This app sets up a postgres audit database via triggers. See https://wiki.postgresql.org/wiki/Audit_trigger_91plus and https://github.com/2ndQuadrant/audit-trigger/ for more information.
pip install postgres_audit_triggers
- Add the
postgres_audit_triggers
app toINSTALLED_APPS
before any apps that will be audited:
# settings.py
INSTALLED_APPS = {
'django.contrib.postgres',
'postgres_audit_triggers',
...
}
- Install the
postgres_audit_triggers
middleware:
# settings.py
MIDDLEWARE = [
...
'postgres_audit_triggers.middleware.AuditMiddleware',
]
This middleware will add metadata to the audit row. To send metadata, the client must send a
Postgres-Audit-Triggers-Meta
header in the request to your Django view. The data within
that header must be JSON serializable to a python dictionary.
-
Run migrations:
python manage.py migrate postgres_audit_triggers
-
Add
audit_trigger = True
to the Model Meta options of the models that will be audited:
# models.py
class MyAuditedModel(models.Model):
...
class Meta:
audit_trigger = True
...
- Make migrations:
python manage.py makemigrations
- Run migrations:
python manage.py migrate
Triggers introduce performance overhead. In certain cases, you may need to disable triggers while performing bulk operations. To turn off all triggers, a decorator is provided:
from postgres_audit_triggers.decorators import disable_triggers
@disable_triggers
def foo():
# auditing will not be triggered on any database operations performed here
Bar.objects.bulk_create(items)