One of the most challenging aspects of building a compelling user experience
is crafting complex multi-part workflows. Horizon’s workflows
module
aims to bring that capability within everyday reach.
See also
For usage information, tips & tricks and more examples check out the Workflows Topic Guide.
horizon.workflows.
Workflow
(request=None, context_seed=None, entry_point=None, *args, **kwargs)[source]¶A Workflow is a collection of Steps.
Its interface is very straightforward, but it is responsible for handling some very important tasks such as:
The Workflow
class has the following attributes:
name
¶The verbose name for this workflow which will be displayed to the user. Defaults to the class name.
slug
¶The unique slug for this workflow. Required.
steps
¶Read-only access to the final ordered set of step instances for this workflow.
default_steps
¶A list of Step
classes which serve as the
starting point for this workflow’s ordered steps. Defaults to an empty
list ([]
).
The name which will appear on the submit button for the workflow’s
form. Defaults to "Save"
.
success_message
¶A string which will be displayed to the user upon successful completion
of the workflow. Defaults to
"{{ workflow.name }} completed successfully."
failure_message
¶A string which will be displayed to the user upon failure to complete
the workflow. Defaults to "{{ workflow.name }} did not complete."
depends_on
¶A roll-up list of all the depends_on
values compiled from the
workflow’s steps.
contributions
¶A roll-up list of all the contributes
values compiled from the
workflow’s steps.
template_name
¶Path to the template which should be used to render this workflow.
In general the default common template should be used. Default:
"horizon/common/_workflow.html"
.
entry_point
¶The slug of the step which should initially be active when the
workflow is rendered. This can be passed in upon initialization of
the workflow, or set anytime after initialization but before calling
either get_entry_point
or render
.
redirect_param_name
¶The name of a parameter used for tracking the URL to redirect to upon
completion of the workflow. Defaults to "next"
.
object
¶The object (if any) which this workflow relates to. In the case of a workflow which creates a new resource the object would be the created resource after the relevant creation steps have been undertaken. In the case of a workflow which updates a resource it would be the resource being updated after it has been retrieved.
wizard
¶Whether to present the workflow as a wizard, with “prev” and “next” buttons and validation after every step.
add_error_to_step
(message, slug)[source]¶Adds an error message to the workflow’s Step.
This is useful when you wish for API errors to appear as errors on the form rather than using the messages framework.
The workflow’s Step is specified by its slug.
finalize
()[source]¶Finalizes a workflow by running through all the actions.
It runs all the actions in order and calling their handle
methods.
Returns True
on full success, or False
for a partial success,
e.g. there were non-critical errors.
(If it failed completely the function wouldn’t return.)
format_status_message
(message)[source]¶Hook to allow customization of the message returned to the user.
This is called upon both successful or unsuccessful completion of the workflow.
By default it simply inserts the workflow’s name into the message string.
get_absolute_url
()[source]¶Returns the canonical URL for this workflow.
This is used for the POST action attribute on the form element wrapping the workflow.
For convenience it defaults to the value of
request.get_full_path()
with any query string stripped off,
e.g. the path at which the workflow was requested.
get_entry_point
()[source]¶Returns the slug of the step which the workflow should begin on.
This method takes into account both already-available data and errors within the steps.
get_success_url
()[source]¶Returns a URL to redirect the user to upon completion.
By default it will attempt to parse a success_url
attribute on the
workflow, which can take the form of a reversible URL pattern name,
or a standard HTTP URL.
handle
(request, context)[source]¶Handles any final processing for this workflow.
Should return a boolean value indicating success.
is_valid
()[source]¶Verifies that all required data is present in the context.
It also calls the validate
method to allow for finer-grained checks
on the context data.
validate
(context)[source]¶Hook for custom context data validation.
Should return a booleanvalue or
raise WorkflowValidationError
.
horizon.workflows.
Step
(workflow)[source]¶A wrapper around an action which defines its context in a workflow.
It knows about details such as:
A Step
class has the following attributes:
depends_on
¶A list of context data keys which this step requires in order to begin interaction.
contributes
¶A list of keys which this step will contribute to the workflow’s
context data. Optional keys should still be listed, even if their
values may be set to None
.
connections
¶A dictionary which maps context data key names to lists of callbacks.
