""" Settings for Graphene are all namespaced in the GRAPHENE setting. For example your project's `settings.py` file might look like this: GRAPHENE = { 'SCHEMA': 'my_app.schema.schema' 'MIDDLEWARE': ( 'graphene_django.debug.DjangoDebugMiddleware', ) } This module provides the `graphene_settings` object, that is used to access Graphene settings, checking for user settings first, then falling back to the defaults. """ from __future__ import unicode_literals from django.conf import settings from django.test.signals import setting_changed from django.utils import six try: import importlib # Available in Python 3.1+ except ImportError: from django.utils import importlib # Will be removed in Django 1.9 # Copied shamelessly from Django REST Framework DEFAULTS = { "SCHEMA": None, "SCHEMA_OUTPUT": "schema.json", "SCHEMA_INDENT": 2, "MIDDLEWARE": (), # Set to True if the connection fields must have # either the first or last argument "RELAY_CONNECTION_ENFORCE_FIRST_OR_LAST": False, # Max items returned in ConnectionFields / FilterConnectionFields "RELAY_CONNECTION_MAX_LIMIT": 100, "DJANGO_GRAPHENE_CAMELCASE_ERRORS": False, } if settings.DEBUG: DEFAULTS["MIDDLEWARE"] += ("graphene_django.debug.DjangoDebugMiddleware",) # List of settings that may be in string import notation. IMPORT_STRINGS = ("MIDDLEWARE", "SCHEMA") def perform_import(val, setting_name): """ If the given setting is a string import notation, then perform the necessary import or imports. """ if val is None: return None elif isinstance(val, six.string_types): return import_from_string(val, setting_name) elif isinstance(val, (list, tuple)): return [import_from_string(item, setting_name) for item in val] return val def import_from_string(val, setting_name): """ Attempt to import a class from a string representation. """ try: # Nod to tastypie's use of importlib. parts = val.split(".") module_path, class_name = ".".join(parts[:-1]), parts[-1] module = importlib.import_module(module_path) return getattr(module, class_name) except (ImportError, AttributeError) as e: msg = "Could not import '%s' for Graphene setting '%s'. %s: %s." % ( val, setting_name, e.__class__.__name__, e, ) raise ImportError(msg) class GrapheneSettings(object): """ A settings object, that allows API settings to be accessed as properties. For example: from graphene_django.settings import settings print(settings.SCHEMA) Any setting with string import paths will be automatically resolved and return the class, rather than the string literal. """ def __init__(self, user_settings=None, defaults=None, import_strings=None): if user_settings: self._user_settings = user_settings self.defaults = defaults or DEFAULTS self.import_strings = import_strings or IMPORT_STRINGS @property def user_settings(self): if not hasattr(self, "_user_settings"): self._user_settings = getattr(settings, "GRAPHENE", {}) return self._user_settings def __getattr__(self, attr): if attr not in self.defaults: raise AttributeError("Invalid Graphene setting: '%s'" % attr) try: # Check if present in user settings val = self.user_settings[attr] except KeyError: # Fall back to defaults val = self.defaults[attr] # Coerce import strings into classes if attr in self.import_strings: val = perform_import(val, attr) # Cache the result setattr(self, attr, val) return val graphene_settings = GrapheneSettings(None, DEFAULTS, IMPORT_STRINGS) def reload_graphene_settings(*args, **kwargs): global graphene_settings setting, value = kwargs["setting"], kwargs["value"] if setting == "GRAPHENE": graphene_settings = GrapheneSettings(value, DEFAULTS, IMPORT_STRINGS) setting_changed.connect(reload_graphene_settings)