Customizing Horizon¶
Themes¶
As of the Kilo release, styling for the OpenStack Dashboard can be altered
through the use of a theme. A theme is a directory containing a
_variables.scss
file to override the color codes used throughout the SCSS
and a _styles.scss
file with additional styles to load after dashboard
styles have loaded.
As of the Mitaka release, Horizon can be configured to run with multiple themes available at run time. It uses a browser cookie to allow users to toggle between the configured themes. By default, Horizon is configured with the two standard themes available: ‘default’ and ‘material’.
To configure or alter the available themes, set AVAILABLE_THEMES
in
local_settings.py
to a list of tuples, such that ('name', 'label', 'path')
name
- The key by which the theme value is stored within the cookie
label
- The label shown in the theme toggle under the User Menu
path
- The directory location for the theme. The path must be relative to the
openstack_dashboard
directory or an absolute path to an accessible location on the file system
To use a custom theme, set AVAILABLE_THEMES
in local_settings.py
to
a list of themes. If you wish to run in a mode similar to legacy Horizon,
set AVAILABLE_THEMES
with a single tuple, and the theme toggle will not
be available at all through the application to allow user configuration themes.
For example, a configuration with multiple themes:
AVAILABLE_THEMES = [
('default', 'Default', 'themes/default'),
('material', 'Material', 'themes/material'),
]
A configuration with a single theme:
AVAILABLE_THEMES = [
('default', 'Default', 'themes/default'),
]
Both the Dashboard custom variables and Bootstrap variables can be overridden.
For a full list of the Dashboard SCSS variables that can be changed, see the
variables file at openstack_dashboard/static/dashboard/scss/_variables.scss
.
In order to build a custom theme, both _variables.scss
and _styles.scss
are required and _variables.scss
must provide all the default Bootstrap
variables.
Inherit from an Existing Theme¶
Custom themes must implement all of the Bootstrap variables required by
Horizon in _variables.scss
and _styles.scss
. To make this easier, you
can inherit the variables needed in the default theme and only override those
that you need to customize. To inherit from the default theme, put this in your
theme’s _variables.scss
:
@import "/themes/default/variables";
- Once you have made your changes you must re-generate the static files with
tox -e manage -- collectstatic
.
By default, all of the themes configured by AVAILABLE_THEMES
setting are
collected by horizon during the collectstatic process. By default, the themes
are collected into the dynamic static/themes directory, but this location can
be customized via the local_settings.py
variable: THEME_COLLECTION_DIR
Once collected, any theme configured via AVAILABLE_THEMES
is available to
inherit from by importing its variables and styles from its collection
directory. The following is an example of inheriting from the material theme:
@import "/themes/material/variables";
@import "/themes/material/styles";
Bootswatch¶
Horizon packages the Bootswatch SCSS files for use with its material
theme.
Because of this, it is simple to use an existing Bootswatch theme as a base.
This is due to the fact that Bootswatch is loaded as a 3rd party static asset,
and therefore is automatically collected into the static directory in
/horizon/lib/. The following is an example of how to inherit from Bootswatch’s
darkly
theme:
@import "/horizon/lib/bootswatch/darkly/variables";
@import "/horizon/lib/bootswatch/darkly/bootswatch";
Organizing Your Theme Directory¶
A custom theme directory can be organized differently, depending on the
level of customization that is desired, as it can include static files
as well as Django templates. It can include special subdirectories that will
be used differently: static
, templates
and img
.
The static
Folder¶
If the theme folder contains a sub-folder called static
, then that sub
folder will be used as the static root of the theme. I.e., Horizon will
look in that sub-folder for the _variables.scss and _styles.scss files.
The contents of this folder will also be served up at /static/custom
.
The templates
Folder¶
If the theme folder contains a sub-folder templates
, then the path
to that sub-folder will be prepended to the TEMPLATE_DIRS
tuple to
allow for theme specific template customizations.
Using the templates
Folder¶
Any Django template that is used in Horizon can be overridden through a theme. This allows highly customized user experiences to exist within the scope of different themes. Any template that is overridden must adhere to the same directory structure that the extending template expects.
