user2429940
user2429940

Reputation:

How to execute a Python script from the Django shell?

I need to execute a Python script from the Django shell. I tried:

./manage.py shell << my_script.py

But it didn't work. It was just waiting for me to write something.

Upvotes: 368

Views: 363499

Answers (27)

MrNinjamannn
MrNinjamannn

Reputation: 661

If you don't have many commands in your script, use -c/--command:

manage.py shell --command "import django; print(django.__version__)"

Django stable docs on manage.py shell

Upvotes: 16

SaimumIslam27
SaimumIslam27

Reputation: 1184

Add these lines to your python script.py

import os
import sys
import django
from pathlib import Path

BASE_DIR = Path(__file__).resolve().parent.parent
sys.path.append(str(BASE_DIR))
    
os.environ.setdefault("DJANGO_SETTINGS_MODULE","django_server_app.settings")
django.setup()

# add your code here

then go to the project directory and run python script.py

Upvotes: 1

focus zheng
focus zheng

Reputation: 380

put globals().update(locals()) after importing statement

Upvotes: 0

J&#233;ter Silveira
J&#233;ter Silveira

Reputation: 359

You can simply run:

python manage.py shell < your_script.py

It should do the job!

Upvotes: 7

Akshay Vijay Jain
Akshay Vijay Jain

Reputation: 16025

Actually it is very simple, once you open django shell with python manage.py shell
then simply write
import test
to import test.py

# test.py
def x():
  print('hello');

Now you can execute the commands in this file as

test.x() //  will print hello

Upvotes: 1

Koops
Koops

Reputation: 543

First check your file.

py manage.py

If your file is shown

[contracts]
category_load

Now you can run your .py file by typing in the powershell(terminal)

py manage.py category_load

Upvotes: 0

Md. Ashraful Haque
Md. Ashraful Haque

Reputation: 117

I'm late for the party but I hope that my response will help someone: You can do this in your Python script:

step1: Import

import mysite.asgi

step2: Need to execute a Python script simply typing:

python test.py

Where test.py file like look this:

import mysite.asgi

from polls.models import GMD_TABLE
print ( [obj.gt_GMD_name for obj in GMD_TABLE.objects.all()] )

FINALY: The result will be:

['ISHWARDI', 'JHENAIDHA', 'HVDC CIRCLE']

Where ['ISHWARDI', 'JHENAIDHA', 'HVDC CIRCLE'] is the values of GMD_TABLE

Upvotes: 10

Underoos
Underoos

Reputation: 5200

Late to the party. But this might be helpful for someone.

All you need is your script and django-extensions installed.

Just run the shell_plus available in django_extensions and import the script that you've written.

If your script is scpt.py and it's inside a folder fol you can run the script as follows.

python manage.py shell_plus

and just import your script inside the shell as follows.

>>> from fol import scpt

Upvotes: 0

Martin13
Martin13

Reputation: 119

The django shell is the good way to execute a python module with the django environment, but it is not always easy and tiresome to import modules and execute functions manually especially without auto-completion. To resolve this, I created a small shell script "runscript.sh" that allows you to take full advantage of the auto-completion and the log history of the Linux console.

NB: Copy runscript.sh to the root project and set the execute right (chmod +x)

For example: I want to run python function named show(a, b, c) in module do_somethings.py in myapp/do_folder/

The standard django way (manage.py shell):

python3 manage.py shell
 > from myapp.do_folder import do_somethings
 > do_somethings.show("p1", "p2"  , 3.14159)

With script (runscript.sh):

./runscript.sh myapp/do_folder/do_somethings.py show p1 p2 3.14159

The script is not limited in number of arguments. However only arguments of primitive types are supported (int, float, string)

Upvotes: 0

Apogentus
Apogentus

Reputation: 6623

If you want to execute startup script (e.g. import some django models to work with them interactively) and remain in django shell:

PYTHONSTARTUP=my_script.py python manage.py shell

Upvotes: 1

Other way it's execute this one:

echo 'execfile("/path_to/myscript.py")' | python manage.py shell --settings=config.base

This is working on Python2.7 and Django1.9

Upvotes: 0

danodonovan
danodonovan

Reputation: 20373

You're not recommended to do that from the shell - and this is intended as you shouldn't really be executing random scripts from the django environment (but there are ways around this, see the other answers).

If this is a script that you will be running multiple times, it's a good idea to set it up as a custom command ie

 $ ./manage.py my_command

to do this create a file in a subdir of management and commands of your app, ie

my_app/
    __init__.py
    models.py
    management/
        __init__.py
        commands/
            __init__.py
            my_command.py
    tests.py
    views.py

and in this file define your custom command (ensuring that the name of the file is the name of the command you want to execute from ./manage.py)

from django.core.management.base import BaseCommand

class Command(BaseCommand):
    def handle(self, **options):
        # now do the things that you want with your models here

Upvotes: 301

mariotomo
mariotomo

Reputation: 9748

came here with the same question as the OP, and I found my favourite answer precisely in the mistake within the question, which works also in Python 3:

./manage.py shell <<EOF
import my_script
my_script.main()
EOF

Upvotes: 1

Kevin He
Kevin He

Reputation: 1250

If you want to run in in BG even better:

nohup echo 'exec(open("my_script.py").read())' | python manage.py shell &

The output will be in nohup.out

Upvotes: 3

Simone
Simone

Reputation: 166

As other answers indicate but don't explicitly state, what you may actually need is not necessarily to execute your script from the Django shell, but to access your apps without using the Django shell.

