horizon/doc/source/quickstart.rst

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Horizon Quickstart

Setup

To setup a Horizon development environment simply clone the Horizon git repository from http://github.com/openstack/horizon and execute the run_tests.sh script from the root folder (see ref/run_tests):

> git clone https://github.com/openstack/horizon.git
> cd horizon
> ./run_tests.sh

Next you will need to setup your Django application config by copying openstack_dashboard/local/local_settings.py.example to openstack_dashboard/local/local_settings.py. To do this quickly you can use the following command:

> cp openstack_dashboard/local/local_settings.py.example openstack_dashboard/local/local_settings.py

Horizon assumes a single end-point for OpenStack services which defaults to the local host (127.0.0.1). If this is not the case change the OPENSTACK_HOST setting in the openstack_dashboard/local/local_settings.py file, to the actual IP address of the OpenStack end-point Horizon should use.

To start the Horizon development server use the Django manage.py utility with the context of the virtual environment:

> tools/with_venv.sh ./manage.py runserver

Alternately specify the listen IP and port:

> tools/with_venv.sh ./manage.py runserver 0.0.0.0:8080

Note

If you would like to run commands without the prefix of tools/with_venv.sh you may source your environment directly. This will remain active as long as your shell session stays open:

> source .venv/bin/activate

Once the Horizon server is running point a web browser to http://localhost:8000 or to the IP and port the server is listening for.

Note

The DevStack project (http://devstack.org/) can be used to install an OpenStack development environment from scratch.

Note

The minimum required set of OpenStack services running includes the following:

  • Nova (compute, api, scheduler, and network)
  • Glance
  • Keystone

Optional support is provided for Swift.

Horizon's Structure

This project is a bit different from other OpenStack projects in that it has two very distinct components underneath it: horizon, and openstack_dashboard.

The horizon directory holds the generic libraries and components that can be used in any Django project.

The openstack_dashboard directory contains a reference Django project that uses horizon.

For development, both pieces share an environment which (by default) is built with the tools/install_venv.py script. That script creates a virtualenv and installs all the necessary packages.

If dependencies are added to either horizon or openstack_dashboard, they should be added to requirements.txt.

Important

If you do anything which changes the environment (adding new dependencies or renaming directories are both great examples) be sure to increment the environment_version counter in run_tests.sh <ref/run_tests>.

Project

INSTALLED_APPS

At the project level you add Horizon and any desired dashboards to your settings.INSTALLED_APPS:

INSTALLED_APPS = (
    'openstack_dashboard',
    ...
    'horizon',
    'openstack_dashboard.dashboards.project',
    'openstack_dashboard.dashboards.admin',
    'openstack_dashboard.dashboards.settings',
    ...
)

URLs

Then you add a single line to your project's urls.py:

url(r'', include(horizon.urls)),

Those urls are automatically constructed based on the registered Horizon apps. If a different URL structure is desired it can be constructed by hand.

Templates

Pre-built template tags generate navigation. In your nav.html template you might have the following:

{% load horizon %}

<div class='nav'>
    {% horizon_main_nav %}
</div>

And in your sidebar.html you might have:

{% load horizon %}

<div class='sidebar'>
    {% horizon_dashboard_nav %}
</div>

These template tags are aware of the current "active" dashboard and panel via template context variables and will render accordingly.

Application

Structure

An application would have the following structure (we'll use syspanel as an example):

project/
|---__init__.py
|---dashboard.py <-----Registers the app with Horizon and sets dashboard properties
|---overview/
|---images_and_snapshots/
    |-- images
    |-- __init__.py
    |---panel.py <-----Registers the panel in the app and defines panel properties
    |-- snapshots/
    |-- templates/
    |-- tests.py
    |-- urls.py
    |-- views.py
    ...
...

Dashboard Classes

Inside of dashboard.py you would have a class definition and the registration process:

import horizon

....
# ObjectStorePanels is an example for a PanelGroup
# for panel classes in general, see below
class ObjectStorePanels(horizon.PanelGroup):
    slug = "object_store"
    name = _("Object Store")
    panels = ('containers',)


class Project(horizon.Dashboard):
    name = _("Project") # Appears in navigation
    slug = "project"    # Appears in URL
    # panels may be strings or refer to classes, such as
    # ObjectStorePanels
    panels = (BasePanels, NetworkPanels, ObjectStorePanels)
    default_panel = 'overview'
    supports_tenants = True
    ...

horizon.register(Project)

Panel Classes

To connect a ~horizon.Panel with a ~horizon.Dashboard class you register it in a panel.py file like so:

import horizon

from openstack_dashboard.dashboards.project import dashboard


class Images(horizon.Panel):
    name = "Images"
    slug = 'images'
    permissions = ('openstack.roles.admin', 'my.other.permission',)


# You could also register your panel with another application's dashboard
dashboard.Project.register(Images)

By default a ~horizon.Panel class looks for a urls.py file in the same directory as panel.py to include in the rollup of url patterns from panels to dashboards to Horizon, resulting in a wholly extensible, configurable URL structure.