For example, if you wish to customize the sidebar, Horizon expects the template
to live at horizon/_sidebar.html
. You would need to duplicate that
directory structure under your templates directory, such that your override
would live at { theme_path }/templates/horizon/_sidebar.html
.
The img
Folder¶
If the static root of the theme folder contains an img
directory,
then all images that make use of the {% themable_asset %} templatetag
can be overridden.
These assets include logo.svg, splash-logo.svg and favicon.ico, however overriding the SVG/GIF assets used by Heat within the dashboard/img folder is not currently supported.
Customizing the Logo¶
Simple¶
If you wish to customize the logo that is used on the splash screen or in the
top navigation bar, then you need to create an img
directory under your
theme’s static root directory and place your custom logo.svg
or
logo-splash.svg
within it.
If you wish to override the logo.svg
using the previous method, and if the
image used is larger than the height of the top navigation, then the image will be
constrained to fit within the height of nav. You can customize the height of
the top navigation bar by customizing the SCSS variable: $navbar-height
.
If the image’s height is smaller than the navbar height, then the image
will retain its original resolution and size, and simply be centered
vertically in the available space.
Prior to the Kilo release the images files inside of Horizon needed to be replaced by your images files or the Horizon stylesheets needed to be altered to point to the location of your image.
Advanced¶
If you need to do more to customize the logo than simply replacing the existing
PNG, then you can also override the _brand.html through a custom theme. To use
this technique, simply add a templates/header/_brand.html
to the root of
your custom theme, and add markup directly to the file. For an example of how
to do this, see
openstack_dashboard/themes/material/templates/header/_brand.html
.
The splash / login panel can also be customized by adding
templates/auth/_splash.html
. See
openstack_dashboard/themes/material/templates/auth/_splash.html
for an
example.
Branding Horizon¶
As of the Liberty release, Horizon has begun to conform more strictly to Bootstrap standards in an effort to embrace more responsive web design as well as alleviate the future need to re-brand new functionality for every release.
Supported Components¶
The following components, organized by release, are the only ones that make full use of the Bootstrap theme architecture.
8.0.0 (Liberty)¶
9.0.0 (Mitaka)¶
Step 1¶
The first step needed to create a custom branded theme for Horizon is to create a custom Bootstrap theme. There are several tools to aid in this. Some of the more useful ones include:
Note
Bootstrap uses LESS by default, but we use SCSS. All of the above
tools will provide the variables.less
file, which will need to be
converted to _variables.scss
Charts¶
Pie Charts¶
Pie Charts are SVG elements. SVG elements allow CSS customizations for only a basic element’s look and feel (i.e. colors, size).
Since there is no native element in Bootstrap specifically for pie charts,
the look and feel of the charts are inheriting from other elements of the
theme. Please see _pie_charts.scss
for specifics.
Bar Charts¶
Bar Charts can be either a Bootstrap Progress Bar or an SVG element. Either implementation will use the Bootstrap Progress Bar styles.
The SVG implementation will not make use of the customized Progress Bar height though, so it is recommended that Bootstrap Progress Bars are used whenever possible.
Please see _bar_charts.scss
for specifics on what can be customized for
SVGs. See the Progress bars section of your variables file for specific
variables to customize.
Tables¶
The standard Django tables now make use of the native Bootstrap table markup. See Tables section of your variables file for variables to customize.
The standard Bootstrap tables will be borderless by default. If you wish to
add a border, like the default
theme, see
openstack_dashboard/themes/default/horizon/components/_tables.scss
Login¶
Login Splash Page¶
The login splash page now uses a standard Bootstrap panel in its implementation. See the Panels section in your variables file to variables to easily customize.
Modal Login¶
The modal login experience, as used when switching regions, uses a standard Bootstrap dialog. See the Modals section of your variables file for specific variables to customize.
Tabs¶
The standard tabs make use of the native Bootstrap tab markup.
See Tabs section of your variables file for variables to customize.
Alerts¶
Alerts use the basic Bootstrap brand colors. See Colors section of your variables file for specifics.