This differs a lot Django version to Django version. If you do not find your solution on this thread, answers here -- Django script to access model objects without using manage.py shell -- or similar searches may help you.

I had to begin my_command.py with

import os,sys
sys.path.append('/path/to/myproject')
os.environ.setdefault("DJANGO_SETTINGS_MODULE", "config.settings.file")
import django
django.setup()

import project.app.models
#do things with my models, yay

and then ran python3 my_command.py

(Django 2.0.2)

Upvotes: 7

codeape
codeape

Reputation: 100886

The << part is wrong, use < instead:

$ ./manage.py shell < myscript.py

You could also do:

$ ./manage.py shell
...
>>> execfile('myscript.py')

For python3 you would need to use

>>> exec(open('myscript.py').read())

Upvotes: 563

gitaarik
gitaarik

Reputation: 46360

If IPython is available (pip install ipython) then ./manage.py shell will automatically use it's shell and then you can use the magic command %run:

%run my_script.py

Upvotes: 17

raratiru
raratiru

Reputation: 9636

@AtulVarma provided a very useful comment under the not-working accepted answer:

echo 'import myscript' | python manage.py shell

Upvotes: 15

e-nouri
e-nouri

Reputation: 2626

I'm late for the party but I hope that my response will help someone: You can do this in your Python script:

import sys, os
sys.path.append('/path/to/your/django/app')
os.environ['DJANGO_SETTINGS_MODULE'] = 'settings'
from django.conf import settings

the rest of your stuff goes here ....

Upvotes: 74

runscript from django-extensions

python manage.py runscript scripty.py

A sample script.py to test it out:

from django.contrib.auth.models import User
print(User.objects.values())

Mentioned at: http://django-extensions.readthedocs.io/en/latest/command_extensions.html and documented at:

python manage.py runscript --help

There is a tutorial too.

Tested on Django 1.9.6, django-extensions 1.6.7.

Upvotes: 51

user5121699
user5121699

Reputation: 41

import os, sys, django
os.environ["DJANGO_SETTINGS_MODULE"] = "settings"
sys.path.insert(0, os.getcwd())

django.setup()

Upvotes: 4

Rahul Satal
Rahul Satal

Reputation: 2237

Try this if you are using virtual enviroment :-

python manage.py shell

for using those command you must be inside virtual enviroment. for this use :-

workon vir_env_name

for example :-

dc@dc-comp-4:~/mysite$ workon jango
(jango)dc@dc-comp-4:~/mysite$ python manage.py shell
Python 2.7.6 (default, Mar 22 2014, 22:59:56) 
[GCC 4.8.2] on linux2
Type "help", "copyright", "credits" or "license" for more information.
(InteractiveConsole)
>>> 

Note :- Here mysite is my website name and jango is my virtual enviroment name

Upvotes: 0

davidj411
davidj411

Reputation: 1015

django.setup() does not seem to work.

does not seem to be required either.

this alone worked.

import os, django, glob, sys, shelve
os.environ.setdefault("DJANGO_SETTINGS_MODULE", "myProject.settings")

Upvotes: 0

cgons
cgons

Reputation: 1351

For anyone using Django 1.7+, it seems that simply import the settings module is not enough.

After some digging, I found this Stack Overflow answer: https://stackoverflow.com/a/23241093

You now need to:

import os, django
os.environ.setdefault("DJANGO_SETTINGS_MODULE", "myapp.settings")
django.setup()
# now your code can go here...

Without doing the above, I was getting a django.core.exceptions.AppRegistryNoReady error.

My script file is in the same directory as my django project (ie. in the same folder as manage.py)

Upvotes: 132

tseboho
tseboho

Reputation: 87

Something I just found to be interesting is Django Scripts, which allows you to write scripts to be run with python manage.py runscript foobar. More detailed information on implementation and scructure can be found here, http://django-extensions.readthedocs.org/en/latest/index.html

Upvotes: 0

danodonovan
danodonovan

Reputation: 20373

Note, this method has been deprecated for more recent versions of django! (> 1.3)

An alternative answer, you could add this to the top of my_script.py

from django.core.management import setup_environ
import settings
setup_environ(settings)

and execute my_script.py just with python in the directory where you have settings.py but this is a bit hacky.

$ python my_script.py

Upvotes: 3

ziima
ziima

Reputation: 816

You can just run the script with the DJANGO_SETTINGS_MODULE environment variable set. That's all it takes to set up Django-shell environment.

This works in Django >= 1.4

Upvotes: 8

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