The rate at which we've increased this has not been keeping up with hardware (and software) improvements, and we're now considerably behind where we should be. The delta between our performance and an optimized implementation's performance prevents us from improving that further, but hopefully once Python 2.7.8 and 3.4+ get into more hands we can more aggressively increase this number.
And follow more closely the class of characters defined in the
RFC 3986.
Thanks Erik van Zijst for the report and the initial patch, and
Tim Graham for the review.
This follows commits 80f4487 and 01399fa; original patch had to be
reverted because it wasn't Python 2.6 compatible and we need it to
be in order to build docs on the djangoproject.com server.
This fix should be replaced by @lru_cache as soon as we drop
Python 2.6 compatibility.
Thanks Florian Apolloner for the review and Alexander Schepanovski
for the original patch.
This reverts commit 80f4487 temporarily, because that commit prevented
the djangoproject.com server from building the docs, because it still
uses Python 2.6.
Python 2.7.7 includes compare_digest in the hmac module, but it requires
both arguments to have the same type. This is usually not a problem on
Python 3 since everything is text, but we have mixed unicode and str on
Python 2 -- hence make sure everything is bytes before feeding it into
compare_digest.
Previously the FORMAT_MODULE_PATH setting only accepted one string (dotted
module path). A feature has been added to also allow a list of strings.
This is useful when using several reusable third party apps that define new
formats. We can now use them all and we can even override some of the formats
by providing a project-wide format module.
Previously the FORMAT_MODULE_PATH setting only accepted one string (dotted
module path).
This is useful when using several reusable third party apps that define new
formats. We can now use them all and we can even override some of the formats
by providing a project-wide format module.
While Node class has a useful `__str__`, its `__repr__` is not that
useful. Added a `__repr__` that makes use of the current `__str__`.
This is especially useful since the more popular `Q` class inherits
`tree.Node`. Also created new tests that cover most of `Node` class
functionality.
This is a bit faster than ours, which is good, because it lets you increase
the iteration counts.
This will be used on Python 3.4+, and, pending the acceptance of PEP466, on
newer Python 2.7s.