Subscribe to django model changes include bulk create/update/delete.
- Using Observer Pattern notify subscribers about changes to a django model.
- Decouple Business logic from Models.save
- Support for bulk actions (Not available using django signals.)
- Use noop subscribers when
settings.SUBSCRIPTION_DISABLE_SUBSCRIBERSisTruewhich prevents having to mock subscribers that call external services in testing or local development environments. - Show changes to the instance after it has been updated i.e diff's the initial state and the current state.
$ pip install django-model-subscriptionAdd model_subscription to your INSTALLED_APPS
INSTALLED_APPS = [
...,
'model_subscription',
...
]from model_subscription.mixin import SubscriptionModelMixin
from model_subscription.model import SubscriptionQuerySet
class TestModel(SubscriptionModelMixin, models.Model):
name = models.CharField(max_length=255)
objects = SubscriptionQuerySet.as_manager()from model_subscription.model import SubscriptionModel
class TestModel(SubscriptionModel):
name = models.CharField(max_length=255)- Using
OperationType
import logging
from model_subscription.decorators import subscribe
from model_subscription.constants import OperationType
log = logging.getLogger(__name__)
@subscribe(OperationType.CREATE, TestModel)
def handle_create(instance):
log.debug('Created {}'.format(instance.name))
- Using
create_subscriptiondirectly (succinct version).
import logging
from model_subscription.decorators import create_subscription
log = logging.getLogger(__name__)
@create_subscription(TestModel)
def handle_create(instance):
log.debug('Created {}'.format(instance.name))
subscribe: Explicit (Requires a valid OperationType).
create_subscription: Subscribes to create operation i.e a new instance.
@create_subscription(TestModel)
def handle_create(instance):
log.debug('1. Created {}'.format(instance.name))update_subscription: Subscribes to updates also includes (changed_data).
@update_subscription(TestModel)
def handle_update(instance, changed_data):
log.debug('Updated {} {}'.format(instance.name, changed_data))delete_subscription: Subscribes to delete operation:
NOTE: The instance.pk is already set to None.
@delete_subscription(TestModel)
def handle_delete(instance):
log.debug('Deleted {}'.format(instance.name))bulk_create_subscription: Subscribe to bulk create operations.
@bulk_create_subscription(TestModel)
def handle_bulk_create(instances):
for instance in instances:
log.debug('Bulk Created {}'.format(instance.name))bulk_update_subscription: Subscribe to bulk update operations.
@bulk_update_subscription(TestModel)
def handle_bulk_update(instances):
for instance in instances:
log.debug('Updated {}'.format(instance.name))bulk_delete_subscription: Subscribe to bulk delete operations.
@bulk_delete_subscription(TestModel)
def handle_bulk_delete(instances):
for instance in instances:
log.debug('Deleted {}'.format(instance.name))Update you apps.py
from django.apps import AppConfig
class MyAppConfig(AppConfig):
name = 'myapp'
def ready(self):
from myapp import subscriptionsBy default the settings.SUBSCRIPTION_AUTO_DISCOVER is set to False.
To use auto discovery this is not recommended as it would notify the subscribers wherever the model is used i.e IPython notebook, external scripts.
In your settings.py add
SUBSCRIPTION_AUTO_DISCOVER = TrueNOTE: This is only required when
SUBSCRIPTION_AUTO_DISCOVER = True
SUBSCRIPTION_MODULE = 'subscription'If you feel generous and want to show some extra appreciation:
- https://python-3-patterns-idioms-test.readthedocs.io/en/latest/Observer.html
- https://refactoring.guru/design-patterns/observer
- https://hackernoon.com/observer-vs-pub-sub-pattern-50d3b27f838c
- Supporting field level subscriptions.
- Support class based subscribers which implements
__call__ - Extend to include custom OperationType.
- Add support for using a single class to manage multiple actions i.e MyClass.update, MyClass.create.

