The Django Debug Toolbar is a configurable set of panels that display various debug information about the current request/response and when clicked, display more details about the panel's content.
Currently, the following panels have been written and are working:
logbook <http://logbook.pocoo.org>
_ moduleThere is also one Django management command currently:
debugsqlshell
: Outputs the SQL that gets executed as you work in the Python
interactive shell. (See example below)If you have ideas for other panels please let us know.
debug_toolbar
directory to your Python path.settings.py
file:``'debug_toolbar.middleware.DebugToolbarMiddleware',``
Tying into middleware allows each panel to be instantiated on request and rendering to happen on response.
The order of MIDDLEWARE_CLASSES is important: the Debug Toolbar middleware must come after any other middleware that encodes the response's content (such as GZipMiddleware).
Note: The debug toolbar will only display itself if the mimetype of the
response is either text/html
or application/xhtml+xml
and contains a
closing </body>
tag.
Note: Be aware of middleware ordering and other middleware that may intercept requests and return responses. Putting the debug toolbar middleware after the Flatpage middleware, for example, means the toolbar will not show up on flatpages.
INTERNAL_IPS
setting. If you areworking locally this will be:
INTERNAL_IPS = ('127.0.0.1',)
Note: This is required because of the built-in requirements of the
show_toolbar
method. See below for how to define a method to determine
your own logic for displaying the toolbar.
debug_toolbar
to your INSTALLED_APPS
setting so Django can find thetemplate files associated with the Debug Toolbar.
Alternatively, add the path to the debug toolbar templates
('path/to/debug_toolbar/templates'
to your TEMPLATE_DIRS
setting.)
The debug toolbar has two settings that can be set in settings.py
:
DEBUG_TOOLBAR_PANELS
to your settings.py
file that specifies the full Python path to the panel that you want included
in the Toolbar. This setting looks very much like the MIDDLEWARE_CLASSES
setting. For example::
DEBUG_TOOLBAR_PANELS = (
'debug_toolbar.panels.version.VersionDebugPanel',
'debug_toolbar.panels.timer.TimerDebugPanel',
'debug_toolbar.panels.settings_vars.SettingsVarsDebugPanel',
'debug_toolbar.panels.headers.HeaderDebugPanel',
'debug_toolbar.panels.request_vars.RequestVarsDebugPanel',
'debug_toolbar.panels.template.TemplateDebugPanel',
'debug_toolbar.panels.sql.SQLDebugPanel',
'debug_toolbar.panels.signals.SignalDebugPanel',
'debug_toolbar.panels.logger.LoggingPanel',
)
You can change the ordering of this tuple to customize the order of the panels you want to display, or add/remove panels. If you have custom panels you can include them in this way -- just provide the full Python path to your panel.
can be placed in a dictionary:
INTERCEPT_REDIRECTS
: If set to True (default), the debug toolbar will
show an intermediate page upon redirect so you can view any debug
information prior to redirecting. This page will provide a link to the
redirect destination you can follow when ready. If set to False, redirects
will proceed as normal.
SHOW_TOOLBAR_CALLBACK
: If not set or set to None, the debug_toolbar
middleware will use its built-in show_toolbar method for determining whether
the toolbar should show or not. The default checks are that DEBUG must be
set to True or the IP of the request must be in INTERNAL_IPS. You can
provide your own method for displaying the toolbar which contains your
custom logic. This method should return True or False.
EXTRA_SIGNALS
: An array of custom signals that might be in your project,
defined as the python path to the signal.
HIDE_DJANGO_SQL
: If set to True (the default) then code in Django itself
won't be shown in SQL stacktraces.
SHOW_TEMPLATE_CONTEXT
: If set to True (the default) then a template's
context will be included with it in the Template debug panel. Turning this
off is useful when you have large template contexts, or you have template
contexts with lazy datastructures that you don't want to be evaluated.
TAG
: If set, this will be the tag to which debug_toolbar will attach the
debug toolbar. Defaults to 'body'.
ENABLE_STACKTRACES
: If set, this will show stacktraces for SQL queries.
Enabling stacktraces can increase the CPU time used when executing
queries. Defaults to True.
Example configuration::
def custom_show_toolbar(request): return True # Always show toolbar, for example purposes only.
DEBUG_TOOLBAR_CONFIG = { 'INTERCEPT_REDIRECTS': False, 'SHOW_TOOLBAR_CALLBACK': custom_show_toolbar, 'EXTRA_SIGNALS': ['myproject.signals.MySignal'], 'HIDE_DJANGO_SQL': False, 'TAG': 'div', 'ENABLE_STACKTRACES' : True, }
debugsqlshell
The following is sample output from running the debugsqlshell
management
command. Each ORM call that results in a database query will be beautifully
output in the shell::
$ ./manage.py debugsqlshell
Python 2.6.1 (r261:67515, Jul 7 2009, 23:51:51)
[GCC 4.2.1 (Apple Inc. build 5646)] on darwin
Type "help", "copyright", "credits" or "license" for more information.
(InteractiveConsole)
>>> from page.models import Page
>>> ### Lookup and use resulting in an extra query...
>>> p = Page.objects.get(pk=1)
SELECT "page_page"."id",
"page_page"."number",
"page_page"."template_id",
"page_page"."description"
FROM "page_page"
WHERE "page_page"."id" = 1
>>> print p.template.name
SELECT "page_template"."id",
"page_template"."name",
"page_template"."description"
FROM "page_template"
WHERE "page_template"."id" = 1
Home
>>> ### Using select_related to avoid 2nd database call...
>>> p = Page.objects.select_related('template').get(pk=1)
SELECT "page_page"."id",
"page_page"."number",
"page_page"."template_id",
"page_page"."description",
"page_template"."id",
"page_template"."name",
"page_template"."description"
FROM "page_page"
INNER JOIN "page_template" ON ("page_page"."template_id" = "page_template"."id")
WHERE "page_page"."id" = 1
>>> print p.template.name
Home
The Debug Toolbar includes a limited (and growing) test suite. If you commit code, please consider adding proper coverage (especially if it has a chance for a regression) in the test suite.
::
python setup.py test
A list of 3rd party panels can be found on the Django Debug Toolbar Github wiki: https://github.com/django-debug-toolbar/django-debug-toolbar/wiki/3rd-Party-Panels
See: https://github.com/django-debug-toolbar/django-debug-toolbar/issues