subscript, using the SUBSCRIPT Draft.js inline style, saved as a <sub> tag.
  • strikethrough, using the STRIKETHROUGH Draft.js inline style, saved as a <s> tag.
  • code, using the CODE Draft.js inline style, saved as a <code> tag.

Projects already using those exact Draft.js type and HTML tag combinations can safely replace their feature definitions with the new built-ins. Projects that use the same feature identifier can keep their existing feature definitions as overrides. Finally, if the Draft.js types / HTML tags are used but with a different combination, do not enable the new feature definitions to avoid conflicts in storage or editor behavior.

Chinese language locales changed to zh_Hans and zh_Hant

The translations for Chinese (Simplified) and Chinese (Traditional) are now available under the locale names zh_Hans and zh_Hant respectively, rather than zh_CN and zh_TW. Projects that currently use the old names for the LANGUAGE_CODE setting may need to update the settings file to use the new names.

Wagtail 2.4 release notes

What’s new
New “Welcome to your Wagtail site” Starter Page

When using the wagtail start command to make a new site, users will now be greeted with a proper starter page. Thanks to Timothy Allen and Scott Cranfill for pulling this off!

Wagtail welcome message
Other features
  • Added support for Python 3.7 (Matt Westcott)
  • Added max_count option on page models to limit the number of pages of a particular type that can be created (Dan Braghis)
  • Document and image choosers now show the document / image’s collection (Alejandro Garza, Janneke Janssen)
  • New image_url template tag allows to generate dynamic image URLs, so image renditions are being created outside the main request which improves performance. Requires extra configuration, see Dynamic image serve view (Yannick Chabbert, Dan Braghis).
  • Added ability to run individual tests through tox (Benjamin Bach)
  • Collection listings are now ordered by name (Seb Brown)
  • Added file_hash field to documents (Karl Hobley, Dan Braghis)
  • Added last login to the user overview (Noah B Johnson)
  • Changed design of image editing page (Janneke Janssen, Ben Enright)
  • Added Slovak character map for JavaScript slug generation (Andy Chosak)
  • Make documentation links on welcome page work for prereleases (Matt Westcott)
  • Allow overridden copy() methods in Page subclasses to be called from the page copy view (Robert Rollins)
  • Users without a preferred language set on their profile now use language selected by Django’s LocaleMiddleware (Benjamin Bach)
  • Added hooks to customise the actions menu on the page create/edit views (Matt Westcott)
  • Cleanup: Use functools.partial() instead of django.utils.functional.curry() (Sergey Fedoseev)
  • Added before_move_page and after_move_page hooks (Maylon Pedroso)
  • Bulk deletion button for snippets is now hidden until items are selected (Karl Hobley)
Bug fixes
  • Query objects returned from PageQuerySet.type_q can now be merged with | (Brady Moe)
  • Add rel="noopener noreferrer" to target blank links (Anselm Bradford)
  • Additional fields on custom document models now show on the multiple document upload view (Robert Rollins, Sergey Fedoseev)
  • Help text does not overflow when using a combination of BooleanField and FieldPanel in page model (Dzianis Sheka)
  • Document chooser now displays more useful help message when there are no documents in Wagtail document library (gmmoraes, Stas Rudakou)
  • Allow custom logos of any height in the admin menu (Meteor0id)
  • Allow nav menu to take up all available space instead of scrolling (Meteor0id)
  • Users without the edit permission no longer see “Edit” links in list of pages waiting for moderation (Justin Focus, Fedor Selitsky)
  • Redirects now return 404 when destination is unspecified or a page with no site (Hillary Jeffrey)
  • Refactor all breakpoint definitions, removing style overlaps (Janneke Janssen)
  • Updated draftjs_exporter to 2.1.5 to fix bug in handling adjacent entities (Thibaud Colas)
  • Page titles consisting only of stopwords now generate a non-empty default slug (Andy Chosak, Janneke Janssen)
  • Sitemap generator now allows passing a sitemap instance in the URL configuration (Mitchel Cabuloy, Dan Braghis)
Upgrade considerations
Removed support for Django 1.11

Django 1.11 is no longer supported in this release; please upgrade your project to Django 2.0 or 2.1 before upgrading to Wagtail 2.4.

Custom image model migrations created on Wagtail <1.8 may fail

Projects with a custom image model (see Custom image models) created on Wagtail 1.7 or earlier are likely to have one or more migrations that refer to the (now-deleted) wagtailimages.Filter model. In Wagtail 2.4, the migrations that defined this model have been squashed, which may result in the error ValueError: Related model 'wagtailimages.Filter' cannot be resolved when bringing up a new instance of the database. To rectify this, check your project’s migrations for ForeignKey references to wagtailimages.Filter, and change them to IntegerField definitions. For example, the line:

('filter', models.ForeignKey(blank=True, null=True, on_delete=django.db.models.deletion.CASCADE, related_name='+', to='wagtailimages.Filter')),

should become:

('filter', models.IntegerField(blank=True, null=True)),

Wagtail 2.3 release notes

Wagtail 2.3 is designated a Long Term Support (LTS) release. Long Term Support releases will continue to receive maintenance updates as necessary to address security and data-loss related issues, up until the next LTS release (typically a period of 8 months).

Note that Wagtail 2.3 will be the last release branch to support Django 1.11.

What’s new
Added Django 2.1 support

Wagtail is now compatible with Django 2.1. Compatibility fixes were contributed by Ryan Verner and Matt Westcott.

Improved colour contrast

Colour contrast within the admin interface has been improved, and now complies with WCAG 2 level AA. This was completed by Coen van der Kamp and Naomi Morduch Toubman based on earlier work from Edd Baldry, Naa Marteki Reed and Ben Enright.

Other features
  • Added ‘scale’ image filter (Oliver Wilkerson)
  • Added meta tag to prevent search engines from indexing admin pages (Karl Hobley)
  • EmbedBlock now validates against recognised embed providers on save (Bertrand Bordage)
  • Made cache control headers on Wagtail admin consistent with Django admin (Tomasz Knapik)
  • Notification emails now include an “Auto-Submitted: auto-generated” header (Dan Braghis)
  • Image chooser panels now show alt text as title (Samir Shah)
  • Added download_url field to images in the API (Michael Harrison)
  • Dummy requests for preview now preserve the HTTP Authorization header (Ben Dickinson)
Bug fixes
  • Respect next param on login (Loic Teixeira)
  • InlinePanel now handles relations that specify a related_query_name (Aram Dulyan)
  • before_delete_page / after_delete_page hooks now run within the same database transaction as the page deletion (Tomasz Knapik)
  • Seek to the beginning of image files when uploading, to restore compatibility with django-storages Google Cloud and Azure backends (Mikalai Radchuk)
  • Snippet chooser modal no longer fails on snippet models with UUID primary keys (Sævar Öfjörð Magnússon)
  • Restored localisation in date/time pickers (David Moore, Thibaud Colas)
  • Tag input field no longer treats ‘б’ on Russian keyboards as a comma (Michael Borisov)
  • Disabled autocomplete dropdowns on date/time chooser fields (Janneke Janssen)
  • Split up wagtail.admin.forms to make it less prone to circular imports (Matt Westcott)
  • Disable linking to root page in rich text, making the page non-functional (Matt Westcott)
  • Pages should be editable and save-able even if there are broken page or document links in rich text (Matt Westcott)
  • Avoid redundant round-trips of JSON StreamField data on save, improving performance and preventing consistency issues on fixture loading (Andy Chosak, Matt Westcott)
  • Users are not logged out when changing their own password through the Users area (Matt Westcott)
Upgrade considerations
wagtail.admin.forms reorganised

The wagtail.admin.forms module has been split up into submodules to make it less prone to producing circular imports, particularly when a custom user model is in use. The following (undocumented) definitions have now been moved to new locations:

Definition New location
LoginForm wagtail.admin.forms.auth
PasswordResetForm wagtail.admin.forms.auth
URLOrAbsolutePathValidator wagtail.admin.forms.choosers
URLOrAbsolutePathField wagtail.admin.forms.choosers
ExternalLinkChooserForm wagtail.admin.forms.choosers
EmailLinkChooserForm wagtail.admin.forms.choosers
CollectionViewRestrictionForm wagtail.admin.forms.collections
CollectionForm wagtail.admin.forms.collections
BaseCollectionMemberForm wagtail.admin.forms.collections
BaseGroupCollectionMemberPermissionFormSet wagtail.admin.forms.collections
collection_member_permission_formset_factory wagtail.admin.forms.collections
CopyForm wagtail.admin.forms.pages
PageViewRestrictionForm wagtail.admin.forms.pages
SearchForm wagtail.admin.forms.search
BaseViewRestrictionForm wagtail.admin.forms.view_restrictions

The following definitions remain in wagtail.admin.forms: FORM_FIELD_OVERRIDES, DIRECT_FORM_FIELD_OVERRIDES, formfield_for_dbfield, WagtailAdminModelFormMetaclass, WagtailAdminModelForm and WagtailAdminPageForm.

Wagtail 2.2.2 release notes

What’s new
Bug fixes
  • Seek to the beginning of image files when uploading, to restore compatibility with django-storages Google Cloud and Azure backends (Mikalai Radchuk)
  • Respect next param on login (Loic Teixeira)

Wagtail 2.2.1 release notes

What’s new
Bug fixes
  • Pin Beautiful Soup to 4.6.0 due to further regressions in formatting empty elements (Matt Westcott)
  • Prevent AppRegistryNotReady error when wagtail.contrib.sitemaps is in INSTALLED_APPS (Matt Westcott)

Wagtail 2.2 release notes

What’s new
Other features
  • Added another valid AudioBoom oEmbed pattern (Bertrand Bordage)
  • Added annotate_score support to PostgreSQL search backend (Bertrand Bordage)
  • Pillow’s image optimisation is now applied when saving PNG images (Dmitry Vasilev)
  • JS / CSS media files can now be associated with Draftail feature definitions (Matt Westcott)
  • The {% slugurl %} template tag is now site-aware (Samir Shah)
  • Added file_size field to documents (Karl Hobley)
  • Added file_hash field to images (Karl Hobley)
  • Update documentation (configuring Django for Wagtail) to contain all current settings options (Matt Westcott, LB (Ben Johnston))
  • Added defer flag to PageQuerySet.specific (Karl Hobley)
  • Snippets can now be deleted from the listing view (LB (Ben Johnston))
  • Increased max length of redirect URL field to 255 (Michael Harrison)
  • Added documentation for new JS/CSS media files association with Draftail feature definitions (Ed Henderson)
  • Added accessible colour contrast guidelines to the style guide (Catherine Farman)
  • Admin modal views no longer rely on JavaScript eval(), for better CSP compliance (Matt Westcott)
  • Update editor guide for embeds and documents in rich text (Kevin Howbrook)
  • Improved performance of sitemap generation (Michael van Tellingen, Bertrand Bordage)
  • Added an internal API for autocomplete (Karl Hobley)
Bug fixes
  • Handle all exceptions from Image.get_file_size (Andrew Plummer)
  • Fix display of breadcrumbs in ModelAdmin (LB (Ben Johnston))
  • Remove duplicate border radius of avatars (Benjamin Thurm)
  • Site.get_site_root_paths() preferring other sites over the default when some sites share the same root_page (Andy Babic)
  • Pages with missing model definitions no longer crash the API (Abdulmalik Abdulwahab)
  • Rich text image chooser no longer skips format selection after a validation error (Matt Westcott)
  • Null characters in URLs no longer crash the redirect middleware on PostgreSQL (Andrew Crewdson, Matt Westcott)
  • Permission checks no longer prevent a non-live page from being unscheduled (Abdulmalik Abdulwahab)
  • Copy-paste between Draftail editors now preserves all formatting/content (Thibaud Colas)
  • Fix alignment of checkboxes and radio buttons on Firefox (Matt Westcott)
Upgrade considerations
JavaScript templates in modal workflows are deprecated

The wagtail.admin.modal_workflow module (used internally by Wagtail to handle modal popup interfaces such as the page chooser) has been updated to avoid returning JavaScript code as part of HTTP responses. User code that relies on this functionality can be updated as follows:

  • Eliminate template tags from the .js template. Any dynamic data needed by the template can instead be passed in a dict to render_modal_workflow, as a keyword argument json_data; this data will then be available as the second parameter of the JavaScript function.
  • At the point where you call the ModalWorkflow constructor, add an onload option - a dictionary of functions to be called on loading each step of the workflow. Move the code from the .js template into this dictionary. Then, on the call to render_modal_workflow, rather than passing the .js template name (which should now be replaced by None), pass a step item in the json_data dictionary to indicate the onload function to be called.

Additionally, if your code calls loadResponseText as part of a jQuery AJAX callback, this should now be passed all three arguments from the callback (the response data, status string and XMLHttpRequest object).

Page.get_sitemap_urls() now accepts an optional request keyword argument

The Page.get_sitemap_urls() method used by the wagtail.contrib.sitemaps module has been updated to receive an optional request keyword argument. If you have overridden this method in your page models, you will need to update the method signature to accept this argument (and pass it on when calling super, if applicable).

Wagtail 2.1.3 release notes

What’s new
Bug fixes
  • Pin Beautiful Soup to 4.6.0 due to further regressions in formatting empty elements (Matt Westcott)

Wagtail 2.1.2 release notes

What’s new
Bug fixes
  • Bundle the l18n package to avoid installation issues on systems with a non-Unicode locale (Matt Westcott)
  • Mark Beautiful Soup 4.6.1 as incompatible due to bug in formatting empty elements (Matt Westcott)

Wagtail 2.1.1 release notes

What’s new
Bug fixes
  • Fix Site.get_site_root_paths() preferring other sites over the default when some sites share the same root_page (Andy Babic)
  • Rich text image chooser no longer skips format selection after a validation error (Matt Westcott)
  • Null characters in URLs no longer crash the redirect middleware on PostgreSQL (Matt Westcott)

Wagtail 2.1 release notes

What’s new
New HelpPanel

A new panel type HelpPanel allows to easily add HTML within an edit form. This new feature was developed by Kevin Chung.

Profile picture upload

Users can now upload profile pictures directly through the Account Settings menu, rather than using Gravatar. Gravatar is still used as a fallback if no profile picture has been uploaded directly; a new setting WAGTAIL_GRAVATAR_PROVIDER_URL has been added to specify an alternative provider, or disable the use of external avatars completely. This feature was developed by Daniel Chimeno, Pierre Geier and Matt Westcott.

API lookup by page path

The API now includes an endpoint for finding pages by path; see Finding pages by HTML path. This feature was developed by Karl Hobley.

User time zone setting

Users can now set their current time zone through the Account Settings menu, which will then be reflected in date / time fields throughout the admin (such as go-live / expiry dates). The list of available time zones can be configured via the WAGTAIL_USER_TIME_ZONES setting. This feature was developed by David Moore.

Elasticsearch 6 support

Wagtail now supports Elasticsearch 6. See Elasticsearch Backend for configuration details. This feature was developed by Karl Hobley.

Other features
  • Persist tab hash in URL to allow direct navigation to tabs in the admin interface (Ben Weatherman)
  • Animate the chevron icon when opening sub-menus in the admin (Carlo Ascani)
  • Look through the target link and target page slug (in addition to the old slug) when searching for redirects in the admin (Michael Harrison)
  • Remove support for IE6 to IE9 from project template (Samir Shah)
  • Remove outdated X-UA-Compatible meta from admin template (Thibaud Colas)
  • Add JavaScript source maps in production build for packaged Wagtail (Thibaud Colas)
  • Removed assert statements from Wagtail API (Kim Chee Leong)
  • Update jquery-datetimepicker dependency to make Wagtail more CSP-friendly (unsafe-eval) (Pomax)
  • Added error notification when running the wagtail command on Python <3.4 (Matt Westcott)
  • update_index management command now accepts a --chunk_size option to determine the number of items to load at once (Dave Bell)
  • Added hook register_account_menu_item to add new account preference items (Michael van Tellingen)
  • Added change email functionality from the account settings (Alejandro Garza, Alexs Mathilda)
  • Add request parameter to edit handlers (Rajeev J Sebastian)
  • ImageChooser now sets a default title based on filename (Coen van der Kamp)
  • Added error handling to the Draftail editor (Thibaud Colas)
  • Add new wagtail_icon template tag to facilitate making admin icons accessible (Sander Tuit)
  • Set ALLOWED_HOSTS in the project template to allow any host in development (Tom Dyson)
  • Expose reusable client-side code to build Draftail extensions (Thibaud Colas)
  • Added WAGTAILFRONTENDCACHE_LANGUAGES setting to specify the languages whose URLs are to be purged when using i18n_patterns (PyMan Claudio Marinozzi)
  • Added extra_footer_actions template blocks for customising the add/edit page views (Arthur Holzner)
Bug fixes
  • Status button on ‘edit page’ now links to the correct URL when live and draft slug differ (LB (Ben Johnston))
  • Image title text in the gallery and in the chooser now wraps for long filenames (LB (Ben Johnston), Luiz Boaretto)
  • Move image editor action buttons to the bottom of the form on mobile (Julian Gallo)
  • StreamField icons are now correctly sorted into groups on the ‘append’ menu (Tim Heap)
  • Draftail now supports features specified via the WAGTAILADMIN_RICH_TEXT_EDITORS setting (Todd Dembrey)
  • Password reset form no longer indicates whether the email is recognised, as per standard Django behaviour (Bertrand Bordage)
  • UserAttributeSimilarityValidator is now correctly enforced on user creation / editing forms (Tim Heap)
  • Focal area removal not working in IE11 and MS Edge (Thibaud Colas)
  • Rewrite password change feedback message to be more user-friendly (Casper Timmers)
  • Correct dropdown arrow styling in Firefox, IE11 (Janneke Janssen, Alexs Mathilda)
  • Password reset no indicates specific validation errors on certain password restrictions (Lucas Moeskops)
  • Confirmation page on page deletion now respects custom get_admin_display_title methods (Kim Chee Leong)
  • Adding external link with selected text now includes text in link chooser (Tony Yates, Thibaud Colas, Alexs Mathilda)
  • Editing setting object with no site configured no longer crashes (Harm Zeinstra)
  • Creating a new object with inlines while mandatory fields are empty no longer crashes (Bertrand Bordage)
  • Localization of image and apps verbose names
  • Draftail editor no longer crashes after deleting image/embed using DEL key (Thibaud Colas)
  • Breadcrumb navigation now respects custom get_admin_display_title methods (Arthur Holzner, Wietze Helmantel, Matt Westcott)
  • Inconsistent order of heading features when adding h1, h5 or h6 as default feature for Hallo RichText editor (Loic Teixeira)
  • Add invalid password reset link error message (Coen van der Kamp)
  • Bypass select/prefetch related optimisation on update_index for ParentalManyToManyField to fix crash (Tim Kamanin)
  • ‘Add user’ is now rendered as a button due to the use of quotes within translations (Benoît Vogel)
  • Menu icon no longer overlaps with title in Modeladmin on mobile (Coen van der Kamp)
  • Background color overflow within the Wagtail documentation (Sergey Fedoseev)
  • Page count on homepage summary panel now takes account of user permissions (Andy Chosak)
  • Explorer view now prevents navigating outside of the common ancestor of the user’s permissions (Andy Chosak)
  • Generate URL for the current site when multiple sites share the same root page (Codie Roelf)
  • Restored ability to use non-model fields with FieldPanel (Matt Westcott, LB (Ben Johnston))
  • Stop revision comparison view from crashing when non-model FieldPanels are in use (LB (Ben Johnston))
  • Ordering in the page explorer now respects custom get_admin_display_title methods when sorting <100 pages (Matt Westcott)
  • Use index-specific Elasticsearch endpoints for bulk insertion, for compatibility with providers that lock down the root endpoint (Karl Hobley)
  • Fix usage URL on the document edit page (Jérôme Lebleu)
Upgrade considerations
Image format image_to_html method has been updated

The internal API for rich text image format objects (see Image Formats in the Rich Text Editor) has been updated; the Format.image_to_html method now receives the extra_attributes keyword argument as a dictionary of attributes, rather than a string. If you have defined any custom format objects that override this method, these will need to be updated.

Wagtail 2.0.2 release notes

What’s new
Bug fixes
  • Restored ability to use non-model fields with FieldPanel (Matt Westcott, LB (Ben Johnston))
  • Fix usage URL on the document edit page (Jérôme Lebleu)
  • Pin Beautiful Soup to 4.6.0 due to further regressions in formatting empty elements (Matt Westcott)

Wagtail 2.0.1 release notes

What’s new
  • Added error notification when running the wagtail command on Python <3.4 (Matt Westcott)
  • Added error handling to the Draftail editor (Thibaud Colas)
Bug fixes
  • Draftail now supports features specified via the WAGTAILADMIN_RICH_TEXT_EDITORS setting (Todd Dembrey)
  • Password reset form no longer indicates whether the email is recognised, as per standard Django behaviour (Bertrand Bordage)
  • UserAttributeSimilarityValidator is now correctly enforced on user creation / editing forms (Tim Heap)
  • Editing setting object with no site configured no longer crashes (Harm Zeinstra)
  • Creating a new object with inlines while mandatory fields are empty no longer crashes (Bertrand Bordage)

Wagtail 2.0 release notes

What’s new
Added Django 2.0 support

Wagtail is now compatible with Django 2.0. Compatibility fixes were contributed by Matt Westcott, Karl Hobley, LB (Ben Johnston) and Mads Jensen.

