Experimental frontend for argus-server as a django app.
Will possibly cease to exist as a separate app if the experiment is deemed successful.
See argus-server for more about argus.
Imports django-htmx. See the documentation for django-htmx for details.
To make sure you do not accidentally work on an old argus-server, do the following:
- Use/make a venv, for instance: create a new one with
python -m venv argus-htmx
- Check out argus-server code
- Install argus-server dynamically into the venv:
pip install -e .
- Check out this repo
- Install this app dynamically into the venv:
pip install -e .
It is now safe to remove argus-server from the venv if you feel like it.
Do this in your workdir, which could be the checked out argus-server repo.
This assumes that you have a local settings file (we recommend calling it
"localsettings.py" since that is hidden by .gitignore) as a sibling of
src/
.
At the top of this local settings file, copy the contents of
argus.htmx.settings
. This will base the settings-file on
argus.site.settings.backend
and automatically use
argus.site.utils.update_settings
with
argus_htmx.app_config.APP_SETTINGS
to set/overwrite some settings and
mutate others. Note the usage of globals()
; due to this, inheriting from
argus.htmx.settings
will probably not work as expected.
While developing you will probably prefer to swap out
argus.site.settings.backend
with argus.site.settings.dev
, as the former
is almost production-ready while the latter is tuned for development and
depends on the optional dependencies you can install via pip install
argus-server[dev]
.
The argus.site.utils.update_settings
function will add or change the settings
- INSTALLED_APPS
- LOGIN_REDIRECT_URL
- LOGIN_URL
- LOGOUT_REDIRECT_URL
- LOGOUT_URL
- MIDDLEWARE
- PUBLIC_URLS
- ROOT_URLCONF
- TEMPLATES
See argus_htmx.appconfig._app_settings
for what is being set. The
management command printsettings
(which depends on the app
django-extensions
, a dev
-dependency) will print out the complete
settings used.
If you add more pages and endpoints you will have to write your own root urls.py and set ROOT_URLCONF appropriately.
If you have some other apps you want installed and configured, you could either
add the necessary settings to your localsettings.py
or use the extra-apps
machinery. The later is especially useful during the development phase when you
haven't settled on which apps to use yet.
You make a JSON-file which is read into your settings via one of two environment variables.
In order to add apps and settings that extend argus-server
and this
app
you use the environment variable ARGUS_EXTRA_APPS
:
export ARGUS_EXTRA_APPS=`cat extra.json`
If you want to override existing apps the environment variable to use is
ARGUS_OVERRIDING_APPS
:
export ARGUS_OVERRIDING_APPS=`cat overriding.json`
Have a look at the contents of argus_htmx.appconfig._app_settings
for an
example of what you can set this way.
You can merge your urlpatterns with the apps' urlpatterns via the
argus.site.utils.get_urlpatterns
function, see argus.htmx.urls
for an
example.
If using django.contrib.auth.backends.RemoteUserBackend
(which depends on
the middleware django.contrib.auth.middleware.RemoteUserMiddleware
) there's
an optional setting ARGUS_REMOTE_USER_METHOD_NAME
to choose what to show on
the button.
If using social_core.backends.open_id_connect.OpenIdConnectAuth
there's an
optional setting ARGUS_OIDC_METHOD_NAME
to choose what to show on the
button.
Both can be set via environment variables.
On every new version, reinstall the dependencies since there might be new ones.
To try out daisyUI themes use the context processor
argus_htmx.context_processor.theme_via_session
instead of
argus_htmx.context_processor.theme_via_GET
.
Default included themes are: light, dark and argus.
This project supports Tailwind CSS utility classes and daisyUI components for styling. Below is an overview of the stack, installation and build instructions, and configuration details for themes and styles.
- Tailwind CSS: A utility-first CSS framework for rapidly building custom user interfaces.
- daisyUI: A component library for Tailwind CSS that provides a set of ready-to-use components as well as color themes.
Recommended but open for tweaks and adaptations steps:
Get Tailwind standalone CLI bundled with daisyUI from https://github.com/dobicinaitis/tailwind-cli-extra
Most linux:
$ curl -sL https://github.com/dobicinaitis/tailwind-cli-extra/releases/latest/download/tailwindcss-extra-linux-x64 -o /tmp/tailwindcss $ chmod +x /tmp/tailwindcss
For other OSes see https://github.com/dobicinaitis/tailwind-cli-extra/releases/latest/ and update the bit after
download/
accordingly.Optionally you can compile tailwind+daisyUI standalone cli bundle yourself as described here: tailwindlabs/tailwindcss#12294 (comment).
