Django 2.x Solution:
It's very easy to handle file deletion in Django 2. I've tried following solution using Django 2 and SFTP Storage and also FTP STORAGE, and I'm pretty sure that it'll work with any other storage managers which implemented delete
method. (delete
method is one of the storage
abstract methods which is supposed to delete the file from the storage, physically!)
Override the delete
method of the model in a way that the instance deletes its FileFields before deleting itself:
class Song(models.Model):
name = models.CharField(blank=True, max_length=100)
author = models.ForeignKey(User, to_field='id', related_name="id_user2")
song = models.FileField(upload_to='/songs/')
image = models.ImageField(upload_to='/pictures/', blank=True)
date_upload = models.DateField(auto_now_add=True)
def delete(self, using=None, keep_parents=False):
self.song.storage.delete(self.song.name)
self.image.storage.delete(self.image.name)
super().delete()
It works pretty easy for me.
If you want to check if file exists before deletion, you can use storage.exists
. e.g. self.song.storage.exists(self.song.name)
will return a boolean
representing if the song exists. So it will look like this:
def delete(self, using=None, keep_parents=False):
# assuming that you use same storage for all files in this model:
storage = self.song.storage
if storage.exists(self.song.name):
storage.delete(self.song.name)
if storage.exists(self.image.name):
storage.delete(self.image.name)
super().delete()
EDIT (In Addition):
As @HeyMan mentioned, with this solution calling Song.objects.all().delete()
does not delete files! This is happening because Song.objects.all().delete()
is running delete query of Default Manager. So if you want to be able to delete files of a model by using objects
methods, you must write and use a Custom Manager (just for overriding its delete query):
class CustomManager(models.Manager):
def delete(self):
for obj in self.get_queryset():
obj.delete()
and for assigning the CustomManager
to the model, you must initial objects
inside your model:
class Song(models.Model):
name = models.CharField(blank=True, max_length=100)
author = models.ForeignKey(User, to_field='id', related_name="id_user2")
song = models.FileField(upload_to='/songs/')
image = models.ImageField(upload_to='/pictures/', blank=True)
date_upload = models.DateField(auto_now_add=True)
objects = CustomManager() # just add this line of code inside of your model
def delete(self, using=None, keep_parents=False):
self.song.storage.delete(self.song.name)
self.image.storage.delete(self.image.name)
super().delete()
Now you can use .delete()
in the end of any objects
sub-queries. I wrote the simplest CustomManager
, but you can do it better by returning something about objects you deleted or whatever you want.