New rich text editor

Wagtail’s rich text editor has now been replaced with Draftail, a new editor based on Draft.js, fixing numerous bugs and providing an improved editing experience, better support for current browsers, and more consistent HTML output. This feature was developed by Thibaud Colas, Loïc Teixeira and Matt Westcott.

Reorganised modules

The modules that make up Wagtail have been renamed and reorganised, to avoid the repetition in names like wagtail.wagtailcore.models (originally an artefact of app naming limitations in Django 1.6) and to improve consistency. While this will require some up-front work to upgrade existing Wagtail sites, we believe that this will be a long-term improvement to the developer experience, improving readability of code and reducing errors. This change was implemented by Karl Hobley and Matt Westcott.

Scheduled page revisions

The behaviour of scheduled publishing has been revised so that pages are no longer unpublished at the point of setting a future go-live date, making it possible to schedule updates to an existing published page. This feature was developed by Patrick Woods.

Other features
  • Moved Wagtail API v1 implementation (wagtail.contrib.api) to an external app (Karl Hobley)
  • The page chooser now searches all fields of a page, instead of just the title (Bertrand Bordage)
  • Implement ordering by date in form submission view (LB (Ben Johnston))
  • Elasticsearch scroll API is now used when fetching more than 100 search results (Karl Hobley)
  • Added hidden field to the form builder (Ross Crawford-d’Heureuse)
  • Usage count now shows on delete confirmation page when WAGTAIL_USAGE_COUNT_ENABLED is active (Kees Hink)
  • Added usage count to snippets (Kees Hink)
  • Moved usage count to the sidebar on the edit page (Kees Hink)
  • Explorer menu now reflects customisations to the page listing made via the construct_explorer_page_queryset hook and ModelAdmin.exclude_from_explorer property (Tim Heap)
  • “Choose another image” button changed to “Change image” to avoid ambiguity (Edd Baldry)
  • Added hooks before_create_user, after_create_user, before_delete_user, after_delete_user, before_edit_user, after_edit_user (Jon Carmack)
  • Added exclude_fields_in_copy property to Page to define fields that should not be included on page copy (LB (Ben Johnston))
  • Improved error message on incorrect {% image %} tag syntax (LB (Ben Johnston))
  • Optimized preview data storage (Bertrand Bordage)
  • Added render_landing_page method to AbstractForm to be easily overridden and pass form_submission to landing page context (Stein Strindhaug)
  • Added heading kwarg to InlinePanel to allow heading to be set independently of button label (Adrian Turjak)
  • The value type returned from a StructBlock can now be customised. See Additional methods and properties on StructBlock values (LB (Ben Johnston))
  • Added bgcolor image operation (Karl Hobley)
  • Added WAGTAILADMIN_USER_LOGIN_FORM setting for overriding the admin login form (Mike Dingjan)
  • Snippets now support custom primary keys (Sævar Öfjörð Magnússon)
  • Upgraded jQuery to version 3.2.1 (Janneke Janssen)
  • Update autoprefixer configuration to better match browser support targets (Janneke Janssen)
  • Update React and related dependencies to latest versions (Janneke Janssen, Hugo van den Berg)
  • Remove Hallo editor .richtext CSS class in favour of more explicit extension points (Thibaud Colas)
  • Updated documentation styling (LB (Ben Johnston))
  • Rich text fields now take feature lists into account when whitelisting HTML elements (Matt Westcott)
  • FormPage lists and Form submission lists in admin now use class based views for easy overriding (Johan Arensman)
  • Form submission csv exports now have the export date in the filename and can be customized (Johan Arensman)
  • FormBuilder class now uses bound methods for field generation, adding custom fields is now easier and documented (LB (Ben Johnston))
  • Added WAGTAILADMIN_NOTIFICATION_INCLUDE_SUPERUSERS setting to determine whether superusers are included in moderation email notifications (Bruno Alla)
  • Added a basic Dockerfile to the project template (Tom Dyson)
  • StreamField blocks now allow custom get_template methods for overriding templates in instances (Christopher Bledsoe)
  • Simplified edit handler API (Florent Osmont, Bertrand Bordage)
  • Made ‘add/change/delete collection’ permissions configurable from the group edit page (Matt Westcott)
  • Expose React-related dependencies as global variables for extension in the admin interface (Thibaud Colas)
  • Added helper functions for constructing form data for use with assertCanCreate. See Form data helpers (Tim Heap, Matt Westcott)
Bug fixes
  • Do not remove stopwords when generating slugs from non-ASCII titles, to avoid issues with incorrect word boundaries (Sævar Öfjörð Magnússon)
  • The PostgreSQL search backend now preserves ordering of the QuerySet when searching with order_by_relevance=False (Bertrand Bordage)
  • Using modeladmin_register as a decorator no longer replaces the decorated class with None (Tim Heap)
  • Fixed crash in XML sitemap generator when all pages on the site are private (Stein Strindhaug)
  • The {% routablepageurl %} template tag no longer generates invalid URLs when the WAGTAIL_APPEND_SLASH setting was set to False (Venelin Stoykov)
  • The “View live” button is no longer shown if the page doesn’t have a routable URL (Tim Heap)
  • API listing views no longer fail when no site records are defined (Karl Hobley)
  • Fixed rendering of border on dropdown arrow buttons on Chrome (Bertrand Bordage)
  • Fixed incorrect z-index on userbar causing it to appear behind page content (Stein Strindhaug)
  • Form submissions pagination no longer looses date filter when changing page (Bertrand Bordage)
  • PostgreSQL search backend now removes duplicate page instances from the database (Bertrand Bordage)
  • FormSubmissionsPanel now recognises custom form submission classes (LB (Ben Johnston))
  • Prevent the footer and revisions link from unnecessarily collapsing on mobile (Jack Paine)
  • Empty searches were activated when paginating through images and documents (LB (Ben Johnston))
  • Summary numbers of pages, images and documents were not responsive when greater than 4 digits (Michael Palmer)
  • Project template now has password validators enabled by default (Matt Westcott)
  • Alignment options correctly removed from TableBlock context menu (LB (Ben Johnston))
  • Fix support of ATOMIC_REBUILD for projects with Elasticsearch client >=1.7.0 (Mikalai Radchuk)
  • Fixed error on Elasticsearch backend when passing a QuerySet as an __in filter (Karl Hobley, Matt Westcott)
  • __isnull filters no longer fail on Elasticsearch 5 (Karl Hobley)
  • Prevented intermittent failures on Postgres search backend when a field is defined as both a SearchField and a FilterField (Matt Westcott)
  • Alt text of images in rich text is no longer truncated on double-quote characters (Matt Westcott)
  • Ampersands in embed URLs within rich text are no longer double-escaped (Matt Westcott)
  • Using RGBA images no longer crashes with Pillow >= 4.2.0 (Karl Hobley)
  • Copying a page with PostgreSQL search enabled no longer crashes (Bertrand Bordage)
  • Style of the page unlock button was broken (Bertrand Bordage)
  • Admin search no longer floods browser history (Bertrand Bordage)
  • Version comparison now handles custom primary keys on inline models correctly (LB (Ben Johnston))
  • Fixed error when inserting chooser panels into FieldRowPanel (Florent Osmont, Bertrand Bordage)
  • Reinstated missing error reporting on image upload (Matt Westcott)
  • Only load Hallo CSS if Hallo is in use (Thibaud Colas)
  • Prevent style leak of Wagtail panel icons in widgets using h2 elements (Thibaud Colas)
Upgrade considerations
Removed support for Python 2.7, Django 1.8 and Django 1.10

Python 2.7, Django 1.8 and Django 1.10 are no longer supported in this release. You are advised to upgrade your project to Python 3 and Django 1.11 before upgrading to Wagtail 2.0.

Added support for Django 2.0

Before upgrading to Django 2.0, you are advised to review the release notes, especially the backwards incompatible changes and removed features.

Wagtail module path updates

Many of the module paths within Wagtail have been reorganised to reduce duplication - for example, wagtail.wagtailcore.models is now wagtail.core.models. As a result, import lines and other references to Wagtail modules will need to be updated when you upgrade to Wagtail 2.0. A new command has been added to assist with this - from the root of your project’s code base:

$ wagtail updatemodulepaths --list  # list the files to be changed without updating them
$ wagtail updatemodulepaths --diff  # show the changes to be made, without updating files
$ wagtail updatemodulepaths  # actually update the files

Or, to run from a different location:

$ wagtail updatemodulepaths /path/to/project --list
$ wagtail updatemodulepaths /path/to/project --diff
$ wagtail updatemodulepaths /path/to/project

For the full list of command line options, enter wagtail help updatemodulepaths.

You are advised to take a backup of your project codebase before running this command. The command will perform a search-and-replace over all *.py files for the affected module paths; while this should catch the vast majority of module references, it will not be able to fix instances that do not use the dotted path directly, such as from wagtail import wagtailcore.

The full list of modules to be renamed is as follows:

Old name New name Notes
wagtail.wagtailcore wagtail.core  
wagtail.wagtailadmin wagtail.admin  
wagtail.wagtaildocs wagtail.documents ‘documents’ no longer abbreviated
wagtail.wagtailembeds wagtail.embeds  
wagtail.wagtailimages wagtail.images  
wagtail.wagtailsearch wagtail.search  
wagtail.wagtailsites wagtail.sites  
wagtail.wagtailsnippets wagtail.snippets  
wagtail.wagtailusers wagtail.users  
wagtail.wagtailforms wagtail.contrib.forms Moved into ‘contrib’
wagtail.wagtailredirects wagtail.contrib.redirects Moved into ‘contrib’
wagtail.contrib.wagtailapi removed API v1, removed in this release
wagtail.contrib.wagtailfrontendcache wagtail.contrib.frontend_cache Underscore added
wagtail.contrib.wagtailroutablepage wagtail.contrib.routable_page Underscore added
wagtail.contrib.wagtailsearchpromotions wagtail.contrib.search_promotions Underscore added
wagtail.contrib.wagtailsitemaps wagtail.contrib.sitemaps  
wagtail.contrib.wagtailstyleguide wagtail.contrib.styleguide  

Places these should be updated include:

  • import lines
  • Paths specified in settings, such as INSTALLED_APPS, MIDDLEWARE and WAGTAILSEARCH_BACKENDS
  • Fields and blocks referenced within migrations, such as wagtail.wagtailcore.fields.StreamField and wagtail.wagtailcore.blocks.RichTextBlock

However, note that this only applies to dotted module paths beginning with wagtail.. App names that are not part of a dotted module path should be left unchanged - in this case, the wagtail prefix is still required to avoid clashing with other apps that might exist in the project with names such as admin or images. The following should be left unchanged:

  • Foreign keys specifying a model as 'app_name.ModelName', e.g. models.ForeignKey('wagtailimages.Image',...)
  • App labels used in database table names, content types or permissions
  • Paths to templates and static files, e.g. when overriding admin templates with custom branding
  • Template tag library names, e.g. {% load wagtailcore_tags %}
Hallo.js customisations are unavailable on the Draftail rich text editor

The Draftail rich text editor has a substantially different API from Hallo.js, including the use of a non-HTML format for its internal data representation; as a result, functionality added through Hallo.js plugins will be unavailable. If your project is dependent on Hallo.js-specific behaviour, you can revert to the original Hallo-based editor by adding the following to your settings:

WAGTAILADMIN_RICH_TEXT_EDITORS = {
    'default': {
        'WIDGET': 'wagtail.admin.rich_text.HalloRichTextArea'
    }
}
Data format for rich text fields in assertCanCreate tests has been updated

The assertCanCreate test method (see Testing your Wagtail site) requires data to be passed in the same format that the page edit form would submit. The Draftail rich text editor posts this data in a non-HTML format, and so any existing assertCanCreate tests involving rich text fields will fail when Draftail is in use:

self.assertCanCreate(root_page, ContentPage, {
    'title': 'About us',
    'body': '<p>Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet</p>',  # will not work
})

Wagtail now provides a set of helper functions for constructing form data: see Form data helpers. The above assertion can now be rewritten as:

from wagtail.tests.utils.form_data import rich_text

self.assertCanCreate(root_page, ContentPage, {
    'title': 'About us',
    'body': rich_text('<p>Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet</p>'),
})
Removed support for Elasticsearch 1.x

Elasticsearch 1.x is no longer supported in this release. Please upgrade to a 2.x or 5.x release of Elasticsearch before upgrading to Wagtail 2.0.

Removed version 1 of the Wagtail API

Version 1 of the Wagtail API (wagtail.contrib.wagtailapi) has been removed from Wagtail.

If you’re using version 1, you will need to migrate to version 2. Please see Wagtail API v2 Configuration Guide and Wagtail API v2 Usage Guide.

If migrating to version 2 is not an option right now (if you have API clients that you don’t have direct control over, such as a mobile app), you can find the implementation of the version 1 API in the new wagtailapi_legacy repository.

This repository has been created to provide a place for the community to collaborate on supporting legacy versions of the API until everyone has migrated to an officially supported version.

construct_whitelister_element_rules hook is deprecated

The construct_whitelister_element_rules hook, used to specify additional HTML elements to be permitted in rich text, is deprecated. The recommended way of whitelisting elements is now to use rich text features - see Whitelisting rich text elements. For example, a whitelist rule that was previously defined as:

from wagtail.core import hooks
from wagtail.core.whitelist import allow_without_attributes

@hooks.register('construct_whitelister_element_rules')
def whitelist_blockquote():
    return {
        'blockquote': allow_without_attributes,
    }

can be rewritten as:

from wagtail.admin.rich_text.converters.editor_html import WhitelistRule
from wagtail.core import hooks
from wagtail.core.whitelist import allow_without_attributes

@hooks.register('register_rich_text_features')
def blockquote_feature(features):

    # register a feature 'blockquote' which whitelists the <blockquote> element
    features.register_converter_rule('editorhtml', 'blockquote', [
        WhitelistRule('blockquote', allow_without_attributes),
    ])

    # add 'blockquote' to the default feature set
    features.default_features.append('blockquote')

Please note that the new Draftail rich text editor uses a different mechanism to process rich text content, and does not apply whitelist rules; they only take effect when the Hallo.js editor is in use.

wagtail.images.views.serve.generate_signature now returns a string

The generate_signature function in wagtail.images.views.serve, used to build URLs for the dynamic image serve view, now returns a string rather than a byte string. This ensures that any existing user code that builds up the final image URL with reverse will continue to work on Django 2.0 (which no longer allows byte strings to be passed to reverse). Any code that expects a byte string as the return value of generate_string - for example, calling decode() on the result - will need to be updated. (Apps that need to preserve compatibility with earlier versions of Wagtail can call django.utils.encoding.force_text instead of decode.)

Deprecated search view

Wagtail has always included a bundled view for frontend search. However, this view isn’t easy to customise so defining this view per project is usually preferred. If you have used this bundled view (check for an import from wagtail.wagtailsearch.urls in your project’s urls.py), you will need to replace this with your own implementation.

See the search view in Wagtail demo for a guide: https://github.com/wagtail/wagtaildemo/blob/master/demo/views.py

New Hallo editor extension points

With the introduction of a new editor, we want to make sure existing editor plugins meant for Hallo only target Hallo editors for extension.

  • The existing .richtext CSS class is no longer applied to the Hallo editor’s DOM element.
  • In JavaScript, use the [data-hallo-editor] attribute selector to target the editor, eg. var $editor = $('[data-hallo-editor]');.
  • In CSS, use the .halloeditor class selector.

For example,

/* JS */
- var widget = $(elem).parent('.richtext').data('IKS-hallo');
+ var widget = $(elem).parent('[data-hallo-editor]').data('IKS-hallo');

[...]

/* Styles */
- .richtext {
+ .halloeditor {
    font-family: monospace;
}

Wagtail 1.13.4 release notes

What’s new
Bug fixes
  • Pin Beautiful Soup to 4.6.0 due to further regressions in formatting empty elements (Matt Westcott)

Wagtail 1.13.3 release notes

What’s new
Bug fixes
  • Pin django-taggit to <0.23 to restore Django 1.8 compatibility (Matt Westcott)
  • Mark Beautiful Soup 4.6.1 as incompatible due to bug in formatting empty elements (Matt Westcott)

Wagtail 1.13.2 release notes

What’s new
Bug fixes
  • Fix support of ATOMIC_REBUILD for projects with Elasticsearch client >=1.7.0 (Mikalai Radchuk)
  • Logging an indexing failure on an object with a non-ASCII representation no longer crashes on Python 2 (Aram Dulyan)
  • Rich text image chooser no longer skips format selection after a validation error (Matt Westcott)
  • Null characters in URLs no longer crash the redirect middleware on PostgreSQL (Matt Westcott)

Wagtail 1.13.1 release notes

What’s new
Bug fixes
  • API listing views no longer fail when no site records are defined (Karl Hobley)
  • Fixed crash in XML sitemap generator when all pages on the site are private (Stein Strindhaug)
  • Fixed incorrect z-index on userbar causing it to appear behind page content (Stein Strindhaug)
  • Fixed error in Postgres search backend when searching specific fields of a specific() Page QuerySet (Bertrand Bordage, Matt Westcott)
  • Fixed error on Elasticsearch backend when passing a QuerySet as an __in filter (Karl Hobley, Matt Westcott)
  • __isnull filters no longer fail on Elasticsearch 5 (Karl Hobley)
  • Prevented intermittent failures on Postgres search backend when a field is defined as both a SearchField and a FilterField (Matt Westcott)

Wagtail 1.13 release notes

Wagtail 1.13 is designated a Long Term Support (LTS) release. Long Term Support releases will continue to receive maintenance updates as necessary to address security and data-loss related issues, up until the next LTS release (typically a period of 8 months). Please note that Wagtail 1.13 will be the last LTS release to support Python 2.

What’s new
New features
  • Front-end cache invalidator now supports purging URLs as a batch - see Invalidating URLs (Karl Hobley)
  • Custom document model is now documented (Emily Horsman)
  • Use minified versions of CSS in the admin by adding minification to the front-end tooling (Vincent Audebert, Thibaud Colas)
  • Wagtailforms serve view now passes request.FILES, for use in custom form handlers (LB (Ben Johnston))
  • Documents and images are now given new filenames on re-uploading, to avoid old versions being kept in cache (Bertrand Bordage)
  • Added custom 404 page for admin interface (Jack Paine)
  • Breadcrumb navigation now uses globe icon to indicate tree root, rather than home icon (Matt Westcott)
  • Wagtail now uses React 15.6.2 and above, released under the MIT license (Janneke Janssen)
  • User search in the Wagtail admin UI now works across multiple fields (Will Giddens)
  • Page.last_published_at is now a filterable field for search (Mikalai Radchuk)
  • Page search results and usage listings now include navigation links (Matt Westcott)
Bug fixes
  • “Open Link in New Tab” on a right arrow in page explorer should open page list (Emily Horsman)
  • Using order_by_relevance=False when searching with PostgreSQL now works (Mitchel Cabuloy)
  • Inline panel first and last sorting arrows correctly hidden in non-default tabs (Matt Westcott)
  • WAGTAILAPI_LIMIT_MAX now accepts None to disable limiting (jcronyn)
  • In PostgreSQL, new default ordering when ranking of objects is the same (Bertrand Bordage)
  • Fixed overlapping header elements on form submissions view on mobile (Jack Paine)
  • Fixed avatar position in footer on mobile (Jack Paine)
  • Custom document models no longer require their own post-delete signal handler (Gordon Pendleton)
  • Deletion of image / document files now only happens when database transaction has completed (Gordon Pendleton)
  • Fixed Node build scripts to work on Windows (Mikalai Radchuk)
  • Stop breadcrumb home icon from showing as ellipsis in Chrome 60 (Matt Westcott)
  • Prevent USE_THOUSAND_SEPARATOR = True from breaking the image focal point chooser (Sævar Öfjörð Magnússon)
  • Removed deprecated SessionAuthenticationMiddleware from project template (Samir Shah)
  • Custom display page titles defined with get_admin_display_title are now shown in search results (Ben Sturmfels, Matt Westcott)
  • Custom PageManagers now return the correct PageQuerySet subclass (Matt Westcott)

Wagtail 1.12.6 release notes

What’s new
Bug fixes
  • Pin Beautiful Soup to 4.6.0 due to further regressions in formatting empty elements (Matt Westcott)

Wagtail 1.12.5 release notes

What’s new
Bug fixes
  • Pin django-taggit to <0.23 to restore Django 1.8 compatibility (Matt Westcott)
  • Mark Beautiful Soup 4.6.1 as incompatible due to bug in formatting empty elements (Matt Westcott)

Wagtail 1.12.4 release notes

What’s new
Bug fixes
  • Fix support of ATOMIC_REBUILD for projects with Elasticsearch client >=1.7.0 (Mikalai Radchuk)
  • Logging an indexing failure on an object with a non-ASCII representation no longer crashes on Python 2 (Aram Dulyan)
  • Rich text image chooser no longer skips format selection after a validation error (Matt Westcott)
  • Null characters in URLs no longer crash the redirect middleware on PostgreSQL (Andrew Crewdson, Matt Westcott)

Wagtail 1.12.3 release notes

What’s new
Bug fixes
  • API listing views no longer fail when no site records are defined (Karl Hobley)
  • Pinned Django REST Framework to <3.7 to restore Django 1.8 compatibility (Matt Westcott)
  • Fixed crash in XML sitemap generator when all pages on the site are private (Stein Strindhaug)
  • Fixed error in Postgres search backend when searching specific fields of a specific() Page QuerySet (Bertrand Bordage, Matt Westcott)
  • Fixed error on Elasticsearch backend when passing a QuerySet as an __in filter (Karl Hobley, Matt Westcott)
  • __isnull filters no longer fail on Elasticsearch 5 (Karl Hobley)
  • Prevented intermittent failures on Postgres search backend when a field is defined as both a SearchField and a FilterField (Matt Westcott)

Wagtail 1.12.2 release notes

What’s new
Bug fixes
  • Migration for addition of Page.draft_title field is now reversible (Venelin Stoykov)
  • Fixed failure on application startup when ManifestStaticFilesStorage is in use and collectstatic has not yet been run (Matt Westcott)
  • Fixed handling of Vimeo and other oEmbed providers with a format parameter in the endpoint URL (Mitchel Cabuloy)
  • Fixed regression in rendering save button in wagtail.contrib.settings edit view (Matt Westcott)

Wagtail 1.12.1 release notes

What’s new
Bug fixes
  • Prevent home page draft title from displaying as blank (Mikalai Radchuk, Matt Westcott)
  • Fix regression on styling of preview button with more than one preview mode (Jack Paine)
  • Enabled translations within date-time chooser widget (Lucas Moeskops)

Wagtail 1.12 release notes

Wagtail 1.12 is designated a Long Term Support (LTS) release. Long Term Support releases will continue to receive maintenance updates as necessary to address security and data-loss related issues, up until the next LTS release (typically a period of 8 months).

