Welcome to Django 1.5!
These release notes cover the new features, as well as some backwards incompatible changes you’ll want to be aware of when upgrading from Django 1.4 or older versions. We’ve also dropped some features, which are detailed in our deprecation plan, and we’ve begun the deprecation process for some features.
The biggest new feature in Django 1.5 is the configurable User model. Before Django 1.5, applications that wanted to use Django’s auth framework (django.contrib.auth) were forced to use Django’s definition of a “user”. In Django 1.5, you can now swap out the User model for one that you write yourself. This could be a simple extension to the existing User model – for example, you could add a Twitter or Facebook ID field – or you could completely replace the User with one totally customized for your site.
Django 1.5 is also the first release with Python 3 support! We’re labeling this support “experimental” because we don’t yet consider it production-ready, but everything’s in place for you to start porting your apps to Python 3. Our next release, Django 1.6, will support Python 3 without reservations.
Other notable new features in Django 1.5 include:
Wherever possible we try to introduce new features in a backwards-compatible manner per our API stability policy. However, as with previous releases, Django 1.5 ships with some minor backwards incompatible changes; people upgrading from previous versions of Django should read that list carefully.
One deprecated feature worth noting is the shift to “new-style” url tag. Prior to Django 1.3, syntax like {% url myview %} was interpreted incorrectly (Django considered "myview" to be a literal name of a view, not a template variable named myview). Django 1.3 and above introduced the {% load url from future %} syntax to bring in the corrected behavior where myview was seen as a variable.
The upshot of this is that if you are not using {% load url from future %} in your templates, you’ll need to change tags like {% url myview %} to {% url "myview" %}. If you were using {% load url from future %} you can simply remove that line under Django 1.5
Django 1.5 requires Python 2.6.5 or above, though we highly recommended Python 2.7.3 or above. Support for Python 2.5 and below has been dropped.
This change should affect only a small number of Django users, as most operating-system vendors today are shipping Python 2.6 or newer as their default version. If you’re still using Python 2.5, however, you’ll need to stick to Django 1.4 until you can upgrade your Python version. Per our support policy, Django 1.4 will continue to receive security support until the release of Django 1.6.
Django 1.5 does not run on a Jython final release, because Jython’s latest release doesn’t currently support Python 2.6. However, Jython currently does offer an alpha release featuring 2.7 support, and Django 1.5 supports that alpha release.
Django 1.5 introduces support for Python 3 - specifically, Python 3.2 and above. This comes in the form of a single codebase; you don’t need to install a different version of Django on Python 3. This means that you can write applications targeted for just Python 2, just Python 3, or single applications that support both platforms.
However, we’re labeling this support “experimental” for now: although it’s received extensive testing via our automated test suite, it’s received very little real-world testing. We’ve done our best to eliminate bugs, but we can’t be sure we covered all possible uses of Django. Further, Django’s more than a web framework; it’s an ecosystem of pluggable components. At this point, very few third-party applications have been ported to Python 3, so it’s unlikely that a real-world application will have all its dependencies satisfied under Python 3.
Thus, we’re recommending that Django 1.5 not be used in production under Python 3. Instead, use this opportunity to begin porting applications to Python 3. If you’re an author of a pluggable component, we encourage you to start porting now.
We plan to offer first-class, production-ready support for Python 3 in our next release, Django 1.6.
In Django 1.5, you can now use your own model as the store for user-related data. If your project needs a username with more than 30 characters, or if you want to store user’s names in a format other than first name/last name, or you want to put custom profile information onto your User object, you can now do so.
If you have a third-party reusable application that references the User model, you may need to make some changes to the way you reference User instances. You should also document any specific features of the User model that your application relies upon.
See the documentation on custom User models for more details.
The method Model.save() has a new keyword argument update_fields. By using this argument it is possible to save only a select list of model’s fields. This can be useful for performance reasons or when trying to avoid overwriting concurrent changes.
Deferred instances (those loaded by .only() or .defer()) will automatically save just the loaded fields. If any field is set manually after load, that field will also get updated on save.
See the Model.save() documentation for more details.
Before Django 1.5, it was possible to create a streaming response by passing an iterator to HttpResponse. But this was unreliable: any middleware that accessed the content attribute would consume the iterator prematurely.
