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wagtailheadlesspreview 0.8.0
Wagtail Headless Preview
Overview
With Wagtail as the backend, and a separate app for the front-end (for example a single page React app), editors are no
longer able to preview their changes. This is because the front-end is no longer within Wagtail's direct control.
The preview data therefore needs to be exposed to the front-end app.
This package enables previews for Wagtail pages when used in a headless setup by routing the preview to the specified
front-end URL.
Setup
Install using pip:
pip install wagtail-headless-preview
After installing the module, add wagtail_headless_preview to installed apps in your settings file:
# settings.py
INSTALLED_APPS = [
# ...
"wagtail_headless_preview",
]
Run migrations:
$ python manage.py migrate
Then configure the preview client URL using the CLIENT_URLS option in the WAGTAIL_HEADLESS_PREVIEW setting.
Configuration
wagtail_headless_preview uses a single settings dictionary:
# settings.py
WAGTAIL_HEADLESS_PREVIEW = {
"CLIENT_URLS": {}, # defaults to an empty dict. You must at the very least define the default client URL.
"SERVE_BASE_URL": None, # can be used for HeadlessServeMixin
"REDIRECT_ON_PREVIEW": False, # set to True to redirect to the preview instead of using the Wagtail default mechanism
"ENFORCE_TRAILING_SLASH": True, # set to False in order to disable the trailing slash enforcement
}
Single site setup
For single sites, add the front-end URL as the default entry:
WAGTAIL_HEADLESS_PREVIEW = {
"CLIENT_URLS": {
"default": "http://localhost:8020",
}
}
If you have configured your Wagtail Site entry to use the front-end URL, then you can update your configuration to:
WAGTAIL_HEADLESS_PREVIEW = {
"CLIENT_URLS": {
"default": "{SITE_ROOT_URL}",
}
}
The {SITE_ROOT_URL} placeholder is replaced with the root_url property of the Site the preview page belongs to.
Multi-site setup
For a multi-site setup, add each site as a separate entry in the CLIENT_URLS option in the WAGTAIL_HEADLESS_PREVIEW setting:
WAGTAIL_HEADLESS_PREVIEW = {
"CLIENT_URLS": {
"default": "https://wagtail.org", # adjust to match your front-end URL. e.g. locally it may be something like http://localhost:8020
"cms.wagtail.org": "https://wagtail.org",
"cms.torchbox.com": "http://torchbox.com",
},
# ...
}
Serve URL
To make the editing experience seamles and to avoid server errors due to missing templates,
you can use the HeadlessMixin which combines the HeadlessServeMixin and HeadlessPreviewMixin mixins.
HeadlessServeMixin overrides the Wagtail Page.serve method to redirect to the client URL. By default,
it uses the hosts defined in CLIENT_URLS. However, you can provide a single URL to rule them all:
# settings.py
WAGTAIL_HEADLESS_PREVIEW = {
# ...
"SERVE_BASE_URL": "https://my.headless.site",
}
Enforce trailing slash
By default, wagtail_headless_preview enforces a trailing slash on the client URL. You can disable this behaviour by
setting ENFORCE_TRAILING_SLASH to False:
# settings.py
WAGTAIL_HEADLESS_PREVIEW = {
# ...
"ENFORCE_TRAILING_SLASH": False
}
Usage
To enable preview as well as wire in the "View live" button in the Wagtail UI, add the HeadlessMixin
to your Page class:
from wagtail.models import Page
from wagtail_headless_preview.models import HeadlessMixin
class MyWonderfulPage(HeadlessMixin, Page):
pass
If you require more granular control, or if you've modified you Page model's serve method, you can
add HeadlessPreviewMixin to your Page class to only handle previews:
from wagtail.models import Page
from wagtail_headless_preview.models import HeadlessPreviewMixin
class MyWonderfulPage(HeadlessPreviewMixin, Page):
pass
How will my front-end app display preview content?
This depends on your project, as it will be dictated by the requirements of your front-end app.
The following example uses a Wagtail API endpoint to access previews -
your app may opt to access page previews using GraphQL instead.
Example
This example sets up an API endpoint which will return the preview for a page, and then displays that data
on a simplified demo front-end app.
