Fixes: bug #1210123 Change-Id: I48afb1a5559d630ba307c9074b9de7db0ef8d496
7.1 KiB
Customizing Horizon
Changing the Site Title
The OpenStack Dashboard Site Title branding (i.e.
"OpenStack Dashboard") can be overwritten by adding the
attribute SITE_BRANDING
to local_settings.py
with the value being the desired name.
The file local_settings.py
can be found at the Horizon
directory path of
horizon/openstack-dashboard/local/local_settings.py
.
Changing the Logo
The OpenStack Logo is pulled in through style.css
:
#splash .modal {
background: #fff url(../images/logo.png) no-repeat center 35px;
h1.brand a {
background: url(../images/logo.png) top left no-repeat;
To override the OpenStack Logo image, replace the image at the
directory path
horizon/openstack-dashboard/dashboard/static/dashboard/images/logo.png
.
The dimensions should be
width: 108px, height: 121px
.
Modifying Existing Dashboards and Panels
If you wish to alter dashboards or panels which are not part of your codebase, you can specify a custom python module which will be loaded after the entire Horizon site has been initialized, but prior to the URLconf construction. This allows for common site-customization requirements such as:
- Registering or unregistering panels from an existing dashboard.
- Changing the names of dashboards and panels.
- Re-ordering panels within a dashboard or panel group.
To specify the python module containing your modifications, add the
key customization_module
to your
settings.HORIZON_CONFIG
dictionary. The value should be a
string containing the path to your module in dotted python path
notation. Example:
HORIZON_CONFIG = {
"customization_module": "my_project.overrides"
}
You can do essentially anything you like in the customization module. For example, you could change the name of a panel:
from django.utils.translation import ugettext_lazy as _
import horizon
# Rename "User Settings" to "User Options"
settings = horizon.get_dashboard("settings")
user_panel = settings.get_panel("user")
user_panel.name = _("User Options")
Or get the instances panel:
projects_dashboard = horizon.get_dashboard("project")
instances_panel = projects_dashboard.get_panel("instances")
And limit access to users with the Keystone Admin role:
permissions = list(getattr(instances_panel, 'permissions', []))
permissions.append('openstack.roles.admin')
instances_panel.permissions = tuple(permissions)
Or just remove it entirely:
projects_dashboard.unregister(instances_panel.__class__)
You can also override existing methods with your own versions:
# Disable Floating IPs
from openstack_dashboard.dashboards.project.access_and_security import tabs
from openstack_dashboard.dashboards.project.instances import tables
NO = lambda *x: False
tabs.FloatingIPsTab.allowed = NO
tables.AssociateIP.allowed = NO
tables.SimpleAssociateIP.allowed = NO
tables.SimpleDisassociateIP.allowed = NO
Note
my_project.overrides
needs to be importable by the
python process running Horizon. If your module is not installed as a
system-wide python package, you can either make it installable (e.g.,
with a setup.py) or you can adjust the python path used by your WSGI
server to include its location.
Probably the easiest way is to add a python-path
argument to the WSGIDaemonProcess
line in Apache's Horizon
config.
Assuming your my_project
module lives in
/opt/python/my_project
, you'd make it look like the
following:
WSGIDaemonProcess [... existing options ...] python-path=/opt/python
Button Icons
Horizon provides hooks for customizing the look and feel of each class of button on the site. The following classes are used to identify each type of button:
- Generic Classes
-
- btn-search
- btn-delete
- btn-upload
- btn-download
- btn-create
- btn-edit
- btn-list
- btn-copy
- btn-camera
- btn-stats
- btn-enable
- btn-disable
- Floating IP-specific Classes
-
- btn-allocate
- btn-release
- btn-associate
- btn-disassociate
- Instance-specific Classes
-
- btn-launch
- btn-terminate
- btn-reboot
- btn-pause
- btn-suspend
- btn-console
- btn-log
- Volume-specific classes
-
- btn-detach
Additionally, the site-wide default button classes can be configured
by setting ACTION_CSS_CLASSES
to a tuple of the classes you
wish to appear on all action buttons in your
local_settings.py
file.
Custom Stylesheets
It is possible to define custom stylesheets for your dashboards.
Horizon's base template horizon/templates/horizon/base.html
defines multiple blocks that can be overriden.
To define custom css files that apply only to a specific dashboard,
create a base template in your dashboard's templates folder, which
extends Horizon's base template e.g.
openstack_dashboard/dashboards/my_custom_dashboard/ templates/my_custom_dashboard/base.html
.
In this template, redefine block css
. (Don't forget to
include _stylesheets.html
which includes all Horizon's
default stylesheets.):
{% extends 'base.html' %}
{% block css %}
{% include "_stylesheets.html" %}
{% load compress %}
{% compress css %}
<link href='{{ STATIC_URL }}my_custom_dashboard/less/my_custom_dashboard.less' type='text/less' media='screen' rel='stylesheet' />
{% endcompress %}
{% endblock %}
The custom stylesheets then reside in the dashboard's own
static
folder
openstack_dashboard/dashboards/my_custom_dashboard/static/ my_custom_dashboard/less/my_custom_dashboard.less
.
All dashboard's templates have to inherit from dashboard's base.html:
{% extends 'my_custom_dashboard/base.html' %}
...
Custom Javascript
Similarly to adding custom styling (see above), it is possible to include custom javascript files.
All Horizon's javascript files are listed in the
horizon/_scripts.html
partial template, which is included
in Horizon's base template in block js
.
To add custom javascript files, create an _scripts.html
partial template in your dashboard
openstack_dashboard/dashboards/my_custom_dashboard/ templates/my_custom_dashboard/_scripts.html
which extends horizon/_scripts.html.
. In this template
override the block custom_js_files
including your custom
javascript files:
{% extends 'horizon/_scripts.html' %}
{% block custom_js_files %}
<script src='{{ STATIC_URL }}my_custom_dashboard/js/my_custom_js.js' type='text/javascript' charset='utf-8'></script>
{% endblock %}
In your dashboard's own base template
openstack_dashboard/dashboards/ my_custom_dashboard/templates/my_custom_dashboard/base.html
override block js
with inclusion of dashboard's own
_scripts.html
:
{% block js %}
{% include "my_custom_dashboard/_scripts.html" %}
{% endblock %}
The result is a single compressed js file consisting both Horizon and dashboard's custom scripts.