Checkboxes¶
Horizon uses icon fonts to represent checkboxes. In order to customize this, you simply need to override the standard scss. For an example of this, see themes/material/static/horizon/components/_checkboxes.scss
Bootswatch and Material Design¶
Bootswatch is a collection of free themes for Bootstrap and is now available for use in Horizon.
In order to showcase what can be done to enhance an existing Bootstrap theme,
Horizon now includes a secondary theme, roughly based on Google’s Material
Design called material
. Bootswatch’s Paper is a simple Bootstrap
implementation of Material Design and is used by material
.
Bootswatch provides a number of other themes, that once Horizon is fully theme compliant, will allow easy toggling and customizations for darker or accessibility driven experiences.
Development Tips¶
When developing a new theme for Horizon, it is required that the dynamically generated static directory be cleared after each change and the server restarted. This is not always ideal. If you wish to develop and not have to restart the server each time, it is recommended that you configure your development environment to not run in OFFLINE mode. Simply verify the following settings in your local_settings.py:
COMPRESS_OFFLINE = False
COMPRESS_ENABLED = False
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
openstack_dashboard/local/local_settings.py
.
Changing the Brand Link¶
The logo also acts as a hyperlink. The default behavior is to redirect to
horizon:user_home
. By adding the attribute SITE_BRANDING_LINK
with
the desired url target e.g., http://sample-company.com
in
local_settings.py
, the target of the hyperlink can be changed.
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.
Default Horizon panels are loaded based upon files within the openstack_dashboard/enabled/ folder. These files are loaded based upon the filename order, with space left for more files to be added. There are some example files available within this folder, with the .example suffix added. Developers and deployers should strive to use this method of customization as much as possible, and support for this is given preference over more exotic methods such as monkey patching and overrides files.
Horizon customization module (overrides)¶
Horizon has a global overrides mechanism available to perform customizations that are not yet customizable via configuration settings. This file can perform monkey patching and other forms of customization which are not possible via the enabled folder’s customization method.
This method of customization is meant to be available for deployers of Horizon, and use of this should be avoided by Horizon plugins at all cost. Plugins needing this level of monkey patching and flexibility should instead look for changing their __init__.py file and performing customizations through other means.
To specify the python module containing your modifications, add the key
customization_module
to your HORIZON_CONFIG
dictionary in
local_settings.py
. 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")
Or just remove it entirely:
projects_dashboard.unregister(instances_panel.__class__)
You cannot unregister a default_panel
. If you wish to remove a
default_panel
, you need to make a different panel in the dashboard as a
default_panel
and then unregister the former. For example, if you wished
to remove the overview_panel
from the Project
dashboard, you could do
the following:
project = horizon.get_dashboard('project')
project.default_panel = "instances"
overview = project.get_panel('overview')
project.unregister(overview.__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
You could also customize what columns are displayed in an existing
table, by redefining the columns
attribute of its Meta
class. This can be achieved in 3 steps:
- Extend the table that you wish to modify
- Redefine the
columns
attribute under theMeta
class for this new table - Modify the
table_class
attribute for the related view so that it points to the new table
For example, if you wished to remove the Admin State column from the
NetworksTable
,
you could do the following:
from openstack_dashboard.dashboards.project.networks import tables
from openstack_dashboard.dashboards.project.networks import views
class MyNetworksTable(tables.NetworksTable):
class Meta(tables.NetworksTable.Meta):
columns = ('name', 'subnets', 'shared', 'status')
views.IndexView.table_class = MyNetworksTable
If you want to add a column you can override the parent table in a
similar way, add the new column definition and then use the Meta
columns
attribute to control the column order as needed.
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
Customize the project and user table columns¶
Keystone V3 has a place to store extra information regarding project and user.
Using the override mechanism described in Horizon customization module (overrides),
Horizon is able to show these extra information as a custom column.