What’s new
Configurable rich text features

The feature set provided by the rich text editor can now be configured on a per-field basis, by passing a features keyword argument; for example, a field can be configured to allow bold / italic formatting and links, but not headings or embedded images or media. For further information, see Limiting features in a rich text field. This feature was developed by Matt Westcott.

Improved embed configuration

New configuration options for embedded media have been added, to give greater control over how media URLs are converted to embeds, and to make it possible to specify additional media providers beyond the ones built in to Wagtail. For further information, see Embedded content. This feature was developed by Karl Hobley.

Other features
  • The admin interface now displays a title of the latest draft (Mikalai Radchuk)
  • RoutablePageMixin now has a default “index” route (Andreas Nüßlein, Matt Westcott)
  • Added multi-select form field to the form builder (dwasyl)
  • Improved performance of sitemap generation (Levi Adler)
  • StreamField now respects the blank setting; StreamBlock accepts a required setting (Loic Teixeira)
  • StreamBlock now accepts min_num, max_num and block_counts settings to control the minimum and maximum numbers of blocks (Edwar Baron, Matt Westcott)
  • Users can no longer remove their own active / superuser flags through Settings -> Users (Stein Strindhaug, Huub Bouma)
  • The process_form_submission method of form pages now return the created form submission object (Christine Ho)
  • Added WAGTAILUSERS_PASSWORD_ENABLED and WAGTAILUSERS_PASSWORD_REQUIRED settings to permit creating users with no Django-side passwords, to support external authentication setups (Matt Westcott)
  • Added help text parameter to DecimalBlock and RegexBlock (Tomasz Knapik)
  • Optimised caudal oscillation parameters on logo (Jack Paine)
Bug fixes
  • FieldBlocks in StreamField now call the field’s prepare_value method (Tim Heap)
  • Initial disabled state of InlinePanel add button is now set correctly on non-default tabs (Matthew Downey)
  • Redirects with unicode characters now work (Rich Brennan)
  • Prevent explorer view from crashing when page model definitions are missing, allowing the offending pages to be deleted (Matt Westcott)
  • Hide the userbar from printed page representation (Eugene Morozov)
  • Prevent the page editor footer content from collapsing into two lines unnecessarily (Jack Paine)
  • StructBlock values no longer render HTML templates as their str representation, to prevent infinite loops in debugging / logging tools (Matt Westcott)
  • Removed deprecated jQuery load call from TableBlock initialisation (Jack Paine)
  • Position of options in mobile nav-menu (Jack Paine)
  • Center page editor footer regardless of screen width (Jack Paine)
  • Change the design of the navbar toggle icon so that it no longer obstructs page headers (Jack Paine)
  • Document add/edit forms no longer render container elements for hidden fields (Jeffrey Chau)
Upgrade considerations
StreamField now defaults to blank=False

StreamField now respects the blank field setting; when this is false, at least one block must be supplied for the field to pass validation. To match the behaviour of other model fields, blank defaults to False; if you wish to allow a StreamField to be left empty, you must now add blank=True to the field.

When passing an explicit StreamBlock as the top-level block of a StreamField definition, note that the StreamField’s blank keyword argument always takes precedence over the block’s required property, including when it is left as the default value of blank=False. Consequently, setting required=False on a top-level StreamBlock has no effect.

Old configuration settings for embeds are deprecated

The configuration settings WAGTAILEMBEDS_EMBED_FINDER and WAGTAILEMBEDS_EMBEDLY_KEY have been deprecated in favour of the new WAGTAILEMBEDS_FINDERS setting. Please see Configuring embed “finders” for the new configuration to use.

Registering custom hallo.js plugins directly is deprecated

The ability to enable / disable hallo.js plugins by calling registerHalloPlugin or modifying the halloPlugins list has been deprecated, and will be removed in Wagtail 1.14. The recommended way of customising the hallo.js editor is now through rich text features. For details of how to define a hallo.js plugin as a rich text feature, see Extending the Hallo Editor.

Custom get_admin_display_title methods should use draft_title

This release introduces a new draft_title field on page models, so that page titles as used across the admin interface will correctly reflect any changes that exist in draft. If any of your page models override the get_admin_display_title method, to customise the display of page titles in the admin, it is recommended that you now update these to base their output on draft_title rather than title. Alternatively, to preserve backwards compatibility, you can invoke super on the method, for example:

def get_admin_display_title(self):
    return "%(title)s (%(lang)s)" % {
        'title': super(TranslatablePage, self).get_admin_display_title(),
        'lang': self.language_code,
    }
Fixtures for loading pages should include draft_title

In most situations, the new draft_title field on page models will automatically be populated from the page title. However, this is not the case for pages that are created from fixtures. Projects that use fixtures to load initial data should therefore ensure that a draft_title field is specified.

RoutablePageMixin now has a default index route

If you’ve used RoutablePageMixin on a Page model, you may have had to manually define an index route to serve the page at its main URL (r'^$') so it behaves like a normal page. Wagtail now defines a default index route so this is no longer required.

Wagtail 1.11.1 release notes

What’s new
Bug fixes
  • Custom display page titles defined with get_admin_display_title are now shown within the page explorer menu (Matt Westcott, Janneke Janssen)

Wagtail 1.11 release notes

What’s new
Explorer menu built with the admin API and React

After more than a year of work, the new explorer menu has finally landed! It comes with the following improvements:

  • View all pages - not just the ones with child pages.
  • Better performance, no matter the number of pages or levels in the hierarchy.
  • Navigate the menu via keyboard.
  • View Draft pages, and go to page editing, directly from the menu.

Beyond features, the explorer is built with the new admin API and React components. This will facilitate further evolutions to make it even faster and user-friendly. This work is the product of 4 Wagtail sprints, and the efforts of 16 people, listed here by order of first involvement:

  • Karl Hobley (Cape town sprint, admin API)
  • Josh Barr (Cape town sprint, prototype UI)
  • Thibaud Colas (Ede sprint, Reykjavík sprint)
  • Janneke Janssen (Ede sprint, Reykjavík sprint, Wagtail Space sprint)
  • Rob Moorman (Ede sprint, eslint-config-wagtail, ES6+React+Redux styleguide)
  • Maurice Bartnig (Ede sprint, i18n and bug fixes)
  • Jonny Scholes (code review)
  • Matt Westcott (Reykjavík sprint, refactorings)
  • Sævar Öfjörð Magnússon (Reykjavík sprint)
  • Eirikur Ingi Magnusson (Reykjavík sprint)
  • Harris Lapiroff (Reykjavík sprint, tab-accessible navigation)
  • Hugo van den Berg (testing, Wagtail Space sprint)
  • Olly Willans (UI, UX, Wagtail Space sprint)
  • Andy Babic (UI, UX)
  • Ben Enright (UI, UX)
  • Bertrand Bordage (testing, documentation)
Privacy settings on documents

Privacy settings can now be configured on collections, to restrict access to documents either by shared password or by user account. See: Private pages.

This feature was developed by Ulrich Wagner and Matt Westcott. Thank you to Wharton Research Data Services of The Wharton School for sponsoring this feature.

Other features
  • Optimised page URL generation by caching site paths in the request scope (Tobias McNulty, Matt Westcott)
  • The current live version of a page is now tracked on the revision listing view (Matheus Bratfisch)
  • Each block created in a StreamField is now assigned a globally unique identifier (Matt Westcott)
  • Mixcloud oEmbed pattern has been updated (Alice Rose)
  • Added last_published_at field to the Page model (Matt Westcott)
  • Added show_in_menus_default flag on page models, to allow “show in menus” to be checked by default (LB (Ben Johnston))
  • “Copy page” form now validates against copying to a destination where the user does not have permission (Henk-Jan van Hasselaar)
  • Allows reverse relations in RelatedFields for elasticsearch & PostgreSQL search backends (Lucas Moeskops, Bertrand Bordage)
  • Added oEmbed support for Facebook (Mikalai Radchuk)
  • Added oEmbed support for Tumblr (Mikalai Radchuk)
Bug fixes
  • Unauthenticated AJAX requests to admin views now return 403 rather than redirecting to the login page (Karl Hobley)
  • TableBlock options afterChange, afterCreateCol, afterCreateRow, afterRemoveCol, afterRemoveRow and contextMenu can now be overridden (Loic Teixeira)
  • The lastmod field returned by wagtailsitemaps now shows the last published date rather than the date of the last draft edit (Matt Westcott)
  • Document chooser upload form no longer renders container elements for hidden fields (Jeffrey Chau)
  • Prevented exception when visiting a preview URL without initiating the preview (Paul Kamp)
Upgrade considerations
Browser requirements for the new explorer menu

The new explorer menu does not support IE8, IE9, and IE10. The fallback experience is a link pointing to the explorer pages.

Caching of site-level URL information throughout the request cycle

The get_url_parts and relative_url methods on Page now accept an optional request keyword argument. Additionally, two new methods have been added, get_url (analogous to the url property) and get_full_url (analogous to the full_url) property. Whenever possible, these methods should be used instead of the property versions, and the request passed to each method. For example:

page_url = my_page.url

would become:

page_url = my_page.get_url(request=request)

This enables caching of underlying site-level URL information throughout the request cycle, thereby significantly reducing the number of cache or SQL queries your site will generate for a given page load. A common use case for these methods is any custom template tag your project may include for generating navigation menus. For more information, please refer to Page URLs.

Furthermore, if you have overridden get_url_parts or relative_url on any of your page models, you will need to update the method signature to support this keyword argument; most likely, this will involve changing the line:

def get_url_parts(self):

to:

def get_url_parts(self, *args, **kwargs):

and passing those through at the point where you are calling get_url_parts on super (if applicable).

See also: wagtail.core.models.Page.get_url_parts(), wagtail.core.models.Page.get_url(), wagtail.core.models.Page.get_full_url(), and wagtail.core.models.Page.relative_url()

“Password required” template for documents

This release adds the ability to password-protect documents as well as pages. The template used for the “password required” form is distinct from the one used for pages; if you have previously overridden the default template through the PASSWORD_REQUIRED_TEMPLATE setting, you may wish to provide a corresponding template for documents through the setting DOCUMENT_PASSWORD_REQUIRED_TEMPLATE. See: Private pages

Elasticsearch 5.4 is incompatible with ATOMIC_REBUILD

While not specific to Wagtail 1.11, users of Elasticsearch should be aware that the ATOMIC_REBUILD option is not compatible with Elasticsearch 5.4.x due to a bug in the handling of aliases. If you wish to use this feature, please use Elasticsearch 5.3.x or 5.5.x (when available).

Wagtail 1.10.1 release notes

What’s changed
Bug fixes
  • Fix admin page preview that was broken 24 hours after previewing a page (Martin Hill)
  • Removed territory-specific translations for Spanish, Polish, Swedish, Russian and Chinese (Taiwan) that block more complete translations from being used (Matt Westcott)

Wagtail 1.10 release notes

What’s new
PostgreSQL search engine

A new search engine has been added to Wagtail which uses PostgreSQL’s built-in full-text search functionality. This means that if you use PostgreSQL to manage your database, you can now get a good quality search engine without needing to install Elasticsearch.

To get started, see PostgreSQL search engine.

This feature was developed at the Arnhem sprint by Bertrand Bordage, Jaap Roes, Arne de Laat and Ramon de Jezus.

Django 1.11 and Python 3.6 support

Wagtail is now compatible with Django 1.11 and Python 3.6. Compatibility fixes were contributed by Tim Graham, Matt Westcott, Mikalai Radchuk and Bertrand Bordage.

User language preference

Users can now set their preferred language for the Wagtail admin interface under Account Settings → Language Preferences. The list of available languages can be configured via the WAGTAILADMIN_PERMITTED_LANGUAGES setting. This feature was developed by Daniel Chimeno.

New admin preview

Previewing pages in Wagtail admin interface was rewritten to make it more robust. In previous versions, preview was broken in several scenarios so users often ended up on a blank page with an infinite spinner.

An additional setting was created: WAGTAIL_AUTO_UPDATE_PREVIEW. It allows users to see changes done in the editor by refreshing the preview tab without having to click again on the preview button.

This was developed by Bertrand Bordage.

Other features
  • Use minified versions of jQuery and jQuery UI in the admin. Total savings without compression 371 KB (Tom Dyson)
  • Hooks can now specify the order in which they are run (Gagaro)
  • Added a submit_buttons block to login template (Gagaro)
  • Added construct_image_chooser_queryset, construct_document_chooser_queryset and construct_page_chooser_queryset hooks (Gagaro)
  • The homepage created in the project template is now titled “Home” rather than “Homepage” (Karl Hobley)
  • Signal receivers for custom Image and Rendition models are connected automatically (Mike Dingjan)
  • PageChooserBlock can now accept a list/tuple of page models as target_model (Mikalai Radchuk)
  • Styling tweaks for the ModelAdmin’s IndexView to be more inline with the Wagtail styleguide (Andy Babic)
  • Added .nvmrc to the project root for Node versioning support (Janneke Janssen)
  • Added form_fields_exclude property to ModelAdmin views (Matheus Bratfisch)
  • User creation / edit form now enforces password validators set in AUTH_PASSWORD_VALIDATORS (Bertrand Bordage)
  • Added support for displaying non_field_errors when validation fails in the page editor (Matt Westcott)
  • Added WAGTAILADMIN_RECENT_EDITS_LIMIT setting to to define the number of your most recent edits on the dashboard (Maarten Kling)
  • Added link to the full Elasticsearch setup documentation from the Performance page (Matt Westcott)
  • Tag input fields now accept spaces in tags by default, and can be overridden with the TAG_SPACES_ALLOWED setting (Kees Hink, Alex Gleason)
  • Page chooser widgets now display the required page type where relevant (Christine Ho)
  • Site root pages are now indicated with a globe icon in the explorer listing (Nick Smith, Huub Bouma)
  • Draft page view is now restricted to users with edit / publish permission over the page (Kees Hink)
  • Added the option to delete a previously saved focal point on a image (Maarten Kling)
  • Page explorer menu item, search and summary panel are now hidden for users with no page permissions (Tim Heap)
  • Added support for custom date and datetime formats in input fields (Bojan Mihelac)
  • Added support for custom Django REST framework serialiser fields in Page.api_fields using a new APIField class (Karl Hobley)
  • Added classname argument to StreamFieldPanel (Christine Ho)
  • Added group keyword argument to StreamField blocks for grouping related blocks together in the block menu (Andreas Nüßlein)
  • Update the sitemap generator to use the Django sitemap module (Michael van Tellingen, Mike Dingjan)
Bug fixes
  • Marked ‘Date from’ / ‘Date to’ strings in wagtailforms for translation (Vorlif)
  • “File” field label on image edit form is now translated (Stein Strindhaug)
  • Unreliable preview is now reliable by always opening in a new window (Kjartan Sverrisson)
  • Fixed placement of {{ block.super }} in snippets/type_index.html (LB (Ben Johnston))
  • Optimised database queries on group edit page (Ashia Zawaduk)
  • Choosing a popular search term for promoted search results now works correctly after pagination (Janneke Janssen)
  • IDs used in tabbed interfaces are now namespaced to avoid collisions with other page elements (Janneke Janssen)
  • Page title not displaying page name when moving a page (Trent Holliday)
  • The ModelAdmin module can now work without the wagtailimages and wagtaildocs apps installed (Andy Babic)
  • Cloudflare error handling now handles non-string error responses correctly (hdnpl)
  • Search indexing now uses a defined query ordering to prevent objects from being skipped (Christian Peters)
  • Ensure that number localisation is not applied to object IDs within admin templates (Tom Hendrikx)
  • Paginating with a search present was always returning the 1st page in Internet Explorer 10 & 11 (Ralph Jacobs)
  • RoutablePageMixin and wagtailforms previews now set the request.is_preview flag (Wietze Helmantel)
  • The save and preview buttons in the page editor are now mobile-friendly (Maarten Kling)
  • Page links within rich text now respect custom URLs defined on specific page models (Gary Krige, Huub Bouma)
  • Default avatar no longer visible when using a transparent gravatar image (Thijs Kramer)
  • Scrolling within the datetime picker is now usable again for touchpads (Ralph Jacobs)
  • List-based fields within form builder form submissions are now displayed as comma-separated strings rather than as Python lists (Christine Ho, Matt Westcott)
  • The page type usage listing now have a translatable page title (Ramon de Jezus)
  • Styles for submission filtering form now have a consistent height. (Thijs Kramer)
  • Slicing a search result set no longer loses the annotation added by annotate_score (Karl Hobley)
  • String-based primary keys are now escaped correctly in ModelAdmin URLs (Andreas Nüßlein)
  • Empty search in the API now works (Morgan Aubert)
  • RichTextBlock toolbar now correctly positioned within StructBlock (Janneke Janssen)
  • Fixed display of ManyToMany fields and False values on the ModelAdmin inspect view (Andy Babic)
  • Prevent pages from being recursively copied into themselves (Matheus Bratfisch)
  • Specifying the full file name in documents URL is mandatory (Morgan Aubert)
  • Reordering inline forms now works correctly when moving past a deleted form (Janneke Janssen)
  • Removed erroneous |safe filter from search results template in project template (Karl Hobley)
Upgrade considerations
Django 1.9 and Python 3.3 support dropped

Support for Django 1.9 and Python 3.3 has been dropped in this release; please upgrade from these before upgrading Wagtail. Note that the Django 1.8 release series is still supported, as a Long Term Support release.

Dropped support for generating static sites using django-medusa

Django-medusa is no longer maintained, and is incompatible with Django 1.8 and above. An alternative module based on the django-bakery package is available as a third-party contribution: https://github.com/moorinteractive/wagtail-bakery.

Signals on custom Image and Rendition models connected automatically

Projects using custom image models no longer need to set up signal receivers to handle deletion of image files and image feature detection, as these are now handled automatically by Wagtail. The following lines of code should be removed:

# Delete the source image file when an image is deleted
@receiver(post_delete, sender=CustomImage)
def image_delete(sender, instance, **kwargs):
    instance.file.delete(False)


# Delete the rendition image file when a rendition is deleted
@receiver(post_delete, sender=CustomRendition)
def rendition_delete(sender, instance, **kwargs):
    instance.file.delete(False)


# Perform image feature detection (if enabled)
@receiver(pre_save, sender=CustomImage)
def image_feature_detection(sender, instance, **kwargs):
    if not instance.has_focal_point():
        instance.set_focal_point(instance.get_suggested_focal_point())
Adding / editing users through Wagtail admin no longer sets is_staff flag

Previously, the is_staff flag (which grants access to the Django admin interface) was automatically set for superusers, and reset for other users, when creating and updating users through the Wagtail admin. This behaviour has now been removed, since Wagtail is designed to work independently of the Django admin. If you need to reinstate the old behaviour, you can set up a pre_save signal handler on the User model to set the flag appropriately.

