问题
I'm using Django sessions and I would like a way of seeing the session data in the admin interface. Is this possible?
I.e. for each session I want to see the data stored in the session database (which is essentially a dictionary as far as I can gather).
Currently I can just see a hash in the Session data
field, such as:
gAJ9cQEoVQ5zb3J0aW5nX2Nob2ljZXECVQJQT3EDVQxnYW1lc19wbGF5ZWRxBH1xBVgLAAAAcG9z
dG1hbi1wYXRxBksDc1UKaXBfYWRkcmVzc3EHVQkxMjcuMC4wLjFxCFUKdGVzdGNvb2tpZXEJVQZ3
b3JrZWRxClUKZ2FtZV92b3Rlc3ELfXEMdS4wOGJlMDY3YWI0ZmU0ODBmOGZlOTczZTUwYmYwYjE5
OA==
I have put the following into admin.py to achieve this:
from django.contrib.sessions.models import Session
...
admin.site.register(Session)
In particular I was hoping to be able to see at least an IP address for each session. (Would be nice too if I could count how many sessions per IP address and order the IPs based on number of sessions in total for each.)
Thank you for your help :-)
回答1:
You can do something like this:
from django.contrib.sessions.models import Session
class SessionAdmin(ModelAdmin):
def _session_data(self, obj):
return obj.get_decoded()
list_display = ['session_key', '_session_data', 'expire_date']
admin.site.register(Session, SessionAdmin)
It might be even that get_decoded can be used directly in list_display. And in case there's some catch that prevents this from working ok, you can decode the session data yourself, based on the linked Django source.
回答2:
Continuing from Tomasz's answer, I went with:
import pprint
from django.contrib.sessions.models import Session
class SessionAdmin(admin.ModelAdmin):
def _session_data(self, obj):
return pprint.pformat(obj.get_decoded()).replace('\n', '<br>\n')
_session_data.allow_tags=True
list_display = ['session_key', '_session_data', 'expire_date']
readonly_fields = ['_session_data']
exclude = ['session_data']
date_hierarchy='expire_date'
admin.site.register(Session, SessionAdmin)
回答3:
Session data is contained in a base64 encoded pickled dictionary. That's is what you're seeing in the admin because that data is stored in a TextField in the Session model.
I don't think any distributed django code stores the ip address in the session but you could do it yourself if you can access it.
In order to display the real session information, you may write your own form field that presents the decoded information. Keep in mind that you'll have to also overwrite the save method if you want to modify it. You can take a look at the encode and decode methods in django/contrib/sessions/models.py
.
回答4:
EB's otherwise great answer left me with the error "Database returned an invalid value in QuerySet.dates(). Are time zone definitions and pytz installed?". (I do have db tz info and pytz installed, and my app uses timezones extensively.) Removing the 'date_hierarchy' line resolved the issue for me. So:
import pprint
from django.contrib.sessions.models import Session
class SessionAdmin(admin.ModelAdmin):
def _session_data(self, obj):
return pprint.pformat(obj.get_decoded()).replace('\n', '<br>\n')
_session_data.allow_tags=True
list_display = ['session_key', '_session_data', 'expire_date']
readonly_fields = ['_session_data']
exclude = ['session_data']
admin.site.register(Session, SessionAdmin)
来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/4976015/django-how-to-see-session-data-in-the-admin-interface