In Django, is there a place I can get a list of or look up the models that the ORM knows about?
7 Answers
Simple solution:
import django.apps
django.apps.apps.get_models()
By default apps.get_models()
don't include
- auto-created models for many-to-many relations without an explicit intermediate table
- models that have been swapped out.
If you want to include these as well,
django.apps.apps.get_models(include_auto_created=True, include_swapped=True)
Prior to Django 1.7, instead use:
from django.db import models
models.get_models(include_auto_created=True)
The include_auto_created
parameter ensures that through tables implicitly created by ManyToManyField
s will be retrieved as well.
-
3Using the same method you can also get all the models in just one app: stackoverflow.com/a/8702854/117268 Commented Jul 22, 2013 at 8:27
-
from django.apps.apps import get_models
producesImportError: No module named 'django.apps.apps'
... any idea? Commented Jun 7, 2015 at 23:40 -
3
If you want a dictionary with all models you can use:
from django.apps import apps
models = {
model.__name__: model for model in apps.get_models()
}
List models using http://docs.djangoproject.com/en/dev/ref/contrib/contenttypes/
from django.contrib.contenttypes.models import ContentType
for ct in ContentType.objects.all():
m = ct.model_class()
print "%s.%s\t%d" % (m.__module__, m.__name__, m._default_manager.count())
If you want to play, and not use the good solution, you can play a bit with python introspection:
import settings
from django.db import models
for app in settings.INSTALLED_APPS:
models_name = app + ".models"
try:
models_module = __import__(models_name, fromlist=["models"])
attributes = dir(models_module)
for attr in attributes:
try:
attrib = models_module.__getattribute__(attr)
if issubclass(attrib, models.Model) and attrib.__module__== models_name:
print "%s.%s" % (models_name, attr)
except TypeError, e:
pass
except ImportError, e:
pass
Note: this is quite a rough piece of code; it will assume that all models are defined in "models.py" and that they inherit from django.db.models.Model.
If you use the contenttypes app, then it is straightforward: http://docs.djangoproject.com/en/dev/ref/contrib/contenttypes/
If you register your models with the admin app, you can see all the attributes of these classes in the admin documentation.
Here's a simple way to find and delete any permissions that exist in the database but don't exist in the ORM model definitions:
from django.apps import apps
from django.contrib.auth.management import _get_all_permissions
from django.contrib.auth.models import Permission
from django.core.management.base import BaseCommand
class Command(BaseCommand):
def handle(self, *args, **options):
builtins = []
for klass in apps.get_models():
for perm in _get_all_permissions(klass._meta):
builtins.append(perm[0])
builtins = set(builtins)
permissions = set(Permission.objects.all().values_list('codename', flat=True))
to_remove = permissions - builtins
res = Permission.objects.filter(codename__in=to_remove).delete()
self.stdout.write('Deleted records: ' + str(res))