The new signature enables better support for routing RunPython and
RunSQL operations, especially w.r.t. reusable and third-party apps.
This commit also takes advantage of the deprecation cycle for the old
signature to remove the backward incompatibility introduced in #22583;
RunPython and RunSQL won't call allow_migrate() when when the router
has the old signature.
Thanks Aymeric Augustin and Tim Graham for helping shape up the patch.
Refs 22583.
Conflicts:
django/db/utils.py
Backport of bed504d70b from master
This feature allows the default `TIMEOUT` Cache argument to be set to `None`,
so that cache instances can set a non-expiring key as the default,
instead of using the default value of 5 minutes.
Previously, this was possible only by passing `None` as an argument to
the set() method of objects of type `BaseCache` (and subtypes).
Thanks Curtis Malony and Florian Apolloner.
Squashed commit of the following:
commit 3380495e93
Author: Aymeric Augustin <aymeric.augustin@m4x.org>
Date: Sat Nov 23 14:18:07 2013 +0100
Looked up the template_fragments cache at runtime.
commit 905a74f52b
Author: Aymeric Augustin <aymeric.augustin@m4x.org>
Date: Sat Nov 23 14:19:48 2013 +0100
Removed all uses of create_cache.
Refactored the cache tests significantly.
Made it safe to override the CACHES setting.
commit 35e289fe92
Author: Aymeric Augustin <aymeric.augustin@m4x.org>
Date: Sat Nov 23 12:23:57 2013 +0100
Removed create_cache function.
commit 8e274f747a
Author: Aymeric Augustin <aymeric.augustin@m4x.org>
Date: Sat Nov 23 12:04:52 2013 +0100
Updated docs to describe a simplified cache backend API.
commit ee7eb0f73e
Author: Curtis Maloney <curtis@tinbrain.net>
Date: Sat Oct 19 09:49:24 2013 +1100
Fixed#21012 -- Thread-local caches, like databases.
* Safer for use in multiprocess environments
* Better random culling
* Cache files use less disk space
* Safer delete behavior
Also fixed#15806, fixed#15825.
- Fixed some grammar and formatting mistakes
- Added the type and default for CULL_FREQUENCY
- Made the note on culling the entire cache more precise. (It's actually
slower on the filesystem backend.)
* Renamed smart_unicode to smart_text (but kept the old name under
Python 2 for backwards compatibility).
* Renamed smart_str to smart_bytes.
* Re-introduced smart_str as an alias for smart_text under Python 3
and smart_bytes under Python 2 (which is backwards compatible).
Thus smart_str always returns a str objects.
* Used the new smart_str in a few places where both Python 2 and 3
want a str.