How to integrate Django with a legacy databaseÂś
While Django is best suited for developing new applications, itâs quite possible to integrate it into legacy databases. Django includes a couple of utilities to automate as much of this process as possible.
This document assumes you know the Django basics, as covered in the tutorial.
Once youâve got Django set up, youâll follow this general process to integrate with an existing database.
Give Django your database parametersÂś
Youâll need to tell Django what your database connection parameters are, and
what the name of the database is. Do that by editing the DATABASES
setting and assigning values to the following keys for the 'default'
connection:
Auto-generate the modelsÂś
Django comes with a utility called inspectdb that can create models
by introspecting an existing database. You can view the output by running this
command:
$ python manage.py inspectdb
Save this as a file by using standard Unix output redirection:
$ python manage.py inspectdb > models.py
This feature is meant as a shortcut, not as definitive model generation. See the
documentation of inspectdb for more information.
Once youâve cleaned up your models, name the file models.py and put it in
the Python package that holds your app. Then add the app to your
INSTALLED_APPS setting.
By default, inspectdb creates unmanaged models. That is,
managed = False in the modelâs Meta class tells Django not to manage
each tableâs creation, modification, and deletion:
class Person(models.Model):
id = models.IntegerField(primary_key=True)
first_name = models.CharField(max_length=70)
class Meta:
managed = False
db_table = 'CENSUS_PERSONS'
If you do want to allow Django to manage the tableâs lifecycle, youâll need to
change the managed option above to True
(or remove it because True is its default value).
Install the core Django tablesÂś
Next, run the migrate command to install any extra needed database
records such as admin permissions and content types:
$ python manage.py migrate
Test and tweakÂś
Those are the basic steps â from here youâll want to tweak the models Django generated until they work the way youâd like. Try accessing your data via the Django database API, and try editing objects via Djangoâs admin site, and edit the models file accordingly.