[Fixed]-How to create a django ViewFlow process programmatically

12πŸ‘

βœ…

There are two additional Start build-in Tasks available for Flows

StartFunction – starts flow when the function called somewhere:

@flow_start_func
def create_flow(activation, **kwargs):
    activation.prepare()
    activation.done()
    return activation

class FunctionFlow(Flow):
    start = flow.StartFunction(create_flow) \
        .Next(this.end)

# somewhere in the code
FunctionFlow.start.run(**some_kwargs)

StartSignal – starts flow on django signal receive:

class SignalFlow(Flow):
    start = flow.StartSignal(some_signal, create_flow) \      
        .Next(this.end)

You can check the usage for them, and rest of build-in task in this viewflow test suite.

For manually process the task state, first you should get the task from the database, activate it, and call any activation method.

task  = MyFlow.task_cls.objects.get(...)
activation = task.activate()
if  activation.undo.can_proceed():
    activation.undo()

Any activation transition have .can_proceed() method, helps you to check, is the task in the state that allows the transition.

πŸ‘€kmmbvnr

1πŸ‘

I needed to be able to manually or programmatically start a flow instance. The model I ended up with, based on the above reference to StartFunction looks like this:

class MyRunFlow(flow.Flow):
    process_class = Run

    start = flow.Start(ProcessCreate, fields=['schedule']). \
        Permission(auto_create=True). \
        Next(this.wait_data_collect_start)
    start2 = flow.StartFunction(process_create). \
        Next(this.wait_data_collect_start)

Note the important point is that process_create has the Process object and this code must programmatically set up the same fields that the manual form submission does via the fields specification to ProcessCreate:

@flow_start_func
def process_create(activation: FuncActivation, **kwargs):
    #
    # Update the database record.
    #
    db_sch = Schedule.objects.get(id=kwargs['schedule'])
    activation.process.schedule = db_sch # <<<< Same fields as ProcessCreate
    activation.process.save()
    #
    # Go!
    #
    activation.prepare()
    activation.done()
    return activation

Note that the activation subclass inside the flow_start_func is FuncActivation, which has the prepare() and save() methods. The kwargs come from the call to run, which goes something like:

start_node = <walk the flow class looking for nodes of type StartFunction>
activation = start_node.run(schedule=self.id)
πŸ‘€Shaheed Haque

0πŸ‘

to start manually:

from viewflow import flow
from viewflow.base import this, Flow
from .models import CIE
from viewflow import frontend
from django.utils.decorators import method_decorator

@frontend.register
class CIE(Flow):
    process_class = CIE
    start = flow.StartFunction(this.create_flow).Next(this.end)
    end = flow.End()

    @method_decorator(flow.flow_start_func)
    def create_flow(self, activation):
        activation.prepare()
        activation.done()
        return activation

after that expose rpc:

from modernrpc.core import rpc_method
from flow.flows import CIE

    @rpc_method
    def start():
        CIE.start.run()
πŸ‘€Luis Quissak

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