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django-maintenance-mode

django-maintenance-mode shows a 503 error page when maintenance-mode is on.

It works at application level, so your django instance should be up.

It doesn't use database and doesn't prevent database access.

##Requirements

  • Python 2.6, Python 2.7
  • Django 1.5 through Django 1.9

##Installation

  1. Run pip install django-maintenance-mode or download django-maintenance-mode and add the maintenance_mode package to your project
  2. Add 'maintenance_mode' to settings.INSTALLED_APPS before custom applications
  3. Add 'maintenance_mode.middleware.MaintenanceModeMiddleware' to settings.MIDDLEWARE_CLASSES as last middleware
  4. Add your custom templates/503.html file
  5. Restart your application server

##Configuration (optional)

All these settings are optional, if not defined in settings.py the default values (listed below) will be used.

#if True the maintenance-mode will be activated
MAINTENANCE_MODE = False

#if True the staff will not see the maintenance-mode page
MAINTENANCE_MODE_IGNORE_STAFF = False

#if True the superuser will not see the maintenance-mode page
MAINTENANCE_MODE_IGNORE_SUPERUSER = False

#list of ip-addresses that will not be affected by the maintenance-mode
#ip-addresses will be used to compile regular expressions objects
MAINTENANCE_MODE_IGNORE_IP_ADDRESSES = ()

#list of urls that will not be affected by the maintenance-mode
#urls will be used to compile regular expressions objects
MAINTENANCE_MODE_IGNORE_URLS = ()

#the absolute url where users will be redirected to during maintenance-mode
MAINTENANCE_MODE_REDIRECT_URL = None

#the template that will be shown by the maintenance-mode page
MAINTENANCE_MODE_TEMPLATE = '503.html'

#the path of the function that will return the template context -> 'myapp.mymodule.myfunction'
MAINTENANCE_MODE_TEMPLATE_CONTEXT = None

Add maintenance_mode.urls to urls.py if you want superusers able to set maintenance_mode using urls.

urlpatterns = patterns('',
    ...
    url(r'^maintenance-mode/', include('maintenance_mode.urls')),
    ...
)

##Usage

####Python

from maintenance_mode.core import get_maintenance_mode, set_maintenance_mode

set_maintenance_mode(True)

if get_maintenance_mode():
    set_maintenance_mode(False)

or

from django.core.management import call_command
from django.core.management.base import BaseCommand


class Command(BaseCommand):

    def handle(self, *args, **options):

        call_command('maintenance_mode', 'on')

        #call your command(s)

        call_command('maintenance_mode', 'off')

####Terminal

Run python manage.py maintenance_mode <on|off>

(This is not Heroku-friendly because any execution of heroku run manage.py will be run on a separate worker dyno, not the web one. Therefore the state-file is set but on the wrong machine)

####URLs Superusers can change maintenance-mode using the following urls:

/maintenance-mode/off/

/maintenance-mode/on/

##License Released under MIT License.

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django-maintenance-mode shows a 503 error page when maintenance mode is on.

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