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326 lines
11 KiB
ReStructuredText
326 lines
11 KiB
ReStructuredText
=========================
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How to add new Task types
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=========================
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The Workflow system allows users to create tasks, which represent stages of moderation.
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Wagtail provides one built in task type: ``GroupApprovalTask``, which allows any user in specific groups to approve or reject moderation.
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However, it is possible to add your own task types in code. Instances of your custom task can then be created in the ``Tasks`` section of the Wagtail Admin.
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Task models
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~~~~~~~~~~~
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All custom tasks must be models inheriting from ``wagtailcore.Task``. In this set of examples, we'll set up a task which can be approved by only one specific user.
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.. code-block:: python
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# <project>/models.py
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from wagtail.core.models import Task
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class UserApprovalTask(Task):
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pass
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Subclassed Tasks follow the same approach as Pages: they are concrete models, with the specific subclass instance accessible by calling ``Task.specific()``.
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You can now add any custom fields. To make these editable in the admin, add the names of the fields into the ``admin_form_fields`` attribute:
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For example:
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.. code-block:: python
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# <project>/models.py
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from django.conf import settings
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from django.db import models
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from wagtail.core.models import Task
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class UserApprovalTask(Task):
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user = models.ForeignKey(settings.AUTH_USER_MODEL, on_delete=models.SET_NULL, null=True, blank=False)
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admin_form_fields = Task.admin_form_fields + ['user']
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Any fields that shouldn't be edited after task creation - for example, anything that would fundamentally change the meaning of the task in any history logs -
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can be added to ``admin_form_readonly_on_edit_fields``. For example:
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.. code-block:: python
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# <project>/models.py
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from django.conf import settings
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from django.db import models
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from wagtail.core.models import Task
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class UserApprovalTask(Task):
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user = models.ForeignKey(settings.AUTH_USER_MODEL, on_delete=models.SET_NULL, null=True, blank=False)
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admin_form_fields = Task.admin_form_fields + ['user']
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# prevent editing of ``user`` after the task is created
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# by default, this attribute contains the 'name' field to prevent tasks from being renamed
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admin_form_readonly_on_edit_fields = Task.admin_form_readonly_on_edit_fields + ['user']
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Wagtail will choose a default form widget to use based on the field type. But you can override the form widget using the ``admin_form_widgets`` attribute:
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.. code-block:: python
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# <project>/models.py
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from django.conf import settings
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from django.db import models
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from wagtail.core.models import Task
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from .widgets import CustomUserChooserWidget
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class UserApprovalTask(Task):
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user = models.ForeignKey(settings.AUTH_USER_MODEL, on_delete=models.SET_NULL, null=True, blank=False)
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admin_form_fields = Task.admin_form_fields + ['user']
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admin_form_widgets = {
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'user': CustomUserChooserWidget,
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}
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Custom TaskState models
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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You might also need to store custom state information for the task: for example, a rating left by an approving user.
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Normally, this is done on an instance of ``TaskState``, which is created when a page starts the task. However, this can
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also be subclassed equivalently to ``Task``:
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.. code-block:: python
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# <project>/models.py
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from wagtail.core.models import TaskState
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class UserApprovalTaskState(TaskState):
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pass
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Your custom task must then be instructed to generate an instance of your custom task state on start instead of a plain ``TaskState`` instance:
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.. code-block:: python
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# <project>/models.py
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from django.conf import settings
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from django.db import models
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from wagtail.core.models import Task, TaskState
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class UserApprovalTaskState(TaskState):
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pass
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class UserApprovalTask(Task):
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user = models.ForeignKey(settings.AUTH_USER_MODEL, on_delete=models.SET_NULL, null=True, blank=False)
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admin_form_fields = Task.admin_form_fields + ['user']
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task_state_class = UserApprovalTaskState
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Customising behaviour
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Both ``Task`` and ``TaskState`` have a number of methods which can be overridden to implement custom behaviour. Here are some of the most useful:
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``Task.user_can_access_editor(page, user)``, ``Task.user_can_lock(page, user)``, ``Task.user_can_unlock(page, user)``:
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These methods determine if users usually without permissions can access the editor, lock, or unlock the page, by returning True or False.
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Note that returning ``False`` will not prevent users who would normally be able to perform those actions. For example, for our ``UserApprovalTask``:
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.. code-block:: python
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def user_can_access_editor(self, page, user):
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return user == self.user
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``Task.page_locked_for_user(page, user)``:
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This returns ``True`` if the page should be locked and uneditable by the user. It is
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used by `GroupApprovalTask` to lock the page to any users not in the approval group.
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.. code-block:: python
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def page_locked_for_user(self, page, user):
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return user != self.user
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``Task.get_actions(page, user)``:
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This returns a list of ``(action_name, action_verbose_name, action_requires_additional_data_from_modal)`` tuples, corresponding to the actions available for the task in the edit view menu.
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``action_requires_additional_data_from_modal`` should be a boolean, returning ``True`` if choosing the action should open a modal for
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additional data input - for example, entering a comment.
