Pickling a `SimpleLazyObject` wrapping a model did not work correctly; in
particular it did not add the `_django_version` attribute added in 42736ac8.
Now it will handle this and other custom `__reduce__` methods correctly.
Without an explicit 'level', only messages at WARNING or higher
are handled. This makes the config consistent with the docs
which say, "The django catch-all logger sends all messages at
the INFO level or higher to the console."
This commits lifts the restriction that the outermost atomic block must
be declared with savepoint=False. This restriction was overly cautious.
The logic that makes it safe not to create savepoints for inner blocks
also applies to the outermost block when autocommit is disabled and a
transaction is already active.
This makes it possible to use the ORM after set_autocommit(False).
Previously it didn't work because ORM write operations are protected
with atomic(savepoint=False).
Too much field exclusions in form's construct_instance() in _post_clean()
could lead to some unexpected missing ForeignKey values.
Fixes a regression from 45e049937. Refs #13776.
Moved data loss check when assigning to a reverse one-to-one relation on
an unsaved instance to Model.save(). This is exactly the same change as
e4b813c but for reverse relations.
The change partly goes back to the old behavior for forwards migrations
which should reduce the amount of memory consumption (#24745). However,
by the way the current state computation is done (there is no
`state_backwards` on a migration class) this change cannot be applied to
backwards migrations. Hence rolling back migrations still requires the
precomputation and storage of the intermediate migration states.
This improvement also implies that Django does not handle mixed
migration plans anymore. Mixed plans consist of a list of migrations
where some are being applied and others are being unapplied.
Thanks Andrew Godwin, Josh Smeaton and Tim Graham for the review as well
as everybody involved on the ticket that kept me looking into the issue.
The ``item_enclosures`` hook returns a list of ``Enclosure`` objects which is
then used by the feed builder. If the feed is a RSS feed, an exception is
raised as RSS feeds don't allow multiple enclosures per feed item.
The ``item_enclosures`` hook defaults to an empty list or, if the
``item_enclosure_url`` hook is defined, to a list with a single ``Enclosure``
built from the ``item_enclosure_url``, ``item_enclosure_length``, and
``item_enclosure_mime_type`` hooks.
Added the CSRF_TRUSTED_ORIGINS setting which contains a list of other
domains that are included during the CSRF Referer header verification
for secure (HTTPS) requests.
With this change, it's expected to survive anything except errors
that make it impossible to import the settings. It's too complex
to fallback to a sensible behavior with a broken settings module.
Harcoding things about runserver in ManagementUtility.execute is
atrocious but it's the only way out of the chicken'n'egg problem:
the current implementation of the autoreloader primarily watches
imported Python modules -- and then a few other things that were
bolted on top of this design -- but we want it to kick in even if
the project contains import-time errors and django.setup() fails.
At some point we should throw away this code and replace it by an
off-the-shelf autoreloader that watches the working directory and
re-runs `django-admin runserver` whenever something changes.
Changed the way makemessages invokes xgettext from one call per
translatable file to one call per locale directory (using --files-from).
This allows to avoid https://savannah.gnu.org/bugs/index.php?35027 and,
as a positive side effect, speeds up localization build.
Introduced an AbstractBaseSession model and hooks providing the option
of overriding the model class used by the session store and the session
store class used by the model.
Refactored tests to use a sample project.
Updated extraction:
* Removed special handling of single percent signs.
* When extracting messages from template text, doubled all percent signs
so they are not interpreted by gettext as string format flags. All
strings extracted by gettext, if containing a percent sign, will now
be labeled "#, python-format".
Updated translation:
* Used "%%" for "%" in template text before calling gettext.
* Updated {% trans %} rendering to restore "%" from "%%".
Added django.views.i18n.json_catalog() view, which returns a JSON
response containing translations, formats, and a plural expression
for the specified language.