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1127 lines
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1127 lines
47 KiB
Plaintext
==============================
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Django 1.4 alpha release notes
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==============================
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December 22, 2011.
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Welcome to Django 1.4 alpha!
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This is the first in a series of preview/development releases leading up to
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the eventual release of Django 1.4, scheduled for March 2012. This release is
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primarily targeted at developers who are interested in trying out new features
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and testing the Django codebase to help identify and resolve bugs prior to the
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final 1.4 release.
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As such, this release is *not* intended for production use, and any such use
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is discouraged.
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Django 1.4 alpha includes various `new features`_ and some minor `backwards
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incompatible changes`_. There are also some features that have been dropped,
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which are detailed in :doc:`our deprecation plan </internals/deprecation>`,
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and we've `begun the deprecation process for some features`_.
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.. _new features: `What's new in Django 1.4`_
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.. _backwards incompatible changes: `Backwards incompatible changes in 1.4`_
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.. _begun the deprecation process for some features: `Features deprecated in 1.4`_
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Python compatibility
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====================
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While not a new feature, it's important to note that Django 1.4 introduces the
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second shift in our Python compatibility policy since Django's initial public
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debut. Django 1.2 dropped support for Python 2.3; now Django 1.4 drops support
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for Python 2.4. As such, the minimum Python version required for Django is now
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2.5, and Django is tested and supported on Python 2.5, 2.6 and 2.7.
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This change should affect only a small number of Django users, as most
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operating-system vendors today are shipping Python 2.5 or newer as their default
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version. If you're still using Python 2.4, however, you'll need to stick to
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Django 1.3 until you can upgrade; per :doc:`our support policy
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</internals/release-process>`, Django 1.3 will continue to receive security
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support until the release of Django 1.5.
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Django does not support Python 3.x at this time. A document outlining our full
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timeline for deprecating Python 2.x and moving to Python 3.x will be published
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before the release of Django 1.4.
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What's new in Django 1.4
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========================
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Support for in-browser testing frameworks
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Django 1.4 now supports integration with in-browser testing frameworks such
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as Selenium_ or Windmill_ thanks to the :class:`django.test.LiveServerTestCase`
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base class, allowing you to test the interactions between your site's front and
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back ends more comprehensively. See the
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:class:`documentation<django.test.LiveServerTestCase>` for more details and
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concrete examples.
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.. _Windmill: http://www.getwindmill.com/
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.. _Selenium: http://seleniumhq.org/
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``SELECT FOR UPDATE`` support
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Django 1.4 now includes a :meth:`QuerySet.select_for_update()
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<django.db.models.query.QuerySet.select_for_update>` method which generates a
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``SELECT ... FOR UPDATE`` SQL query. This will lock rows until the end of the
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transaction, meaning that other transactions cannot modify or delete rows
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matched by a ``FOR UPDATE`` query.
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For more details, see the documentation for
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:meth:`~django.db.models.query.QuerySet.select_for_update`.
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``Model.objects.bulk_create`` in the ORM
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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This method allows for more efficient creation of multiple objects in the ORM.
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It can provide significant performance increases if you have many objects.
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Django makes use of this internally, meaning some operations (such as database
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setup for test suites) have seen a performance benefit as a result.
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See the :meth:`~django.db.models.query.QuerySet.bulk_create` docs for more
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information.
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``QuerySet.prefetch_related``
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Similar to :meth:`~django.db.models.query.QuerySet.select_related` but with a
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different strategy and broader scope,
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:meth:`~django.db.models.query.QuerySet.prefetch_related` has been added to
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:class:`~django.db.models.query.QuerySet`. This method returns a new
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``QuerySet`` that will prefetch each of the specified related lookups in a
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single batch as soon as the query begins to be evaluated. Unlike
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``select_related``, it does the joins in Python, not in the database, and
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supports many-to-many relationships,
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:class:`~django.contrib.contenttypes.generic.GenericForeignKey` and more. This
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allows you to fix a very common performance problem in which your code ends up
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doing O(n) database queries (or worse) if objects on your primary ``QuerySet``
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each have many related objects that you also need.
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Improved password hashing
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Django's auth system (``django.contrib.auth``) stores passwords using a one-way
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algorithm. Django 1.3 uses the SHA1_ algorithm, but increasing processor speeds
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and theoretical attacks have revealed that SHA1 isn't as secure as we'd like.
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Thus, Django 1.4 introduces a new password storage system: by default Django now
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uses the PBKDF2_ algorithm (as recommended by NIST_). You can also easily choose
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a different algorithm (including the popular bcrypt_ algorithm). For more
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details, see :ref:`auth_password_storage`.
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.. _sha1: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SHA1
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.. _pbkdf2: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PBKDF2
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.. _nist: http://csrc.nist.gov/publications/nistpubs/800-132/nist-sp800-132.pdf
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.. _bcrypt: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bcrypt
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HTML5 Doctype
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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We've switched the admin and other bundled templates to use the HTML5
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doctype. While Django will be careful to maintain compatibility with older
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browsers, this change means that you can use any HTML5 features you need in
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admin pages without having to lose HTML validity or override the provided
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templates to change the doctype.
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List filters in admin interface
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Prior to Django 1.4, the :mod:`~django.contrib.admin` app allowed you to specify
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change list filters by specifying a field lookup, but didn't allow you to create
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custom filters. This has been rectified with a simple API (previously used
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internally and known as "FilterSpec"). For more details, see the documentation
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for :attr:`~django.contrib.admin.ModelAdmin.list_filter`.
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Multiple sort in admin interface
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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The admin change list now supports sorting on multiple columns. It respects all
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elements of the :attr:`~django.contrib.admin.ModelAdmin.ordering` attribute, and
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sorting on multiple columns by clicking on headers is designed to mimic the
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behavior of desktop GUIs. The
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:meth:`~django.contrib.admin.ModelAdmin.get_ordering` method for specifying the
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ordering dynamically (e.g. depending on the request) has also been added.