The callbacks may be functions, dotted python paths to functions
which may be imported, or dotted strings beginning with "self"
to indicate methods on the current Step
instance.
before
¶Another Step
class. This optional attribute is used to provide
control over workflow ordering when steps are dynamically added to
workflows. The workflow mechanism will attempt to place the current
step before the step specified in the attribute.
after
¶Another Step
class. This attribute has the same purpose as
before()
except that it will instead
attempt to place the current step after the given step.
help_text
¶A string of simple help text which will be prepended to the Action
class’ help text if desired.
template_name
¶A path to a template which will be used to render this step. In
general the default common template should be used. Default:
"horizon/common/_workflow_step.html"
.
has_errors
¶A boolean value which indicates whether or not this step has any errors on the action within it or in the scope of the workflow. This attribute will only accurately reflect this status after validation has occurred.
slug
¶Inherited from the Action
class.
name
¶Inherited from the Action
class.
permissions
¶Inherited from the Action
class.
allowed
(request)[source]¶Determines whether or not the step is displayed.
Step instances can override this method to specify conditions under
which this tab should not be shown at all by returning False
.
The default behavior is to return True
for all cases.
contribute
(data, context)[source]¶Adds the data listed in contributes
to the workflow’s context.
By default, the context is simply updated with all the data returned by the action.
Note that even if the value of one of the contributes
keys is
not present (e.g. optional) the key should still be added to the
context with a value of None
.
prepare_action_context
(request, context)[source]¶Hook to customize how the workflow context is passed to the action.
This is the reverse of what “contribute” does to make the action outputs sane for the workflow. Changes to the context are not saved globally here. They are localized to the action.
Simply returns the unaltered context by default.
horizon.workflows.
Action
(request, context, *args, **kwargs)[source]¶An Action
represents an atomic logical interaction with the system.
This is easier to understand with a conceptual example: in the context of a “launch instance” workflow, actions would include “naming the instance”, “selecting an image”, and ultimately “launching the instance”.
Because Actions
are always interactive, they always provide form
controls, and thus inherit from Django’s Form
class. However, they
have some additional intelligence added to them:
Actions
are aware of the permissions required to complete them.Actions
have a meta-level concept of “help text” which is meant to be
displayed in such a way as to give context to the action regardless of
where the action is presented in a site or workflow.Actions
understand how to handle their inputs and produce outputs,
much like SelfHandlingForm
does now.Action
classes may define the following attributes in a Meta
class within them:
name
¶The verbose name for this action. Defaults to the name of the class.
slug
¶A semi-unique slug for this action. Defaults to the “slugified” name of the class.
permissions
¶A list of permission names which this action requires in order to be
completed. Defaults to an empty list ([]
).
policy_rules
¶list of scope and rule tuples to do policy checks on, the composition of which is (scope, rule)
for a policy that requires a single rule check:
policy_rules should look like
"(("compute", "compute:create_instance"),)"
for a policy that requires multiple rule checks:
rules should look like
"(("identity", "identity:list_users"),
("identity", "identity:list_roles"))"
where two service-rule clauses are OR-ed.
help_text
¶A string of simple help text to be displayed alongside the Action’s fields.
help_text_template
¶A path to a template which contains more complex help text to be
displayed alongside the Action’s fields. In conjunction with
get_help_text()
method you can
customize your help text template to display practically anything.
handle
(request, context)[source]¶Handles any requisite processing for this action.
The method should return either None
or a dictionary of data
to be passed to contribute()
.
Returns None
by default, effectively making it a no-op.
horizon.workflows.
WorkflowView
[source]¶A generic view which handles the intricacies of workflow processing.
template_name
¶The template to use when rendering this view via standard HTTP requests. Required.
ajax_template_name
¶The template to use when rendering the workflow for AJAX requests.
In general the default common template should be used. Defaults to
"horizon/common/_workflow.html"
.
context_object_name
¶The key which should be used for the workflow object in the template
context. Defaults to "workflow"
.
get_context_data
(**kwargs)[source]¶Returns the template context, including the workflow class.
This method should be overridden in subclasses to provide additional context data to the template.
get_initial
()[source]¶Returns initial data for the workflow.
Defaults to using the GET parameters to allow pre-seeding of the workflow context values.
Except where otherwise noted, this document is licensed under Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 License. See all OpenStack Legal Documents.