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Fixed #24149 -- Normalized tuple settings to lists.

This commit is contained in:
darkryder
2015-01-21 22:25:57 +05:30
committed by Tim Graham
parent 570912a97d
commit 9ec8aa5e5d
120 changed files with 612 additions and 616 deletions

View File

@@ -31,20 +31,20 @@ First, you must add the
:setting:`MIDDLEWARE_CLASSES` setting **after** the
:class:`django.contrib.auth.middleware.AuthenticationMiddleware`::
MIDDLEWARE_CLASSES = (
MIDDLEWARE_CLASSES = [
'...',
'django.contrib.auth.middleware.AuthenticationMiddleware',
'django.contrib.auth.middleware.RemoteUserMiddleware',
'...',
)
]
Next, you must replace the :class:`~django.contrib.auth.backends.ModelBackend`
with :class:`~django.contrib.auth.backends.RemoteUserBackend` in the
:setting:`AUTHENTICATION_BACKENDS` setting::
AUTHENTICATION_BACKENDS = (
AUTHENTICATION_BACKENDS = [
'django.contrib.auth.backends.RemoteUserBackend',
)
]
With this setup, ``RemoteUserMiddleware`` will detect the username in
``request.META['REMOTE_USER']`` and will authenticate and auto-login that user

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@@ -73,14 +73,14 @@ those are usually just people typing in broken URLs or broken Web 'bots).
Put it towards the top of your :setting:`MIDDLEWARE_CLASSES` setting.
You can tell Django to stop reporting particular 404s by tweaking the
:setting:`IGNORABLE_404_URLS` setting. It should be a tuple of compiled
:setting:`IGNORABLE_404_URLS` setting. It should be a list of compiled
regular expression objects. For example::
import re
IGNORABLE_404_URLS = (
IGNORABLE_404_URLS = [
re.compile(r'\.(php|cgi)$'),
re.compile(r'^/phpmyadmin/'),
)
]
In this example, a 404 to any URL ending with ``.php`` or ``.cgi`` will *not* be
reported. Neither will any URL starting with ``/phpmyadmin/``.
@@ -89,11 +89,11 @@ The following example shows how to exclude some conventional URLs that browsers
crawlers often request::
import re
IGNORABLE_404_URLS = (
IGNORABLE_404_URLS = [
re.compile(r'^/apple-touch-icon.*\.png$'),
re.compile(r'^/favicon\.ico$'),
re.compile(r'^/robots\.txt$'),
)
]
(Note that these are regular expressions, so we put a backslash in front of
periods to escape them.)

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@@ -55,10 +55,10 @@ particular app. In addition to using a ``static/`` directory inside your apps,
you can define a list of directories (:setting:`STATICFILES_DIRS`) in your
settings file where Django will also look for static files. For example::
STATICFILES_DIRS = (
STATICFILES_DIRS = [
os.path.join(BASE_DIR, "static"),
'/var/www/static/',
)
]
See the documentation for the :setting:`STATICFILES_FINDERS` setting for
details on how ``staticfiles`` finds your files.