A deprecation path is required because the return type of
django.template.loader.get_template changed during the
multiple template engines refactor.
test_csrf_token_in_404 was incorrect: it tested the case when the
hardcoded template was rendered, and that template doesn't depend on the
CSRF token. This commit makes it test the case when a custom template is
rendered.
Passed the engine instance to loaders. This is a prerequisite for
looking up configuration on the engine instance instead of global
settings.
This is backwards incompatible for custom template loaders that override
__init__. However the documentation doesn't talk about __init__ and the
way to pass arguments to custom template loaders isn't specified. I'm
considering it a private API.
I don't agree with flake8 here about the right indentation, but as long as
we're using it, we should stick to it. I don't want to disable its hanging
indent checks just because of this case.
Added a class to wrap callable in settings:
* Not to call in the debug page (#21345).
* Not to break the debug page if the callable forbidding to set attributes (#23070).
Thanks @bmispelon for giving me some advice.
Introduced a number of settings to configure max-age, path, and domain
for the language cookie: LANGUAGE_COOKIE_AGE, LANGUAGE_COOKIE_PATH and
LANGUAGE_COOKIE_DOMAIN.
Thanks sahid for the suggestion.
Commit 79558c78 cleaned up the (undocumented) interface of Resolver404
exception, which breaks compatibility with code messing with .args[0]
directly. Revert the cleanup part and simply leave the fix itself.
When django.core.urlresolvers.resolve was called from a view, failed
and the exception was propagated and rendered by technical_404_response,
the URL mentioned on the page was the current URL instead of the URL
passed to resolve().
Fixed by using the path attribute from the Resolver404 exception instead
of request.path_info. Also cleaned up the exceptions to use standard
named parameters instead of stuffing a dict in args[0]
Following the app-loading refactor, these objects must live outside of
django.contrib.sites.models because they must be available without
importing the django.contrib.sites.models module when
django.contrib.sites isn't installed.
Refs #21680. Thanks Carl and Loic for reporting this issue.
The last component of the dotted path to the application module is
consistently referenced as the application "label". For instance it's
AppConfig.label. appname could be confused with AppConfig.name, which is
the full dotted path.