You can now explicitly generate a streaming response with the new StreamingHttpResponse class. This class exposes a streaming_content attribute which is an iterator.
Since StreamingHttpResponse does not have a content attribute, middleware that needs access to the response content must test for streaming responses and behave accordingly. See process_response for more information.
To make it easier to deal with javascript templates which collide with Django’s syntax, you can now use the verbatim block tag to avoid parsing the tag’s content.
The methods ContentTypeManager.get_for_model() and ContentTypeManager.get_for_models() have a new keyword argument – respectively for_concrete_model and for_concrete_models. By passing False using this argument it is now possible to retrieve the ContentType associated with proxy models.
In all generic class-based views (or any class-based view inheriting from ContextMixin), the context dictionary contains a view variable that points to the View instance.
Additions to the docs include a revamped Tutorial 3 and a new tutorial on testing. A new section, “Advanced Tutorials”, offers How to write reusable apps as well as a step-by-step guide for new contributors in Writing your first patch for Django.
Django 1.5 also includes several smaller improvements worth noting:
Warning
In addition to the changes outlined in this section, be sure to review the deprecation plan for any features that have been removed. If you haven’t updated your code within the deprecation timeline for a given feature, its removal may appear as a backwards incompatible change.
Abstract models are able to define a custom manager, and that manager will be inherited by any concrete models extending the abstract model. However, if you try to use the abstract model to call a method on the manager, an exception will now be raised. Previously, the call would have been permitted, but would have failed as soon as any database operation was attempted (usually with a “table does not exist” error from the database).
If you have functionality on a manager that you have been invoking using the abstract class, you should migrate that logic to a Python staticmethod or classmethod on the abstract class.
For consistency with the other date-based generic views, YearArchiveView now passes year in the context as a datetime.date rather than a string. If you are using {{ year }} in your templates, you must replace it with {{ year|date:"Y" }}.
next_year and previous_year were also added in the context. They are calculated according to allow_empty and allow_future.
YearArchiveView and MonthArchiveView were documented to provide a date_list sorted in ascending order in the context, like their function-based predecessors, but it actually was in descending order. In 1.5, the documented order was restored. You may want to add (or remove) the reversed keyword when you’re iterating on date_list in a template:
{% for date in date_list reversed %}
ArchiveIndexView still provides a date_list in descending order.
For consistency with the design of the other generic views, TemplateView no longer passes a params dictionary into the context, instead passing the variables from the URLconf directly into the context.
request.POST will no longer include data posted via HTTP requests with non form-specific content-types in the header. In prior versions, data posted with content-types other than multipart/form-data or application/x-www-form-urlencoded would still end up represented in the request.POST attribute. Developers wishing to access the raw POST data for these cases, should use the request.body attribute instead.
Unlike GET and POST, these HTTP methods aren’t implemented by web browsers. Rather, they’re used in APIs, which transfer data in various formats such as JSON or XML. Since such requests may contain arbitrary data, Django doesn’t attempt to decode their body.
However, the test client used to build a query string for OPTIONS and DELETE requests like for GET, and a request body for PUT requests like for POST. This encoding was arbitrary and inconsistent with Django’s behavior when it receives the requests, so it was removed in Django 1.5.
If you were using the data parameter in an OPTIONS or a DELETE request, you must convert it to a query string and append it to the path parameter.
If you were using the data parameter in a PUT request without a content_type, you must encode your data before passing it to the test client and set the content_type argument.
As explained below, Django 1.5 deprecates django.utils.simplejson in favor of Python 2.6’s built-in json module. In theory, this change is harmless. Unfortunately, because of incompatibilities between versions of simplejson, it may trigger errors in some circumstances.
JSON-related features in Django 1.4 always used django.utils.simplejson. This module was actually:
In Django 1.5, those features use Python’s json module, which is based on version 2.0.9 of simplejson.
There are no known incompatibilities between Django’s copy of version 2.0.7 and Python’s copy of version 2.0.9. However, there are some incompatibilities between other versions of simplejson:
More information on these incompatibilities is available in ticket #18023.
The net result is that, if you have installed simplejson and your code uses Django’s serialization internals directly – for instance django.core.serializers.json.DjangoJSONEncoder, the switch from simplejson to json could break your code. (In general, changes to internals aren’t documented; we’re making an exception here.)