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New ``ModelAdmin`` methods
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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A new :meth:`~django.contrib.admin.ModelAdmin.save_related` method was added to
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:mod:`~django.contrib.admin.ModelAdmin` to ease customization of how
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related objects are saved in the admin.
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Two other new methods,
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:meth:`~django.contrib.admin.ModelAdmin.get_list_display` and
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:meth:`~django.contrib.admin.ModelAdmin.get_list_display_links`
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were added to :class:`~django.contrib.admin.ModelAdmin` to enable the dynamic
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customization of fields and links displayed on the admin change list.
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Admin inlines respect user permissions
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Admin inlines will now only allow those actions for which the user has
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permission. For ``ManyToMany`` relationships with an auto-created intermediate
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model (which does not have its own permissions), the change permission for the
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related model determines if the user has the permission to add, change or
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delete relationships.
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Tools for cryptographic signing
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Django 1.4 adds both a low-level API for signing values and a high-level API
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for setting and reading signed cookies, one of the most common uses of
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signing in Web applications.
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See the :doc:`cryptographic signing </topics/signing>` docs for more
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information.
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Cookie-based session backend
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Django 1.4 introduces a new cookie-based backend for the session framework
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which uses the tools for :doc:`cryptographic signing </topics/signing>` to
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store the session data in the client's browser.
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See the :ref:`cookie-based session backend <cookie-session-backend>` docs for
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more information.
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New form wizard
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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The previous ``FormWizard`` from the formtools contrib app has been
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replaced with a new implementation based on the class-based views
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introduced in Django 1.3. It features a pluggable storage API and doesn't
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require the wizard to pass around hidden fields for every previous step.
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Django 1.4 ships with a session-based storage backend and a cookie-based
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storage backend. The latter uses the tools for
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:doc:`cryptographic signing </topics/signing>` also introduced in
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Django 1.4 to store the wizard's state in the user's cookies.
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See the :doc:`form wizard </ref/contrib/formtools/form-wizard>` docs for
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more information.
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``reverse_lazy``
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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A lazily evaluated version of :func:`django.core.urlresolvers.reverse` was
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added to allow using URL reversals before the project's URLConf gets loaded.
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Translating URL patterns
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Django 1.4 gained the ability to look for a language prefix in the URL pattern
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when using the new :func:`~django.conf.urls.i18n.i18n_patterns` helper function.
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Additionally, it's now possible to define translatable URL patterns using
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:func:`~django.utils.translation.ugettext_lazy`. See
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:ref:`url-internationalization` for more information about the language prefix
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and how to internationalize URL patterns.
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Contextual translation support for ``{% trans %}`` and ``{% blocktrans %}``
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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The :ref:`contextual translation<contextual-markers>` support introduced in
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Django 1.3 via the ``pgettext`` function has been extended to the
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:ttag:`trans` and :ttag:`blocktrans` template tags using the new ``context``
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keyword.
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Customizable ``SingleObjectMixin`` URLConf kwargs
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Two new attributes,
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:attr:`pk_url_kwarg<django.views.generic.detail.SingleObjectMixin.pk_url_kwarg>`
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and
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:attr:`slug_url_kwarg<django.views.generic.detail.SingleObjectMixin.slug_url_kwarg>`,
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have been added to :class:`~django.views.generic.detail.SingleObjectMixin` to
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enable the customization of URLConf keyword arguments used for single
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object generic views.
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Assignment template tags
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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A new :ref:`assignment_tag<howto-custom-template-tags-assignment-tags>` helper
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function was added to ``template.Library`` to ease the creation of template
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tags that store data in a specified context variable.
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``*args`` and ``**kwargs`` support for template tag helper functions
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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The :ref:`simple_tag<howto-custom-template-tags-simple-tags>`,
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:ref:`inclusion_tag <howto-custom-template-tags-inclusion-tags>` and
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newly introduced
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:ref:`assignment_tag<howto-custom-template-tags-assignment-tags>` template
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helper functions may now accept any number of positional or keyword arguments.
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For example:
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.. code-block:: python
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@register.simple_tag
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def my_tag(a, b, *args, **kwargs):
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warning = kwargs['warning']
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profile = kwargs['profile']
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...
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return ...
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Then in the template any number of arguments may be passed to the template tag.
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For example:
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.. code-block:: html+django
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{% my_tag 123 "abcd" book.title warning=message|lower profile=user.profile %}
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No wrapping of exceptions in ``TEMPLATE_DEBUG`` mode
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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In previous versions of Django, whenever the :setting:`TEMPLATE_DEBUG` setting
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was ``True``, any exception raised during template rendering (even exceptions
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unrelated to template syntax) were wrapped in ``TemplateSyntaxError`` and
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re-raised. This was done in order to provide detailed template source location
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information in the debug 500 page.
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In Django 1.4, exceptions are no longer wrapped. Instead, the original
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exception is annotated with the source information. This means that catching
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exceptions from template rendering is now consistent regardless of the value of
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:setting:`TEMPLATE_DEBUG`, and there's no need to catch and unwrap
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``TemplateSyntaxError`` in order to catch other errors.
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``truncatechars`` template filter
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Added a filter which truncates a string to be no longer than the specified
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number of characters. Truncated strings end with a translatable ellipsis
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sequence ("..."). See the documentation for :tfilter:`truncatechars` for
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more details.
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``static`` template tag
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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The :mod:`staticfiles<django.contrib.staticfiles>` contrib app has a new
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:ttag:`static<staticfiles-static>` template tag to refer to files saved with
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the :setting:`STATICFILES_STORAGE` storage backend. It uses the storage
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backend's ``url`` method and therefore supports advanced features such as
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:ref:`serving files from a cloud service<staticfiles-from-cdn>`.
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``CachedStaticFilesStorage`` storage backend
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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In addition to the `static template tag`_, the
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:mod:`staticfiles<django.contrib.staticfiles>` contrib app now has a
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:class:`~django.contrib.staticfiles.storage.CachedStaticFilesStorage` backend
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which caches the files it saves (when running the :djadmin:`collectstatic`
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management command) by appending the MD5 hash of the file's content to the
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filename. For example, the file ``css/styles.css`` would also be saved as
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``css/styles.55e7cbb9ba48.css``
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See the :class:`~django.contrib.staticfiles.storage.CachedStaticFilesStorage`
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docs for more information.
