Django default settings convention for pluggable app?

you can use django-zero-settings which lets you define your defaults and a setting key for user settings to auto-override defaults, has auto-import strings, removed settings management, cache, pre-checks, etc.

to create app settings like your example:

from zero_settings import ZeroSettings

app_settings = ZeroSettings(
    key="APP",
    defaults={
        "FOO": "bar"
    },
)

then you can use it like:

from app.settings import app_settings

print(app_settings.FOO)  # which prints bar

user settings will auto override defaults, like:

# this is settings.py, Django settings file
SECRET_KEY = "some_key"
# other settings ...
# the key `APP` is same key arg for ZeroSettings
APP = {
    "FOO": "not_bar"
}

and then:

from app.settings import app_settings

print(app_settings.FOO)  # this time you get not_bar

How about this?

In myapp/settings.py:

from django.conf import settings

FOO = 'bar'
BAR = 'baz'

_g = globals()
for key, value in _g.items():
    _g[key] = getattr(settings, key, value)

In myapp/other.py:

import myapp.settings

print myapp.settings.FOO

Given this answer by ncoghlan, I feel ok using globals() this way.


I think it's quite common to create a settings.py in your app's package, where you define your settings like this:

from django.conf import settings
FOO = getattr(settings, 'FOO', "default_value")

In your app you can import them from your app's settings module:

from myapp.settings import *

def print_foo():
    print FOO

But I think everybody agrees that Django is lacking a better generic architecture for this! If you're looking for a more sophisticated way to handle this, there are some third party apps for this like django-appconf, but it's your decision if you want to introduce one more dependency for your app or not!

Updated for 2020

In settings.py, put settings.* before the property.

from django.conf import settings
settings.FOO = getattr(settings, 'FOO', "default_value")

It seems that every solution I see there tends to create an internal copy of application settings, proxy, wrap or whatever. This is confusing and creates problems when settings are modified in run time like they do in tests.

To me all settings belong in django.conf.settings and only there. You should not read them from somewhere else nor copy it for later use (as they may change). You should set them once and don't bother about defaults later on.

I understand the impulse to drop the app prefix when app setting is used internally, but this also is IMHO a bad idea. When in trouble looking for SOME_APP_FOO will not yield results, as it's used just as FOO internally. Confusing right? And for what, few letters? Remember that explicit is better?

IMHO the best way is to just set those defaults in Django's own settings, and why don't use piping that is already there? No module import hooks or hijacking models.py being always imported to initialize some extra and complicated meta class piping.

Why not use AppConfig.ready for setting defaults?

class FooBarConfig(AppConfig):
    name = 'foo_bar'

    def ready(self):
        from django.conf import settings
        settings = settings._wrapped.__dict__
        settings.setdefault('FOO_BAR_SETTING', 'whatever')

Or better yet define them in clean simple way in a separate module and import them as (or close to how) Settings class does it:

class FooBarConfig(AppConfig):
    name = 'foo_bar'

    def ready(self):
        from . import app_settings as defaults
        from django.conf import settings
        for name in dir(defaults):
            if name.isupper() and not hasattr(settings, name):
                setattr(settings, name, getattr(defaults, name))

I'm not sure use of __dict__ is the best solution, but you get the idea, you can always user hasattr/setattr combo to get the efect.

This way your app settings are:

  1. exposed to others — if they should rely on them in some rare cases, if of course apps are configured in order rely on each other
  2. read normally as any other setting
  3. nicely declared in their own module
  4. lazy enough
  5. controlled how they're are set in django.conf.settings — you can implement some transposition of names if you want to

PS. There is a warning about not modifying settings in run time but it does not explain why. So I think this one time, during initialization may be a reasonable exception ;)

PS2. Don't name the separate module just settings as this may get confusing when you import settings from django.conf.