Websites generally need to serve additional files such as images, JavaScript, or CSS. In Django, we refer to these files as “static files”. Django provides django.contrib.staticfiles
to help you manage them.
This page describes how you can serve these static files.
django.contrib.staticfiles
is included in your INSTALLED_APPS
. In your settings file, define STATIC_URL
, for example:
STATIC_URL = '/static/'
In your templates, use the static
template tag to build the URL for the given relative path using the configured STATICFILES_STORAGE
.
{% load static %} <img src="{% static 'my_app/example.jpg' %}" alt="My image">
static
in your app. For example my_app/static/my_app/example.jpg
. Serving the files
In addition to these configuration steps, you’ll also need to actually serve the static files.
During development, if you use django.contrib.staticfiles
, this will be done automatically by runserver
when DEBUG
is set to True
(see django.contrib.staticfiles.views.serve()
).
This method is grossly inefficient and probably insecure, so it is unsuitable for production.
See Deploying static files for proper strategies to serve static files in production environments.
Your project will probably also have static assets that aren’t tied to a particular app. In addition to using a static/
directory inside your apps, you can define a list of directories (STATICFILES_DIRS
) in your settings file where Django will also look for static files. For example:
STATICFILES_DIRS = [ BASE_DIR / "static", '/var/www/static/', ]
See the documentation for the STATICFILES_FINDERS
setting for details on how staticfiles
finds your files.
Static file namespacing
Now we might be able to get away with putting our static files directly in my_app/static/
(rather than creating another my_app
subdirectory), but it would actually be a bad idea. Django will use the first static file it finds whose name matches, and if you had a static file with the same name in a different application, Django would be unable to distinguish between them. We need to be able to point Django at the right one, and the best way to ensure this is by namespacing them. That is, by putting those static files inside another directory named for the application itself.
You can namespace static assets in STATICFILES_DIRS
by specifying prefixes.
If you use django.contrib.staticfiles
as explained above, runserver
will do this automatically when DEBUG
is set to True
. If you don’t have django.contrib.staticfiles
in INSTALLED_APPS
, you can still manually serve static files using the django.views.static.serve()
view.
This is not suitable for production use! For some common deployment strategies, see Deploying static files.
For example, if your STATIC_URL
is defined as /static/
, you can do this by adding the following snippet to your urls.py:
from django.conf import settings from django.conf.urls.static import static urlpatterns = [ # ... the rest of your URLconf goes here ... ] + static(settings.STATIC_URL, document_root=settings.STATIC_ROOT)
Note
This helper function works only in debug mode and only if the given prefix is local (e.g. /static/
) and not a URL (e.g. http://static.example.com/
).
Also this helper function only serves the actual STATIC_ROOT
folder; it doesn’t perform static files discovery like django.contrib.staticfiles
.
During development, you can serve user-uploaded media files from MEDIA_ROOT
using the django.views.static.serve()
view.
This is not suitable for production use! For some common deployment strategies, see Deploying static files.
For example, if your MEDIA_URL
is defined as /media/
, you can do this by adding the following snippet to your ROOT_URLCONF
:
from django.conf import settings from django.conf.urls.static import static urlpatterns = [ # ... the rest of your URLconf goes here ... ] + static(settings.MEDIA_URL, document_root=settings.MEDIA_ROOT)
Note
This helper function works only in debug mode and only if the given prefix is local (e.g. /media/
) and not a URL (e.g. http://media.example.com/
).
When running tests that use actual HTTP requests instead of the built-in testing client (i.e. when using the built-in LiveServerTestCase
) the static assets need to be served along the rest of the content so the test environment reproduces the real one as faithfully as possible, but LiveServerTestCase
has only very basic static file-serving functionality: It doesn’t know about the finders feature of the staticfiles
application and assumes the static content has already been collected under STATIC_ROOT
.
Because of this, staticfiles
ships its own django.contrib.staticfiles.testing.StaticLiveServerTestCase
, a subclass of the built-in one that has the ability to transparently serve all the assets during execution of these tests in a way very similar to what we get at development time with DEBUG = True
, i.e. without having to collect them using collectstatic
first.
django.contrib.staticfiles
provides a convenience management command for gathering static files in a single directory so you can serve them easily.
Set the STATIC_ROOT
setting to the directory from which you’d like to serve these files, for example:
STATIC_ROOT = "/var/www/example.com/static/"
Run the collectstatic
management command:
$ python manage.py collectstatic
This will copy all files from your static folders into the STATIC_ROOT
directory.
This document has covered the basics and some common usage patterns. For complete details on all the settings, commands, template tags, and other pieces included in django.contrib.staticfiles
, see the staticfiles reference.
© Django Software Foundation and individual contributors
Licensed under the BSD License.
https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/3.2/howto/static-files/index/