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Simple clickjacking protection
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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We've added a middleware to provide easy protection against `clickjacking
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<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clickjacking>`_ using the ``X-Frame-Options``
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header. It's not enabled by default for backwards compatibility reasons, but
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you'll almost certainly want to :doc:`enable it </ref/clickjacking/>` to help
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plug that security hole for browsers that support the header.
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CSRF improvements
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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We've made various improvements to our CSRF features, including the
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:func:`~django.views.decorators.csrf.ensure_csrf_cookie` decorator which can
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help with AJAX heavy sites, protection for PUT and DELETE requests, and the
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:setting:`CSRF_COOKIE_SECURE` and :setting:`CSRF_COOKIE_PATH` settings which can
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improve the security and usefulness of the CSRF protection. See the :doc:`CSRF
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docs </ref/contrib/csrf>` for more information.
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Error report filtering
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Two new function decorators, :func:`sensitive_variables` and
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:func:`sensitive_post_parameters`, were added to allow designating the
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local variables and POST parameters which may contain sensitive
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information and should be filtered out of error reports.
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All POST parameters are now systematically filtered out of error reports for
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certain views (``login``, ``password_reset_confirm``, ``password_change``, and
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``add_view`` in :mod:`django.contrib.auth.views`, as well as
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``user_change_password`` in the admin app) to prevent the leaking of sensitive
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information such as user passwords.
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You may override or customize the default filtering by writing a :ref:`custom
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filter<custom-error-reports>`. For more information see the docs on
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:ref:`Filtering error reports<filtering-error-reports>`.
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Extended IPv6 support
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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The previously added support for IPv6 addresses when using the runserver
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management command in Django 1.3 has now been further extended by adding
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a :class:`~django.db.models.fields.GenericIPAddressField` model field,
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a :class:`~django.forms.fields.GenericIPAddressField` form field and
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the validators :data:`~django.core.validators.validate_ipv46_address` and
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:data:`~django.core.validators.validate_ipv6_address`
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Updated default project layout and ``manage.py``
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Django 1.4 ships with an updated default project layout and ``manage.py`` file
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for the :djadmin:`startproject` management command. These fix some issues with
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the previous ``manage.py`` handling of Python import paths that caused double
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imports, trouble moving from development to deployment, and other
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difficult-to-debug path issues.
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The previous ``manage.py`` called functions that are now deprecated, and thus
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projects upgrading to Django 1.4 should update their ``manage.py``. (The
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old-style ``manage.py`` will continue to work as before until Django 1.6; in
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1.5 it will raise ``DeprecationWarning``).
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The new recommended ``manage.py`` file should look like this::
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#!/usr/bin/env python
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import os, sys
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if __name__ == "__main__":
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os.environ.setdefault("DJANGO_SETTINGS_MODULE", "{{ project_name }}.settings")
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from django.core.management import execute_from_command_line
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execute_from_command_line(sys.argv)
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``{{ project_name }}`` should be replaced with the Python package name of the
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actual project.
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If settings, URLconfs, and apps within the project are imported or referenced
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using the project name prefix (e.g. ``myproject.settings``, ``ROOT_URLCONF =
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"myproject.urls"``, etc), the new ``manage.py`` will need to be moved one
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directory up, so it is outside the project package rather than adjacent to
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``settings.py`` and ``urls.py``.
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For instance, with the following layout::
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manage.py
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mysite/
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__init__.py
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settings.py
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urls.py
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myapp/
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__init__.py
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models.py
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You could import ``mysite.settings``, ``mysite.urls``, and ``mysite.myapp``,
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but not ``settings``, ``urls``, or ``myapp`` as top-level modules.
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Anything imported as a top-level module can be placed adjacent to the new
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``manage.py``. For instance, to decouple "myapp" from the project module and
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import it as just ``myapp``, place it outside the ``mysite/`` directory::
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manage.py
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myapp/
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__init__.py
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models.py
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mysite/
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__init__.py
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settings.py
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urls.py
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If the same code is imported inconsistently (some places with the project
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prefix, some places without it), the imports will need to be cleaned up when
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switching to the new ``manage.py``.
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Improved WSGI support
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
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The :djadmin:`startproject` management command now adds a :file:`wsgi.py`
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module to the initial project layout, containing a simple WSGI application that
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can be used for :doc:`deploying with WSGI app
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servers</howto/deployment/wsgi/index>`.
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The :djadmin:`built-in development server<runserver>` now supports using an
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externally-defined WSGI callable, so as to make it possible to run runserver
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with the same WSGI configuration that is used for deployment. A new
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:setting:`WSGI_APPLICATION` setting is available to configure which WSGI
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callable :djadmin:`runserver` uses.
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(The :djadmin:`runfcgi` management command also internally wraps the WSGI
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callable configured via :setting:`WSGI_APPLICATION`.)
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Custom project and app templates
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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The :djadmin:`startapp` and :djadmin:`startproject` management commands
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got a ``--template`` option for specifying a path or URL to a custom app or
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project template.