Specifying the full file name in documents URL is mandatory

In previous releases, it was possible to download a document using the primary key and a fraction of its file name, or even without file name. You could get the same document at the addresses /documents/1/your-file-name.pdf, /documents/1/you & /documents/1/.

This feature was supposed to allow shorter URLs but was not used in Wagtail. For security reasons, we removed it, so only the full URL works: /documents/1/your-file-name.pdf

If any of your applications relied on the previous behaviour, you will have to rewrite it to take this into account.

Wagtail 1.9.1 release notes

What’s changed
Bug fixes
  • Removed erroneous |safe filter from search results template in project template (Karl Hobley)
  • Prevent pages from being recursively copied into themselves (Matheus Bratfisch)

Wagtail 1.9 release notes

What’s new
Revision comparisons
_images/releasenotes_1_9_revisioncomparison.png

Wagtail now provides the ability to view differences between revisions of a page, from the revisions listing page and when reviewing a page in moderation. This feature was developed by Karl Hobley, Janneke Janssen and Matt Westcott. Thank you to Blackstone Chambers for sponsoring this feature.

Many-to-many relations on page models
_images/releasenotes_1_9_m2m.png

Wagtail now supports a new field type ParentalManyToManyField that can be used to set up many-to-many relations on pages. For details, see the Categories section of the tutorial. This feature was developed by Thejaswi Puthraya and Matt Westcott.

Bulk-deletion of form submissions

Form builder form submissions can now be deleted in bulk from the form submissions index page. This feature was sponsored by St John’s College, Oxford and developed by Karl Hobley.

Accessing parent context from StreamField block get_context methods

The get_context method on StreamField blocks now receives a parent_context keyword argument, consisting of the dict of variables passed in from the calling template. For example, this makes it possible to perform pagination logic within get_context, retrieving the current page number from parent_context['request'].GET. See get_context on StreamField blocks. This feature was developed by Mikael Svensson and Peter Baumgartner.

Welcome message customisation for multi-tenanted installations

The welcome message on the admin dashboard has been updated to be more suitable for multi-tenanted installations. Users whose page permissions lie within a single site will now see that site name in the welcome message, rather than the installation-wide WAGTAIL_SITE_NAME. As before, this message can be customised, and additional template variables have been provided for this purpose - see Custom branding. This feature was developed by Jeffrey Chau.

Other features
  • Changed text of “Draft” and “Live” buttons to “View draft” and “View live” (Dan Braghis)
  • Added get_api_representation method to streamfield blocks allowing the JSON representation in the API to be customised (Marco Fucci)
  • Added before_copy_page and after_copy_page hooks (Matheus Bratfisch)
  • View live / draft links in the admin now consistently open in a new window (Marco Fucci)
  • ChoiceBlock now omits the blank option if the block is required and has a default value (Andreas Nüßlein)
  • The add_subpage view now maintains a next URL parameter to specify where to redirect to after completing page creation (Robert Rollins)
  • The wagtailforms module now allows to define custom form submission model, add custom data to CSV export and some other customisations. See Form builder customisation (Mikalai Radchuk)
  • The Webpack configuration is now in a subfolder to declutter the project root, and uses environment-specific configurations for smaller bundles in production and easier debugging in development (Janneke Janssen, Thibaud Colas)
  • Added page titles to title text on action buttons in the explorer, for improved accessibility (Matt Westcott)
Bug fixes
  • Help text for StreamField is now visible and does not cover block controls (Stein Strindhaug)
  • “X minutes ago” timestamps are now marked for translation (Janneke Janssen, Matt Westcott)
  • Avoid indexing unsaved field content on save(update_fields=[…]) operations (Matt Westcott)
  • Corrected ordering of arguments passed to ModelAdmin get_extra_class_names_for_field_col / get_extra_attrs_for_field_col methods (Andy Babic)
  • pageurl / slugurl tags now function when request.site is not available (Tobias McNulty, Matt Westcott)
Upgrade considerations
django-modelcluster and django-taggit dependencies updated

Wagtail now requires version 3.0 or later of django-modelcluster and version 0.20 or later of django-taggit; earlier versions are unsupported. In normal circumstances these packages will be upgraded automatically when upgrading Wagtail; however, if your Wagtail project has a requirements file that explicitly specifies an older version, this will need to be updated.

get_context methods on StreamField blocks need updating

Previously, get_context methods on StreamField blocks returned a dict of variables which would be merged into the calling template’s context before rendering the block template. get_context methods now receive a parent_context dict, and are responsible for returning the final context dictionary with any new variables merged into it. The old calling convention is now deprecated, and will be phased out in Wagtail 1.11.

In most cases, the method will be calling get_context on the superclass, and can be updated by passing the new parent_context keyword argument to it:

class MyBlock(Block):

    def get_context(self, value):
        context = super(MyBlock, self).get_context(value)
        ...
        return context

becomes:

class MyBlock(Block):

    def get_context(self, value, parent_context=None):
        context = super(MyBlock, self).get_context(value, parent_context=parent_context)
        ...
        return context

Note that get_context methods on page models are unaffected by this change.

Wagtail 1.8.2 release notes

What’s changed
Bug fixes
  • Removed erroneous |safe filter from search results template in project template (Karl Hobley)
  • Avoid indexing unsaved field content on save(update_fields=[...]) operations (Matt Westcott)
  • Prevent pages from being recursively copied into themselves (Matheus Bratfisch)

Wagtail 1.8.1 release notes

What’s changed
Bug fixes
  • Reduced Rendition.focal_point_key field length to prevent migration failure when upgrading to Wagtail 1.8 on MySQL with utf8 character encoding (Andy Chosak, Matt Westcott)

Wagtail 1.8 release notes

Wagtail 1.8 is designated a Long Term Support (LTS) release. Long Term Support releases will continue to receive maintenance updates as necessary to address security and data-loss related issues, up until the next LTS release (typically a period of 8 months).

What’s new
New page privacy options
_images/releasenotes_1_8_pageprivacy.png

Access to pages can now be restricted based on user accounts and group membership, rather than just through a shared password. This makes it possible to set up intranet-style sites via the admin, with no additional coding. This feature was developed by Shawn Makinson, Tom Miller, Luca Perico and Matt Westcott.

See: Private pages

Restrictions on bulk-deletion of pages

Previously, any user with edit permission over a page and its descendants was able to delete them all as a single action, which led to the risk of accidental deletions. To guard against this, the permission rules have been revised so that a user with basic permissions can only delete pages that have no children; in order to delete a whole subtree, they must individually delete each child page first. A new “bulk delete” permission type has been added which allows a user to delete pages with children, as before; superusers receive this permission implicitly, and so there is no change of behaviour for them.

See: Permissions

This feature was developed by Matt Westcott.

Elasticsearch 5 support

Wagtail now supports Elasticsearch 5. See Elasticsearch Backend for configuration details. This feature was developed by Karl Hobley.

Permission-limited admin breadcrumb

Breadcrumb links within the admin are now limited to the portion of the page tree that covers all pages the user has permission over. As with the changes to the explorer sidebar menu in Wagtail 1.6, this is a step towards supporting full multi-tenancy (where multiple sites on the same Wagtail installation can be fully isolated from each other through permission configuration). This feature was developed by Jeffrey Chau, Robert Rollins and Matt Westcott.

Updated tutorial

The “Your first Wagtail site” tutorial has been extensively updated to cover concepts such as dynamic page listings, template context variables, and tagging. This update was contributed by Scot Hacker, with additions from Matt Westcott.

Other features
  • Added support of a custom edit_handler for site settings. See docs for the site settings module. (Axel Haustant)
  • Added get_landing_page_template getter method to AbstractForm (Gagaro)
  • Added Page.get_admin_display_title method to override how the title is displayed in the admin (Henk-Jan van Hasselaar)
  • Added support for specifying custom HTML attributes for table rows on ModelAdmin index pages. See ModelAdmin.get_extra_attrs_for_row() (Andy Babic)
  • Added first_common_ancestor method to PageQuerySet (Tim Heap)
  • Page chooser now opens at the deepest ancestor page that covers all the pages of the required page type (Tim Heap)
  • PageChooserBlock now accepts a target_model option to specify the required page type (Tim Heap)
  • Modeladmin forms now respect fields / exclude options passed on custom model forms (Thejaswi Puthraya)
  • Added new StreamField block type StaticBlock for blocks that occupy a position in a stream but otherwise have no configuration; see StaticBlock (Benoît Vogel)
  • Added new StreamField block type BlockQuoteBlock (Scot Hacker)
  • Updated Cloudflare cache module to use the v4 API (Albert O’Connor)
  • Added exclude_from_explorer attribute to the ModelAdmin class to allow hiding instances of a page type from Wagtail’s explorer views (Andy Babic)
  • Added above_login, below_login, fields and login_form customisation blocks to the login page template - see Customising admin templates (Tim Heap)
  • ChoiceBlock now accepts a callable as the choices list (Mikalai Radchuk)
  • Redundant action buttons are now omitted from the root page in the explorer (Nick Smith)
  • Locked pages are now disabled from editing at the browser level (Edd Baldry)
  • Added wagtail.core.query.PageQuerySet.in_site() method for filtering page QuerySets to pages within the specified site (Chris Rogers)
  • Added the ability to override the default index settings for Elasticsearch. See Elasticsearch Backend (PyMan Claudio Marinozzi)
  • Extra options for the Elasticsearch constructor should be now defined with the new key OPTIONS of the WAGTAILSEARCH_BACKENDS setting (PyMan Claudio Marinozzi)
Bug fixes
  • AbstractForm now respects custom get_template methods on the page model (Gagaro)
  • Use specific page model for the parent page in the explore index (Gagaro)
  • Remove responsive styles in embed when there is no ratio available (Gagaro)
  • Parent page link in page search modal no longer disappears on hover (Dan Braghis)
  • ModelAdmin views now consistently call get_context_data (Andy Babic)
  • Header for search results on the redirects index page now shows the correct count when the listing is paginated (Nick Smith)
  • set_url_paths management command is now compatible with Django 1.10 (Benjamin Bach)
  • Form builder email notifications now output multiple values correctly (Sævar Öfjörð Magnússon)
  • Closing ‘more’ dropdown on explorer no longer jumps to the top of the page (Ducky)
  • Users with only publish permission are no longer given implicit permission to delete pages (Matt Westcott)
  • search_garbage_collect management command now works when wagtailsearchpromotions is not installed (Morgan Aubert)
  • wagtail.contrib.settings context processor no longer fails when request.site is unavailable (Diederik van der Boor)
  • TableBlock content is now indexed for search (Morgan Aubert)
  • Page.copy() is now marked as alters_data, to prevent template code from triggering it (Diederik van der Boor)
Upgrade considerations
unique_together constraint on custom image rendition models needs updating

If your project is using a custom image model (see Custom image models), you will need to update the unique_together option on the corresponding Rendition model when upgrading to Wagtail 1.8. Change the line:

unique_together = (
    ('image', 'filter', 'focal_point_key'),
)

to:

unique_together = (
    ('image', 'filter_spec', 'focal_point_key'),
)

You will then be able to run manage.py makemigrations and manage.py migrate as normal.

Additionally, third-party code that accesses the Filter and Rendition models directly should note the following and make updates where applicable:

  • Filter will no longer be a Django model as of Wagtail 1.9, and as such, ORM operations on it (such as save() and Filter.objects) are deprecated. It should be instantiated and used as an in-memory object instead - for example, flt, created = Filter.objects.get_or_create(spec='fill-100x100') should become flt = Filter(spec='fill-100x100').
  • The filter field of Rendition models is no longer in use; lookups should instead be performed on the filter_spec field, which contains a filter spec string such as 'fill-100x100'.
wagtail.wagtailimages.models.get_image_model has moved

The get_image_model function should now be imported from wagtail.wagtailimages rather than wagtail.wagtailimages.models. See Referring to the image model.

Non-administrators now need ‘bulk delete’ permission to delete pages with children

As a precaution against accidental data loss, this release introduces a new “bulk delete” permission on pages, which can be set through the Settings -> Groups area. Non-administrator users must have this permission in order to delete pages that have children; a user without this permission would have to delete each child individually before deleting the parent. By default, no groups are assigned this new permission. If you wish to restore the previous behaviour, and don’t want to configure permissions manually through the admin interface, you can do so with a data migration. Create an empty migration using ./manage.py makemigrations myapp --empty --name assign_bulk_delete_permission (replacing myapp with the name of one of your project’s apps) and edit the migration file to contain the following:

from __future__ import unicode_literals

from django.db import migrations


def add_bulk_delete_permission(apps, schema_editor):
    """Find all groups with add/edit page permissions, and assign them bulk_delete permission"""
    GroupPagePermission = apps.get_model('wagtailcore', 'GroupPagePermission')
    for group_id, page_id in GroupPagePermission.objects.filter(
        permission_type__in=['add', 'edit']
    ).values_list('group', 'page').distinct():
        GroupPagePermission.objects.create(
            group_id=group_id, page_id=page_id, permission_type='bulk_delete'
        )


def remove_bulk_delete_permission(apps, schema_editor):
    GroupPagePermission = apps.get_model('wagtailcore', 'GroupPagePermission')
    GroupPagePermission.objects.filter(permission_type='bulk_delete').delete()


class Migration(migrations.Migration):

    dependencies = [
        # keep the original dependencies line
    ]

    operations = [
        migrations.RunPython(add_bulk_delete_permission, remove_bulk_delete_permission),
    ]
Cloudflare cache module now requires a ZONEID setting

The wagtail.contrib.wagtailfrontendcache.backends.CloudflareBackend module has been updated to use Cloudflare’s v4 API, replacing the previous v1 implementation (which is unsupported as of November 9th, 2016). The new API requires users to supply a zone identifier, which should be passed as the ZONEID field of the WAGTAILFRONTENDCACHE setting:

WAGTAILFRONTENDCACHE = {
    'cloudflare': {
        'BACKEND': 'wagtail.contrib.wagtailfrontendcache.backends.CloudflareBackend',
        'EMAIL': 'your-cloudflare-email-address@example.com',
        'TOKEN': 'your cloudflare api token',
        'ZONEID': 'your cloudflare domain zone id',
    },
}

For details of how to obtain the zone identifier, see the Cloudflare API documentation.

Extra options for the Elasticsearch constructor should be now defined with the new key OPTIONS of the WAGTAILSEARCH_BACKENDS setting

For the Elasticsearch backend, all extra keys defined in WAGTAILSEARCH_BACKENDS are passed directly to the Elasticsearch constructor. All these keys now should be moved inside the new OPTIONS dictionary. The old behaviour is still supported, but deprecated.

For example, the following configuration changes the connection class that the Elasticsearch connector uses:

from elasticsearch import RequestsHttpConnection

WAGTAILSEARCH_BACKENDS = {
    'default': {
        'BACKEND': 'wagtail.wagtailsearch.backends.elasticsearch',
        'connection_class': RequestsHttpConnection,
    }
}

As connection_class needs to be passed through to the Elasticsearch connector, it should be moved to the new OPTIONS dictionary:

from elasticsearch import RequestsHttpConnection

WAGTAILSEARCH_BACKENDS = {
    'default': {
        'BACKEND': 'wagtail.wagtailsearch.backends.elasticsearch',
        'OPTIONS': {
            'connection_class': RequestsHttpConnection,
        }
    }
}

Wagtail 1.7 release notes

What’s new
Elasticsearch 2 support

Wagtail now supports Elasticsearch 2. Note that you need to change backend in WAGTAILSEARCH_BACKENDS, if you wish to switch to Elasticsearch 2. This feature was developed by Karl Hobley.

See: Elasticsearch Backend

New image tag options for file type and JPEG compression level

The {% image %} tag now supports extra parameters for specifying the image file type and JPEG compression level on a per-tag basis. See Output image format and Image quality. This feature was developed by Karl Hobley.

AWS CloudFront support added to cache invalidation module

Wagtail’s cache invalidation module can now invalidate pages cached in AWS CloudFront when they are updated or unpublished. This feature was developed by Rob Moorman.

See: Amazon CloudFront

Unpublishing subpages

Unpublishing a page now gives the option to unpublish its subpages at the same time. This feature was developed by Jordi Joan.

Minor features
  • The |embed filter has been converted into a templatetag {% embed %} (Janneke Janssen)
  • The wagtailforms module now provides a FormSubmissionPanel for displaying details of form submissions; see Displaying form submission information for documentation. (João Luiz Lorencetti)
  • The Wagtail version number can now be obtained as a tuple using from wagtail import VERSION (Tim Heap)
  • send_mail logic has been moved from AbstractEmailForm.process_form_submission into AbstractEmailForm.send_mail. Now it’s easier to override this logic (Tim Leguijt)
  • Added before_create_page, before_edit_page, before_delete_page hooks (Karl Hobley)
  • Updated font sizes and colours to improve legibility of admin menu and buttons (Stein Strindhaug)
  • Added pagination to “choose destination” view when moving pages (Nick Smith, Žan Anderle)
  • Added ability to annotate search results with score - see Annotating results with score (Karl Hobley)
  • Added ability to limit access to form submissions - see filter_form_submissions_for_user (Mikalai Radchuk)
  • Added the ability to configure the number of days search logs are kept for, through the WAGTAILSEARCH_HITS_MAX_AGE setting (Stephen Rice)
  • SnippetChooserBlock now supports passing the model name as a string (Nick Smith)
  • Redesigned account settings / logout area in the sidebar for better clarity (Janneke Janssen)
  • Pillow’s image optimisation is now applied when saving JPEG images (Karl Hobley)
Bug fixes
  • Migrations for wagtailcore and project template are now reversible (Benjamin Bach)
  • Migrations no longer depend on wagtailcore and taggit’s __latest__ migration, logically preventing those apps from receiving new migrations (Matt Westcott)
  • The default image format label text (‘Full width’, ‘Left-aligned’, ‘Right-aligned’) is now localised (Mikalai Radchuk)
  • Text on the front-end ‘password required’ form is now marked for translation (Janneke Janssen)
  • Text on the page view restriction form is now marked for translation (Luiz Boaretto)
  • Fixed toggle behaviour of userbar on mobile (Robert Rollins)
  • Image rendition / document file deletion now happens on a post_delete signal, so that files are not lost if the deletion does not proceed (Janneke Janssen)
  • “Your recent edits” list on dashboard no longer leaves out pages that another user has subsequently edited (Michael Cordover, Kees Hink, João Luiz Lorencetti)
  • InlinePanel now accepts a classname parameter as per the documentation (emg36, Matt Westcott)
  • Disabled use of escape key to revert content of rich text fields, which could cause accidental data loss (Matt Westcott)
  • Setting USE_THOUSAND_SEPARATOR = True no longer breaks the rendering of numbers in JS code for InlinePanel (Mattias Loverot, Matt Westcott)
  • Images / documents pagination now preserves GET parameters (Bojan Mihelac)
  • Wagtail’s UserProfile model now sets a related_name of wagtail_userprofile to avoid naming collisions with other user profile models (Matt Westcott)
  • Non-text content is now preserved when adding or editing a link within rich text (Matt Westcott)
  • Fixed preview when SECURE_SSL_REDIRECT = True (Aymeric Augustin)
  • Prevent hang when truncating an image filename without an extension (Ricky Robinett)
Upgrade considerations
Project template’s initial migration should not depend on wagtailcore.__latest__

On projects created under previous releases of Wagtail, the home/migrations/0001_initial.py migration created by the wagtail start command contains the following dependency line:

dependencies = [
    ('wagtailcore', '__latest__'),
]

This may produce InconsistentMigrationHistory errors under Django 1.10 when upgrading Wagtail, since Django interprets this to mean that no new migrations can legally be added to wagtailcore after this migration is applied. This line should be changed to:

dependencies = [
    ('wagtailcore', '0029_unicode_slugfield_dj19'),
]
Custom image models require a data migration for the new filter_spec field

The data model for image renditions will be changed in Wagtail 1.8 to eliminate Filter as a model. Wagtail sites using a custom image model (see Custom image models) need to have a schema and data migration in place prior to upgrading to Wagtail 1.8. To create these migrations:

  • Run manage.py makemigrations to create the schema migration

  • Run manage.py makemigrations --empty myapp (replacing myapp with the name of the app containing the custom image model) to create an empty migration

  • Edit the created migration to contain:

    from wagtail.wagtailimages.utils import get_fill_filter_spec_migrations
    

    and, for the operations list:

    forward, reverse = get_fill_filter_spec_migrations('myapp', 'CustomRendition')
    operations = [
        migrations.RunPython(forward, reverse),
    ]
    

    replacing myapp and CustomRendition with the app and model name for the custom rendition model.

embed template filter is now a template tag

The embed template filter, used to translate the URL of a media resource (such as a YouTube video) into a corresponding embeddable HTML fragment, has now been converted to a template tag. Any template code such as:

{% load wagtailembeds_tags %}
...
{{ my_media_url|embed }}

should now be rewritten as:

{% load wagtailembeds_tags %}
...
{% embed my_media_url %}

Wagtail 1.6.3 release notes

What’s changed
Bug fixes
  • Restore compatibility with django-debug-toolbar 1.5 (Matt Westcott)
  • Edits to StreamFields are no longer ignored in page edits on Django >=1.10.1 when a default value exists (Matt Westcott)

Wagtail 1.6.2 release notes

What’s changed
Bug fixes
  • Initial values of checkboxes on group permission edit form now are visible on Django 1.10 (Matt Westcott)

Wagtail 1.6.1 release notes

What’s new
Minor features
  • Added WAGTAIL_ALLOW_UNICODE_SLUGS setting to make Unicode support optional in page slugs (Matt Westcott)
Bug fixes
  • Wagtail’s middleware classes are now compatible with Django 1.10’s new-style middleware (Karl Hobley)
  • The can_create_at() method is now checked in the create page view (Mikalai Radchuk)
  • Fixed regression on Django 1.10.1 causing Page subclasses to fail to use PageManager (Matt Westcott)
  • ChoiceBlocks with lazy translations as option labels no longer break Elasticsearch indexing (Matt Westcott)
  • The page editor no longer fails to load JavaScript files with ManifestStaticFilesStorage (Matt Westcott)
  • Django 1.10 enables client-side validation for all forms by default, but it fails to handle all the nuances of how forms are used in Wagtail. The client-side validation has been disabled for the Wagtail UI (Matt Westcott)
Upgrade considerations
Multi-level inheritance and custom managers

The inheritance rules for Custom Page managers have been updated to match Django’s standard behaviour. In the vast majority of scenarios there will be no change. However, in the specific case where a page model with a custom objects manager is subclassed further, the subclass will be assigned a plain Manager instead of a PageManager, and will now need to explicitly override this with a PageManager to function correctly:

class EventPage(Page):
    objects = EventManager()


class SpecialEventPage(EventPage):
    # Previously SpecialEventPage.objects would be set to a PageManager automatically;
    # this now needs to be set explicitly
    objects = PageManager()

Wagtail 1.6 release notes

What’s new
Django 1.10 support

Wagtail is now compatible with Django 1.10. Thanks to Mikalai Radchuk and Paul J Stevens for developing this, and to Tim Graham for reviewing and additional Django core assistance.

