contrib.auth.views.login() has a new parameter `redirect_authenticated_user`
to automatically redirect authenticated users visiting the login page.
Thanks to dmathieu and Alex Buchanan for the original code and to Carl Meyer
for the help and review.
New Storage.get_{accessed,created,modified}_time() methods convert the
naive time from now-deprecated {accessed,created_modified}_time()
methods into aware objects in UTC if USE_TZ=True.
When running collectstatic with a hashing static file storage backend,
URLs referencing other files were normalized with posixpath.normpath.
This could corrupt URLs: for example 'a.css#b/../c' became just 'c'.
Normalization seems to be an artifact of the historical implementation.
It contained a home-grown implementation of posixpath.join which relied
on counting occurrences of .. and /, so multiple / had to be collapsed.
The new implementation introduced in the previous commit doesn't suffer
from this issue. So it seems safe to remove the normalization.
There was a test for this normalization behavior but I don't think it's
a good test. Django shouldn't modify CSS that way. If a developer has
rendundant /s, it's mostly an aesthetic issue and it isn't Django's job
to fix it. Conversely, if the user wants a series of /s, perhaps in the
URL fragment, Django shouldn't destroy it.
Refs #26249.
collectstatic crashed when:
* a hashing static file storage backend was used
* a static file referenced another static file located directly in
STATIC_ROOT (not a subdirectory) with an absolute URL (which must
start with STATIC_URL, which cannot be empty)
It seems to me that the current code reimplements relative path joining
and doesn't handle edge cases correctly. I suspect it assumes that
STATIC_URL is of the form r'/[^/]+/'.
Throwing out that code in favor of the posixpath module makes the logic
easier to follow. Handling absolute paths correctly also becomes easier.
Also updated topics/auth/customizing.txt to reflect that subclasses of
UserCreationForm and UserChangeForm can be used with custom user models.
Thanks Baptiste Mispelon for the initial documentation.