Fixed #6353 (again) by making force_unicode() and smart_str() a bit more robust

in the face of funky Exception instances. This is slightly symptomatic of
problems in the calling code, but we don't want to raise a secondary exception
whilst trying to display the first one. Based on a patch from Karen Tracey.


git-svn-id: http://code.djangoproject.com/svn/django/trunk@8588 bcc190cf-cafb-0310-a4f2-bffc1f526a37
This commit is contained in:
Malcolm Tredinnick 2008-08-26 18:53:51 +00:00
parent 5dd68fa74a
commit c6a2bd9b96
1 changed files with 19 additions and 1 deletions

View File

@ -48,7 +48,19 @@ def force_unicode(s, encoding='utf-8', strings_only=False, errors='strict'):
if hasattr(s, '__unicode__'):
s = unicode(s)
else:
s = unicode(str(s), encoding, errors)
try:
s = unicode(str(s), encoding, errors)
except UnicodeEncodeError:
if not isinstance(s, Exception):
raise
# If we get to here, the caller has passed in an Exception
# subclass populated with non-ASCII data without special
# handling to display as a string. We need to handle this
# without raising a further exception. We do an
# approximation to what the Exception's standard str()
# output should be.
s = ' '.join([force_unicode(arg, encoding, strings_only,
errors) for arg in s])
elif not isinstance(s, unicode):
# Note: We use .decode() here, instead of unicode(s, encoding,
# errors), so that if s is a SafeString, it ends up being a
@ -72,6 +84,12 @@ def smart_str(s, encoding='utf-8', strings_only=False, errors='strict'):
try:
return str(s)
except UnicodeEncodeError:
if isinstance(s, Exception):
# An Exception subclass containing non-ASCII data that doesn't
# know how to print itself properly. We shouldn't raise a
# further exception.
return ' '.join([smart_str(arg, encoding, strings_only,
errors) for arg in s])
return unicode(s).encode(encoding, errors)
elif isinstance(s, unicode):
return s.encode(encoding, errors)