{% include_block %} tag for improved StreamField template inclusion

In previous releases, the standard way of rendering the HTML content of a StreamField was through a simple variable template tag, such as {{ page.body }}. This had the drawback that any templates used in the StreamField rendering would not inherit variables from the parent template’s context, such as page and request. To address this, a new template tag {% include_block page.body %} has been introduced as the new recommended way of outputting Streamfield content - this replicates the behaviour of Django’s {% include %} tag, passing on the full template context by default. For full documentation, see Template rendering. This feature was developed by Matt Westcott, and additionally ported to Jinja2 (see: Jinja2 template support) by Mikalai Radchuk.

Unicode page slugs

Page URL slugs can now contain Unicode characters, when using Django 1.9 or above. This feature was developed by Behzad Nategh.

Permission-limited explorer menu

The explorer sidebar menu now limits the displayed pages to the ones the logged-in user has permission for. For example, if a user has permission over the pages MegaCorp / Departments / Finance and MegaCorp / Departments / HR, then their menu will begin at “Departments”. This reduces the amount of “drilling-down” the user has to do, and is an initial step towards supporting fully independent sites on the same Wagtail installation. This feature was developed by Matt Westcott and Robert Rollins, California Institute of Technology.

Minor features
  • Image upload form in image chooser now performs client side validation so that the selected file is not lost in the submission (Jack Paine)
  • oEmbed URL for audioBoom was updated (Janneke Janssen)
  • Remember tree location in page chooser when switching between Internal / External / Email link (Matt Westcott)
  • FieldRowPanel now creates equal-width columns automatically if col* classnames are not specified (Chris Rogers)
  • Form builder now validates against multiple fields with the same name (Richard McMillan)
  • The ‘choices’ field on the form builder no longer has a maximum length (Johannes Spielmann)
  • Multiple ChooserBlocks inside a StreamField are now prefetched in bulk, for improved performance (Michael van Tellingen, Roel Bruggink, Matt Westcott)
  • Added new EmailBlock and IntegerBlock (Oktay Altay)
  • Added a new FloatBlock, DecimalBlock and a RegexBlock (Oktay Altay, Andy Babic)
  • Wagtail version number is now shown on the settings menu (Chris Rogers)
  • Added a system check to validate that fields listed in search_fields are defined on the model (Josh Schneier)
  • Added formal APIs for customising the display of StructBlock forms within the page editor - see Custom editing interfaces for StructBlock (Matt Westcott)
  • wagtailforms.models.AbstractEmailForm now supports multiple email recipients (Serafeim Papastefanos)
  • Added ability to delete users through Settings -> Users (Vincent Audebert; thanks also to Ludolf Takens and Tobias Schmidt for alternative implementations)
  • Page previews now pass additional HTTP headers, to simulate the page being viewed by the logged-in user and avoid clashes with middleware (Robert Rollins)
  • Added back buttons to page delete and unpublish confirmation screens (Matt Westcott)
  • Recognise Flickr embed URLs using HTTPS (Danielle Madeley)
  • Success message when publishing a page now correctly respects custom URLs defined on the specific page class (Chris Darko)
  • Required blocks inside StreamField are now indicated with asterisks (Stephen Rice)
Bug fixes
  • Email templates and document uploader now support custom STATICFILES_STORAGE (Jonny Scholes)
  • Removed alignment options (deprecated in HTML and not rendered by Wagtail) from TableBlock context menu (Moritz Pfeiffer)
  • Fixed incorrect CSS path on ModelAdmin’s “choose a parent page” view
  • Prevent empty redirect by overnormalisation
  • “Remove link” button in rich text editor didn’t trigger “edit” event, leading to the change to sometimes not be persisted (Matt Westcott)
  • RichText values can now be correctly evaluated as booleans (Mike Dingjan, Bertrand Bordage)
  • wagtailforms no longer assumes an .html extension when determining the landing page template filename (kakulukia)
  • Fixed styling glitch on bi-colour icon + text buttons in Chrome (Janneke Janssen)
  • StreamField can now be used in an InlinePanel (Gagaro)
  • StreamField block renderings using templates no longer undergo double escaping when using Jinja2 (Aymeric Augustin)
  • RichText objects no longer undergo double escaping when using Jinja2 (Aymeric Augustin, Matt Westcott)
  • Saving a page by pressing enter key no longer triggers a “Changes may not be saved message” (Sean Muck, Matt Westcott)
  • RoutablePageMixin no longer breaks in the presence of instance-only attributes such as those generated by FileFields (Fábio Macêdo Mendes)
  • The --schema-only flag on update_index no longer expects an argument (Karl Hobley)
  • Added file handling to support custom user add/edit forms with images/files (Eraldo Energy)
  • Placeholder text in modeladmin search now uses the correct template variable (Adriaan Tijsseling)
  • Fixed bad SQL syntax for updating URL paths on Microsoft SQL Server (Jesse Legg)
  • Added workaround for Django 1.10 bug https://code.djangoproject.com/ticket/27037 causing forms with file upload fields to fail validation (Matt Westcott)
Upgrade considerations
Form builder FormField models require a migration

There are some changes in the wagtailforms.models.AbstractFormField model:

  • The choices field has been changed from a CharField to a TextField, to allow it to be of unlimited length;
  • The help text for the to_address field has been changed: it now gives more information on how to specify multiple addresses.

These changes require migration. If you are using the wagtailforms module in your project, you will need to run python manage.py makemigrations and python manage.py migrate after upgrading, in order to apply changes to your form page models.

TagSearchable needs removing from custom image / document model migrations

The mixin class wagtail.wagtailadmin.taggable.TagSearchable, used internally by image and document models, has been deprecated. If you are using custom image or document models in your project, the migration(s) which created them will contain frozen references to wagtail.wagtailadmin.taggable.TagSearchable, which must now be removed. The line:

import wagtail.wagtailadmin.taggable

should be replaced by:

import wagtail.wagtailsearch.index

and the line:

bases=(models.Model, wagtail.wagtailadmin.taggable.TagSearchable),

should be updated to:

bases=(models.Model, wagtail.wagtailsearch.index.Indexed),
render and render_basic methods on StreamField blocks now accept a context keyword argument

The render and render_basic methods on wagtail.wagtailcore.blocks.Block have been updated to accept an optional context keyword argument, a template context to use when rendering the block. If you have defined any custom StreamField blocks that override either of these methods, the method signature now needs to be updated to include this keyword argument:

class MyBlock(Block):

    def render(self, value):
        ...

    def render_basic(self, value):
        ...

should now become:

class MyBlock(Block):

    def render(self, value, context=None):
        ...

    def render_basic(self, value, context=None):
        ...

Wagtail 1.5.3 release notes

What’s changed
Bug fixes
  • Pin html5lib to version 0.999999 to prevent breakage caused by internal API changes (Liam Brenner)

Wagtail 1.5.2 release notes

What’s new
Bug fixes
  • Fixed regression in 1.5.1 on editing external links (Stephen Rice)

Wagtail 1.5.1 release notes

What’s new
Bug fixes
  • When editing a document link in rich text, the document ID is no longer erroneously interpreted as a page ID (Stephen Rice)
  • Removing embedded media from rich text by mouse click action now gets correctly registered as a change to the field (Loic Teixeira)
  • Rich text editor is no longer broken in InlinePanels (Matt Westcott, Gagaro)
  • Rich text editor is no longer broken in settings (Matt Westcott)
  • Link tooltip now shows correct urls for newly inserted document links (Matt Westcott)
  • Now page chooser (in a rich text editor) opens up at the link’s parent page, rather than at the page itself (Matt Westcott)
  • Reverted fix for explorer menu scrolling with page content, as it blocked access to menus that exceed screen height
  • Image listing in the image chooser no longer becomes unpaginated after an invalid upload form submission (Stephen Rice)
  • Confirmation message on the ModelAdmin delete view no longer errors if the model’s string representation depends on the primary key (Yannick Chabbert)
  • Applied correct translation tags for ‘permanent’ / ‘temporary’ labels on redirects (Matt Westcott)

Wagtail 1.5 release notes

What’s new
Reorganised page explorer actions
_images/releasenotes_1_5_explorermenu.png

The action buttons on the page explorer have been reorganised to reduce clutter, and lesser-used actions have been moved to a “More” dropdown. A new hook register_page_listing_buttons has been added for adding custom action buttons to the page explorer.

ModelAdmin

Wagtail now includes an app wagtail.contrib.modeladmin (previously available separately as the wagtailmodeladmin package) which allows you to configure arbitrary Django models to be listed, added and edited through the Wagtail admin.

_images/releasenotes_1_5_modeladmin.png

See ModelAdmin for full documentation. This feature was developed by Andy Babic.

TableBlock

TableBlock, a new StreamField block type for editing table-based content, is now available through the wagtail.contrib.table_block module.

_images/screen40_table_block1.png

See TableBlock for documentation. This feature was developed by Moritz Pfeiffer, David Seddon and Brad Busenius.

Improvements to the “Image serve view”

Dynamic image serve view

This view, which is used for requesting image thumbnails from an external app, has had some improvements made to it in this release.

  • A “redirect” action has been added which will redirect the user to where the resized image is hosted rather than serving it from the app. This may be beneficial for performance if the images are hosted externally (eg, S3)
  • It now takes an optional extra path component which can be used for appending a filename to the end of the URL
  • The key is now configurable on the view so you don’t have to use your project’s SECRET_KEY
  • It’s been refactored into a class based view and you can now create multiple serve views with different image models and/or keys
  • It now supports serving image files using django-sendfile (Thanks to Yannick Chabbert for implementing this)
Minor features
  • Password reset email now reminds the user of their username (Matt Westcott)
  • Added jinja2 support for the settings template tag (Tim Heap)
  • Added ‘revisions’ action to pages list (Roel Bruggink)
  • Added a hook insert_global_admin_js for inserting custom JavaScript throughout the admin backend (Tom Dyson)
  • Recognise instagram embed URLs with www prefix (Matt Westcott)
  • The type of the search_fields attribute on Page models (and other searchable models) has changed from a tuple to a list (see upgrade consideration below) (Tim Heap)
  • Use PasswordChangeForm when user changes their password, requiring the user to enter their current password (Matthijs Melissen)
  • Highlight current day in date picker (Jonas Lergell)
  • Eliminated the deprecated register.assignment_tag on Django 1.9 (Josh Schneier)
  • Increased size of Save button on site settings (Liam Brenner)
  • Optimised Site.find_for_request to only perform one database query (Matthew Downey)
  • Notification messages on creating / editing sites now include the site name if specified (Chris Rogers)
  • Added --schema-only option to update_index management command
  • Added meaningful default icons to StreamField blocks (Benjamin Bach)
  • Added title text to action buttons in the page explorer (Liam Brenner)
  • Changed project template to explicitly import development settings via settings.dev (Tomas Olander)
  • Improved L10N and I18N for revisions list (Roel Bruggink)
  • The multiple image uploader now displays details of server errors (Nigel Fletton)
  • Added WAGTAIL_APPEND_SLASH setting to determine whether page URLs end in a trailing slash - see Append Slash (Andrew Tork Baker)
  • Added auto resizing text field, richtext field, and snippet chooser to styleguide (Liam Brenner)
  • Support field widget media inside StreamBlock blocks (Karl Hobley)
  • Spinner was added to Save button on site settings (Liam Brenner)
  • Added success message after logout from Admin (Liam Brenner)
  • Added get_upload_to method to AbstractRendition which, when overridden, allows control over where image renditions are stored (Rob Moggach and Matt Westcott)
  • Added a mechanism to customise the add / edit user forms for custom user models - see Custom user models (Nigel Fletton)
  • Added internal provision for swapping in alternative rich text editors (Karl Hobley)
Bug fixes
  • The currently selected day is now highlighted only in the correct month in date pickers (Jonas Lergell)
  • Fixed crash when an image without a source file was resized with the “dynamic serve view”
  • Registered settings admin menu items now show active correctly (Matthew Downey)
  • Direct usage of Document model replaced with get_document_model function in wagtail.contrib.wagtailmedusa and in wagtail.contrib.wagtailapi
  • Failures on sending moderation notification emails now produce a warning, rather than crashing the admin page outright (Matt Fozard)
  • All admin forms that could potentially include file upload fields now specify multipart/form-data where appropriate (Tim Heap)
  • REM units in Wagtailuserbar caused incorrect spacing (Vincent Audebert)
  • Explorer menu no longer scrolls with page content (Vincent Audebert)
  • decorate_urlpatterns now uses functools.update_wrapper to keep view names and docstrings (Mario César)
  • StreamField block controls are no longer hidden by the StreamField menu when prepending a new block (Vincent Audebert)
  • Removed invalid use of __ alias that prevented strings getting picked up for translation (Juha Yrjölä)
  • Routable pages without a main view no longer raise a TypeError (Bojan Mihelac)
  • Fixed UnicodeEncodeError in wagtailforms when downloading a CSV for a form containing non-ASCII field labels on Python 2 (Mikalai Radchuk)
  • Server errors during search indexing on creating / updating / deleting a model are now logged, rather than causing the overall operation to fail (Karl Hobley)
  • Objects are now correctly removed from search indexes on deletion (Karl Hobley)
Upgrade considerations
Buttons in admin now require class="button"

The Wagtail admin CSS has been refactored for maintainability, and buttons now require an explicit button class. (Previously, the styles were applied on all inputs of type "submit", "reset" or "button".) If you have created any apps that extend the Wagtail admin with new views / templates, you will need to add this class to all buttons.

The search_fields attribute on models should now be set to a list

On searchable models (eg, Page or custom Image models) the search_fields attribute should now be a list instead of a tuple.

For example, the following Page model:

class MyPage(Page):
    ...

    search_fields = Page.search_fields + (
        indexed.SearchField('body'),
    )

Should be changed to:

class MyPage(Page):
    ...

    search_fields = Page.search_fields + [
        indexed.SearchField('body'),
    ]

To ease the burden on third-party modules, adding tuples to Page.search_fields will still work. But this backwards-compatibility fix will be removed in Wagtail 1.7.

Elasticsearch backend now defaults to verifying SSL certs

Previously, if you used the Elasticsearch backend, configured with the URLS property like:

WAGTAILSEARCH_BACKENDS = {
    'default': {
        'BACKEND': 'wagtail.wagtailsearch.backends.elasticsearch',
        'URLS': ['https://example.com/'],
    }
}

Elasticsearch would not be configured to verify SSL certificates for HTTPS URLs. This has been changed so that SSL certificates are verified for HTTPS connections by default.

If you need the old behaviour back, where SSL certificates are not verified for your HTTPS connection, you can configure the Elasticsearch backend with the HOSTS option, like so:

WAGTAILSEARCH_BACKENDS = {
    'default': {
        'BACKEND': 'wagtail.wagtailsearch.backends.elasticsearch',
        'HOSTS': [{
            'host': 'example.com'
            'use_ssl': True,
            'verify_certs': False,
        }],
    }
}

See the Elasticsearch-py documentation for more configuration options.

Project template now imports settings.dev explicitly

In previous releases, the project template’s settings/__init__.py file was set up to import the development settings (settings/dev.py), so that these would be picked up as the default (i.e. whenever a settings module was not specified explicitly). However, in some setups this meant that the development settings were being inadvertently imported in production mode.

For this reason, the import in settings/__init__.py has now been removed, and commands must now specify myproject.settings.dev or myproject.settings.production as appropriate; the supporting scripts (such as manage.py) have been updated accordingly. As this is a change to the project template, existing projects are not affected; however, if you have any common scripts or configuration files that rely on importing myproject.settings as the settings module, these will need to be updated in order to work on projects created under Wagtail 1.5.

Wagtail 1.4.6 release notes

What’s changed
Bug fixes
  • Pin html5lib to version 0.999999 to prevent breakage caused by internal API changes (Liam Brenner)

Wagtail 1.4.5 release notes

What’s changed
Bug fixes
  • Paste / drag operations done entirely with the mouse are now correctly picked up as edits within the rich text editor (Matt Fozard)
  • Logic for cancelling the “unsaved changes” check on form submission has been fixed to work cross-browser (Stephen Rice)
  • The “unsaved changes” confirmation was erroneously shown on IE / Firefox when previewing a page with validation errors (Matt Westcott)
  • The up / down / delete controls on the “Promoted search results” form no longer trigger a form submission (Matt Westcott)
  • Opening preview window no longer performs user-agent sniffing, and now works correctly on IE11 (Matt Westcott)
  • Tree paths are now correctly assigned when previewing a newly-created page underneath a parent with deleted children (Matt Westcott)
  • Added BASE_URL setting back to project template
  • Clearing the search box in the page chooser now returns the user to the browse view (Matt Westcott)
  • The above fix also fixed an issue where Internet Explorer got stuck in the search view upon opening the page chooser (Matt Westcott)

Wagtail 1.4.4 release notes

What’s changed
Translations
  • New translation for Slovenian (Mitja Pagon)
Bug fixes
  • The wagtailuserbar template tag now gracefully handles situations where the request object is not in the template context (Matt Westcott)
  • Meta classes on StreamField blocks now handle multiple inheritance correctly (Tim Heap)
  • Now user can upload images / documents only into permitted collection from choosers
  • Keyboard shortcuts for save / preview on the page editor no longer incorrectly trigger the “unsaved changes” message (Jack Paine / Matt Westcott)
  • Redirects no longer fail when both a site-specific and generic redirect exist for the same URL path (Nick Smith, João Luiz Lorencetti)
  • Wagtail now checks that Group is registered with the Django admin before unregistering it (Jason Morrison)
  • Previewing inaccessible pages no longer fails with ALLOWED_HOSTS = ['*'] (Robert Rollins)
  • The submit button ‘spinner’ no longer activates if the form has client-side validation errors (Jack Paine, Matt Westcott)
  • Overriding MESSAGE_TAGS in project settings no longer causes messages in the Wagtail admin to lose their styling (Tim Heap)
  • Border added around explorer menu to stop it blending in with StreamField block listing; also fixes invisible explorer menu in Firefox 46 (Alex Gleason)

Wagtail 1.4.3 release notes

What’s changed
Bug fixes
  • Fixed regression introduced in 1.4.2 which caused Wagtail to query the database during a system check (Tim Heap)

Wagtail 1.4.2 release notes

What’s changed
Bug fixes
  • Streamfields no longer break on validation error
  • Number of validation errors in each tab in the editor is now correctly reported again
  • Userbar now opens on devices with both touch and mouse (Josh Barr)
  • wagtail.wagtailadmin.wagtail_hooks no longer calls static during app load, so you can use ManifestStaticFilesStorage without calling the collectstatic command
  • Fixed crash on page save when a custom Page edit handler has been specified using the edit_handler attribute (Tim Heap)

Wagtail 1.4.1 release notes

What’s changed
Bug fixes
  • Fixed erroneous rendering of up arrow icons (Rob Moorman)

Wagtail 1.4 release notes

Wagtail 1.4 is designated a Long Term Support (LTS) release. Long Term Support releases will continue to receive maintenance updates as necessary to address security and data-loss related issues, up until the next LTS release (typically a period of 8 months).

