Refactor the sidebar to use Django templates
With this change the html for the sidebar is no longer generated by
Melange, instead it's delegated to Django (which is what it does
best anyway). The downside is that it is no longer possible to have
arbitrary deeply nested menu's.
from django.core.management.base import NoArgsCommand
def module_to_dict(module, omittable=lambda k: k.startswith('_')):
"Converts a module namespace to a Python dictionary. Used by get_settings_diff."
return dict([(k, repr(v)) for k, v in module.__dict__.items() if not omittable(k)])
class Command(NoArgsCommand):
help = """Displays differences between the current settings.py and Django's
default settings. Settings that don't appear in the defaults are
followed by "###"."""
requires_model_validation = False
def handle_noargs(self, **options):
# Inspired by Postfix's "postconf -n".
from django.conf import settings, global_settings
# Because settings are imported lazily, we need to explicitly load them.
settings._import_settings()
user_settings = module_to_dict(settings._target)
default_settings = module_to_dict(global_settings)
output = []
keys = user_settings.keys()
keys.sort()
for key in keys:
if key not in default_settings:
output.append("%s = %s ###" % (key, user_settings[key]))
elif user_settings[key] != default_settings[key]:
output.append("%s = %s" % (key, user_settings[key]))
print '\n'.join(output)