Wagtail provides the `wagtail start` command and project template to get you started with a new Wagtail project as quickly as possible, but it's easy to integrate Wagtail into an existing Django project too.
or add the package to your existing requirements file. This will also install the **Pillow** library as a dependency, which requires libjpeg and zlib - see Pillow's [platform-specific installation instructions](https://pillow.readthedocs.io/en/stable/installation.html#external-libraries).
Add a `WAGTAILADMIN_BASE_URL` - this is the base URL used by the Wagtail admin site. It is typically used for generating URLs to include in notification emails:
```python
WAGTAILADMIN_BASE_URL = 'http://example.com'
```
If this setting is not present, Wagtail will fall back to `request.site.root_url` or to the hostname of the request. Although this setting is not strictly required, it is highly recommended because leaving it out may produce unusable URLs in notification emails.
`wagtailadmin_urls` provides the [admin interface](https://guide.wagtail.org/en-latest/concepts/wagtail-interfaces/#admin-interface) for Wagtail. This is separate from the Django admin interface, `django.contrib.admin`. Wagtail-only projects host the Wagtail admin at `/admin/`, but if this clashes with your project's existing admin backend then you can use an alternative path, such as `/cms/`.
Wagtail serves your document files from the location, `wagtaildocs_urls`. You can omit this if you do not intend to use Wagtail's document management features.
Wagtail serves your pages from the `wagtail_urls` location. In the above example, Wagtail handles URLs under `/pages/`, leaving your Django project to handle the root URL and other paths as normal. If you want Wagtail to handle the entire URL space including the root URL, then place `path('', include(wagtail_urls))` at the end of the `urlpatterns` list. Placing `path('', include(wagtail_urls))` at the end of the `urlpatterns` ensures that it doesn't override more specific URL patterns.
Finally, you need to set up your project to serve user-uploaded files from `MEDIA_ROOT`. Your Django project may already have this in place, but if not, add the following snippet to `urls.py`:
Note that this only works in development mode (`DEBUG = True`); in production, you have to configure your web server to serve files from `MEDIA_ROOT`. For further details, see the Django documentation: [Serving files uploaded by a user during development](https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/stable/howto/static-files/#serving-files-uploaded-by-a-user-during-development) and [Deploying static files](django:howto/static-files/deployment).
Wagtail uses Django’s default user model by default. Superuser accounts receive automatic access to the Wagtail [admin interface](https://guide.wagtail.org/en-latest/concepts/wagtail-interfaces/#admin-interface); use `python manage.py createsuperuser` if you don't already have one. Wagtail supports custom user models with some restrictions. Wagtail uses an extension of Django's permissions framework, so your user model must at minimum inherit from `AbstractBaseUser` and `PermissionsMixin`.
You're now ready to add a new app to your Django project through `python manage.py startapp`. Remember to add the new app to `INSTALLED_APPS` in your settings.py file and set up page models, as described in [Your first Wagtail site](/getting_started/tutorial).
Note that there's one small difference when you're not using the Wagtail project template: Wagtail creates an initial homepage of the basic type `Page`, which doesn't include any content fields beyond the title. You probably want to replace this with your own `HomePage` class. If you do so, ensure that you set up a site record (under Settings / Sites in the Wagtail admin) to point to the new homepage.