What’s new
Page revision management
_images/revision-ui.png

From the page editing interface, editors can now access a list of previous revisions of the page, and preview or roll back to any earlier revision.

Collections for image / document organisation

Images and documents can now be organised into collections, set up by administrators through the Settings -> Collections menu item. User permissions can be set either globally (on the ‘Root’ collection) or on individual collections, allowing different user groups to keep their media items separated. Thank you to the University of South Wales for sponsoring this feature.

Redesigned userbar
_images/userbar-corner.png

The Wagtail userbar (which gives editors quick access to the admin from the site frontend) has been redesigned, and no longer depends on an iframe. The new design allows more flexibility in label text, more configurable positioning to avoid overlapping with site navigation, and adds a new “Show in Explorer” option. This feature was developed by Thomas Winter and Gareth Price.

Protection against unsaved changes

The page editor interface now produces a warning if the user attempts to navigate away while there are unsaved changes.

Multiple document uploader

The “Add a document” interface now supports uploading multiple documents at once, in the same way as uploading images.

Custom document models

The Document model can now be overridden using the new WAGTAILDOCS_DOCUMENT_MODEL setting. This works in the same way that WAGTAILIMAGES_IMAGE_MODEL works for Image.

Removed django-compressor dependency

Wagtail no longer depends on the django-compressor library. While we highly recommend compressing and bundling the CSS and JavaScript on your sites, using django-compressor places additional installation and configuration demands on the developer, so this has now been made optional.

Minor features
  • The page search interface now searches all fields instead of just the title (Kait Crawford)
  • Snippets now support a custom edit_handler property; this can be used to implement a tabbed interface, for example. See Customising the tabbed interface (Mikalai Radchuk)
  • Date/time pickers now respect the locale’s ‘first day of week’ setting (Peter Quade)
  • Refactored the way forms are constructed for the page editor, to allow custom forms to be used
  • Notification message on publish now indicates whether the page is being published now or scheduled for publication in future (Chris Rogers)
  • Server errors when uploading images / documents through the chooser modal are now reported back to the user (Nigel Fletton)
  • Added a hook insert_global_admin_css for inserting custom CSS throughout the admin backend (Tom Dyson)
  • Added a hook construct_explorer_page_queryset for customising the set of pages displayed in the page explorer
  • Page models now perform field validation, including testing slugs for uniqueness within a parent page, at the model level on saving
  • Page slugs are now auto-generated at the model level on page creation if one has not been specified explicitly
  • The Page model now has two new methods get_site() and get_url_parts() to aid with customising the page URL generation logic
  • Upgraded jQuery to 2.2.1 (Charlie Choiniere)
  • Multiple homepage summary items (construct_homepage_summary_items hook) now better vertically spaced (Nicolas Kuttler)
  • Email notifications can now be sent in HTML format. See Email Notifications (Mike Dingjan)
  • StreamBlock now has provision for throwing non-field-specific validation errors
  • Wagtail now works with Willow 0.3, which supports auto-correcting the orientation of images based on EXIF data
  • New translations for Hungarian, Swedish (Sweden) and Turkish
Bug fixes
  • Custom page managers no longer raise an error when used on an abstract model
  • Wagtail’s migrations are now all reversible (Benjamin Bach)
  • Deleting a page content type now preserves existing pages as basic Page instances, to prevent tree corruption
  • The Page.path field is now explicitly given the “C” collation on PostgreSQL to prevent tree ordering issues when using a database created with the Slovak locale
  • Wagtail’s compiled static assets are now put into the correct directory on Windows (Aarni Koskela)
  • ChooserBlock now correctly handles models with primary keys other than id (alexpilot11)
  • Fixed typo in Wistia oEmbed pattern (Josh Hurd)
  • Added more accurate help text for the Administrator flag on user accounts (Matt Fozard)
  • Tags added on the multiple image uploader are now saved correctly
  • Documents created by a user are no longer deleted when the user is deleted
  • Fixed a crash in RedirectMiddleware when a middleware class before SiteMiddleware returns a response (Josh Schneier)
  • Fixed error retrieving the moderator list on pages that are covered by multiple moderator permission records (Matt Fozard)
  • Ordering pages in the explorer by reverse ‘last updated’ time now puts pages with no revisions at the top
  • WagtailTestUtils now works correctly on custom user models without a username field (Adam Bolfik)
  • Logging in to the admin as a user with valid credentials but no admin access permission now displays an error message, rather than rejecting the user silently
  • StreamBlock HTML rendering now handles non-ASCII characters correctly on Python 2 (Mikalai Radchuk)
  • Fixed a bug preventing pages with a OneToOneField from being copied (Liam Brenner)
  • SASS compilation errors during Wagtail development no longer cause exit of Gulp process, instead throws error to console and continues (Thomas Winter)
  • Explorer page listing now uses specific page models, so that custom URL schemes defined on Page subclasses are respected
  • Made settings menu clickable again in Firefox 46.0a2 (Juha Kujala)
  • User management index view no longer assumes the presence of username, first_name, last_name and email fields on the user model (Eirik Krogstad)
Upgrade considerations
Removal of django-compressor

As Wagtail no longer installs django-compressor automatically as a dependency, you may need to make changes to your site’s configuration when upgrading. If your project is actively using django-compressor (that is, your site templates contain {% compress %} tags), you should ensure that your project’s requirements explicitly include django-compressor, rather than indirectly relying on Wagtail to install it. If you are not actively using django-compressor on your site, you should update your settings file to remove the line 'compressor' from INSTALLED_APPS, and remove 'compressor.finders.CompressorFinder' from STATICFILES_FINDERS.

Page models now enforce field validation

In previous releases, field validation on Page models was only applied at the form level, meaning that creating pages directly at the model level would bypass validation. For example, if NewsPage is a Page model with a required body field, then code such as:

news_page = NewsPage(title="Hello", slug='hello')
parent_page = NewsIndex.objects.get()
parent_page.add_child(instance=news_page)

would create a page that does not comply with the validation rules. This is no longer possible, as validation is now enforced at the model level on save() and save_revision(); as a result, code that creates pages programmatically (such as unit tests, and import scripts) may need to be updated to ensure that it creates valid pages.

Wagtail 1.3.1 release notes

What’s changed
Bug fixes
  • Applied workaround for failing wagtailimages migration on Django 1.8.8 / 1.9.1 with Postgres (see Django issue #26034)

Wagtail 1.3 release notes

What’s new
Django 1.9 support

Wagtail is now compatible with Django 1.9.

Indexing fields across relations in Elasticsearch

Fields on related objects can now be indexed in Elasticsearch using the new indexed.RelatedFields declaration type:

class Book(models.Model, index.Indexed):
    ...

    search_fields = [
        index.SearchField('title'),
        index.FilterField('published_date'),

        index.RelatedFields('author', [
            index.SearchField('name'),
            index.FilterField('date_of_birth'),
        ]),
    ]

# Search books where their author was born after 1950
# Both the book title and the authors name will be searched
>>> Book.objects.filter(author__date_of_birth__gt=date(1950, 1, 1)).search("Hello")

See: index.RelatedFields

Cross-linked admin search UI

The search interface in the Wagtail admin now includes a toolbar to quickly switch between different search types - pages, images, documents and users. A new register_admin_search_area hook is provided for adding new search types to this toolbar.

Minor features
  • Added WagtailPageTests, a helper module to simplify writing tests for Wagtail sites. See Testing your Wagtail site
  • Added system checks to check the subpage_types and parent_page_types attributes of page models
  • Added WAGTAIL_PASSWORD_RESET_ENABLED setting to allow password resets to be disabled independently of the password management interface (John Draper)
  • Submit for moderation notification emails now include the editor name (Denis Voskvitsov)
  • Updated fonts for more comprehensive Unicode support
  • Added .alt attribute to image renditions
  • The default src, width, height and alt attributes can now be overridden by attributes passed to the {% image %} tag
  • Added keyboard shortcuts for preview and save in the page editor
  • Added Page methods can_exist_under, can_create_at, can_move_to for customising page type business rules
  • wagtailadmin.utils.send_mail now passes extra keyword arguments to Django’s send_mail function (Matthew Downey)
  • page_unpublish signal is now fired for each page that was unpublished by a call to PageQuerySet.unpublish()
  • Add get_upload_to method to AbstractImage, to allow overriding the default image upload path (Ben Emery)
  • Notification emails are now sent per user (Matthew Downey)
  • Added the ability to override the default manager on Page models
  • Added an optional human-friendly site_name field to sites (Timo Rieber)
  • Added a system check to warn developers who use a custom Wagtail build but forgot to build the admin css
  • Added success message after updating image from the image upload view (Christian Peters)
  • Added a request.is_preview variable for templates to distinguish between previewing and live (Denis Voskvitsov)
  • ‘Pages’ link on site stats dashboard now links to the site homepage when only one site exists, rather than the root level
  • Added support for chaining multiple image operations on the {% image %} tag (Christian Peters)
  • New translations for Arabic, Latvian and Slovak
Bug fixes
  • Images and page revisions created by a user are no longer deleted when the user is deleted (Rich Atkinson)
  • HTTP cache purge now works again on Python 2 (Mitchel Cabuloy)
  • Locked pages can no longer be unpublished (Alex Bridge)
  • Site records now implement get_by_natural_key
  • Creating pages at the root level (and any other instances of the base Page model) now properly respects the parent_page_types setting
  • Settings menu now opens correctly from the page editor and styleguide views
  • subpage_types / parent_page_types business rules are now enforced when moving pages
  • Multi-word tags on images and documents are now correctly preserved as a single tag (LKozlowski)
  • Changed verbose names to start with lower case where necessary (Maris Serzans)
  • Invalid images no longer crash the image listing (Maris Serzans)
  • MenuItem url parameter can now take a lazy URL (Adon Metcalfe, rayrayndwiga)
  • Added missing translation tag to InlinePanel ‘Add’ button (jnns)
  • Added missing translation tag to ‘Signing in…’ button text (Eugene MechanisM)
  • Restored correct highlighting behaviour of rich text toolbar buttons
  • Rendering a missing image through ImageChooserBlock no longer breaks the whole page (Christian Peters)
  • Filtering by popular tag in the image chooser now works when using the database search backend
Upgrade considerations
Jinja2 template tag modules have changed location

Due to a change in the way template tags are imported in Django 1.9, it has been necessary to move the Jinja2 template tag modules from “templatetags” to a new location, “jinja2tags”. The correct configuration settings to enable Jinja2 templates are now as follows:

TEMPLATES = [
    # ...
    {
        'BACKEND': 'django.template.backends.jinja2.Jinja2',
        'APP_DIRS': True,
        'OPTIONS': {
            'extensions': [
                'wagtail.core.jinja2tags.core',
                'wagtail.wagtailadmin.jinja2tags.userbar',
                'wagtail.wagtailimages.jinja2tags.images',
            ],
        },
    }
]

See: Jinja2 template support

ContentType-returning methods in wagtailcore are deprecated

The following internal functions and methods in wagtail.wagtailcore.models, which return a list of ContentType objects, have been deprecated. Any uses of these in your code should be replaced by the corresponding new function which returns a list of model classes instead:

  • get_page_types() - replaced by get_page_models()
  • Page.clean_subpage_types() - replaced by Page.clean_subpage_models()
  • Page.clean_parent_page_types() - replaced by Page.clean_parent_page_models()
  • Page.allowed_parent_page_types() - replaced by Page.allowed_parent_page_models()
  • Page.allowed_subpage_types() - replaced by Page.allowed_subpage_models()

In addition, note that these methods now return page types that are marked as is_creatable = False, including the base Page class. (Abstract models are not included, as before.)

Wagtail 1.2 release notes

What’s new
Site settings module

Wagtail now includes a contrib module (previously available as the wagtailsettings package) to allow administrators to edit site-specific settings.

See: Site settings

Jinja2 support

The core templatetags (pageurl, slugurl, image, richtext and wagtailuserbar) are now compatible with Jinja2 so it’s now possible to use Jinja2 as the template engine for your Wagtail site.

Note that the variable name self is reserved in Jinja2, and so Wagtail now provides alternative variable names where self was previously used: page to refer to page objects, and value to refer to StreamField blocks. All code examples in this documentation have now been updated to use the new variable names, for compatibility with Jinja2; however, users of the default Django template engine can continue to use self.

See: Jinja2 template support

Site-specific redirects

You can now create redirects for a particular site using the admin interface.

Search API improvements

Wagtail’s image and document models now provide a search method on their QuerySets, making it easy to perform searches on filtered data sets. In addition, search methods now accept two new keyword arguments:

  • operator, to determine whether multiple search terms will be treated as ‘or’ (any term may match) or ‘and’ (all terms must match);
  • order_by_relevance, set to True (the default) to order by relevance or False to preserve the QuerySet’s original ordering.

See: Searching

max_num and min_num parameters on inline panels

Inline panels now accept the optional parameters max_num and min_num, to specify the maximum / minimum number of child items that must exist in order for the page to be valid.

See: Inline Panels and Model Clusters

get_context on StreamField blocks

StreamField blocks now provide a get_context method that can be overridden to pass additional variables to the block’s template.

Browsable API

The Wagtail API now incorporates the browsable front-end provided by Django REST Framework. Note that this must be enabled by adding 'rest_framework' to your project’s INSTALLED_APPS setting.

Python 3.5 support

Wagtail now supports Python 3.5 when run in conjunction with Django 1.8.6 or later.

Minor features
  • WagtailRedirectMiddleware can now ignore the query string if there is no redirect that exactly matches it
  • Order of URL parameters now ignored by redirect middleware
  • Added SQL Server compatibility to image migration
  • Added class attributes to Wagtail rich text editor buttons to aid custom styling
  • Simplified body_class in default homepage template
  • page_published signal now called with the revision object that was published
  • Added a favicon to the admin interface, customisable by overriding the branding_favicon block (see Custom branding).
  • Added spinner animations to long-running form submissions
  • The EMBEDLY_KEY setting has been renamed to WAGTAILEMBEDS_EMBEDLY_KEY
  • StreamField blocks are now added automatically, without showing the block types menu, if only one block type exists (Alex Gleason)
  • The first_published_at and latest_revision_created_at fields on page models are now available as filter fields on search queries
  • Wagtail admin now standardises on a single thumbnail image size, to reduce the overhead of creating multiple renditions
  • Rich text fields now strip out HTML comments
  • Page editor form now sets enctype="multipart/form-data" as appropriate, allowing FileField to be used on page models (Petr Vacha)
  • Explorer navigation menu on a completely empty page tree now takes you to the root level, rather than doing nothing
  • Added animation and fixed display issues when focusing a rich text field (Alex Gleason)
  • Added a system check to warn if Pillow is compiled without JPEG / PNG support
  • Page chooser now prevents users from selecting the root node where this would be invalid
  • New translations for Dutch (Netherlands), Georgian, Swedish and Turkish (Turkey)
Bug fixes
  • Page slugs are no longer auto-updated from the page title if the page is already published
  • Deleting a page permission from the groups admin UI does not immediately submit the form
  • Wagtail userbar is shown on pages that do not pass a page variable to the template (e.g. because they override the serve method)
  • request.site now set correctly on page preview when the page is not in the default site
  • Project template no longer raises a deprecation warning (Maximilian Stauss)
  • PageManager.sibling_of(page) and PageManager.not_sibling_of(page) now default to inclusive (i.e. page is considered a sibling of itself), for consistency with other sibling methods
  • The “view live” button displayed after publishing a page now correctly reflects any changes made to the page slug (Ryan Pineo)
  • API endpoints now accept and ignore the _ query parameter used by jQuery for cache-busting
  • Page slugs are no longer cut off when Unicode characters are expanded into multiple characters (Sævar Öfjörð Magnússon)
  • Searching a specific page model while filtering it by either ID or tree position no longer raises an error (Ashia Zawaduk)
  • Scrolling an over-long explorer menu no longer causes white background to show through (Alex Gleason)
  • Removed jitter when hovering over StreamField blocks (Alex Gleason)
  • Non-ASCII email addresses no longer throw errors when generating Gravatar URLs (Denis Voskvitsov, Kyle Stratis)
  • Dropdown for ForeignKey s are now styled consistently (Ashia Zawaduk)
  • Date choosers now appear on top of StreamField menus (Sergey Nikitin)
  • Fixed a migration error that was raised when block-updating from 0.8 to 1.1+
  • Page.copy() no longer breaks on models with a ClusterTaggableManager or ManyToManyField
  • Validation errors when inserting an embed into a rich text area are now reported back to the editor
Upgrade considerations
PageManager.sibling_of(page) and PageManager.not_sibling_of(page) have changed behaviour

In previous versions of Wagtail, the sibling_of and not_sibling_of methods behaved inconsistently depending on whether they were called on a manager (e.g. Page.objects.sibling_of(some_page) or EventPage.objects.sibling_of(some_page)) or a QuerySet (e.g. Page.objects.all().sibling_of(some_page) or EventPage.objects.live().sibling_of(some_page)).

Previously, the manager methods behaved as exclusive by default; that is, they did not count the passed-in page object as a sibling of itself:

>>> event_1 = EventPage.objects.get(title='Event 1')
>>> EventPage.objects.sibling_of(event_1)
[<EventPage: Event 2>]  # OLD behaviour: Event 1 is not considered a sibling of itself

This has now been changed to be inclusive by default; that is, the page is counted as a sibling of itself:

>>> event_1 = EventPage.objects.get(title='Event 1')
>>> EventPage.objects.sibling_of(event_1)
[<EventPage: Event 1>, <EventPage: Event 2>]  # NEW behaviour: Event 1 is considered a sibling of itself

If the call to sibling_of or not_sibling_of is chained after another QuerySet method - such as all(), filter() or live() - behaviour is unchanged; this behaves as inclusive, as it did in previous versions:

>>> event_1 = EventPage.objects.get(title='Event 1')
>>> EventPage.objects.all().sibling_of(event_1)
[<EventPage: Event 1>, <EventPage: Event 2>]  # OLD and NEW behaviour

If your project includes queries that rely on the old (exclusive) behaviour, this behaviour can be restored by adding the keyword argument inclusive=False:

>>> event_1 = EventPage.objects.get(title='Event 1')
>>> EventPage.objects.sibling_of(event_1, inclusive=False)
[<EventPage: Event 2>]  # passing inclusive=False restores the OLD behaviour
Image.search and Document.search methods are deprecated

The Image.search and Document.search methods have been deprecated in favour of the new QuerySet-based search mechanism - see Searching Images, Documents and custom models. Code using the old search methods should be updated to search on QuerySets instead; for example:

Image.search("Hello", filters={'uploaded_by_user': user})

can be rewritten as:

Image.objects.filter(uploaded_by_user=user).search("Hello")
Wagtail API requires adding rest_framework to INSTALLED_APPS

If you have the Wagtail API (wagtail.contrib.wagtailapi) enabled, you must now add 'rest_framework' to your project’s INSTALLED_APPS setting. In the current version the API will continue to function without this app, but the browsable front-end will not be available; this ability will be dropped in a future release.

Page.get_latest_revision_as_page() now returns live page object when there are no draft changes

If you have any application code that makes direct updates to page data, at the model or database level, be aware that the way these edits are reflected in the page editor has changed.

Previously, the get_latest_revision_as_page method - used by the page editor to return the current page revision for editing - always retrieved data from the page’s revision history. Now, it will only do so if the page has unpublished changes (i.e. the page is in live + draft state) - pages which have received no draft edits since being published will return the page’s live data instead.

As a result, any changes made directly to a live page object will be immediately reflected in the editor without needing to update the latest revision record (but note, the old behaviour is still used for pages in live + draft state).

Wagtail 1.1 release notes

What’s new
specific() method on PageQuerySet

Usually, an operation that retrieves a QuerySet of pages (such as homepage.get_children()) will return them as basic Page instances, which only include the core page data such as title. The specific() method (e.g. homepage.get_children().specific()) now allows them to be retrieved as their most specific type, using the minimum number of queries.