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For example, Django will use the ``/path/to/my_project_template``
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directorywhen running the following command::
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django-admin.py startproject --template=/path/to/my_project_template myproject
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Additionally you can now provide a destination directory as the second
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argument to both :djadmin:`startapp` and :djadmin:`startproject`::
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django-admin.py startapp myapp /path/to/new/app
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django-admin.py startproject myproject /path/to/new/project
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|
|
For more information see the :djadmin:`startapp` and :djadmin:`startproject`
|
|
documentation.
|
|
|
|
Support for time zones
|
|
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|
|
|
Django 1.4 adds :ref:`support for time zones <time-zones>`. When it's enabled,
|
|
Django stores date and time information in UTC in the database, uses time
|
|
zone-aware datetime objects internally, and translates them to the end user's
|
|
time zone in templates and forms.
|
|
|
|
Reasons for using this feature include:
|
|
|
|
- Customizing date and time display for users around the world.
|
|
- Storing datetimes in UTC for database portability and interoperability.
|
|
(This argument doesn't apply to PostgreSQL, because it already stores
|
|
timestamps with time zone information in Django 1.3.)
|
|
- Avoiding data corruption problems around DST transitions.
|
|
|
|
Time zone support is enabled by default in new projects created with
|
|
:djadmin:`startproject`. If you want to use this feature in an existing
|
|
project, there is a :ref:`migration guide <time-zones-migration-guide>`.
|
|
|
|
Minor features
|
|
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|
|
|
Django 1.4 also includes several smaller improvements worth noting:
|
|
|
|
* A more usable stacktrace in the technical 500 page: frames in the
|
|
stack trace which reference Django's code are dimmed out, while
|
|
frames in user code are slightly emphasized. This change makes it
|
|
easier to scan a stacktrace for issues in user code.
|
|
|
|
* :doc:`Tablespace support </topics/db/tablespaces>` in PostgreSQL.
|
|
|
|
* Customizable names for :meth:`~django.template.Library.simple_tag`.
|
|
|
|
* In the documentation, a helpful :doc:`security overview </topics/security>`
|
|
page.
|
|
|
|
* The :func:`django.contrib.auth.models.check_password` function has been moved
|
|
to the :mod:`django.contrib.auth.utils` module. Importing it from the old
|
|
location will still work, but you should update your imports.
|
|
|
|
* The :djadmin:`collectstatic` management command gained a ``--clear`` option
|
|
to delete all files at the destination before copying or linking the static
|
|
files.
|
|
|
|
* It is now possible to load fixtures containing forward references when using
|
|
MySQL with the InnoDB database engine.
|
|
|
|
* A new 403 response handler has been added as
|
|
``'django.views.defaults.permission_denied'``. You can set your own handler by
|
|
setting the value of :data:`django.conf.urls.handler403`. See the
|
|
documentation about :ref:`the 403 (HTTP Forbidden) view<http_forbidden_view>`
|
|
for more information.
|
|
|
|
* The :ttag:`trans` template tag now takes an optional ``as`` argument to
|
|
be able to retrieve a translation string without displaying it but setting
|
|
a template context variable instead.
|
|
|
|
* The :ttag:`if` template tag now supports ``{% elif %}`` clauses.
|
|
|
|
* A new plain text version of the HTTP 500 status code internal error page
|
|
served when :setting:`DEBUG` is ``True`` is now sent to the client when
|
|
Django detects that the request has originated in JavaScript code
|
|
(:meth:`~django.http.HttpRequest.is_ajax` is used for this).
|
|
|
|
Similarly to its HTML counterpart, it contains a collection of different
|
|
pieces of information about the state of the web application.
|
|
|
|
This should make it easier to read when debugging interaction with
|
|
client-side Javascript code.
|
|
|
|
* Added the :djadminopt:`--no-location` option to the :djadmin:`makemessages`
|
|
command.
|
|
|
|
* Changed the ``locmem`` cache backend to use
|
|
``pickle.HIGHEST_PROTOCOL`` for better compatibility with the other
|
|
cache backends.
|
|
|
|
* Added support in the ORM for generating ``SELECT`` queries containing
|
|
``DISTINCT ON``.
|
|
|
|
The ``distinct()`` ``Queryset`` method now accepts an optional list of model
|
|
field names. If specified, then the ``DISTINCT`` statement is limited to these
|
|
fields. PostgreSQL is the only database backend shipped with Django that
|
|
supports this new functionality.
|
|
|
|
For more details, see the documentation for
|
|
:meth:`~django.db.models.query.QuerySet.distinct`.
|
|
|
|
Backwards incompatible changes in 1.4
|
|
=====================================
|
|
|
|
django.contrib.admin
|
|
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|
|
|
The included administration app ``django.contrib.admin`` has for a long time
|
|
shipped with a default set of static files such as JavaScript, images and
|
|
stylesheets. Django 1.3 added a new contrib app ``django.contrib.staticfiles``
|
|
to handle such files in a generic way and defined conventions for static
|
|
files included in apps.
|
|
|
|
Starting in Django 1.4 the admin's static files also follow this
|
|
convention to make it easier to deploy the included files. In previous
|
|
versions of Django, it was also common to define an ``ADMIN_MEDIA_PREFIX``
|
|
setting to point to the URL where the admin's static files are served by a
|
|
web server. This setting has now been deprecated and replaced by the more
|
|
general setting :setting:`STATIC_URL`. Django will now expect to find the
|
|
admin static files under the URL ``<STATIC_URL>/admin/``.
|
|
|
|
If you've previously used a URL path for ``ADMIN_MEDIA_PREFIX`` (e.g.
|
|
``/media/``) simply make sure :setting:`STATIC_URL` and :setting:`STATIC_ROOT`
|
|
are configured and your web server serves the files correctly. The development
|
|
server continues to serve the admin files just like before. Don't hesitate to
|
|
consult the :doc:`static files howto </howto/static-files>` for further
|
|
details.
|
|
|
|
In case your ``ADMIN_MEDIA_PREFIX`` is set to an specific domain (e.g.
|
|
``http://media.example.com/admin/``) make sure to also set your
|
|
:setting:`STATIC_URL` setting to the correct URL, for example
|
|
``http://media.example.com/``.
|
|
|
|
.. warning::
|
|
|
|
If you're implicitely relying on the path of the admin static files on
|
|
your server's file system when you deploy your site, you have to update
|
|
that path. The files were moved from :file:`django/contrib/admin/media/`
|
|
to :file:`django/contrib/admin/static/admin/`.
|
|
|
|
Supported browsers for the admin
|
|
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|
|
|
Django hasn't had a clear policy on which browsers are supported for using the
|
|
admin app. Django's new policy formalizes existing practices: `YUI's A-grade`_
|
|
browsers should provide a fully-functional admin experience, with the notable
|
|
exception of IE6, which is no longer supported.
