Wagtail Tag Manager (WTM for short) is a Wagtail addon that allows for easier and GDPR compliant administration of scripts and tags.
Please note that this software is in beta and has not been extensively tested in practice. Any part of the API may change without notice!
In this package the term "tag" is being used for code snippets being injected into HTML. This is not to be confused with tags used to identify content in the CMS, such as pictures and documents.
Wagtail Tag Manager offers functionality similar to platforms like Adobe Dynamic Tag Management, Google Tag Manager and Tealium iQ without the need of a third party. It's fully integrated into Wagtail.
This approach comes with a couple of advantages, most prominently the ability to inject tags into a page before the response is send to a client.
- Manage scripts and tags from within Wagtail, with powerful options to define load order.
- Store reusable content in constants and variables and easily add them to your tags.
- Create triggers to load tags based on events in the browser.
- Create cookie declarations to provide end-users with a full picture of the tracking taking place.
- Create custom variables to give administrators functionality specific to your use-cases.
- Disclaimer
- Requirements
- Who's using it
- Instructions
- Template tags
- Preference management
- Context processors
- Settings
- Custom variables
- Page tag mixin
- Lazy triggers
- Sandbox
- Concept
- License
This package attempts to ease the implementation of tags by the new ePrivacy rules as defined by the European Union. I urge you to read about these new rules and ensure you are properly configuring your tags. This package is free and the author can not be held responsible for the correctness of your implementation, or the assumptions made in this package to comply with the new ePrivacy regulation.
Read more about the ePrivacy Regulation.
Included in this package is a cookie bar which admittedly provides too little
information to end users regarding the purpose of the scripts you are placing
on the website. For compliance, please use the cookie_bar.html
template to
change the text shown in the cookie bar.
Package | Version(s) |
---|---|
Django | 2.0, 2.1, 2.2, 3.0, 3.1 |
Wagtail | 2.1, 2.2, 2.3, 2.4, 2.5, 2.6, 2.7, 2.8, 2.9, 2.10 |
I'd love to hear from sites and applications where WTM is being used. Please contact me if you'd like your implementation to be listed here!
Installation:
pip install wagtail-tag-manager
Add the application to your INSTALLED_APPS
:
INSTALLED_APPS = [
# ...
'wagtail.contrib.modeladmin',
'wagtail_tag_manager',
# ...
]
If you wish to enable the cookie bar settings (allowing you to change to title
and text displayed in the cookie bar), also include wagtail.contrib.settings
in the INSTALLED_APPS
.
Include the middleware:
MIDDLEWARE = [
# ...
"wagtail_tag_manager.middleware.CookieConsentMiddleware",
'wagtail_tag_manager.middleware.TagManagerMiddleware', # optional
# ...
]
WTM offers two ways to implement it's functionality. You can either choose to
use the TagManagerMiddleware
(which will rewrite the html on each request)
or use the {% wtm_instant_tags %}
and {% wtm_lazy_manager %}
template
tags.
If you prefer to use the template tags to inject tags into your templates,
set the WTM_INJECT_TAGS
and WTM_INJECT_SCRIPT
settings to False
and implement the template tags as follows:
{% load wtm_tags %}
<head>
{% wtm_instant_tags 'top_head' %} ... {% wtm_instant_tags 'bottom_head' %}
</head>
<body>
{% wtm_instant_tags 'top_body' %} ... {% wtm_instant_tags 'bottom_body' %} {% wtm_lazy_manager %}
</body>
Include the urls:
from django.urls import include, path
from wagtail_tag_manager import urls as wtm_urls
urlpatterns = [
# ...
path('wtm/', include(wtm_urls)),
# ...
path('', include(wagtail_urls)),
# ...
]
As an alternative to using the middleware you can use the wtm_instant_tags
and wtm_lazy_manager
template tags. Please be sure to use the
TagManagerMiddleware
OR the template tags, never both.