Atomic rebuilding of Elasticsearch indexes

The Elasticsearch search backend now accepts an experimental ATOMIC_REBUILD flag which ensures that the existing search index continues to be available while the update_index task is running. See ATOMIC_REBUILD.

The wagtailapi module now uses Django REST Framework

The wagtailapi module is now built on Django REST Framework and it now also has a library of serialisers that you can use in your own REST Framework based APIs. No user-facing changes have been made.

We hope to support more REST framework features, such as a browsable API, in future releases.

Permissions fixes in the admin interface

A number of inconsistencies around permissions in the admin interface were fixed in this release:

  • Removed all permissions for “User profile” (not used)
  • Removed “delete” permission for Images and documents (not used)
  • Users can now access images and documents when they only have the “change” permission (previously required “add” permission as well)
  • Permissions for Users now taken from custom user model, if set (previously always used permissions on Django’s builtin User model)
  • Groups and Users now respond consistently to their respective “add”, “change” and “delete” permissions
Searchable snippets

Snippets that inherit from wagtail.wagtailsearch.index.Indexed are now given a search box on the snippet chooser and listing pages. See Making Snippets Searchable.

Minor features
  • Implemented deletion of form submissions
  • Implemented pagination in the page chooser modal
  • Changed INSTALLED_APPS in project template to list apps in precedence order
  • The {% image %} tag now supports filters on the image variable, e.g. {% image primary_img|default:secondary_img width-500 %}
  • Moved the style guide menu item into the Settings sub-menu
  • Search backends can now be specified by module (e.g. wagtail.wagtailsearch.backends.elasticsearch), rather than a specific class (wagtail.wagtailsearch.backends.elasticsearch.ElasticSearch)
  • Added descendant_of filter to the API
  • Added optional directory argument to “wagtail start” command
  • Non-superusers can now view/edit/delete sites if they have the correct permissions
  • Image file size is now stored in the database, to avoid unnecessary filesystem lookups
  • Page URL lookups hit the cache/database less often
  • Updated URLs within the admin backend to use namespaces
  • The update_index task now indexes objects in batches of 1000, to indicate progress and avoid excessive memory use
  • Added database indexes on PageRevision and Image to improve performance on large sites
  • Search in page chooser now uses Wagtail’s search framework, to order results by relevance
  • PageChooserPanel now supports passing a list (or tuple) of accepted page types
  • The snippet type parameter of SnippetChooserPanel can now be omitted, or passed as a model name string rather than a model class
  • Added aliases for the self template variable to accommodate Jinja as a templating engine: page for pages, field_panel for field panels / edit handlers, and value for blocks
  • Added signposting text to the explorer to steer editors away from creating pages at the root level unless they are setting up new sites
  • “Clear choice” and “Edit this page” buttons are no longer shown on the page field of the group page permissions form
  • Altered styling of stream controls to be more like all other buttons
  • Added ability to mark page models as not available for creation using the flag is_creatable; pages that are abstract Django models are automatically made non-creatable
  • New translations for Norwegian Bokmål and Icelandic
Bug fixes
  • Text areas in the non-default tab of the page editor now resize to the correct height
  • Tabs in “insert link” modal in the rich text editor no longer disappear (Tim Heap)
  • H2 elements in rich text fields were accidentally given a click() binding when put insite a collapsible multi field panel
  • The wagtailimages module is now compatible with remote storage backends that do not allow reopening closed files
  • Search no longer crashes when auto-indexing a model that doesn’t have an id field
  • The wagtailfrontendcache module’s HTTP backend has been rewritten to reliably direct requests to the configured cache hostname
  • Resizing single pixel images with the “fill” filter no longer raises ZeroDivisionError or “tile cannot extend outside image”
  • The QuerySet returned from search operations when using the database search backend now correctly preserves additional properties of the original query, such as prefetch_related / select_related
  • Responses from the external image URL generator are correctly marked as streaming and will no longer fail when used with Django’s cache middleware
  • Page copy now works with pages that use multiple inheritance
  • Form builder pages now pick up template variables defined in the get_context method
  • When copying a page, IDs of child objects within page revision records were not remapped to the new objects; this would cause those objects to be lost from the original page when editing the new one
  • Newly added redirects now take effect on all sites, rather than just the site that the Wagtail admin backend was accessed through
  • Add user form no longer throws a hard error on validation failure
Upgrade considerations
is_abstract flag on page models has been replaced by is_creatable

Previous versions of Wagtail provided an undocumented is_abstract flag on page models - not to be confused with Django’s abstract Meta flag - to indicate that it should not be included in the list of available page types for creation. (Typically this would be used on model classes that were designed to be subclassed to create new page types, rather than used directly.) To avoid confusion with Django’s distinct concept of abstract models, this has now been replaced by a new flag, is_creatable.

If you have used is_abstract = True on any of your models, you should now change this to is_creatable = False.

It is not necessary to include this flag if the model is abstract in the Django sense (i.e. it has abstract = True in the model’s Meta class), since it would never be valid to create pages of that type.

Wagtail 1.0 release notes

What’s changed
StreamField - a field type for freeform content

StreamField provides an editing model for freeform content such as blog posts and news stories, allowing diverse content types such as text, images, headings, video and more specialised types such as maps and charts to be mixed in any order. See How to use StreamField for mixed content.

Wagtail API - A RESTful API for your Wagtail site

When installed, the new Wagtail API module provides a RESTful web API to your Wagtail site. You can use this for accessing your raw field content for your sites pages, images and documents in JSON format.

MySQL support

Wagtail now officially supports MySQL as a database backend.

Django 1.8 support

Wagtail now officially supports running under Django 1.8.

Vanilla project template

The built-in project template is more like the Django built-in one with several Wagtail-specific additions. It includes bare minimum settings and two apps (home and search).

Minor changes
  • Dropped Django 1.6 support
  • Dropped Python 2.6 and 3.2 support
  • Dropped Elasticsearch 0.90.x support
  • Removed dependency on libsass
  • Users without usernames can now be created and edited in the admin interface
  • Added new translations for Croatian and Finnish
Core
  • The Page model now records the date/time that a page was first published, as the field first_published_at
  • Increased the maximum length of a page slug from 50 to 255 characters
  • Added hooks register_rich_text_embed_handler and register_rich_text_link_handler for customising link / embed handling within rich text fields
  • Page URL paths can now be longer than 255 characters
Admin

UI

  • Improvements to the layout of the left-hand menu footer
  • Menu items of custom apps are now highlighted when being used
  • Added thousands separator for counters on dashboard
  • Added contextual links to admin notification messages
  • When copying pages, it is now possible to specify a place to copy to
  • Added pagination to the snippets listing and chooser
  • Page / document / image / snippet choosers now include a link to edit the chosen item
  • Plain text fields in the page editor now use auto-expanding text areas
  • Added “Add child page” button to admin userbar
  • Added update notifications (See: Wagtail update notifications)

Page editor

  • JavaScript includes in the admin backend have been moved to the HTML header, to accommodate form widgets that render inline scripts that depend on libraries such as jQuery
  • The external link chooser in rich text areas now accepts URLs of the form ‘/some/local/path’, to allow linking to non-Wagtail-controlled URLs within the local site
  • Bare text entered in rich text areas is now automatically wrapped in a paragraph element

Edit handlers API

  • FieldPanel now accepts an optional widget parameter to override the field’s default form widget
  • Page model fields without a FieldPanel are no longer displayed in the form
  • No longer need to specify the base model on InlinePanel definitions
  • Page classes can specify an edit_handler property to override the default Content / Promote / Settings tabbed interface. See Customising the tabbed interface.

Other admin changes

  • SCSS files in wagtailadmin now use absolute imports, to permit overriding by user stylesheets
  • Removed the dependency on LOGIN_URL and LOGIN_REDIRECT_URL settings
  • Password reset view names namespaced to wagtailadmin
  • Removed the need to add permission check on admin views (now automated)
  • Reversing django.contrib.auth.admin.login will no longer lead to Wagtails login view (making it easier to have frontend login views)
  • Added cache-control headers to all admin views. This allows Varnish/Squid/CDN to run on vanilla settings in front of a Wagtail site
  • Date / time pickers now consistently use times without seconds, to prevent JavasSript behaviour glitches when focusing / unfocusing fields
  • Added hook construct_homepage_summary_items for customising the site summary panel on the admin homepage
  • Renamed the construct_wagtail_edit_bird hook to construct_wagtail_userbar
  • ‘static’ template tags are now used throughout the admin templates, in place of STATIC_URL
Docs
  • Support for django-sendfile added
  • Documents now served with correct mime-type
  • Support for If-Modified-Since HTTP header
Routable pages
  • Added a new decorator-based syntax for RoutablePage, compatible with Django 1.8
Bug fixes
  • The document_served signal now correctly passes the Document class as sender and the document as instance
  • Image edit page no longer throws OSError when the original image is missing
  • Collapsible blocks stay open on any form error
  • Document upload modal no longer switches tabs on form errors
  • with_metaclass is now imported from Django’s bundled copy of the six library, to avoid errors on Mac OS X from an outdated system copy of the library being imported
Upgrade considerations
Support for older Django/Python/Elasticsearch versions dropped

This release drops support for Django 1.6, Python 2.6/3.2 and Elasticsearch 0.90.x. Please make sure these are updated before upgrading.

If you are upgrading from Elasticsearch 0.90.x, you may also need to update the elasticsearch pip package to a version greater than 1.0 as well.

Wagtail version upgrade notifications are enabled by default

Starting from Wagtail 1.0, the admin dashboard will (for admin users only) perform a check to see if newer releases are available. This also provides the Wagtail team with the hostname of your Wagtail site. If you’d rather not receive update notifications, or if you’d like your site to remain unknown, you can disable it by adding this line to your settings file:

WAGTAIL_ENABLE_UPDATE_CHECK = False
InlinePanel definitions no longer need to specify the base model

In previous versions of Wagtail, inline child blocks on a page or snippet were defined using a declaration like:

InlinePanel(HomePage, 'carousel_items', label="Carousel items")

It is no longer necessary to pass the base model as a parameter, so this declaration should be changed to:

InlinePanel('carousel_items', label="Carousel items")

The old format is now deprecated; all existing InlinePanel declarations should be updated to the new format.

Custom image models should now set the admin_form_fields attribute

Django 1.8 now requires that all the fields in a ModelForm must be defined in its Meta.fields attribute.

As Wagtail uses Django’s ModelForm for creating image model forms, we’ve added a new attribute called admin_form_fields that should be set to a tuple of field names on the image model.

See Custom image models for an example.

You no longer need LOGIN_URL and LOGIN_REDIRECT_URL to point to Wagtail admin.

If you are upgrading from an older version of Wagtail, you probably want to remove these from your project settings.

Previously, these two settings needed to be set to wagtailadmin_login and wagtailadmin_dashboard respectively or Wagtail would become very tricky to log in to. This is no longer the case and Wagtail should work fine without them.

RoutablePage now uses decorator syntax for defining views

In previous versions of Wagtail, page types that used the RoutablePageMixin had endpoints configured by setting their subpage_urls attribute to a list of urls with view names. This will not work on Django 1.8 as view names can no longer be passed into a url (see: https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/stable/releases/1.8/#django-conf-urls-patterns).

Wagtail 1.0 introduces a new syntax where each view function is annotated with a @route decorator - see RoutablePageMixin.

The old subpage_urls convention will continue to work on Django versions prior to 1.8, but this is now deprecated; all existing RoutablePage definitions should be updated to the decorator-based convention.

Upgrading from the external wagtailapi module.

If you were previously using the external wagtailapi module (which has now become wagtail.contrib.wagtailapi). Please be aware of the following backwards-incompatible changes:

1. Representation of foreign keys has changed

Foreign keys were previously represented by just the value of their primary key. For example:

"feed_image": 1

This has now been changed to add some meta information:

"feed_image": {
    "id": 1,
    "meta": {
        "type": "wagtailimages.Image",
        "detail_url": "http://api.example.com/api/v1/images/1/"
    }
}

2. On the page detail view, the “parent” field has been moved out of meta

Previously, there was a “parent” field in the “meta” section on the page detail view:

{
    "id": 10,
    "meta": {
         "type": "demo.BlogPage",
         "parent": 2
    },

    ...
}

This has now been moved to the top level. Also, the above change to how foreign keys are represented applies to this field too:

{
    "id": 10,
    "meta": {
         "type": "demo.BlogPage"
    },
    "parent": {
         "id": 2,
         "meta": {
             "type": "demo.BlogIndexPage"
         }
    }

    ...
}
Celery no longer automatically used for sending notification emails

Previously, Wagtail would try to use Celery whenever the djcelery module was installed, even if Celery wasn’t actually set up. This could cause a very hard to track down problem where notification emails would not be sent so this functionality has now been removed.

If you would like to keep using Celery for sending notification emails, have a look at: django-celery-email

Login/Password reset views renamed

It was previously possible to reverse the Wagtail login view using django.contrib.auth.views.login. This is no longer possible. Update any references to wagtailadmin_login.

Password reset view name has changed from password_reset to wagtailadmin_password_reset.

JavaScript includes in admin backend have been moved

To improve compatibility with third-party form widgets, pages within the Wagtail admin backend now output their JavaScript includes in the HTML header, rather than at the end of the page. If your project extends the admin backend (through the register_admin_menu_item hook, for example) you will need to ensure that all associated JavaScript code runs correctly from the new location. In particular, any code that accesses HTML elements will need to be contained in an ‘onload’ handler (e.g. jQuery’s $(document).ready()).

EditHandler internal API has changed

While it is not an official Wagtail API, it has been possible for Wagtail site implementers to define their own EditHandler subclasses for use in panel definitions, to customise the behaviour of the page / snippet editing forms. If you have made use of this facility, you will need to update your custom EditHandlers, as this mechanism has been refactored (to allow EditHandler classes to keep a persistent reference to their corresponding model). If you have only used Wagtail’s built-in panel types (FieldPanel, InlinePanel, PageChooserPanel and so on), you are unaffected by this change.

Previously, functions like FieldPanel acted as ‘factory’ functions, where a call such as FieldPanel('title') constructed and returned an EditHandler subclass tailored to work on a ‘title’ field. These functions now return an object with a bind_to_model method instead; the EditHandler subclass can be obtained by calling this with the model class as a parameter. As a guide to updating your custom EditHandler code, you may wish to refer to the relevant change to the Wagtail codebase.

chooser_panel templates are obsolete

If you have added your own custom admin views to the Wagtail admin (e.g. through the register_admin_urls hook), you may have used one of the following template includes to incorporate a chooser element for pages, documents, images or snippets into your forms:

  • wagtailadmin/edit_handlers/chooser_panel.html
  • wagtailadmin/edit_handlers/page_chooser_panel.html
  • wagtaildocs/edit_handlers/document_chooser_panel.html
  • wagtailimages/edit_handlers/image_chooser_panel.html
  • wagtailsnippets/edit_handlers/snippet_chooser_panel.html

All of these templates are now deprecated. Wagtail now provides a set of Django form widgets for this purpose - AdminPageChooser, AdminDocumentChooser, AdminImageChooser and AdminSnippetChooser - which can be used in place of the HiddenInput widget that these form fields were previously using. The field can then be rendered using the regular wagtailadmin/shared/field.html or wagtailadmin/shared/field_as_li.html template.

document_served signal arguments have changed

Previously, the document_served signal (which is fired whenever a user downloads a document) passed the document instance as the sender. This has now been changed to correspond the behaviour of Django’s built-in signals; sender is now the Document class, and the document instance is passed as the argument instance. Any existing signal listeners that expect to receive the document instance in sender must now be updated to check the instance argument instead.

Custom image models must specify an admin_form_fields list

Previously, the forms for creating and editing images followed Django’s default behaviour of showing all fields defined on the model; this would include any custom fields specific to your project that you defined by subclassing AbstractImage and setting WAGTAILIMAGES_IMAGE_MODEL. This behaviour is risky as it may lead to fields being unintentionally exposed to the user, and so Django has deprecated this, for removal in Django 1.8. Accordingly, if you create your own custom subclass of AbstractImage, you must now provide an admin_form_fields property, listing the fields that should appear on the image creation / editing form - for example:

from wagtail.wagtailimages.models import AbstractImage, Image

class MyImage(AbstractImage):
    photographer = models.CharField(max_length=255)
    has_legal_approval = models.BooleanField()

    admin_form_fields = Image.admin_form_fields + ['photographer']
construct_wagtail_edit_bird hook has been renamed

Previously you could customize the Wagtail userbar using the construct_wagtail_edit_bird hook. The hook has been renamed to construct_wagtail_userbar.

The old hook is now deprecated; all existing construct_wagtail_edit_bird declarations should be updated to the new hook.

IMAGE_COMPRESSION_QUALITY setting has been renamed

The IMAGE_COMPRESSION_QUALITY setting, which determines the quality of saved JPEG images as a value from 1 to 100, has been renamed to WAGTAILIMAGES_JPEG_QUALITY. If you have used this setting, please update your settings file accordingly.

Wagtail 0.8.10 release notes

What’s changed
Bug fixes
  • When copying a page, IDs of child objects within page revision records were not remapped to the new objects; this would cause those objects to be lost from the original page when editing the new one
  • Search no longer crashes when auto-indexing a model that doesn’t have an id field (Scot Hacker)
  • Resizing single pixel images with the “fill” filter no longer raises ZeroDivisionError or “tile cannot extend outside image”

Wagtail 0.8.8 release notes

What’s changed
Bug fixes
  • Form builder no longer raises a TypeError when submitting unchecked boolean field
  • Image upload form no longer breaks when using i10n thousand separators
  • Multiple image uploader now escapes HTML in filenames
  • Retrieving an individual item from a sliced BaseSearchResults object now properly takes the slice offset into account
  • Removed dependency on unicodecsv which fixes a crash on Python 3
  • Submitting unicode text in form builder form no longer crashes with UnicodeEncodeError on Python 2
  • Creating a proxy model from a Page class no longer crashes in the system check
  • Unrecognised embed URLs passed to the |embed filter no longer cause the whole page to crash with an EmbedNotFoundException
  • Underscores no longer get stripped from page slugs

Wagtail 0.8.7 release notes

What’s changed
Bug fixes
  • wagtailfrontendcache no longer tries to purge pages that are not in a site
  • The contents of <div> elements in the rich text editor were not being whitelisted
  • Due to the above issue, embeds/images in a rich text field would sometimes be saved into the database in their editor representation
  • RoutablePage now prevents subpage_urls from being defined as a property, which would cause a memory leak
  • Added validation to prevent pages being created with only whitespace characters in their title fields
  • Users are no longer logged out on changing password when SessionAuthenticationMiddleware (added in Django 1.7) is in use
  • Added a workaround for a Python / Django issue that prevented documents with certain non-ASCII filenames from being served

Wagtail 0.8.6 release notes

What’s new
Minor features
  • Translations updated, including new translations for Czech, Italian and Japanese
  • The “fixtree” command can now delete orphaned pages
Bug fixes
  • django-taggit library updated to 0.12.3, to fix a bug with migrations on SQLite on Django 1.7.2 and above (https://github.com/alex/django-taggit/issues/285)
  • Fixed a bug that caused children of a deleted page to not be deleted if they had a different type
Upgrade considerations
Orphaned pages may need deleting

This release fixes a bug with page deletion introduced in 0.8, where deleting a page with child pages will result in those child pages being left behind in the database (unless the child pages are of the same type as the parent). This may cause errors later on when creating new pages in the same position. To identify and delete these orphaned pages, it is recommended that you run the following command (from the project root) after upgrading to 0.8.6:

$ ./manage.py fixtree

This will output a list of any orphaned pages found, and request confirmation before deleting them.

Since this now makes fixtree an interactive command, a ./manage.py fixtree --noinput option has been added to restore the previous non-interactive behaviour. With this option enabled, deleting orphaned pages is always skipped.

