127

I am working with Django and use Django shell all the time. The annoying part is that while the Django server reloads on code changes, the shell does not, so every time I make a change to a method I am testing, I need to quit the shell and restart it, re-import all the modules I need, reinitialize all the variables I need etc. While iPython history saves a lot of typing on this, this is still a pain. Is there a way to make django shell auto-reload, the same way django development server does?

I know about reload(), but I import a lot of models and generally use from app.models import * syntax, so reload() is not much help.

2
  • 2
    You should update this question to mark the "django-extensions" answer correct.
    – woodardj
    Nov 16, 2013 at 2:39
  • 1
    Not until it actually works for me. I have the extensions installed and none of my code auto-reloads and I don't see any mention of auto-reloading in the shell_plus docs. It seems that there is a reloader in the runserver_plus command, but that is not what I am looking for.
    – Mad Wombat
    Dec 2, 2015 at 21:17

12 Answers 12

128

I'd suggest use IPython autoreload extension.

./manage.py shell

In [1]: %load_ext autoreload
In [2]: %autoreload 2

And from now all imported modules would be refreshed before evaluate.

In [3]: from x import print_something
In [4]: print_something()
Out[4]: 'Something'

 # Do changes in print_something method in x.py file.

In [5]: print_something()
Out[5]: 'Something else'

Works also if something was imported before %load_ext autoreload command.

./manage.py shell
In [1]: from x import print_something
In [2]: print_something()
Out[2]: 'Something'

 # Do changes in print_something method in x.py file.

In [3]: %load_ext autoreload
In [4]: %autoreload 2
In [5]: print_something()
Out[5]: 'Something else'

There is possible also prevent some imports from refreshing with %aimport command and 3 autoreload strategies:

%autoreload

  • Reload all modules (except those excluded by %aimport) automatically now.

%autoreload 0

  • Disable automatic reloading.

%autoreload 1

  • Reload all modules imported with %aimport every time before executing the Python code typed.

%autoreload 2

  • Reload all modules (except those excluded by %aimport) every time before executing the Python code typed.

%aimport

  • List modules which are to be automatically imported or not to be imported.

%aimport foo

  • Import module ‘foo’ and mark it to be autoreloaded for %autoreload 1

%aimport -foo

  • Mark module ‘foo’ to not be autoreloaded.

This generally works good for my use, but there are some cavetas:

  • Replacing code objects does not always succeed: changing a @property in a class to an ordinary method or a method to a member variable can cause problems (but in old objects only).
  • Functions that are removed (eg. via monkey-patching) from a module before it is reloaded are not upgraded.
  • C extension modules cannot be reloaded, and so cannot be autoreloaded.
4
  • 4
    In case you are using django's /manage.py shell_plus... if you type %load_ext autoreload and then %autoreload 2, models will be automatically reloaded.
    – Fusion
    Aug 8, 2018 at 12:05
  • Note that you need ipython to be installed for this, obviously. See e.g. stackoverflow.com/a/47170195/50899 Oct 6, 2020 at 19:32
  • where to put this %autoreload? It's not clear from the answer
    – IceFire
    Dec 8, 2020 at 12:44
  • 2
    Is there a way to automate this with /manage.py shell_plus, if I want to make it the default behaviour? Aug 31, 2022 at 9:30
56

My solution to it is I write the code and save to a file and then use:

python manage.py shell < test.py

So I can make the change, save and run that command again till I fix whatever I'm trying to fix.

2
  • 5
    Nice and simple. One note, add exit() to the bottom of the py file to exit the Django shell in a cleaner fashion. Thx.
    – Marc
    Jun 4, 2015 at 19:01
  • Simple and elegant solution. Good job.
    – nikoskip
    Jun 17, 2020 at 14:23
46

I recommend using the django-extensions project like stated above by dongweiming. But instead of just 'shell_plus' management command, use:

manage.py shell_plus --notebook

This will open a IPython notebook on your web browser. Write your code there in a cell, your imports etc. and run it.

When you change your modules, just click the notebook menu item 'Kernel->Restart'

There you go, your code is now using your modified modules.

3
  • 43
    "Just use a python notebook" is not an answer to the OP's question.
    – J__
    Jul 26, 2016 at 15:32
  • 1
    This method, while not automatic like %autoreload, does work more reliably than autoreload. kernel restart guarantees that all the cells in the notebook get fully reloaded modules. Plus you can restart and run all cells if you choose. Mar 1, 2017 at 23:01
  • I just get ModuleNotFoundError: No module named 'notebook.notebookapp'
    – Akaisteph7
    Aug 10, 2023 at 20:18
32

look at the manage.py shell_plus command provided by the django-extensions project. It will load all your model files on shell startup. and autoreload your any modify but do not need exit, you can direct call there

6
  • 43
    I use shell_plus and my models are not auto-reloading, am I missing something? Jun 6, 2014 at 19:16
  • 39
    shell_plus doesn't reload models, so this does not answer the question.
    – allanberry
    Feb 4, 2015 at 18:03
  • 6
    as said, shell_plus doesn't reload models.
    – zenperttu
    Jul 17, 2015 at 9:05
  • 2
    Maybe I am missing something, but shell_plus doesn't reload anything for me. It loads all models at startup, which is convenient, but that is that.
    – Mad Wombat
    Dec 2, 2015 at 21:13
  • 16
    shell_plus CAN reload modules using the autoreload module. Type '%load_ext autoreload' and then '%autoreload 2' - see ipython.org/ipython-doc/3/config/extensions/autoreload.html
    – bbrame
    Mar 16, 2016 at 14:24
26

It seems that the general consensus on this topic, is that python reload() sucks and there is no good way to do this.

