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Customizing the Trac Interface
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Contents
This page gives suggestions on how to customize the look of Trac. Topics include editing the HTML templates and CSS files, but not the program code itself. The topics show users how they can modify the look of Trac to meet their specific needs. Suggestions for changes to Trac's interface applicable to all users should be filed as tickets, not listed on this page.
Project Logo and Icon
The easiest parts of the Trac interface to customize are the logo and the site icon. Both of these can be configured with settings in trac.ini.
The logo or icon image should be put in a folder named "htdocs" in your project's environment folder. Note: in projects created with a Trac version prior to 0.9 you will need to create this folder.
Note: you can actually put the logo and icon anywhere on your server (as long as it's accessible through the web server), and use their absolute or server-relative URLs in the configuration.
Now configure the appropriate section of your trac.ini:
Logo
Change the src
setting to site/
followed by the name of your image file. The width
and height
settings should be modified to match your image's dimensions. The Trac chrome handler uses site/
for files within the project directory htdocs
, and common/
for the common htdocs
directory belonging to a Trac installation. Note that 'site/' is not a placeholder for your project name, it is the literal prefix that should be used. For example, if your project is named 'sandbox', and the image file is 'red_logo.gif' then the 'src' setting would be 'site/red_logo.gif', not 'sandbox/red_logo.gif'.
[header_logo] src = site/my_logo.gif alt = My Project width = 300 height = 100
Icon
Icons are small images displayed by your web browser next to the site's URL and in the Bookmarks
menu. Icons should be a 32x32 image in .gif
or .ico
format. Change the icon
setting to site/
followed by the name of your icon file:
[project] icon = site/my_icon.ico
Custom Navigation Entries
The new [mainnav] and [metanav] can now be used to customize the text and link used for the navigation items, or even to disable them, but not for adding new ones.
In the following example, we rename the link to the Wiki start "Home", and hide the "Help/Guide". We also make the "View Tickets" entry link to a specific report:
[mainnav] wiki.label = Home tickets.href = /report/24 [metanav] help = disabled
See also TracNavigation for a more detailed explanation of the mainnav and metanav terms.
Site Appearance
Trac is using Genshi as the templating engine. Say you want to add a link to a custom stylesheet, and then your own header and footer. Save the following content as site.html
inside your projects templates/
directory (each Trac project can have their own site.html
), eg /path/to/env/templates/site.html
:
<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" xmlns:py="http://genshi.edgewall.org/" py:strip=""> <!--! Add site-specific style sheet --> <head py:match="head" py:attrs="select('@*')"> ${select('*|comment()|text()')} <link rel="stylesheet" href="${href.chrome('site/style.css')}" /> </head> <body py:match="body" py:attrs="select('@*')"> <!--! Add site-specific header --> <div id="siteheader"> <!--! Place your header content here... --> </div> ${select('*|text()')} <!--! Add site-specific footer --> <div id="sitefooter"> <!--! Place your footer content here... --> </div> </body> </html>
Notice that XSLT bears some similarities with Genshi templates. However, there are some Trac specific features, for example the ${href.chrome('site/style.css')}
attribute references style.css
in the environment's htdocs/
directory. In a similar fashion ${chrome.htdocs_location}
is used to specify the common htdocs/
directory belonging to a Trac installation. That latter location can however be overriden using the [trac] htdocs_location configuration setting.
site.html
is one file to contain all your modifications. It usually works using the py:match
directive (element or attribute), and it allows you to modify the page as it renders. The matches hook onto specific sections depending on what it tries to find and modify them.
See this thread for a detailed explanation of the above example site.html
.
A site.html
can contain any number of such py:match
sections for whatever you need to modify. This is all Genshi, so the docs on the exact syntax can be found there.
Example snippet of adding introduction text to the new ticket form (but not shown during preview):
<form py:match="div[@id='content' and @class='ticket']/form" py:attrs="select('@*')"> <py:if test="req.path_info == '/newticket' and (not 'preview' in req.args)"> <p>Please make sure to search for existing tickets before reporting a new one!</p> </py:if> ${select('*')} </form>
This example illustrates a technique of using req.path_info
to limit scope of changes to one view only. For instance, to make changes in site.html
only for timeline and avoid modifying other sections - use req.path_info == '/timeline'
condition in <py:if>
test.
