.. _releases-1.2: ============================================ Django 1.2 release notes — UNDER DEVELOPMENT ============================================ This page documents release notes for the as-yet-unreleased Django 1.2. As such it is tentative and subject to change. It provides up-to-date information for those who are following trunk. Django 1.2 includes a number of nifty `new features`_, lots of bug fixes, and an easy upgrade path from Django 1.1. .. _new features: `What's new in Django 1.2`_ .. _backwards-incompatible-changes-1.2: Backwards-incompatible changes in 1.2 ===================================== CSRF Protection --------------- There have been large changes to the way that CSRF protection works, detailed in :ref:`the CSRF documentaton `. The following are the major changes that developers must be aware of: * ``CsrfResponseMiddleware`` and ``CsrfMiddleware`` have been deprecated, and will be removed completely in Django 1.4, in favor of a template tag that should be inserted into forms. * All contrib apps use a ``csrf_protect`` decorator to protect the view. This requires the use of the csrf_token template tag in the template, so if you have used custom templates for contrib views, you MUST READ THE :ref:`UPGRADE INSTRUCTIONS ` to fix those templates. * ``CsrfViewMiddleware`` is included in :setting:`MIDDLEWARE_CLASSES` by default. This turns on CSRF protection by default, so that views that accept POST requests need to be written to work with the middleware. Instructions on how to do this are found in the CSRF docs. * All of the CSRF has moved from contrib to core (with backwards compatible imports in the old locations, which are deprecated). :ttag:`if` tag changes ---------------------- Due to new features in the :ttag:`if` template tag, it no longer accepts 'and', 'or' and 'not' as valid **variable** names. Previously that worked in some cases even though these strings were normally treated as keywords. Now, the keyword status is always enforced, and template code like ``{% if not %}`` or ``{% if and %}`` will throw a TemplateSyntaxError. ``LazyObject`` -------------- ``LazyObject`` is an undocumented utility class used for lazily wrapping other objects of unknown type. In Django 1.1 and earlier, it handled introspection in a non-standard way, depending on wrapped objects implementing a public method ``get_all_members()``. Since this could easily lead to name clashes, it has been changed to use the standard method, involving ``__members__`` and ``__dir__()``. If you used ``LazyObject`` in your own code, and implemented the ``get_all_members()`` method for wrapped objects, you need to make the following changes: * If your class does not have special requirements for introspection (i.e. you have not implemented ``__getattr__()`` or other methods that allow for attributes not discoverable by normal mechanisms), you can simply remove the ``get_all_members()`` method. The default implementation on ``LazyObject`` will do the right thing. * If you have more complex requirements for introspection, first rename the ``get_all_members()`` method to ``__dir__()``. This is the standard method, from Python 2.6 onwards, for supporting introspection. If you are require support for Python < 2.6, add the following code to the class:: __members__ = property(lambda self: self.__dir__()) .. _deprecated-features-1.2: Features deprecated in 1.2 ========================== CSRF response rewriting middleware ---------------------------------- ``CsrfResponseMiddleware``, the middleware that automatically inserted CSRF tokens into POST forms in outgoing pages, has been deprecated in favor of a template tag method (see above), and will be removed completely in Django 1.4. ``CsrfMiddleware``, which includes the functionality of ``CsrfResponseMiddleware`` and ``CsrfViewMiddleware`` has likewise been deprecated. Also, the CSRF module has moved from contrib to core, and the old imports are deprecated, as described in the :ref:`upgrading notes `. ``SMTPConnection`` ------------------ The ``SMTPConnection`` class has been deprecated in favor of a generic E-mail backend API. Old code that explicitly instantiated an instance of an SMTPConnection:: from django.core.mail import SMTPConnection connection = SMTPConnection() messages = get_notification_email() connection.send_messages(messages) should now call :meth:`~django.core.mail.get_connection()` to instantiate a generic e-mail connection:: from django.core.mail import get_connection connection = get_connection() messages = get_notification_email() connection.send_messages(messages) Depending on the value of the :setting:`EMAIL_BACKEND` setting, this may not return an SMTP connection. If you explicitly require an SMTP connection with which to send e-mail, you can explicitly request an SMTP connection:: from django.core.mail import get_connection connection = get_connection('django.core.mail.backends.smtp') messages = get_notification_email() connection.send_messages(messages) If your call to construct an instance of ``SMTPConnection`` required additional arguments, those arguments can be passed to the :meth:`~django.core.mail.get_connection()` call:: connection = get_connection('django.core.mail.backends.smtp', hostname='localhost', port=1234) User Messages API ----------------- The API for storing messages in the user ``Message`` model (via ``user.message_set.create``) is now deprecated and will be removed in Django 1.4 according to the standard :ref:`release process `. To upgrade your code, you need to replace any instances of:: user.message_set.create('a message') with the following:: from django.contrib import messages messages.add_message(request, messages.INFO, 'a message') Additionally, if you make use of the method, you need to replace the following:: for message in user.get_and_delete_messages(): ... with:: from django.contrib import messages for message in messages.get_messages(request): ... For more information, see the full :ref:`messages documentation `. You should begin to update your code to use the new API immediately. What's new in Django 1.2 ======================== CSRF support ------------ Django now has much improved protection against :ref:`Cross-Site Request Forgery (CSRF) attacks`. This type of attack occurs when a malicious Web site contains a link, a form button or some javascript that is intended to perform some action on your Web site, using the credentials of a logged-in user who visits the malicious site in their browser. A related type of attack, 'login CSRF', where an attacking site tricks a user's browser into logging into a site with someone else's credentials, is also covered. E-mail Backends --------------- You can now :ref:`configure the way that Django sends e-mail `. Instead of using SMTP to send all e-mail, you can now choose a configurable e-mail backend to send messages. If your hosting provider uses a sandbox or some other non-SMTP technique for sending mail, you can now construct an e-mail backend that will allow Django's standard :ref:`mail sending methods` to use those facilities. This also makes it easier to debug mail sending - Django ships with backend implementations that allow you to send e-mail to a :ref:`file`, to the :ref:`console`, or to :ref:`memory` - you can even configure all e-mail to be :ref:`thrown away`. Messages Framework ------------------ Django now includes a robust and configurable :ref:`messages framework ` with built-in support for cookie- and session-based messaging, for both anonymous and authenticated clients. The messages framework replaces the deprecated user message API and allows you to temporarily store messages in one request and retrieve them for display in a subsequent request (usually the next one). 'Smart' if tag -------------- The :ttag:`if` tag has been upgraded to be much more powerful. First, support for comparison operators has been added. No longer will you have to type: .. code-block:: html+django {% ifnotequal a b %} ... {% endifnotequal %} ...as you can now do: .. code-block:: html+django {% if a != b %} ... {% endif %} The operators supported are ``==``, ``!=``, ``<``, ``>``, ``<=``, ``>=`` and ``in``, all of which work like the Python operators, in addition to ``and``, ``or`` and ``not`` which were already supported. Also, filters may now be used in the ``if`` expression. For example: .. code-block:: html+django
{{ message }}