11
  • Incorrect. @dongweiming's answer above is the solution, and should be accepted as the best answer. Dec 2, 2015 at 19:25
  • 3
    Multiple comments on his answer say that shell_plus doesn't reload models
    – Mad Wombat
    Dec 2, 2015 at 21:00
  • 1
    I have just tested it myself and it doesn't reload. Besides, what about non-model code I import by hand?
    – Mad Wombat
    Dec 2, 2015 at 21:12
  • Classes in an app I'm using now reload great (Python 3.4.3, Django 1.9b1, django-extensions 1.5.9), including a plain non-django-model module and the class within it. It's 5 years since this answer, and a lot of development has happened. Dec 2, 2015 at 21:42
  • 1
    I have tried it on my setup 40 minutes ago and shell_plus doesn't reload anything for me. Django 1.7.10, python 3.4.3, django-extensions 1.5.9.
    – Mad Wombat
    Dec 2, 2015 at 21:58
17

Use shell_plus with an ipython config. This will enable autoreload before shell_plus automatically imports anything.

pip install django-extensions
pip install ipython
ipython profile create

Edit your ipython profile (~/.ipython/profile_default/ipython_config.py):

c.InteractiveShellApp.exec_lines = ['%autoreload 2']
c.InteractiveShellApp.extensions = ['autoreload']

Open a shell - note that you do not need to include --ipython:

python manage.py shell_plus

Now anything defined in SHELL_PLUS_PRE_IMPORTS or SHELL_PLUS_POST_IMPORTS (docs) will autoreload!

Note that if your shell is at a debugger (ex pdb.set_trace()) when you save a file it can interfere with the reload.

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  • 4
    Thank you for the answer. You might note though, that I asked it in 2010. I am glad to know that after eight years auto-reload finally works in shell_plus :)
    – Mad Wombat
    Apr 26, 2019 at 16:05
  • I tried this, it didnt work, i also added to SHELL_PLUS_PRE_IMPORTS and SHELL_PLUS_POST_IMPORTS
    – Santhosh
    Mar 8, 2021 at 16:58
  • This is very neat
    – zrbecker
    Mar 19, 2021 at 12:41
  • Still gives warnings: RuntimeWarning: Model 'xxx.xxxxxx' was already registered. Reloading models is not advised as it can lead to inconsistencies, most notably with related models. Beware.
    – Akaisteph7
    Aug 10, 2023 at 20:46
8

My solution for this inconvenient follows. I am using IPython.

$ ./manage.py shell
> import myapp.models as mdls   # 'mdls' or whatever you want, but short...
> mdls.SomeModel.objects.get(pk=100)
> # At this point save some changes in the model
> reload(mdls)
> mdls.SomeModel.objects.get(pk=100)

For Python 3.x, 'reload' must be imported using:

from importlib import reload

Hope it helps. Of course it is for debug purposes.

Cheers.

0
4

Reload() doesn't work in Django shell without some tricks. You can check this thread na and my answer specifically:

How do you reload a Django model module using the interactive interpreter via "manage.py shell"?

3

Using a combination of 2 answers for this I came up with a simple one line approach.

You can run the django shell with -c which will run the commands you pass however it quits immediately after the code is run.

The trick is to setup what you need, run code.interact(local=locals()) and then re-start the shell from within the code you pass. Like this:

python manage.py shell -c 'import uuid;test="mytestvar";import code;code.interact(local=locals())'

For me I just wanted the rich library's inspect method. Only a few lines:

python manage.py shell -c 'import code;from rich import pretty;pretty.install();from rich import inspect;code.interact(local=locals())'

Finally the cherry on top is an alias

alias djshell='python manage.py shell -c "import code;from rich import pretty;pretty.install();from rich import inspect;code.interact(local=locals())"'

Now if I startup my shell and say, want to inspect the form class I get this beautiful output: enter image description here

1
  • I love the idea of injecting Rich. However the code.interact(local=locals()) part does not seem to work with ipython. When I run the same command than you with shell_plus rather than shell, I still get a normal shell instead of a ipython shell. Aug 31, 2022 at 15:01
2

Not exactly what you want, but I now tend to build myself management commands for testing and fiddling with things.

In the command you can set up a bunch of locals the way you want and afterwards drop into an interactive shell.

import code

class Command(BaseCommand):
  def handle(self, *args, **kwargs):
     foo = 'bar'
     code.interact(local=locals())

No reload, but an easy and less annoying way to interactively test django functionality.

1

Instead of running commands from the Django shell, you can set up a management command like so and rerun that each time.

0
import test  // test only has x defined
test.x       // prints 3, now add y = 4 in test.py
test.y       // error, test does not have attribute y

solution Use reload from importlib as follows

from importlib import reload
import test // test only has x defined
test.x // prints 3, now add y = 4 in test.py
test.y // error
reload(test)
test.y // prints 4

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