I'm running into quite interesting situation.
I need to extend default django's Group model with some fields. I tried to use inheritance first, e.g. inherit from Group model and change some references, but seems I can't change all needed references, so, this way completely breaks django permission system.
Then I found this answer: How do I extend the Django Group model? where guy suggested to use field.contribute_to_class()
method.
I have put this adjustment right above the model definition in < myapp >. (don't ask me why do I need roles for group, it's not my idea, I just need them :D)
if not hasattr(Group, 'roles'):
field = models.ManyToManyField(
Role, verbose_name=_('roles'), blank=True,
help_text=_('List of roles attached to this group'),
related_name='groups')
field.contribute_to_class(Group, 'roles')
class MyGroup(Group):
class Meta:
proxy = True
def _sync_permissions(self):
"""
This method will sync group permissions with all attached Roles.
"""
self.permissions.clear()
for role in self.roles.all():
self.permissions.add(role.permissions)
self.save()
This part seems to be working (it really modifies django.contrib.auth.models.Group model)
But what I need next is to generate a migration for the Group model.
If I simply run ./manage.py makemigrations <myapp>
it generates a migration for Group model, but tries to put it inside django.contrib.auth application, that is definitely not what I need.
So, my question here is:
Is there a way to tell django to generate a migration for Group model, but not to create a migration file under python libs directory, but rather create it inside < myapp > or just output the migration code?