(Linux/OsX) Move the tailwindcss file to your $PATH, for instance to
~/bin/
or.local/bin
.Go to the repo directory (parent of
src/
)Build main stylesheet file using
tailwindcss
executable from step 1 and pointing to the included config file:Manually:
tailwindcss -c src/argus_htmx/tailwindtheme/tailwind.config.js -i src/argus_htmx/tailwindtheme/styles.css --output src/argus_htmx/static/styles.css
Running with the
--watch
flag for automatic update on change seems error-prone so we've made it very easy to run the command, withmake
ortox
:make tailwind tox -e tailwind
Either will rebuild the styles for you.
How to customize the look:
Override Argus' Tailwind CSS theme defaults and/or choose which daisyUI color themes to include. You can do so by updating the default
TAILWIND_THEME_OVERRIDE
andDAISYUI_THEMES
values respectively before running atailwind_config
management command:Via environment variables, for example:
TAILWIND_THEME_OVERRIDE = ' { "borderWidth": { "DEFAULT": "1px" }, "extend": { "borderRadius": { "4xl": "2rem" } } } ' DAISYUI_THEMES = ' [ "light", "dark", "cyberpunk", "dim", "autumn", { "mytheme": { "primary": "#009eb6", "primary-content": "#00090c", "secondary": "#00ac00", "secondary-content": "#000b00", "accent": "#ff0000", "accent-content": "#160000", "neutral": "#262c0e", "neutral-content": "#cfd1ca", "base-100": "#292129", "base-200": "#221b22", "base-300": "#1c161c", "base-content": "#d0cdd0", "info": "#00feff", "info-content": "#001616", "success": "#b1ea50", "success-content": "#0c1302", "warning": "#d86d00", "warning-content": "#110400", "error": "#ff6280", "error-content": "#160306" } } ] '
Or by providing corresponding values in your local settings that star-imports from an argus-server settings file:
TAILWIND_THEME_OVERRIDE = {...} DAISYUI_THEMES = [...]
- Some links that may be relevant for the customization values mentioned above:
Override the default main stylesheet path by setting
ARGUS_STYLESHEET_PATH
in the environment. The path is underSTATIC_URL
. This depends on the context processorargus_htmx.context_processors.path_to_stylesheet
.Include additional styles/stylesheets using the
head
block in your templates.Generate a Tailwind config file by running the
tailwind_config
management command. By default the generated file will be based onsrc/argus_htmx/tailwindtheme/tailwind.config.template.js
and expected values will be injected with reasonable defaults.
You can customize which columns are shown in the incidents listing table by overriding the
INCIDENT_TABLE_COLUMNS
setting. This setting takes a list of str
or
argus_htmx.incidents.customization.IncidentTableColumn
instances. when given a str
, this
key must be available in the argus_htmx.incidents.customization.BUILTIN_COLUMNS
dictionary. For
example:
from argus_htmx.incidents.customization import BUILTIN_COLUMNS, IncidentTableColumn INCIDENT_TABLE_COLUMNS = [ "id", "start_time", BUILTIN_COLUMNS["description"], # equivalent to just "description" IncidentTableColumn( # a new column definition name="name", label="Custom" cell_template="/path/to/template.html" context={ "additional": "value" } ), ]
For inbuilt support for other types of columns see the howtos in the local docs.
Argus supports showing an extra widget next to the menubar in the incidents listing. This box can
take the width of 1/3 of the window. You can add the widget by creating a context processor that
injects an incidents_extra_widget
variable that points to an html template:
def extra_widget(request): return { "incidents_extra_widget": "path/to/_extra_widget.html", }
note Don't forget to include the context processor in your settings
You could then create path/to/_extra_widget.html
as following:
<div id="service-status" class="border border-primary rounded-2xl h-full p-2"> My custom widget </div>
By default, incidents are shown with a page size of 10
(ie. 10 rows at a time), and the user can
select a different page size from [10, 20, 50, 100]
. It possible to override these settings by
setting the ARGUS_INCIDENTS_DEFAULT_PAGE_SIZE
and ARGUS_INCIDENTS_PAGE_SIZES
setting
respectively.