I have a django site with lots of models and forms. I have many custom forms and formsets and inlineformsets and custom validation and custom querysets. Hence the add model action depends on forms that need other things, and the 'add model' in the django admin throughs a 500 from a custom queryset.
Is there anyway to disable the 'Add $MODEL' functionality for a certain models?
I want /admin/appname/modelname/add/
to give a 404 (or suitable 'go away' error message), I don't want the 'Add $MODELNAME' button to be on /admin/appname/modelname
view.
Django admin provides a way to disable admin actions (http://docs.djangoproject.com/en/dev/ref/contrib/admin/actions/#disabling-actions) however the only action for this model is 'delete_selected'. i.e. the admin actions only act on existing models. Is there some django-esque way to do this?
It is easy, just overload has_add_permission
method in your Admin
class like so:
class MyAdmin(admin.ModelAdmin):
def has_add_permission(self, request, obj=None):
return False
I think this will help you.. below code must be in admin.py file
@admin.register(Author)
class AuthorAdmin(admin.ModelAdmin):
list_display = ('name', )
list_filter = ('name', )
search_fields = ('name', )
list_per_page = 20
# This will help you to disbale add functionality
def has_add_permission(self, request):
return False
# This will help you to disable delete functionaliyt
def has_delete_permission(self, request, obj=None):
return False
In additon to the above as posted by
# This will help you to disable change functionality
def has_change_permission(self, request, obj=None):
return False
By default syncdb creates 3 security permissions for each model:
Create (aka add) Change Delete
If your logged in as Admin, you get EVERYTHING no matter what.
But if you create a new user group called "General Access" (for example) then you can assign ONLY the CHANGE and DELETE permissions for all of your models.
Then any logged in user that is a member of that group will not have "Create" permission, nothing related to it will show on the screen.
Just copy code from another answer
# In admin
# make the related field can't be added
def get_form(self, request, obj=None, **kwargs):
form = super().get_form(request, obj, **kwargs)
form.base_fields['service'].widget.can_add_related = False
return form
In my case I use inline
# In inline formset e.g. admin.TabularInline
# disable all
def get_formset(self, request, obj=None, **kwargs):
formset = super().get_formset(request, obj, **kwargs)
service = formset.form.base_fields['service']
service.widget.can_add_related = service.widget.can_change_related = service.widget.can_delete_related = False
return formset
in service = formset.form.base_fields['service']
base_fields
is the fields defined in model
if defined in the form use:
product = formset.form.declared_fields['product']
base_fields
and declared_fields
are the most important finding I learned from this case.
This is a too much delayed answer; Just posting this as if anyone is finding the same solution.
In admin.py file you can do the following:
class MyModelForm(forms.ModelForm):
class Meta:
model = MyModel
fields = '__all__'
class MyModelAdmin(admin.ModelAdmin):
form = QuestionTrackAdminForm
list_display = ['title', 'weight']
readonly_fields = ['title', 'weight']
admin.site.register(MyModel, MyModelAdmin)
Here, "readonly_fields" does the magic. Thanks.
Success story sharing
admin.site.register(MyModel, MyModelAdmin)
Add all into theadmin.py
of the models`s app folder.obj
parameter.