To load all instant tags at once:
{% load wtm_tags %}
<head>
... {% wtm_instant_tags %}
</head>
To load tags corresponding to a certain position:
{% load wtm_tags %}
<head>
{% wtm_instant_tags 'top_head' %} ... {% wtm_instant_tags 'bottom_head' %}
</head>
<body>
{% wtm_instant_tags 'top_body' %} ... {% wtm_instant_tags 'bottom_body' %}
</body>
{% load wtm_tags %}
<body>
... {% wtm_lazy_manager %}
</body>
Optionally, you can disable either the script and/or the styling.
{% load wtm_tags %}
<body>
... {% wtm_lazy_manager include_style=False include_script=False %}
</body>
{% load wtm_tags %}
<body>
{% wtm_cookie_bar %} ...
</body>
WTM comes with the wtm_include
template tag to accommodate loading of
resources and markup based on the tag strategy and consent given. It can be
used as a way to load html, css or javascript files.
{% load wtm_tags %}
<body>
... {% wtm_include "necessary" "css/style.css" %} {% wtm_include "necessary" "js/style.js" %} {%
wtm_include "necessary" "content.html" %} ...
</body>
Alternatively, you can use it as a block:
{% load wtm_tags %}
<body>
... {% wtm_include "statistics" %}
<script>
console.log("Included conditionally");
</script>
{% wtm_endinclude %} ...
</body>
You can use the following provided template tags to render a tag status overview, a table with cookie declarations or a consent form.
{% wtm_tag_table %} {% wtm_declaration_table %} {% wtm_manage_form %}
To enable the context processors, add the following to your settings:
"context_processors": [
# ...
"wagtail_tag_manager.context_processors.consent_state",
]
You can now use the following value in your templates:
{{ wtm_consent_state.necessary }} {{ wtm_consent_state.preferences }} {{
wtm_consent_state.statistics }} {{ wtm_consent_state.marketing }}
These will return a boolean indicating wether or not tags specific to the corresponding state should load.
WTM_TAG_TYPES = {
# key, verbose name, setting
"necessary": (_("Necessary"), "required"),
"preferences": (_("Preferences"), "initial"),
"statistics": (_("Statistics"), "initial"),
"marketing": (_("Marketing"), ""),
}
Allows you to define the tag types available. This can be helpful if you'd like
the change the terminology used, or when you'd prefer to split a type in
multiple sections. Notice the two keywords (required
and initial
) used.
Tags marked as required
can not be disabled and will always be included on
every page.
Tags marked as initial
will be included as long as no explicit consent has
been given by the end user, provided the browser allows cookies. While no
consent has been given, these tags will be loaded lazily to honor the browser
settings (which we can only read using javascript).
The third option is to mark a tag as delayed
. This will ensure the tag will
not load on the first page load, but only from the second load forward.
WTM_INJECT_TAGS = True
Instructs the middleware to inject all tags marked "instant load" in the
document. Disable this if you would rather use the {% wtm_instant_tags %}
template tags.
WTM_MANAGE_VIEW = True
Allows you to enable or disable the included "manage" view allowing users to get insight in the tags running on your site and adjust their preferences. The view is enabled by default.
WTM_COOKIE_EXPIRE = 365
Sets the expiration time in days of WTM's cookies. Notice that this is only applicable to the consent cookies used by WTM, not any cookies placed by tags.
WTM_CACHE_TIMEOUT = 1800
Sets the amount of seconds the cache will be preserved. At the moment, caching is only applied to constants, which will refresh when a constant is saved. Default is 30 minutes.
WTM_PRESERVE_VARIABLES = True
Configures whether the variables are preserved for each request, or refreshed
for each tag applied to a response. When set to False
, a query will be done
for each single tag which will add up quickly.
WTM_INJECT_STYLE = True
Change to False
to prevent WTM's included styles from loading. This is useful
if you wish to style the cookiebar yourself.
WTM_INJECT_SCRIPT = True
Change to False
to prevent WTM's included scripts from loading. This is
useful if you don't want to use the inlcuded lazy loading and cookie bar
functionality.
WTM_SUMMARY_PANELS = False
Disables or enables the summary panels visible on the Wagtail admin dashboard.
This is an experimental feature.