|
|
|
|
Released over ten years ago, IE6 imposes many limitations on modern web
|
|
development. The practical implications of this policy are that contributors
|
|
are free to improve the admin without consideration for these limitations.
|
|
|
|
This new policy **has no impact** on development outside of the admin. Users of
|
|
Django are free to develop webapps compatible with any range of browsers.
|
|
|
|
.. _YUI's A-grade: http://yuilibrary.com/yui/docs/tutorials/gbs/
|
|
|
|
Removed admin icons
|
|
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|
|
|
As part of an effort to improve the performance and usability of the admin's
|
|
changelist sorting interface and of the admin's :attr:`horizontal
|
|
<django.contrib.admin.ModelAdmin.filter_horizontal>` and :attr:`vertical
|
|
<django.contrib.admin.ModelAdmin.filter_vertical>` "filter" widgets, some icon
|
|
files were removed and grouped into two sprite files.
|
|
|
|
Specifically: ``selector-add.gif``, ``selector-addall.gif``,
|
|
``selector-remove.gif``, ``selector-removeall.gif``,
|
|
``selector_stacked-add.gif`` and ``selector_stacked-remove.gif`` were
|
|
combined into ``selector-icons.gif``; and ``arrow-up.gif`` and
|
|
``arrow-down.gif`` were combined into ``sorting-icons.gif``.
|
|
|
|
If you used those icons to customize the admin then you will want to replace
|
|
them with your own icons or retrieve them from a previous release.
|
|
|
|
CSS class names in admin forms
|
|
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|
|
|
To avoid conflicts with other common CSS class names (e.g. "button"), a prefix
|
|
"field-" has been added to all CSS class names automatically generated from the
|
|
form field names in the main admin forms, stacked inline forms and tabular
|
|
inline cells. You will need to take that prefix into account in your custom
|
|
style sheets or javascript files if you previously used plain field names as
|
|
selectors for custom styles or javascript transformations.
|
|
|
|
Compatibility with old signed data
|
|
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|
|
|
Django 1.3 changed the cryptographic signing mechanisms used in a number of
|
|
places in Django. While Django 1.3 kept fallbacks that would accept hashes
|
|
produced by the previous methods, these fallbacks are removed in Django 1.4.
|
|
|
|
So, if you upgrade to Django 1.4 directly from 1.2 or earlier, you may
|
|
lose/invalidate certain pieces of data that have been cryptographically signed
|
|
using an old method. To avoid this, use Django 1.3 first for a period of time
|
|
to allow the signed data to expire naturally. The affected parts are detailed
|
|
below, with 1) the consequences of ignoring this advice and 2) the amount of
|
|
time you need to run Django 1.3 for the data to expire or become irrelevant.
|
|
|
|
* ``contrib.sessions`` data integrity check
|
|
|
|
* consequences: the user will be logged out, and session data will be lost.
|
|
|
|
* time period: defined by :setting:`SESSION_COOKIE_AGE`.
|
|
|
|
* ``contrib.auth`` password reset hash
|
|
|
|
* consequences: password reset links from before the upgrade will not work.
|
|
|
|
* time period: defined by :setting:`PASSWORD_RESET_TIMEOUT_DAYS`.
|
|
|
|
Form-related hashes — these are much shorter lifetime, and are relevant only for
|
|
the short window where a user might fill in a form generated by the pre-upgrade
|
|
Django instance, and try to submit it to the upgraded Django instance:
|
|
|
|
* ``contrib.comments`` form security hash
|
|
|
|
* consequences: the user will see a validation error "Security hash failed".
|
|
|
|
* time period: the amount of time you expect users to take filling out comment
|
|
forms.
|
|
|
|
* ``FormWizard`` security hash
|
|
|
|
* consequences: the user will see an error about the form having expired,
|
|
and will be sent back to the first page of the wizard, losing the data
|
|
they have entered so far.
|
|
|
|
* time period: the amount of time you expect users to take filling out the
|
|
affected forms.
|
|
|
|
* CSRF check
|
|
|
|
* Note: This is actually a Django 1.1 fallback, not Django 1.2,
|
|
and applies only if you are upgrading from 1.1.
|
|
|
|
* consequences: the user will see a 403 error with any CSRF protected POST
|
|
form.
|
|
|
|
* time period: the amount of time you expect user to take filling out
|
|
such forms.
|
|
|
|
django.contrib.flatpages
|
|
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|
|
|
Starting in the 1.4 release the
|
|
:class:`~django.contrib.flatpages.middleware.FlatpageFallbackMiddleware` only
|
|
adds a trailing slash and redirects if the resulting URL refers to an existing
|
|
flatpage. For example, requesting ``/notaflatpageoravalidurl`` in a previous
|
|
version would redirect to ``/notaflatpageoravalidurl/``, which would
|
|
subsequently raise a 404. Requesting ``/notaflatpageoravalidurl`` now will
|
|
immediately raise a 404. Additionally redirects returned by flatpages are now
|
|
permanent (301 status code) to match the behavior of the
|
|
:class:`~django.middleware.common.CommonMiddleware`.
|
|
|
|
Serialization of :class:`~datetime.datetime` and :class:`~datetime.time`
|
|
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|
|
|
As a consequence of time zone support, and according to the ECMA-262
|
|
specification, some changes were made to the JSON serializer:
|
|
|
|
- It includes the time zone for aware datetime objects. It raises an exception
|
|
for aware time objects.
|
|
- It includes milliseconds for datetime and time objects. There is still
|
|
some precision loss, because Python stores microseconds (6 digits) and JSON
|
|
only supports milliseconds (3 digits). However, it's better than discarding
|
|
microseconds entirely.
|
|
|
|
The XML serializer was also changed to use the ISO8601 format for datetimes.
|
|
The letter ``T`` is used to separate the date part from the time part, instead
|
|
of a space. Time zone information is included in the ``[+-]HH:MM`` format.
|
|
|
|
The serializers will dump datetimes in fixtures with these new formats. They
|
|
can still load fixtures that use the old format.
|
|
|
|
``supports_timezone`` changed to ``False`` for SQLite
|
|
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|
|
|
The database feature ``supports_timezone`` used to be ``True`` for SQLite.