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For example:
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.. code-block:: python
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def get_actions(self, page, user):
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if user == self.user:
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return [
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('approve', "Approve", False),
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('reject', "Reject", False),
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('cancel', "Cancel", False),
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]
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else:
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return []
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``Task.get_form_for_action(action)``:
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Returns a form to be used for additional data input for the given action modal. By default,
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returns ``TaskStateCommentForm``, with a single comment field. The form data returned in
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``form.cleaned_data`` must be fully serializable as JSON.
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``Task.get_template_for_action(action)``:
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Returns the name of a custom template to be used in rendering the data entry modal for that action.
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``Task.on_action(task_state, user, action_name, **kwargs)``:
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This performs the actions specified in ``Task.get_actions(page, user)``: it is passed an action name, eg ``approve``, and the relevant task state. By default,
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it calls ``approve`` and ``reject`` methods on the task state when the corresponding action names are passed through. Any additional data entered in a modal
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(see ``get_form_for_action`` and ``get_actions``) is supplied as kwargs.
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For example, let's say we wanted to add an additional option: cancelling the entire workflow:
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.. code-block:: python
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def on_action(self, task_state, user, action_name):
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if action_name == 'cancel':
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return task_state.workflow_state.cancel(user=user)
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else:
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return super().on_action(task_state, user, workflow_state)
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``Task.get_task_states_user_can_moderate(user, **kwargs)``:
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This returns a QuerySet of ``TaskStates`` (or subclasses) the given user can moderate - this is currently used to select pages to display on the user's dashboard.
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For example:
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.. code-block:: python
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def get_task_states_user_can_moderate(self, user, **kwargs):
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if user == self.user:
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# get all task states linked to the (base class of) current task
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return TaskState.objects.filter(status=TaskState.STATUS_IN_PROGRESS, task=self.task_ptr)
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else:
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return TaskState.objects.none()
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``Task.get_description()```
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A class method that returns the human-readable description for the task.
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For example:
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.. code-block:: python
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@classmethod
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def get_description(cls):
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return _("Members of the chosen Wagtail Groups can approve this task")
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Adding notifications
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Wagtail's notifications are sent by ``wagtail.admin.mail.Notifier`` subclasses: callables intended to be connected to a signal.
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By default, email notifications are sent upon workflow submission, approval and rejection, and upon submission to a group approval task.
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As an example, we'll add email notifications for when our new task is started.
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.. code-block:: python
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# <project>/mail.py
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from wagtail.admin.mail import EmailNotifier
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from wagtail.core.models import TaskState
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from .models import UserApprovalTaskState
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class BaseUserApprovalTaskStateEmailNotifier(EmailNotifier):
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"""A base EmailNotifier to send updates for UserApprovalTask events"""
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def __init__(self):
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# Allow UserApprovalTaskState and TaskState to send notifications
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super().__init__((UserApprovalTaskState, TaskState))
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def can_handle(self, instance, **kwargs):
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if super().can_handle(instance, **kwargs) and isinstance(instance.task.specific, UserApprovalTask):
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# Don't send notifications if a Task has been cancelled and then resumed - ie page was updated to a new revision
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return not TaskState.objects.filter(workflow_state=instance.workflow_state, task=instance.task, status=TaskState.STATUS_CANCELLED).exists()
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return False
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def get_context(self, task_state, **kwargs):
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context = super().get_context(task_state, **kwargs)
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context['page'] = task_state.workflow_state.page
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context['task'] = task_state.task.specific
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return context
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def get_recipient_users(self, task_state, **kwargs):
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# Send emails to the user assigned to the task
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approving_user = task_state.task.specific.user
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recipients = {approving_user}
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return recipients
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def get_template_base_prefix(self, instance, **kwargs):
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# Get the template base prefix for TaskState, so use the ``wagtailadmin/notifications/task_state_`` set of notification templates
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return super().get_template_base_prefix(self, instance.task_state_ptr, **kwargs)
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class UserApprovalTaskStateSubmissionEmailNotifier(BaseUserApprovalTaskStateEmailNotifier):
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"""An EmailNotifier to send updates for UserApprovalTask submission events"""
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notification = 'submitted'
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Similarly, you could define notifier subclasses for approval and rejection notifications.
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Next, you need to instantiate the notifier, and connect it to the ``task_submitted`` signal.
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.. code-block:: python
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# <project>/signal_handlers.py
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from wagtail.core.signals import task_submitted
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from .mail import UserApprovalTaskStateSubmissionEmailNotifier
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task_submission_email_notifier = UserApprovalTaskStateSubmissionEmailNotifier()
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def register_signal_handlers():
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task_submitted.connect(user_approval_task_submission_email_notifier, dispatch_uid='user_approval_task_submitted_email_notification')
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``register_signal_handlers()`` should then be run on loading the app: for example, by adding it to the ``ready()`` method in your ``AppConfig``
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(and making sure this config is set as ``default_app_config`` in ``<project>/__init__.py``).
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.. code-block:: python
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# <project>/apps.py
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from django.apps import AppConfig
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class MyAppConfig(AppConfig):
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name = 'myappname'
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label = 'myapplabel'
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verbose_name = 'My verbose app name'
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def ready(self):
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from .signal_handlers import register_signal_handlers
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register_signal_handlers()
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