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view content/Coding/025-upgrading-django1.5.rst @ 23:e4f02a31925d
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 | 49bebfa6f9d3 |
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Upgrading to Django 1.5 ####################### :date: 2013-08-29 19:30 :tags: Django :slug: upgrading-to-django-1.5 :author: Brian Neal :summary: Here are my notes about upgrading to Django 1.5. Upgrading to Django 1.5 ======================= `Django`_ 1.5 came out a while ago, and I finally got around to upgrading two of my largest sites. I thought I would make a list of what I changed at a high level for my own reference. Perhaps someone else may find it useful as well. In any event, I highly recommend you read the excellent `release notes`_ and `deprecation timeline`_. I also recommend you run with warnings turned on:: $ python -Wall manage.py runserver This will help you flag down issues in your code. If you aren't sure where a warning is coming from, you can turn warnings into exceptions and get a traceback (see the Python docs on the warnings_ library). Another trick is to put a pdb_ breakpoint in the Django code before or after the warning, then you can examine the call stack with the ``w`` command. Upgrading Issues ================ Here are the issues that I ran into. Of course you may have a very different experience depending on what features of Django you used and the details of your site. #. **Replace occurrences of Django's simplejson with json**. The Django team deprecated their version of the json library since they had dropped support for older versions of Python. #. **select_related's depth argument is deprecated**. Instead of using ``depth`` I had to explictly name which relationships to follow. #. **The cleanup management command is now called clearsessions**. I have a Celery_ task I had to update because of this name change. #. **Remove my {% load url from future %} tags**. Long ago I had converted to the newer ``url`` tag behavior by using this tag. Since this is now the current behavior I could remove all of these tags. #. **The LOGIN_* settings now accept URL names**. These settings can now accept URL names which allows me to be more DRY (Don't Repeat Yourself). I no longer have to maintain URL patterns in two places. #. **Management commands should use self.stdout, etc. for output**. I'm not sure if this is required, but it makes it easier to test your management commands. #. **slugify is now available at django.utils.text**. I was doing something kind of hacky by invoking the slugify template filter in Python code. Now this slugify code is more naturally available as a free Python function without the template filter baggage. #. **Remove all references to django.contrib.markup**. Django decided not to be so tightly coupled to various third party markup languages. I can see their reasoning, as it does add to their maintenance burden, but it is kind of inconvenient if you already relied on it. Fortunately I had a while ago stopped relying on the Markdown filter and had used a custom solution. Seeing this issue in the release notes caused me to go looking through my code and I found some unused templates and ``INSTALLED_APPS`` setting that I could remove. On my second site, I had one tiny usage of the Textile filter that I decided to just get rid of since it was hardly worth carrying the dependency for. I wrote a quick and dirty management command to convert the database from storing Textile markup to HTML and I was done. #. **localflavor is deprecated in preferece to a third party app**. I was using some US state fields in a few models. All I had to do was pip_ install `django-localflavor`_, fix up some imports, update my requirements files, and I was good. #. **Function-based generic views are now gone**. A third party application I am using made use of the old function-based generic views. These have been replaced with the newer class-based generic views. Luckily I wasn't actually using the views in this application, I am only relying on it's models and utilities. In this case I simply removed the inclusion of the application's ``urls.py`` and all was well. The application is no longer maintained so I would have had to port to the class-based views if I had needed them. #. **The adminmedia template tags library is now gone**. I wasn't actually using this anymore, but I had a template that was still loading it. This cruft was removed. What I didn't do ================ Django 1.5's largest new feature is probably its support for a `configurable User model`_. This impacts my largest site, and I wasn't quite sure how to proceed on this front. This is the only issue I feel like Django threw me under the bus on. Fortunately, the ``get_profile()`` and ``AUTH_PROFILE_MODULE`` stuff will not be removed until Django 1.7. In addition, the author of the South_ library is developing model migration support which will also land in Django 1.7. Thus there is some time to sort this out, and I'm hoping Django will have some tutorials or docs on how to migrate away from the old ``AUTH_PROFILE_MODULE`` scheme. 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: https://www.djangoproject.com/ .. _release notes: https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/1.5/releases/1.5/ .. _deprecation timeline: https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/1.5/internals/deprecation/ .. _warnings: http://docs.python.org/library/warnings.html .. _pdb: http://docs.python.org/library/pdb.html .. _Celery: http://www.celeryproject.org/ .. _pip: http://www.pip-installer.org/en/latest/ .. _django-localflavor: https://pypi.python.org/pypi/django-localflavor .. _configurable user model: https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/1.5/topics/auth/customizing/#auth-custom-user .. _South: http://south.aeracode.org/