WTM_ENABLE_SCANNER = False
When enabled, allows scanning of cookies placed on the website. Use this to automatically generate cookie declarations. Will attempt to use Chrome Driver when available, and will fall back to regular requests if not.
This is an experimental feature.
WTM_CHROMEDRIVER_URL = "http://0.0.0.0:4444/wd/hub"
Allows configuration of the docker container running an instance of
selenium/standalone-chrome
.
When developing, use the following command to run the docker container and ensure that your site is configured be accessible over your computer's public ip. Otherwise the docker container won't be able to access the website.
https://hub.docker.com/r/selenium/standalone-chrome/
In addition to managing variables in the admin interface, variables can also be
created in your source code by registering a CustomVariable
.
from wagtail_tag_manager.decorators import register_variable
from wagtail_tag_manager.options import CustomVariable
@register_variable
class Variable(CustomVariable):
name = "Custom variable"
description = "Returns a custom value."
key = "custom"
def get_value(self, request):
return "This is a custom variable."
If you would like to include tags on a page, include the TagMixin
mixin.
Under the "Settings" tab of the corresponding page type a list of tags will be
shown. By selecting these, these tags will be included when the page loads.
Additionally, by selecting the "Include children" field, all descending pages of the configured page will also load the chosen tags.
Note that the consent state is being applied to these tags. If the selected tag is marked as, for example, "marketing", the end-user still must allow this type of tags before is is being injected.
from wagtail_tag_manager.mixins import TagMixin
class HomePage(TagMixin, Page):
pass
Triggers allow you to monitor events on the frontend of your website and load a tag after a specified event has occurred. By using conditions you are able to harness (custom) variables to only trigger a tag once your event complies with the conditions that you specified.
To experiment with the package you can use the sandbox provided in this
repository. To install this you will need to create and activate a
virtualenv and then run make sandbox
. This will start a fresh Wagtail
install, with the tag manager module enabled, on http://localhost:8000
and http://localhost:8000/cms/. The superuser credentials are
superuser
with the password testing
.
Various types of tags, constants and variables are enabled out of the box. Check out the console in your browser to see them in action.
WTM comes with the following tag types pre-configured:
Name | Setting |
---|---|
Necessary | Required |
Preferences | Initial |
Statistics | Initial |
Marketing | Default |
These types correspond to the segmentation made by the EU here.
State | Required | Initial | Delayed | Default |
---|---|---|---|---|
No cookies accepted. | yes | no | no | no |
Cookies implicitly accepted through browser settings. | yes | yes | yes¹ | no |
Cookies explicitly accepted, noting tracking functionality.² | yes | yes | yes¹ | yes |
¹ From the second page load onward.
² According to the ePrivacy regulation, mentioning that you are using tracking functionality is mandatory.
Note that in the case of Statistics cookies or local storage, you are obliged to still show a notification at least once, noting that you are using cookies for analytical and performance measurement purposes.
When implementing Marketing cookies, the user has to explicitly give permission for you to enable them for their session. When asking for permission, you must explicitly state the tracking functionality of the script you are using.
To ease the implementation by this concept, Wagtail Tag Manager allows you to define a tag as "Necessary", "Preferences", "Statistics" or "Marketing". When properly configured, it'll take care of loading the correct tag at the correct time, taking in account the following scenario's:
-
The user has not accepted cookies.
Required Initial Delayed Default Instant yes no no no Lazy yes no no no -
The user has accepted cookies through browser settings.
Required Initial Delayed Default Instant yes yes¹ yes² no Lazy yes yes yes² no ¹ Will be loaded lazily.
² From the second page load onward.
As the acceptance of "Initial" tags can only be verified client side, we'll first load all the "Initial" tags lazy (whether they are instant or not).
Please note that we still have to show a message stating that we are using tags with analytical purposes.
-
The user has explicitly accepted cookies for your site.
Required Initial Delayed Default Instant yes yes yes yes Lazy yes yes yes yes
To make Wagtail Tag Manager accessible, it's is published under the BSD 3-Clause "New" or "Revised" License. For more information, please refer to the LICENSE file in this repository.