|
|
Indeed, if you saved an aware datetime object, SQLite stored a string that
|
|
included an UTC offset. However, this offset was ignored when loading the value
|
|
back from the database, which could corrupt the data.
|
|
|
|
In the context of time zone support, this flag was changed to ``False``, and
|
|
datetimes are now stored without time zone information in SQLite. When
|
|
:setting:`USE_TZ` is ``False``, if you attempt to save an aware datetime
|
|
object, Django raises an exception.
|
|
|
|
Database connection's thread-locality
|
|
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|
|
|
``DatabaseWrapper`` objects (i.e. the connection objects referenced by
|
|
``django.db.connection`` and ``django.db.connections["some_alias"]``) used to
|
|
be thread-local. They are now global objects in order to be potentially shared
|
|
between multiple threads. While the individual connection objects are now
|
|
global, the ``django.db.connections`` dictionary referencing those objects is
|
|
still thread-local. Therefore if you just use the ORM or
|
|
``DatabaseWrapper.cursor()`` then the behavior is still the same as before.
|
|
Note, however, that ``django.db.connection`` does not directly reference the
|
|
default ``DatabaseWrapper`` object anymore and is now a proxy to access that
|
|
object's attributes. If you need to access the actual ``DatabaseWrapper``
|
|
object, use ``django.db.connections[DEFAULT_DB_ALIAS]`` instead.
|
|
|
|
As part of this change, all underlying SQLite connections are now enabled for
|
|
potential thread-sharing (by passing the ``check_same_thread=False`` attribute
|
|
to pysqlite). ``DatabaseWrapper`` however preserves the previous behavior by
|
|
disabling thread-sharing by default, so this does not affect any existing
|
|
code that purely relies on the ORM or on ``DatabaseWrapper.cursor()``.
|
|
|
|
Finally, while it is now possible to pass connections between threads, Django
|
|
does not make any effort to synchronize access to the underlying backend.
|
|
Concurrency behavior is defined by the underlying backend implementation.
|
|
Check their documentation for details.
|
|
|
|
`COMMENTS_BANNED_USERS_GROUP` setting
|
|
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|
|
|
Django's :doc:`comments app </ref/contrib/comments/index>` has historically
|
|
supported excluding the comments of a special user group, but we've never
|
|
documented the feature properly and didn't enforce the exclusion in other parts
|
|
of the app such as the template tags. To fix this problem, we removed the code
|
|
from the feed class.
|
|
|
|
If you rely on the feature and want to restore the old behavior, simply use
|
|
a custom comment model manager to exclude the user group, like this::
|
|
|
|
from django.conf import settings
|
|
from django.contrib.comments.managers import CommentManager
|
|
|
|
class BanningCommentManager(CommentManager):
|
|
def get_query_set(self):
|
|
qs = super(BanningCommentManager, self).get_query_set()
|
|
if getattr(settings, 'COMMENTS_BANNED_USERS_GROUP', None):
|
|
where = ['user_id NOT IN (SELECT user_id FROM auth_user_groups WHERE group_id = %s)']
|
|
params = [settings.COMMENTS_BANNED_USERS_GROUP]
|
|
qs = qs.extra(where=where, params=params)
|
|
return qs
|
|
|
|
Save this model manager in your custom comment app (e.g. in
|
|
``my_comments_app/managers.py``) and add it your
|
|
:ref:`custom comment app model <custom-comment-app-api>`::
|
|
|
|
from django.db import models
|
|
from django.contrib.comments.models import Comment
|
|
|
|
from my_comments_app.managers import BanningCommentManager
|
|
|
|
class CommentWithTitle(Comment):
|
|
title = models.CharField(max_length=300)
|
|
|
|
objects = BanningCommentManager()
|
|
|
|
For more details, see the documentation about
|
|
:doc:`customizing the comments framework </ref/contrib/comments/custom>`.
|
|
|
|
`IGNORABLE_404_STARTS` and `IGNORABLE_404_ENDS` settings
|
|
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|
|
|
Until Django 1.3, it was possible to exclude some URLs from Django's
|
|
:doc:`404 error reporting</howto/error-reporting>` by adding prefixes to
|
|
:setting:`IGNORABLE_404_STARTS` and suffixes to :setting:`IGNORABLE_404_ENDS`.
|
|
|
|
In Django 1.4, these two settings are superseded by
|
|
:setting:`IGNORABLE_404_URLS`, which is a list of compiled regular expressions.
|
|
Django won't send an email for 404 errors on URLs that match any of them.
|
|
|
|
Furthermore, the previous settings had some rather arbitrary default values::
|
|
|
|
IGNORABLE_404_STARTS = ('/cgi-bin/', '/_vti_bin', '/_vti_inf')
|
|
IGNORABLE_404_ENDS = ('mail.pl', 'mailform.pl', 'mail.cgi', 'mailform.cgi',
|
|
'favicon.ico', '.php')
|
|
|
|
It's not Django's role to decide if your website has a legacy ``/cgi-bin/``
|
|
section or a ``favicon.ico``. As a consequence, the default values of
|
|
:setting:`IGNORABLE_404_URLS`, :setting:`IGNORABLE_404_STARTS` and
|
|
:setting:`IGNORABLE_404_ENDS` are all now empty.
|
|
|
|
If you have customized :setting:`IGNORABLE_404_STARTS` or
|
|
:setting:`IGNORABLE_404_ENDS`, or if you want to keep the old default value,
|
|
you should add the following lines in your settings file::
|
|
|
|
import re
|
|
IGNORABLE_404_URLS = (
|
|
# for each <prefix> in IGNORABLE_404_STARTS
|
|
re.compile(r'^<prefix>'),
|
|
# for each <suffix> in IGNORABLE_404_ENDS
|
|
re.compile(r'<suffix>$'),
|
|
)
|
|
|
|
Don't forget to escape characters that have a special meaning in a regular
|
|
expression.
