The menu system isn’t monolithic. Rather, it is composed of numerous active parts, many of which can operate independently of each other.
What they operate on is a list of menu nodes, that gets passed around the menu system, until it emerges at the other end.
The main active parts of the menu system are menu generators and modifiers.
Some of these parts are supplied with the menus application. Some come from other applications (from the cms application in django CMS, for example, or some other application entirely).
All these active parts need to be registered within the menu system.
Then, when the time comes to build a menu, the system will ask all the registered menu generators and modifiers to get to work on it.
Menu generators and modifiers are classes.
To add nodes to a menu a generator is required.
There is one in cms for example, which examines the Pages in the database and adds them as nodes.
These classses are subclasses of menus.base.Menu. The one in cms is cms.menu.CMSMenu.
In order to use a generator, its get_nodes() method must be called.
A modifier examines the nodes that have been assembled, and modifies them according to its requirements (adding or removing them, or manipulating their attributes, as it sees fit).
An important one in cms (cms.menu.SoftRootCutter) removes the nodes that are no longer required when a soft root is encountered.
These classes are subclasses of menus.base.Modifier. Examples are cms.menu.NavExtender and cms.menu.SoftRootCutter.
In order to use a modifier, its modify() method must be called.
Note that each Modifier’s modify() method can be called twice, before and after the menu has been trimmed.
For example when using the {% show_menu %} templatetag, it’s called:
This corresponds to the state of the nodes list before and after menus.templatetags.menu_tags.cut_levels(), which removes nodes from the menu according to the arguments provided by the templatetag.
This is because some modification might be required on all nodes, and some might only be required on the subset of nodes left after cutting.
Nodes are assembled in a tree. Each node is an instance of the menus.base.NavigationNode class.
A NavigationNode has attributes such as URL, title, parent and children - as one would expect in a navigation tree.
Warning
You can’t assume that a menus.base.NavigationNode represents a django CMS Page. Firstly, some nodes may represent objects from other applications. Secondly, you can’t expect to be able to access Page objects via NavigationNodes.
Let’s look at an example using the {% show_menu %} templatetag. It will be different for other templatetags, and your applications might have their own menu classes. But this should help explain what’s going on and what the menu system is doing.
One thing to understand is that the system passes around a list of nodes, doing various things to it.
Many of the methods below pass this list of nodes to the ones it calls, and return them to the ones that they were in turn called by.
Don’t forget that show_menu recurses - so it will do all of the below for each level in the menu.
checks the cache to see if it should return cached nodes
menus.menu_pool.MenuPool._mark_selected()
loops over each node, comparing its URL with the request.path, and marks the best match as selected
cms.menu.NavExtender
cms.menu.SoftRootCutter removes all nodes below the appropriate soft root
menus.modifiers.Marker loops over all nodes; finds selected, marks its ancestors, siblings and children
menus.modifiers.AuthVisibility removes nodes that require authorisation to see
we’re now back in menus.templatetags.menu_tags.ShowMenu.get_context() again
if we have been provided a root_id, get rid of any nodes other than its descendants
menus.templatetags.menu_tags.cut_levels() removes nodes from the menu according to the arguments provided by the templatetag
cms.menu.NavExtender
cms.menu.SoftRootCutter
menus.modifiers.Marker
menus.modifiers.AuthVisibility
return the nodes to the context in the variable children
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