Add wagtail.api.v2 to the installed apps:
# settings.py
INSTALLED_APPS = [
# ...
"wagtail.api.v2",
]
create an api.py file in your project directory:
from django.contrib.contenttypes.models import ContentType
from wagtail.api.v2.router import WagtailAPIRouter
from wagtail.api.v2.views import PagesAPIViewSet
from wagtail_headless_preview.models import PagePreview
from rest_framework.response import Response
# Create the router. "wagtailapi" is the URL namespace
api_router = WagtailAPIRouter("wagtailapi")
class PagePreviewAPIViewSet(PagesAPIViewSet):
known_query_parameters = PagesAPIViewSet.known_query_parameters.union(
["content_type", "token"]
)
def listing_view(self, request):
# Delegate to detail_view, specifically so there's no
# difference between serialization formats.
self.action = "detail_view"
return self.detail_view(request, 0)
def detail_view(self, request, pk):
page = self.get_object()
serializer = self.get_serializer(page)
return Response(serializer.data)
def get_object(self):
app_label, model = self.request.GET["content_type"].split(".")
content_type = ContentType.objects.get(app_label=app_label, model=model)
page_preview = PagePreview.objects.get(
content_type=content_type, token=self.request.GET["token"]
)
page = page_preview.as_page()
if not page.pk:
# fake primary key to stop API URL routing from complaining
page.pk = 0
return page
api_router.register_endpoint("page_preview", PagePreviewAPIViewSet)
Register the API URLs so Django can route requests into the API:
# urls.py
from .api import api_router
urlpatterns = [
# ...
path("api/v2/", api_router.urls),
# ...
# Ensure that the api_router line appears above the default Wagtail page serving route
path("", include(wagtail_urls)),
]
For further information about configuring the wagtail API, refer to the Wagtail API v2 Configuration Guide
Next, add a client/index.html file in your project root. This will query the API to display our preview:
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html>
<head>
<script>
function go() {
var querystring = window.location.search.replace(/^\?/, '');
var params = {};
querystring.replace(/([^=&]+)=([^&]*)/g, function(m, key, value) {
params[decodeURIComponent(key)] = decodeURIComponent(value);
});
var apiUrl = 'http://localhost:8000/api/v2/page_preview/1/?content_type=' + encodeURIComponent(params['content_type']) + '&token=' + encodeURIComponent(params['token']) + '&format=json';
fetch(apiUrl).then(function(response) {
response.text().then(function(text) {
document.body.innerText = text;
});
});
}
</script>
</head>
<body onload="go()"></body>
</html>
Install django-cors-headers: pip install django-cors-headers
Add CORS config to your settings file to allow the front-end to access the API
# settings.py
CORS_ORIGIN_ALLOW_ALL = True
CORS_URLS_REGEX = r"^/api/v2/"
and follow the rest of the setup instructions for django-cors-headers.
Start up your site as normal: python manage.py runserver 0:8000
Serve the front-end client/index.html at http://localhost:8020/
this can be done by running python3 -m http.server 8020 from inside the client directory
From the wagtail admin interface, edit (or create) and preview a page that uses HeadlessPreviewMixin
The preview page should now show you the API response for the preview! 🎉
This is where a real front-end would take over and display the preview as it would be seen on the live site.
Contributing
All contributions are welcome!
Note that this project uses pre-commit. To set up locally:
# if you don't have it yet
$ pip install pre-commit
# go to the project directory
$ cd wagtail-headless-preview
# initialize pre-commit
$ pre-commit install
# Optional, run all checks once for this, then the checks will run only on the changed files
$ pre-commit run --all-files
How to run tests
Now you can run tests as shown below:
tox -p
or, you can run them for a specific environment tox -e py311-django4.2-wagtail5.1 or specific test
tox -e py311-django4.2-wagtail5.0 -- wagtail_headless_preview.tests.test_frontend.TestFrontendViews.test_redirect_on_preview
Credits
Matthew Westcott (@gasman), initial proof of concept
Karl Hobley (@kaedroho), PoC improvements
For personal and professional use. You cannot resell or redistribute these repositories in their original state.
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