More examples snippets for site.html
can be found at CookBook/SiteHtml.
Example snippets for style.css
can be found at CookBook/SiteStyleCss.
If the environment is upgraded from 0.10 and a site_newticket.cs
file already exists, it can be loaded using a workaround, provided it contains no ClearSilver processing. In addition, as only one element can be imported, the content needs a wrapper, such as a <div>
block or other similar parent container. The XInclude namespace must be specified to allow includes, but that can be moved to document root along with the others:
<form py:match="div[@id='content' and @class='ticket']/form" py:attrs="select('@*')" xmlns:xi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XInclude"> <py:if test="req.path_info == '/newticket' and (not 'preview' in req.args)"> <xi:include href="site_newticket.cs"><xi:fallback /></xi:include> </py:if> ${select('*')} </form>
Also note that the site.html
, despite its name, can be put in a shared templates directory, see the [inherit] templates_dir option. This could provide easier maintenance (and a migration path from 0.10 for larger installations) as one new global site.html
file can be made to include any existing header, footer and newticket snippets.
Project List
You can use a custom Genshi template to display the list of projects if you are using Trac with multiple projects.
The following is the basic template used by Trac to display a list of links to the projects. For projects that could not be loaded, it displays an error message. You can use this as a starting point for your own index template:
<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Strict//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd"> <html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" xmlns:py="http://genshi.edgewall.org/" xmlns:xi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XInclude"> <head> <title>Available Projects</title> </head> <body> <h1>Available Projects</h1> <ul> <li py:for="project in projects" py:choose=""> <a py:when="project.href" href="$project.href" title="$project.description">$project.name</a> <py:otherwise> <small>$project.name: <em>Error</em> <br /> ($project.description)</small> </py:otherwise> </li> </ul> </body> </html>
Once you've created your custom template you will need to configure the webserver to tell Trac where the template is located:
For mod_wsgi:
os.environ['TRAC_ENV_INDEX_TEMPLATE'] = '/path/to/template.html'
For FastCGI:
FastCgiConfig -initial-env TRAC_ENV_PARENT_DIR=/parent/dir/of/projects \
-initial-env TRAC_ENV_INDEX_TEMPLATE=/path/to/template
For mod_python:
PythonOption TracEnvParentDir /parent/dir/of/projects PythonOption TracEnvIndexTemplate /path/to/template
For CGI:
SetEnv TRAC_ENV_INDEX_TEMPLATE /path/to/template
For TracStandalone, you'll need to set up the TRAC_ENV_INDEX_TEMPLATE
environment variable in the shell used to launch tracd:
- Unix:
$ export TRAC_ENV_INDEX_TEMPLATE=/path/to/template
- Windows:
$ set TRAC_ENV_INDEX_TEMPLATE=/path/to/template
Project Templates
The appearance of each individual Trac environment, ie instance of a project, can be customized independently of other projects, even those hosted on the same server. The recommended way is to use a site.html
template whenever possible, see #SiteAppearance. Using site.html
means changes are made to the original templates as they are rendered, and you should not normally need to redo modifications whenever Trac is upgraded. If you do make a copy of theme.html
or any other Trac template, you need to migrate your modifiations to the newer version. If not, new Trac features or bug fixes may not work as expected.
With that word of caution, any Trac template may be copied and customized. The default Trac templates are located inside the installed Trac egg, such as /usr/lib/pythonVERSION/site-packages/Trac-VERSION.egg/trac/templates, ../trac/ticket/templates, ../trac/wiki/templates
. The #ProjectList template file is called index.html
, while the template responsible for main layout is called theme.html
. Page assets such as images and CSS style sheets are located in the egg's trac/htdocs
directory.
However, do not edit templates or site resources inside the Trac egg. Reinstalling Trac overwrites your modifications. Instead use one of these alternatives:
- For a modification to one project only, copy the template to project
templates
directory. - For a modification shared by several projects, copy the template to a shared location and have each project point to this location using the
[inherit] templates_dir
trac.ini option.
Trac resolves requests for a template by first looking inside the project, then in any inherited templates location, and finally inside the Trac egg.
Trac caches templates in memory by default to improve performance. To apply a template you need to restart the web server.