|
|
|
|
CSRF protection extended to PUT and DELETE
|
|
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|
|
|
Previously, Django's :doc:`CSRF protection </ref/contrib/csrf/>` provided
|
|
protection against only POST requests. Since use of PUT and DELETE methods in
|
|
AJAX applications is becoming more common, we now protect all methods not
|
|
defined as safe by :rfc:`2616` i.e. we exempt GET, HEAD, OPTIONS and TRACE, and
|
|
enforce protection on everything else.
|
|
|
|
If you are using PUT or DELETE methods in AJAX applications, please see the
|
|
:ref:`instructions about using AJAX and CSRF <csrf-ajax>`.
|
|
|
|
``django.core.template_loaders``
|
|
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|
|
|
This was an alias to ``django.template.loader`` since 2005, it has been removed
|
|
without emitting a warning due to the length of the deprecation. If your code
|
|
still referenced this please use ``django.template.loader`` instead.
|
|
|
|
``django.db.models.fields.URLField.verify_exists``
|
|
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|
|
|
This functionality has been removed due to intractable performance and
|
|
security issues. Any existing usage of ``verify_exists`` should be
|
|
removed.
|
|
|
|
``django.core.files.storage.Storage.open``
|
|
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|
|
|
The ``open`` method of the base Storage class took an obscure parameter
|
|
``mixin`` which allowed you to dynamically change the base classes of the
|
|
returned file object. This has been removed. In the rare case you relied on the
|
|
`mixin` parameter, you can easily achieve the same by overriding the `open`
|
|
method, e.g.::
|
|
|
|
from django.core.files import File
|
|
from django.core.files.storage import FileSystemStorage
|
|
|
|
class Spam(File):
|
|
"""
|
|
Spam, spam, spam, spam and spam.
|
|
"""
|
|
def ham(self):
|
|
return 'eggs'
|
|
|
|
class SpamStorage(FileSystemStorage):
|
|
"""
|
|
A custom file storage backend.
|
|
"""
|
|
def open(self, name, mode='rb'):
|
|
return Spam(open(self.path(name), mode))
|
|
|
|
YAML deserializer now uses ``yaml.safe_load``
|
|
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|
|
|
``yaml.load`` is able to construct any Python object, which may trigger
|
|
arbitrary code execution if you process a YAML document that comes from an
|
|
untrusted source. This feature isn't necessary for Django's YAML deserializer,
|
|
whose primary use is to load fixtures consisting of simple objects. Even though
|
|
fixtures are trusted data, for additional security, the YAML deserializer now
|
|
uses ``yaml.safe_load``.
|
|
|
|
Features deprecated in 1.4
|
|
==========================
|
|
|
|
Old styles of calling ``cache_page`` decorator
|
|
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|
|
|
Some legacy ways of calling :func:`~django.views.decorators.cache.cache_page`
|
|
have been deprecated, please see the docs for the correct way to use this
|
|
decorator.
|
|
|
|
Support for PostgreSQL versions older than 8.2
|
|
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|
|
|
Django 1.3 dropped support for PostgreSQL versions older than 8.0 and the
|
|
relevant documents suggested to use a recent version because of performance
|
|
reasons but more importantly because end of the upstream support periods for
|
|
releases 8.0 and 8.1 was near (November 2010).
|
|
|
|
Django 1.4 takes that policy further and sets 8.2 as the minimum PostgreSQL
|
|
version it officially supports.
|
|
|
|
Request exceptions are now always logged
|
|
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|
|
|
When :doc:`logging support </topics/logging/>` was added to Django in 1.3, the
|
|
admin error email support was moved into the
|
|
:class:`django.utils.log.AdminEmailHandler`, attached to the
|
|
``'django.request'`` logger. In order to maintain the established behavior of
|
|
error emails, the ``'django.request'`` logger was called only when
|
|
:setting:`DEBUG` was ``False``.
|
|
|
|
To increase the flexibility of error logging for requests, the
|
|
``'django.request'`` logger is now called regardless of the value of
|
|
:setting:`DEBUG`, and the default settings file for new projects now includes a
|
|
separate filter attached to :class:`django.utils.log.AdminEmailHandler` to
|
|
prevent admin error emails in ``DEBUG`` mode::
|
|
|
|
'filters': {
|
|
'require_debug_false': {
|
|
'()': 'django.utils.log.RequireDebugFalse'
|
|
}
|
|
},
|
|
'handlers': {
|
|
'mail_admins': {
|
|
'level': 'ERROR',
|
|
'filters': ['require_debug_false'],
|
|
'class': 'django.utils.log.AdminEmailHandler'
|
|
}
|
|
},
|
|
|
|
If your project was created prior to this change, your :setting:`LOGGING`
|
|
setting will not include this new filter. In order to maintain
|
|
backwards-compatibility, Django will detect that your ``'mail_admins'`` handler
|
|
configuration includes no ``'filters'`` section, and will automatically add
|
|
this filter for you and issue a pending-deprecation warning. This will become a
|
|
deprecation warning in Django 1.5, and in Django 1.6 the
|
|
backwards-compatibility shim will be removed entirely.
|
|
|
|
The existence of any ``'filters'`` key under the ``'mail_admins'`` handler will
|
|
disable this backward-compatibility shim and deprecation warning.
|
|
|
|
``django.conf.urls.defaults``
|
|
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|
|
|
Until Django 1.3 the functions :func:`~django.conf.urls.include`,
|
|
:func:`~django.conf.urls.patterns` and :func:`~django.conf.urls.url` plus
|
|
:data:`~django.conf.urls.handler404`, :data:`~django.conf.urls.handler500`
|
|
were located in a ``django.conf.urls.defaults`` module.
|
|
|
|
Starting with Django 1.4 they are now available in :mod:`django.conf.urls`.
|
|
|
|
``django.contrib.databrowse``
|
|
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|
|
|
Databrowse has not seen active development for some time, and this does not show
|
|
any sign of changing. There had been a suggestion for a `GSOC project`_ to
|
|
integrate the functionality of databrowse into the admin, but no progress was
|
|
made. While Databrowse has been deprecated, an enhancement of
|
|
``django.contrib.admin`` providing a similar feature set is still possible.