For example, if a user in Keystone has an attribute phone_num
, you could
define new column:
from django.utils.translation import ugettext_lazy as _
from horizon import forms
from horizon import tables
from openstack_dashboard.dashboards.identity.users import tables as user_tables
from openstack_dashboard.dashboards.identity.users import views
class MyUsersTable(user_tables.UsersTable):
phone_num = tables.Column('phone_num',
verbose_name=_('Phone Number'),
form_field=forms.CharField(),)
class Meta(user_tables.UsersTable.Meta):
columns = ('name', 'description', 'phone_num')
views.IndexView.table_class = MyUsersTable
Customize Angular dashboards¶
In Angular, you may write a plugin to extend certain features. Two components
in the Horizon framework that make this possible are the extensibility service and
the resource type registry service. The extensibleService
allows certain Horizon
elements to be extended dynamically, including add, remove, and replace. The
resourceTypeRegistry
service provides methods to set and get information
pertaining to a resource type object. We use Heat type names like OS::Glance::Image
as our reference name.
Some information you may place in the registry include:
- API to fetch data from
- Property names
- Actions (e.g. “Create Volume”)
- URL paths to detail view or detail drawer
- Property information like labels or formatting for property values
These properties in the registry use the extensibility service (as of Newton release):
- globalActions
- batchActions
- itemActions
- detailViews
- tableColumns
- filterFacets
Using the information from the registry, we can build out our dashboard panels.
Panels use the high-level directive hzResourceTable
that replaces common
templates so we do not need to write boilerplate HTML and controller code.
It gives developers a quick way to build a new table or change an existing table.
Note
You may still choose to use the HTML template for complete control of form
and functionality. For example, you may want to create a custom footer.
You may also use the hzDynamicTable
directive (what hzResourceTable
uses under the hood) directly. However, neither of these is extensible.
You would need to override the panel completely.
This is a sample module file to demonstrate how to make some customizations to the Images Panel.:
(function() {
'use strict';
angular
.module('horizon.app.core.images')
.run(customizeImagePanel);
customizeImagePanel.$inject = [
'horizon.framework.conf.resource-type-registry.service',
'horizon.app.core.images.basePath',
'horizon.app.core.images.resourceType',
'horizon.app.core.images.actions.surprise.service'
];
function customizeImagePanel(registry, basePath, imageResourceType, surpriseService) {
// get registry for ``OS::Glance::Image``
registry = registry.getResourceType(imageResourceType);
// replace existing Size column to make the font color red
var column = {
id: 'size',
priority: 2,
template: '<a style="color:red;">{$ item.size | bytes $}</a>'
};
registry.tableColumns.replace('size', column);
// add a new detail view
registry.detailsViews
.append({
id: 'anotherDetailView',
name: gettext('Another Detail View'),
template: basePath + 'demo/detail.html'
});
// set a different summary drawer template
registry.setSummaryTemplateUrl(basePath + 'demo/drawer.html');
// add a new global action
registry.globalActions
.append({
id: 'surpriseAction',
service: surpriseService,
template: {
text: gettext('Surprise')
}
});
}
})();
Additionally, you should have content defined in detail.html
and drawer.html
,
as well as define the surpriseService
which is based off the actions
directive and needs allowed and perform methods defined.
Icons¶
Horizon uses font icons from Font Awesome. Please see Font Awesome for instructions on how to use icons in the code.
To add icon to Table Action, use icon property. Example:
- class CreateSnapshot(tables.LinkAction):
- name = “snapshot” verbose_name = _(“Create Snapshot”) icon = “camera”
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 openstack_dashboard/templates/base.html
defines multiple blocks that
can be overridden.
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/scss/my_custom_dashboard.scss' type='text/scss' 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/scss/my_custom_dashboard.scss
.
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 openstack_dashboard/
templates/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.
Additionally, some marketing and analytics scripts require you to place them
within the page’s <head> tag. To do this, place them within the
horizon/_custom_head_js.html
file. Similar to the _scripts.html
file
mentioned above, you may link to an existing file:
<script src='{{ STATIC_URL }}/my_custom_dashboard/js/my_marketing_js.js' type='text/javascript' charset='utf-8'></script>
or you can paste your script directly in the file, being sure to use appropriate tags:
<script type="text/javascript">
//some javascript
</script>
Customizing Meta Attributes¶
To add custom metadata attributes to your project’s base template, include
them in the horizon/_custom_meta.html
file. The contents of this file will be
inserted into the page’s <head> just after the default Horizon meta tags.