Wagtail 0.8.5 release notes

What’s new
Bug fixes
  • On adding a new page, the available page types are ordered by the displayed verbose name
  • Active admin submenus were not properly closed when activating another
  • get_sitemap_urls is now called on the specific page class so it can now be overridden
  • (Firefox and IE) Fixed preview window hanging and not refocusing when “Preview” button is clicked again
  • Storage backends that return raw ContentFile objects are now handled correctly when resizing images
  • Punctuation characters are no longer stripped when performing search queries
  • When adding tags where there were none before, it is now possible to save a single tag with multiple words in it
  • richtext template tag no longer raises TypeError if None is passed into it
  • Serving documents now uses a streaming HTTP response and will no longer break Django’s cache middleware
  • User admin area no longer fails in the presence of negative user IDs (as used by django-guardian’s default settings)
  • Password reset emails now use the BASE_URL setting for the reset URL
  • BASE_URL is now included in the project template’s default settings file

Wagtail 0.8.4 release notes

What’s new
Bug fixes
  • It is no longer possible to have the explorer and settings menu open at the same time
  • Page IDs in page revisions were not updated on page copy, causing subsequent edits to be committed to the original page instead
  • Copying a page now creates a new page revision, ensuring that changes to the title/slug are correctly reflected in the editor (and also ensuring that the user performing the copy is logged)
  • Prevent a race condition when creating Filter objects
  • On adding a new page, the available page types are ordered by the displayed verbose name

Wagtail 0.8.3 release notes

What’s new
Bug fixes
  • Added missing jQuery UI sprite files, causing collectstatic to throw errors (most reported on Heroku)
  • Page system check for on_delete actions of ForeignKeys was throwing false positives when page class descends from an abstract class (Alejandro Giacometti)
  • Page system check for on_delete actions of ForeignKeys now only raises warnings, not errors
  • Fixed a regression where form builder submissions containing a number field would fail with a JSON serialisation error
  • Resizing an image with a focal point equal to the image size would result in a divide-by-zero error
  • Focal point indicator would sometimes be positioned incorrectly for small or thin images
  • Fix: Focal point chooser background colour changed to grey to make working with transparent images easier
  • Elasticsearch configuration now supports specifying HTTP authentication parameters as part of the URL, and defaults to ports 80 (HTTP) and 443 (HTTPS) if port number not specified
  • Fixed a TypeError when previewing pages that use RoutablePageMixin
  • Rendering image with missing file in rich text no longer crashes the entire page
  • IOErrors thrown by underlying image libraries that are not reporting a missing image file are no longer caught
  • Fix: Minimum Pillow version bumped to 2.6.1 to work around a crash when using images with transparency
  • Fix: Images with transparency are now handled better when being used in feature detection
Upgrade considerations
Port number must be specified when running Elasticsearch on port 9200

In previous versions, an Elasticsearch connection URL in WAGTAILSEARCH_BACKENDS without an explicit port number (e.g. http://localhost/) would be treated as port 9200 (the Elasticsearch default) whereas the correct behaviour would be to use the default http/https port of 80/443. This behaviour has now been fixed, so sites running Elasticsearch on port 9200 must now specify this explicitly - e.g. http://localhost:9200. (Projects using the default settings, or the settings given in the Wagtail documentation, are unaffected.)

Wagtail 0.8.1 release notes

What’s new
Bug fixes
  • Fixed a regression where images would fail to save when feature detection is active

Wagtail 0.8 release notes

Wagtail 0.8 is designated a Long Term Support (LTS) release. Long Term Support releases will continue to receive maintenance updates as necessary to address security and data-loss related issues, up until the next LTS release (typically a period of 8 months).

What’s new
Minor features
  • Page operations (creation, publishing, copying etc) are now logged via Python’s logging framework; to configure this, add a logger entry for 'wagtail' or 'wagtail.core' to the LOGGING setup in your settings file.
  • The save button on the page edit page now redirects the user back to the edit page instead of the explorer
  • Signal handlers for wagtail.wagtailsearch and wagtail.contrib.wagtailfrontendcache are now automatically registered when using Django 1.7 or above.
  • Added a Django 1.7 system check to ensure that foreign keys from Page models are set to on_delete=SET_NULL, to prevent inadvertent (and tree-breaking) page deletions
  • Improved error reporting on image upload, including ability to set a maximum file size via a new setting WAGTAILIMAGES_MAX_UPLOAD_SIZE
  • The external image URL generator now keeps persistent image renditions, rather than regenerating them on each request, so it no longer requires a front-end cache.
  • Added Dutch translation
Bug fixes
  • Replaced references of .username with .get_username() on users for better custom user model support
  • Unpinned dependency versions for six and requests to help prevent dependency conflicts
  • Fixed TypeError when getting embed HTML with oembed on Python 3
  • Made HTML whitelisting in rich text fields more robust at catching disallowed URL schemes such as jav\tascript:
  • created_at timestamps on page revisions were not being preserved on page copy, causing revisions to get out of sequence
  • When copying pages recursively, revisions of sub-pages were being copied regardless of the copy_revisions flag
  • Updated the migration dependencies within the project template to ensure that Wagtail’s own migrations consistently apply first
  • The cache of site root paths is now cleared when a site is deleted
  • Search indexing now prevents pages from being indexed multiple times, as both the base Page model and the specific subclass
  • Search indexing now avoids trying to index abstract models
  • Fixed references to “username” in login form help text for better custom user model support
  • Later items in a model’s search_field list now consistently override earlier items, allowing subclasses to redefine rules from the parent
  • Image uploader now accepts JPEG images that PIL reports as being in MPO format
  • Multiple checkbox fields on form-builder forms did not correctly save multiple values
  • Editing a page’s slug and saving it without publishing could sometimes cause the URL paths of child pages to be corrupted
  • latest_revision_created_at was being cleared on page publish, causing the page to drop to the bottom of explorer listings
  • Searches on partial_match fields were wrongly applying prefix analysis to the search query as well as the document (causing e.g. a query for “water” to match against “wagtail”)
Upgrade considerations
Corrupted URL paths may need fixing

This release fixes a bug in Wagtail 0.7 where editing a parent page’s slug could cause the URL paths of child pages to become corrupted. To ensure that your database does not contain any corrupted URL paths, it is recommended that you run ./manage.py set_url_paths after upgrading.

Automatic registration of signal handlers (Django 1.7+)

Signal handlers for the wagtailsearch core app and wagtailfrontendcache contrib app are automatically registered when using Django 1.7. Calls to register_signal_handlers from your urls.py can be removed.

Change to search API when using database backend

When using the database backend, calling search (either through Page.objects.search() or on the backend directly) will now return a SearchResults object rather than a Django QuerySet to make the database backend work more like the Elasticsearch backend.

This change shouldn’t affect most people as SearchResults behaves very similarly to QuerySet. But it may cause issues if you are calling QuerySet specific methods after calling .search(). Eg: Page.objects.search("Hello").filter(foo="Bar") (in this case, .filter() should be moved before .search() and it would work as before).

Removal of validate_image_format from custom image model migrations (Django 1.7+)

If your project is running on Django 1.7, and you have defined a custom image model (by extending the wagtailimages.AbstractImage class), the migration that creates this model will probably have a reference to wagtail.wagtailimages.utils.validators.validate_image_format. This module has now been removed, which will cause manage.py migrate to fail with an ImportError (even if the migration has already been applied). You will need to edit the migration file to remove the line:

import wagtail.wagtailimages.utils.validators

and the validators attribute of the ‘file’ field - that is, the line:

('file', models.ImageField(upload_to=wagtail.wagtailimages.models.get_upload_to,
    width_field='width', height_field='height',
    validators=[wagtail.wagtailimages.utils.validators.validate_image_format],
    verbose_name='File')),

should become:

('file', models.ImageField(upload_to=wagtail.wagtailimages.models.get_upload_to,
    width_field='width', height_field='height', verbose_name='File')),

Wagtail 0.7 release notes

What’s new
New interface for choosing image focal point
_images/focal-point-adjustment.jpg

When editing images, users can now specify a ‘focal point’ region that cropped versions of the image will be centred on. Previously the focal point could only be set automatically, through image feature detection.

Groups and Sites administration interfaces
_images/editor-management.png

The main navigation menu has been reorganised, placing site configuration options in a ‘Settings’ submenu. This includes two new items, which were previously only available through the Django admin backend: ‘Groups’, for setting up user groups with a specific set of permissions, and ‘Sites’, for managing the list of sites served by this Wagtail instance.

Page locking
_images/page-locking.png

Moderators and administrators now have the ability to lock a page, preventing further edits from being made to that page until it is unlocked again.

Minor features
  • The content_type template filter has been removed from the project template, as the same thing can be accomplished with self.get_verbose_name|slugify.
  • Page copy operations now also copy the page revision history.
  • Page models now support a parent_page_types property in addition to subpage types, to restrict the types of page they can be created under.
  • register_snippet can now be invoked as a decorator.
  • The project template (used when running wagtail start) has been updated to Django 1.7.
  • The ‘boost’ applied to the title field on searches has been reduced from 100 to 2.
  • The type method of PageQuerySet (used to filter the QuerySet to a specific page type) now includes subclasses of the given page type.
  • The update_index management command now updates all backends listed in WAGTAILSEARCH_BACKENDS, or a specific one passed on the command line, rather than just the default backend.
  • The ‘fill’ image resize method now supports an additional parameter defining the closeness of the crop. See How to use images in templates
  • Added support for invalidating Cloudflare caches. See Frontend cache invalidator
  • Pages in the explorer can now be ordered by last updated time.
Bug fixes
  • The ‘wagtail start’ command now works on Windows and other environments where the django-admin.py executable is not readily accessible.
  • The external image URL generator no longer stores generated images in Django’s cache; this was an unintentional side-effect of setting cache control headers.
  • The Elasticsearch backend can now search QuerySets that have been filtered with an ‘in’ clause of a non-list type (such as a ValuesListQuerySet).
  • Logic around the has_unpublished_changes flag has been fixed, to prevent issues with the ‘View draft’ button failing to show in some cases.
  • It is now easier to move pages to the beginning and end of their section
  • Image rendering no longer creates erroneous duplicate Rendition records when the focal point is blank.
Upgrade considerations
Addition of wagtailsites app

The Sites administration interface is contained within a new app, wagtailsites. To enable this on an existing Wagtail project, add the line:

'wagtail.wagtailsites',

to the INSTALLED_APPS list in your project’s settings file.

Title boost on search reduced to 2

Wagtail’s search interface applies a ‘boost’ value to give extra weighting to matches on the title field. The original boost value of 100 was found to be excessive, and in Wagtail 0.7 this has been reduced to 2. If you have used comparable boost values on other fields, to give them similar weighting to title, you may now wish to reduce these accordingly. See Indexing.

Addition of locked field to Page model

The page locking mechanism adds a locked field to wagtailcore.Page, defaulting to False. Any application code working with Page objects should be unaffected, but any code that creates page records using direct SQL, or within existing South migrations using South’s frozen ORM, will fail as this code will be unaware of the new database column. To fix a South migration that fails in this way, add the following line to the 'wagtailcore.page' entry at the bottom of the migration file:

'locked': ('django.db.models.fields.BooleanField', [], {'default': 'False'}),
Update to focal_point_key field on custom Rendition models

The focal_point_key field on wagtailimages.Rendition has been changed to null=False, to fix an issue with duplicate renditions being created. If you have defined a custom Rendition model in your project (by extending the wagtailimages.AbstractRendition class), you will need to apply a migration to make the corresponding change on your custom model. Unfortunately neither South nor Django 1.7’s migration system are able to generate this automatically - you will need to customise the migration produced by ./manage.py schemamigration / ./manage.py makemigrations, using the wagtailimages migration as a guide:

Wagtail 0.6 release notes

What’s new
Project template and start project command

Wagtail now has a basic project template built in to make starting new projects much easier.

To use it, install wagtail onto your machine and run wagtail start project_name.

Django 1.7 support

Wagtail can now be used with Django 1.7.

Minor features
  • A new template tag has been added for reversing URLs inside routable pages. See The routablepageurl template tag.
  • RoutablePage can now be used as a mixin. See wagtail.contrib.wagtailroutablepage.models.RoutablePageMixin.
  • MenuItems can now have bundled JavaScript
  • Added the register_admin_menu_item hook for registering menu items at startup. See Hooks
  • Added a version indicator into the admin interface (hover over the wagtail to see it)
  • Added Russian translation
Bug fixes
  • Page URL generation now returns correct URLs for sites that have the main ‘serve’ view rooted somewhere other than ‘/’.
  • Search results in the page chooser now respect the page_type parameter on PageChooserPanel.
  • Rendition filenames are now prevented from going over 60 chars, even with a large focal_point_key.
  • Child relations that are defined on a model’s superclass (such as the base Page model) are now picked up correctly by the page editing form, page copy operations and the replace_text management command.
  • Tags on images and documents are now committed to the search index immediately on saving.
Upgrade considerations
All features deprecated in 0.4 have been removed

See: Deprecated features

Search signal handlers have been moved

If you have an import in your urls.py file like from wagtail.wagtailsearch import register_signal_handlers, this must now be changed to from wagtail.wagtailsearch.signal_handlers import register_signal_handlers

Deprecated features
  • The wagtail.wagtailsearch.indexed module has been renamed to wagtail.wagtailsearch.index

Wagtail 0.5 release notes

What’s new
Multiple image uploader

The image uploader UI has been improved to allow multiple images to be uploaded at once.

Image feature detection

Wagtail can now apply face and feature detection on images using OpenCV, and use this to intelligently crop images.

Feature Detection

Using images outside Wagtail

In normal use, Wagtail will generate resized versions of images at the point that they are referenced on a template, which means that those images are not easily accessible for use outside of Wagtail, such as displaying them on external sites. Wagtail now provides a way to obtain URLs to your images, at any size.

Dynamic image serve view

RoutablePage

A RoutablePage model has been added to allow embedding Django-style URL routing within a page.

RoutablePageMixin

Usage stats for images, documents and snippets

It’s now easier to find where a particular image, document or snippet is being used on your site.

Set the WAGTAIL_USAGE_COUNT_ENABLED setting to True and an icon will appear on the edit page showing you which pages they have been used on.

Copy Page action

The explorer interface now offers the ability to copy pages, with or without subpages.

Minor features
Core
  • Hooks can now be defined using decorator syntax:
@hooks.register('construct_main_menu')
def construct_main_menu(request, menu_items):
    menu_items.append(
        MenuItem('Kittens!', '/kittens/', classnames='icon icon-folder-inverse', order=1000)
    )
  • The lxml library (used for whitelisting and rewriting of rich text fields) has been replaced with the pure-python html5lib library, to simplify installation.
  • A page_unpublished signal has been added.
Admin
  • Explorer nav now rendered separately and fetched with AJAX when needed.

    This improves the general performance of the admin interface for large sites.

Bug fixes
  • Updates to tag fields are now properly committed to the database when publishing directly from the page edit interface.
Upgrade considerations
Urlconf entries for /admin/images/, /admin/embeds/ etc need to be removed

If you created a Wagtail project prior to the release of Wagtail 0.3, it is likely to contain the following entries in its urls.py:

# TODO: some way of getting wagtailimages to register itself within wagtailadmin so that we
# don't have to define it separately here
url(r'^admin/images/', include(wagtailimages_urls)),
url(r'^admin/embeds/', include(wagtailembeds_urls)),
url(r'^admin/documents/', include(wagtaildocs_admin_urls)),
url(r'^admin/snippets/', include(wagtailsnippets_urls)),
url(r'^admin/search/', include(wagtailsearch_admin_urls)),
url(r'^admin/users/', include(wagtailusers_urls)),
url(r'^admin/redirects/', include(wagtailredirects_urls)),

These entries (and the corresponding from wagtail.wagtail* import ... lines) need to be removed from urls.py. (The entry for /admin/ should be left in, however.)

Since Wagtail 0.3, the wagtailadmin module automatically takes care of registering these URL subpaths, so these entries are redundant, and these urlconf modules are not guaranteed to remain stable and backwards-compatible in future. Leaving these entries in place will now cause an ImproperlyConfigured exception to be thrown.

New fields on Image and Rendition models

Several new fields have been added to the Image and Rendition models to support Feature Detection. These will be added to the database when you run ./manage.py migrate. If you have defined a custom image model (by extending the wagtailimages.AbstractImage and wagtailimages.AbstractRendition classes and specifying WAGTAILIMAGES_IMAGE_MODEL in settings), the change needs to be applied to that model’s database table too. Running the command:

$ ./manage.py schemamigration myapp --auto add_image_focal_point_fields

(with ‘myapp’ replaced with your app name) will generate the necessary migration file.

South upgraded to 1.0

In preparation for Django 1.7 support in a future release, Wagtail now depends on South 1.0, and its migration files have been moved from migrations to south_migrations. Older versions of South will fail to find the migrations in the new location.

If your project’s requirements file (most commonly requirements.txt or requirements/base.txt) references a specific older version of South, this must be updated to South 1.0.

Wagtail 0.4.1 release notes

Bug fixes
  • Elasticsearch backend now respects the backward-compatible URLS configuration setting, in addition to HOSTS
  • Documentation fixes

Wagtail 0.4 release notes

What’s new
Private Pages

Wagtail now supports password protecting pages on the frontend, allowing sections of your website to be made private.

Private pages

Python 3 support

Wagtail now supports Python 3.2, 3.3 and 3.4.

Scheduled publishing

Editors can now schedule pages to be published or unpublished at specified times.

A new management command has been added (publish_scheduled_pages) to publish pages that have been scheduled by an editor.

Search on QuerySet with Elasticsearch

It’s now possible to perform searches with Elasticsearch on PageQuerySet objects:

>>> from wagtail.core.models import Page
>>> Page.objects.live().descendant_of(events_index).search("Hello")
[<Page: Event 1>, <Page: Event 2>]
Sitemap generation

A new module has been added (wagtail.contrib.wagtailsitemaps) which produces XML sitemaps for Wagtail sites.

Sitemap generator

Front-end cache invalidation

A new module has been added (wagtail.contrib.wagtailfrontendcache) which invalidates pages in a frontend cache when they are updated or deleted in Wagtail.

Frontend cache invalidator

Notification preferences

Users can now decide which notifications they receive from Wagtail using a new “Notification preferences” section located in the account settings.

Minor features
Core
  • Any extra arguments given to Page.serve are now passed through to get_context and get_template
  • Added in_menu and not_in_menu methods to PageQuerySet
  • Added search method to PageQuerySet
  • Added get_next_siblings and get_prev_siblings to Page
  • Added page_published signal
  • Added copy method to Page to allow copying of pages
  • Added construct_whitelister_element_rules hook for customising the HTML whitelist used when saving RichText fields
  • Support for setting a subpage_types property on Page models, to define which page types are allowed as subpages
Admin
  • Removed the “More” section from the menu
  • Added pagination to page listings
  • Added a new datetime picker widget
  • Updated hallo.js to version 1.0.4
  • Aesthetic improvements to preview experience
  • Login screen redirects to dashboard if user is already logged in
  • Snippets are now ordered alphabetically
  • Added init_new_page signal
Images
  • Added original as a resizing rule supported by the {% image %} tag
  • image tag now accepts extra keyword arguments to be output as attributes on the img tag
  • Added an attrs property to image rendition objects to output src, width, height and alt attributes all in one go
Other
  • Added styleguide, for Wagtail developers
Bug fixes
  • Animated GIFs are now coalesced before resizing
  • The Wand backend clones images before modifying them
  • The admin breadcrumb is now positioned correctly on mobile
  • The page chooser breadcrumb now updates the chooser modal instead of linking to Explorer
  • Embeds - fixed crash when no HTML field is sent back from the embed provider
  • Multiple sites with same hostname but different ports are now allowed
  • It is no longer possible to create multiple sites with is_default_site = True
Backwards-incompatible changes
ElasticUtils replaced with elasticsearch-py

If you are using the Elasticsearch backend, you must install the elasticsearch module into your environment.

Note

If you are using an older version of Elasticsearch (< 1.0) you must install elasticsearch version 0.4.x.

Addition of expired column may break old data migrations involving pages

The scheduled publishing mechanism adds an expired field to wagtailcore.Page, defaulting to False. Any application code working with Page objects should be unaffected, but any code that creates page records using direct SQL, or within existing South migrations using South’s frozen ORM, will fail as this code will be unaware of the expired database column. To fix a South migration that fails in this way, add the following line to the 'wagtailcore.page' entry at the bottom of the migration file:

'expired': ('django.db.models.fields.BooleanField', [], {'default': 'False'}),
Deprecated features
Template tag libraries renamed

The following template tag libraries have been renamed:

  • pageurl => wagtailcore_tags
  • rich_text => wagtailcore_tags
  • embed_filters => wagtailembeds_tags
  • image_tags => wagtailimages_tags

The old names will continue to work, but output a DeprecationWarning - you are advised to update any {% load %} tags in your templates to refer to the new names.

New search field configuration format

indexed_fields is now deprecated and has been replaced by a new search field configuration format called search_fields. See Indexing for how to define a search_fields property on your models.

Page.route method should now return a RouteResult

Previously, the route method called serve and returned an HttpResponse object. This has now been split up so serve is called separately and route must now return a RouteResult object.

If you are overriding Page.route on any of your page models, you will need to update the method to return a RouteResult object. The old method of returning an HttpResponse will continue to work, but this will throw a DeprecationWarning and bypass the before_serve_page hook, which means in particular that Private pages will not work on those page types. See Adding Endpoints with Custom route() Methods.

Wagtailadmins hooks module has moved to wagtailcore

If you use any wagtail_hooks.py files in your project, you may have an import like: from wagtail.wagtailadmin import hooks

Change this to: from wagtail.core import hooks

Miscellaneous
  • Page.show_as_mode replaced with Page.serve_preview
  • Page.get_page_modes method replaced with Page.preview_modes property
  • Page.get_other_siblings replaced with Page.get_siblings(inclusive=False)