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New blog post for moving simulators to GitHub.
author | Brian Neal <bgneal@gmail.com> |
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date | Thu, 02 Jul 2020 15:20:39 -0500 |
parents | 7ce6393e6d30 |
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Upgrading to Django 1.4 ####################### :date: 2012-04-15 14:50 :tags: Django :slug: upgrading-to-django-1.4 :author: Brian Neal `Django 1.4`_ came out recently, and I took a few hours to upgrade my first site yesterday. I thought it would be useful for my own reference to write down what I did. I hope it will be useful to others. I'd love to read what you had to do, so if you went through this process and blogged about it, please leave a comment. Please keep in mind these aren't hard and fast steps or a recipe to follow, as my sites are probably nothing like yours and may use different features of Django. Preparation ----------- The first thing I did was to read very carefully the `Django 1.4 release notes`_. The Django team does a great job of documenting what has changed, so it is well worth your time to read the release notes. It is also a good idea to at least skim the `Django Deprecation Timeline`_. After reading these, you should make a list of the things you want to change, add, or remove. Tips ---- After deciding what areas you want or need to change in your code, these tips may be useful to help you implement the changes. #. **Run with warnings turned on**. Use this command to run the development server: ``$ python -Wall manage.py runserver``. Django makes use of `Python's warning system`_ to flag features that are deprecated. By running Python with the ``-Wall`` switch, you'll see these warnings in the development server output. #. **Use the debugger to track down warnings**. Not sure where a pesky warning is coming from? Just open the Django source code in your editor and put a ``import pdb; pdb.set_trace()`` line right above or below the warning. You can then use the debugger's ``w`` command to get a stack trace and find out exactly what code is leading to the warning. In my case I kept getting a few warnings with no idea where they were coming from. I used this technique to verify the warnings were coming from third party code and not my own. For more information on using the debugger (and you really **should** know how to use this invaluable tool), see the `Pdb documentation`_. My upgrade experience --------------------- Here is a list of things that I did during my port. Again, you may not need to do these, and the next site I upgrade may have a different list. All of these changes (except for the first) are described in the `Django 1.4 release notes`_. #. **Upgrade my Django debug toolbar**. As of this writing, the Django debug toolbar I got from PyPI was not compatible with Django 1.4. I simply uninstalled it and grabbed the development version from GitHub with ``pip install git+https://github.com/django-debug-toolbar/django-debug-toolbar.git``. #. **Remove the ADMIN_MEDIA_PREFIX setting**. The admin application in Django 1.4 now relies on the ``staticfiles`` application (introduced in Django 1.3) to handle the serving of static assets. #. **Remove use of the {% admin_media_prefix %} template tag**. Related to the above, this tag is now deprecated. I had a custom admin view that used this template tag, and I simply replaced it with ``{{ STATIC_URL }}/admin``. #. **Remove verify_exists on URLFields**. The ``verify_exists`` option to the ``URLField`` has been removed for performance and security reasons. I had always set this to ``False``; now I just had to remove it altogether. #. **Add the require_debug_false filter to logging settings**. As explained in the release notes, this change prevents admin error emails from being sent while in ``DEBUG`` mode. #. **django.conf.urls.defaults is deprecated**. I changed my imports in all ``urls.py`` files to use ``django.conf.urls`` instead of ``django.conf.urls.defaults`` to access ``include()``, ``patterns()``, and ``url()``. The Django team had recently moved these functions and updated the docs and tutorial to stop using the frowned upon ``from django.conf.urls.defaults import *``. #. **Enable the new clickjacking protection**. A nice new feature is some new middleware that adds the ``X-Frame-Options`` header to all response headers. This provides clickjacking_ protection in modern browsers. #. **Add an admin password reset feature**. By adding a few new lines to your ``urlconf`` you get a nifty new password reset feature for your admin. #. **Update to the new manage.py**. This was the biggest change with the most impact. The Django team has finally removed a long standing wart with its ``manage.py`` utility. Previously, ``manage.py`` used to play games with your ``PYTHONPATH`` which led to confusion when migrating to production. It could also lead to having your settings imported twice. See the next section in this blog entry for more on what I did here. Reorganizing for the new manage.py ---------------------------------- The change with the largest impact for me was reorganizing my directory structure for the new ``manage.py`` command. Before this change, I had organized my directory structure like this: :: mysite/ media/ static/ mysite/ myapp1/ __init__.py models.py views.py urls.py myapp2/ __init__.py models.py views.py urls.py settings/ __init__.py base.py local.py production.py test.py apache/ myproject.wsgi logs/ templates/ manage.py urls.py LICENSE fabfile.py requirements.txt After replacing the contents of my old ``manage.py`` with the new content, I then reorganized my directory structure to this: :: mysite/ media/ static/ myapp1/ __init__.py models.py views.py urls.py myapp2/ __init__.py models.py views.py urls.py myproject/ settings/ __init__.py base.py local.py production.py test.py apache/ myproject.wsgi logs/ templates/ urls.py LICENSE fabfile.py manage.py requirements.txt It is a subtle change, but I like it. It now makes it clear that my project is just an application itself, consisting of the top-level ``urls.py``, settings, templates and logs. The ``manage.py`` file is now at the top level directory also, which seems right. I had always made my imports as ``from app.models import MyModel`` instead of ``from myproject.app.models``, so I didn't have to update any imports. Since I use the "settings as a package" scheme, I did have to update the imports in my settings files. For example, in my ``local.py`` I had to change ``from settings.base import *`` to ``myproject.settings.base import *``. What I didn't do ---------------- Django 1.4's largest new feature is probably its support for timezones. I decided for this project not to take advantage of that. It would require a lot of changes, and it isn't really worth it for this small site. I may use it on the next site I convert to Django 1.4, and I will definitely be using it on new projects. Conclusion ---------- The upgrade process went smoother and quicker than I thought thanks to the excellent release notes and the Django team's use of Python warnings to flag deprecated features. .. _Django 1.4: https://www.djangoproject.com/weblog/2012/mar/23/14/ .. _Django 1.4 release notes: https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/1.4/releases/1.4/ .. _Django Deprecation Timeline: https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/1.4/internals/deprecation/ .. _Python's warning system: http://docs.python.org/library/warnings.html .. _Pdb documentation: http://docs.python.org/library/pdb.html .. _clickjacking: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clickjacking