Moved the bulk of the shortcut() function in django/views/defaults.py to a new module, django/contrib/contenttypes/views.py. As a result, django/views/defaults.py no longer relies on django.contrib.contenttypes. Of course, the shortcut() function is still available in the former module, for backwards compatibility. See the new FutureBackwardsIncompatibleChanges wiki page.
git-svn-id: http://code.djangoproject.com/svn/django/trunk@9001 bcc190cf-cafb-0310-a4f2-bffc1f526a37
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@ -148,9 +148,9 @@ class AdminSite(object):
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return self.password_change_done(request)
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elif url == 'jsi18n':
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return self.i18n_javascript(request)
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# urls starting with 'r/' are for the "show in web" links
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# URLs starting with 'r/' are for the "View on site" links.
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elif url.startswith('r/'):
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from django.views.defaults import shortcut
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from django.contrib.contenttypes.views import shortcut
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return shortcut(request, *url.split('/')[1:])
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else:
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if '/' in url:
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@ -0,0 +1,67 @@
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from django import http
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from django.contrib.contenttypes.models import ContentType
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from django.contrib.sites.models import Site
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from django.core.exceptions import ObjectDoesNotExist
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def shortcut(request, content_type_id, object_id):
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"Redirect to an object's page based on a content-type ID and an object ID."
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# Look up the object, making sure it's got a get_absolute_url() function.
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try:
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content_type = ContentType.objects.get(pk=content_type_id)
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obj = content_type.get_object_for_this_type(pk=object_id)
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except ObjectDoesNotExist:
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raise http.Http404("Content type %s object %s doesn't exist" % (content_type_id, object_id))
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try:
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absurl = obj.get_absolute_url()
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except AttributeError:
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raise http.Http404("%s objects don't have get_absolute_url() methods" % content_type.name)
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# Try to figure out the object's domain, so we can do a cross-site redirect
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# if necessary.
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# If the object actually defines a domain, we're done.
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if absurl.startswith('http://') or absurl.startswith('https://'):
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return http.HttpResponseRedirect(absurl)
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# Otherwise, we need to introspect the object's relationships for a
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# relation to the Site object
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object_domain = None
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opts = obj._meta
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# First, look for an many-to-many relationship to Site.
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for field in opts.many_to_many:
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if field.rel.to is Site:
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try:
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# Caveat: In the case of multiple related Sites, this just
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# selects the *first* one, which is arbitrary.
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object_domain = getattr(obj, field.name).all()[0].domain
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except IndexError:
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pass
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if object_domain is not None:
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break
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# Next, look for a many-to-one relationship to Site.
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if object_domain is None:
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for field in obj._meta.fields:
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if field.rel and field.rel.to is Site:
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try:
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object_domain = getattr(obj, field.name).domain
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except Site.DoesNotExist:
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pass
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if object_domain is not None:
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break
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# Fall back to the current site (if possible).
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if object_domain is None:
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try:
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object_domain = Site.objects.get_current().domain
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except Site.DoesNotExist:
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pass
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# If all that malarkey found an object domain, use it. Otherwise, fall back
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# to whatever get_absolute_url() returned.
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if object_domain is not None:
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protocol = request.is_secure() and 'https' or 'http'
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return http.HttpResponseRedirect('%s://%s%s' % (protocol, object_domain, absurl))
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else:
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return http.HttpResponseRedirect(absurl)
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@ -1,70 +1,5 @@
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from django.core.exceptions import ObjectDoesNotExist
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from django.template import Context, RequestContext, loader
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from django.contrib.contenttypes.models import ContentType
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from django.contrib.sites.models import Site
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from django import http
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def shortcut(request, content_type_id, object_id):
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"Redirect to an object's page based on a content-type ID and an object ID."
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# Look up the object, making sure it's got a get_absolute_url() function.
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try:
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content_type = ContentType.objects.get(pk=content_type_id)
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obj = content_type.get_object_for_this_type(pk=object_id)
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except ObjectDoesNotExist:
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raise http.Http404, "Content type %s object %s doesn't exist" % (content_type_id, object_id)
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try:
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absurl = obj.get_absolute_url()
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except AttributeError:
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raise http.Http404, "%s objects don't have get_absolute_url() methods" % content_type.name
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# Try to figure out the object's domain, so we can do a cross-site redirect
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# if necessary.
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# If the object actually defines a domain, we're done.
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if absurl.startswith('http://') or absurl.startswith('https://'):
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return http.HttpResponseRedirect(absurl)
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object_domain = None
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# Otherwise, we need to introspect the object's relationships for a
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# relation to the Site object
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opts = obj._meta
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# First, look for an many-to-many relationship to sites
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for field in opts.many_to_many:
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if field.rel.to is Site:
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try:
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object_domain = getattr(obj, field.name).all()[0].domain
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except IndexError:
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pass
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if object_domain is not None:
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break
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# Next look for a many-to-one relationship to site
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if object_domain is None:
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for field in obj._meta.fields:
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if field.rel and field.rel.to is Site:
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try:
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object_domain = getattr(obj, field.name).domain
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except Site.DoesNotExist:
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pass
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if object_domain is not None:
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break
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# Fall back to the current site (if possible)
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if object_domain is None:
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try:
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object_domain = Site.objects.get_current().domain
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except Site.DoesNotExist:
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pass
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# If all that malarkey found an object domain, use it; otherwise fall back
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# to whatever get_absolute_url() returned.
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if object_domain is not None:
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protocol = request.is_secure() and 'https' or 'http'
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return http.HttpResponseRedirect('%s://%s%s' % (protocol, object_domain, absurl))
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else:
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return http.HttpResponseRedirect(absurl)
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from django.template import Context, RequestContext, loader
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def page_not_found(request, template_name='404.html'):
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"""
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@ -87,3 +22,14 @@ def server_error(request, template_name='500.html'):
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"""
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t = loader.get_template(template_name) # You need to create a 500.html template.
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return http.HttpResponseServerError(t.render(Context({})))
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def shortcut(request, content_type_id, object_id):
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# TODO: Remove this in Django 2.0.
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# This is a legacy view that depends on the contenttypes framework.
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# The core logic was moved to django.contrib.contenttypes.views after
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# Django 1.0, but this remains here for backwards compatibility.
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# Note that the import is *within* this function, rather than being at
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# module level, because we don't want to assume people have contenttypes
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# installed.
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from django.contrib.contenttypes.views import shortcut as real_shortcut
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return real_shortcut(request, content_type_id, object_id)
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