At this point, the maintainers of Django believe that using json from the standard library offers the strongest guarantee of backwards-compatibility. They recommend to use it from now on.
If you have written a custom password hasher, your encode(), verify() or safe_summary() methods should accept Unicode parameters (password, salt or encoded). If any of the hashing methods need byte strings, you can use the force_bytes() utility to encode the strings.
When using object pagination, the previous_page_number() and next_page_number() methods of the Page object did not check if the returned number was inside the existing page range. It does check it now and raises an InvalidPage exception when the number is either too low or too high.
PostgreSQL’s autocommit option didn’t work as advertised previously. It did work for single transaction block, but after the first block was left the autocommit behavior was never restored. This bug is now fixed in 1.5. While this is only a bug fix, it is worth checking your applications behavior if you are using PostgreSQL together with the autocommit option.
Django’s session middleware will skip saving the session data if the response’s status code is 500.
Prior to Django 1.5, if you attempted to log into the admin interface and mistakenly used your email address instead of your username, the admin interface would provide a warning advising that your email address was not your username. In Django 1.5, the introduction of custom User models has required the removal of this warning. This doesn’t change the login behavior of the admin site; it only affects the warning message that is displayed under one particular mode of login failure.
Some changes have been introduced in the execution of tests that might be backward-incompatible for some testing setups:
Previously, the test database was truncated before each test run in a TransactionTestCase.
In order to be able to run unit tests in any order and to make sure they are always isolated from each other, TransactionTestCase will now reset the database after each test run instead.
TransactionTestCase tests used to reset primary key sequences automatically together with the database flushing actions described above.
This has been changed so no sequences are implicitly reset. This can cause TransactionTestCase tests that depend on hard-coded primary key values to break.
The new reset_sequences attribute can be used to force the old behavior for TransactionTestCase that might need it.
In order to make sure all TestCase code starts with a clean database, tests are now executed in the following order:
This should not cause any problems unless you have existing doctests which assume a TransactionTestCase executed earlier left some database state behind or unit tests that rely on some form of state being preserved after the execution of other tests. Such tests are already very fragile, and must now be changed to be able to run independently.
The cleaned_data dictionary is now always present after form validation. When the form doesn’t validate, it contains only the fields that passed validation. You should test the success of the validation with the is_valid() method and not with the presence or absence of the cleaned_data attribute on the form.
syncdb now queries the database routers to determine if content types (when contenttypes is enabled) and permissions (when auth is enabled) should be created in the target database. Previously, it created them in the default database, even when another database was specified with the --database option.
If you use syncdb on multiple databases, you should ensure that your routers allow synchronizing content types and permissions to only one of them. See the docs on the behavior of contrib apps with multiple databases for more information.
With the introduction of custom User models, there is no longer any need for a built-in mechanism to store user profile data.
You can still define user profiles models that have a one-to-one relation with the User model - in fact, for many applications needing to associate data with a User account, this will be an appropriate design pattern to follow. However, the AUTH_PROFILE_MODULE setting, and the get_profile() method for accessing the user profile model, should not be used any longer.
Django 1.5 deprecates the ability to stream a response by passing an iterator to HttpResponse. If you rely on this behavior, switch to StreamingHttpResponse. See Explicit support for streaming responses above.
In Django 1.7 and above, the iterator will be consumed immediately by HttpResponse.
Since Django 1.5 drops support for Python 2.5, we can now rely on the json module being available in Python’s standard library, so we’ve removed our own copy of simplejson. You should now import json instead django.utils.simplejson.
Unfortunately, this change might have unwanted side-effects, because of incompatibilities between versions of simplejson – see the backwards-incompatible changes section. If you rely on features added to simplejson after it became Python’s json, you should import simplejson explicitly.
The StrAndUnicode mix-in has been deprecated. Define a __str__ method and apply the python_2_unicode_compatible() decorator instead.
The product() function has been deprecated. Use the built-in itertools.product() instead.
The markup contrib module has been deprecated and will follow an accelerated deprecation schedule. Direct use of python markup libraries or 3rd party tag libraries is preferred to Django maintaining this functionality in the framework.
The cleanup management command has been deprecated and replaced by clearsessions.
The undocumented daily_cleanup.py script has been deprecated. Use the clearsessions management command instead.
Dec 23, 2012