|
|
|
|
.. _GSOC project: https://code.djangoproject.com/wiki/SummerOfCode2011#Integratedatabrowseintotheadmin
|
|
|
|
The code that powers Databrowse is licensed under the same terms as Django
|
|
itself, and so is available to be adopted by an individual or group as
|
|
a third-party project.
|
|
|
|
``django.core.management.setup_environ``
|
|
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|
|
|
This function temporarily modified ``sys.path`` in order to make the parent
|
|
"project" directory importable under the old flat :djadmin:`startproject`
|
|
layout. This function is now deprecated, as its path workarounds are no longer
|
|
needed with the new ``manage.py`` and default project layout.
|
|
|
|
This function was never documented or part of the public API, but was widely
|
|
recommended for use in setting up a "Django environment" for a user script.
|
|
These uses should be replaced by setting the ``DJANGO_SETTINGS_MODULE``
|
|
environment variable or using :func:`django.conf.settings.configure`.
|
|
|
|
``django.core.management.execute_manager``
|
|
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|
|
|
This function was previously used by ``manage.py`` to execute a management
|
|
command. It is identical to
|
|
``django.core.management.execute_from_command_line``, except that it first
|
|
calls ``setup_environ``, which is now deprecated. As such, ``execute_manager``
|
|
is also deprecated; ``execute_from_command_line`` can be used instead. Neither
|
|
of these functions is documented as part of the public API, but a deprecation
|
|
path is needed due to use in existing ``manage.py`` files.
|
|
|
|
``is_safe`` and ``needs_autoescape`` attributes of template filters
|
|
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|
|
|
Two flags, ``is_safe`` and ``needs_autoescape``, define how each template filter
|
|
interacts with Django's auto-escaping behavior. They used to be attributes of
|
|
the filter function::
|
|
|
|
@register.filter
|
|
def noop(value):
|
|
return value
|
|
noop.is_safe = True
|
|
|
|
However, this technique caused some problems in combination with decorators,
|
|
especially :func:`@stringfilter <django.template.defaultfilters.stringfilter>`.
|
|
Now, the flags are keyword arguments of :meth:`@register.filter
|
|
<django.template.Library.filter>`::
|
|
|
|
@register.filter(is_safe=True)
|
|
def noop(value):
|
|
return value
|
|
|
|
See :ref:`filters and auto-escaping <filters-auto-escaping>` for more information.
|
|
|
|
Session cookies now have the ``httponly`` flag by default
|
|
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|
|
|
Session cookies now include the ``httponly`` attribute by default to
|
|
help reduce the impact of potential XSS attacks. For strict backwards
|
|
compatibility, use ``SESSION_COOKIE_HTTPONLY = False`` in your settings file.
|
|
|
|
Wildcard expansion of application names in `INSTALLED_APPS`
|
|
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|
|
|
Until Django 1.3, :setting:`INSTALLED_APPS` accepted wildcards in application
|
|
names, like ``django.contrib.*``. The expansion was performed by a
|
|
filesystem-based implementation of ``from <package> import *``. Unfortunately,
|
|
`this can't be done reliably`_.
|
|
|
|
This behavior was never documented. Since it is un-pythonic and not obviously
|
|
useful, it was removed in Django 1.4. If you relied on it, you must edit your
|
|
settings file to list all your applications explicitly.
|
|
|
|
.. _this can't be done reliably: http://docs.python.org/tutorial/modules.html#importing-from-a-package
|
|
|
|
``HttpRequest.raw_post_data`` renamed to ``HttpRequest.body``
|
|
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|
|
|
This attribute was confusingly named ``HttpRequest.raw_post_data``, but it
|
|
actually provided the body of the HTTP request. It's been renamed to
|
|
``HttpRequest.body``, and ``HttpRequest.raw_post_data`` has been deprecated.
|
|
|
|
The Django 1.4 roadmap
|
|
======================
|
|
|
|
Before the final Django 1.4 release, several other preview/development releases
|
|
will be made available. The current schedule consists of at least the following:
|
|
|
|
* Week of **January 30, 2012**: First Django 1.4 beta release; final
|
|
feature freeze for Django 1.4.
|
|
|
|
* Week of **February 27, 2012**: First Django 1.4 release
|
|
candidate; string freeze for translations.
|
|
|
|
* Week of **March 5, 2011**: Django 1.4 final release.
|
|
|
|
If necessary, additional alpha, beta or release-candidate packages
|
|
will be issued prior to the final 1.4 release. Django 1.4 will be
|
|
released approximately one week after the final release candidate.
|
|
|
|
What you can do to help
|
|
=======================
|
|
|
|
In order to provide a high-quality 1.4 release, we need your help. Although this
|
|
alpha release is, again, *not* intended for production use, you can help the
|
|
Django team by trying out the alpha codebase in a safe test environment and
|
|
reporting any bugs or issues you encounter. The Django ticket tracker is the
|
|
central place to search for open issues:
|
|
|
|
* http://code.djangoproject.com/timeline
|
|
|
|
Please open new tickets if no existing ticket corresponds to a problem you're
|
|
running into.
|
|
|
|
Additionally, discussion of Django development, including progress toward the
|
|
1.3 release, takes place daily on the django-developers mailing list:
|
|
|
|
* http://groups.google.com/group/django-developers
|
|
|
|
... and in the ``#django-dev`` IRC channel on ``irc.freenode.net``. If you're
|
|
interested in helping out with Django's development, feel free to join the
|
|
discussions there.
|
|
|
|
Django's online documentation also includes pointers on how to contribute to
|
|
Django:
|
|
|
|
* :doc:`How to contribute to Django </internals/contributing/index>`
|
|
|
|
Contributions on any level -- developing code, writing documentation or simply
|
|
triaging tickets and helping to test proposed bugfixes -- are always welcome and
|
|
appreciated.
|
|
|
|
Several development sprints will also be taking place before the 1.4
|
|
release; these will typically be announced in advance on the
|
|
django-developers mailing list, and anyone who wants to help is
|
|
welcome to join in.
|