Fixed #14455 -- Documented the backwards compatibility policy for local flavors. Implemented the policy for the changes in the Indonesian local flavor (from r14195) that stimulated the development of this policy. Thanks to Karen, Alex, Ramiro and Chris for their help developing the policy.

git-svn-id: http://code.djangoproject.com/svn/django/trunk@14411 bcc190cf-cafb-0310-a4f2-bffc1f526a37
This commit is contained in:
Russell Keith-Magee 2010-11-01 00:52:58 +00:00
parent 799a3057cd
commit 5c05233ffc
4 changed files with 131 additions and 26 deletions

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@ -1,3 +1,4 @@
import warnings
from django.utils.translation import ugettext_lazy as _
# Reference: http://id.wikipedia.org/wiki/Daftar_provinsi_Indonesia
@ -5,6 +6,11 @@ from django.utils.translation import ugettext_lazy as _
# Indonesia does not have an official Province code standard.
# I decided to use unambiguous and consistent (some are common) 3-letter codes.
warnings.warn(
'There have been recent changes to the ID localflavor. See the release notes for details',
RuntimeWarning
)
PROVINCE_CHOICES = (
('ACE', _('Aceh')),
('BLI', _('Bali')),

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@ -15,19 +15,19 @@ In this context, stable means:
- All the public APIs -- everything documented in the linked documents below,
and all methods that don't begin with an underscore -- will not be moved or
renamed without providing backwards-compatible aliases.
- If new features are added to these APIs -- which is quite possible --
they will not break or change the meaning of existing methods. In other
words, "stable" does not (necessarily) mean "complete."
- If, for some reason, an API declared stable must be removed or replaced, it
will be declared deprecated but will remain in the API for at least two
minor version releases. Warnings will be issued when the deprecated method
is called.
See :ref:`official-releases` for more details on how Django's version
numbering scheme works, and how features will be deprecated.
- We'll only break backwards compatibility of these APIs if a bug or
security hole makes it completely unavoidable.
@ -41,56 +41,56 @@ of 1.0. This includes these APIs:
- :doc:`Authorization </topics/auth>`
- :doc:`Caching </topics/cache>`.
- :doc:`Model definition, managers, querying and transactions
</topics/db/index>`
- :doc:`Sending e-mail </topics/email>`.
- :doc:`File handling and storage </topics/files>`
- :doc:`Forms </topics/forms/index>`
- :doc:`HTTP request/response handling </topics/http/index>`, including file
uploads, middleware, sessions, URL resolution, view, and shortcut APIs.
- :doc:`Generic views </topics/http/generic-views>`.
- :doc:`Internationalization </topics/i18n/index>`.
- :doc:`Pagination </topics/pagination>`
- :doc:`Serialization </topics/serialization>`
- :doc:`Signals </topics/signals>`
- :doc:`Templates </topics/templates>`, including the language, Python-level
:doc:`template APIs </ref/templates/index>`, and :doc:`custom template tags
and libraries </howto/custom-template-tags>`. We may add new template
tags in the future and the names may inadvertently clash with
external template tags. Before adding any such tags, we'll ensure that
Django raises an error if it tries to load tags with duplicate names.
- :doc:`Testing </topics/testing>`
- :doc:`django-admin utility </ref/django-admin>`.
- :doc:`Built-in middleware </ref/middleware>`
- :doc:`Request/response objects </ref/request-response>`.
- :doc:`Settings </ref/settings>`. Note, though that while the :doc:`list of
built-in settings </ref/settings>` can be considered complete we may -- and
probably will -- add new settings in future versions. This is one of those
places where "'stable' does not mean 'complete.'"
- :doc:`Built-in signals </ref/signals>`. Like settings, we'll probably add
new signals in the future, but the existing ones won't break.
- :doc:`Unicode handling </ref/unicode>`.
- Everything covered by the :doc:`HOWTO guides </howto/index>`.
``django.utils``
----------------
@ -106,7 +106,7 @@ the following parts of :doc:`django.utils </ref/utils>` can be considered stable
- ``django.utils.safestring``
- ``django.utils.translation``
- ``django.utils.tzinfo``
Exceptions
==========
@ -145,8 +145,62 @@ Certain APIs are explicitly marked as "internal" in a couple of ways:
- Some documentation refers to internals and mentions them as such. If the
documentation says that something is internal, we reserve the right to
change it.
- Functions, methods, and other objects prefixed by a leading underscore
(``_``). This is the standard Python way of indicating that something is
private; if any method starts with a single ``_``, it's an internal API.
.. _misc-api-stability-localflavor:
Local flavors
-------------
.. versionchanged:: 1.3
:mod:`django.contrib.localflavor` contains assorted pieces of code
that are useful for particular countries or cultures. This data is
local in nature, and is subject to change on timelines that will
almost never correlate with Django's own release schedules. For
example, a common change is to split a province into two new
provinces, or to rename an existing province.
These changes present two competing compatibility issues. Moving
forward, displaying the names of deprecated, renamed and dissolved
provinces in a selection widget is bad from a user interface
perspective. However, maintaining full backwards compatibility
requires that we support historical values that may be stored in a
database -- including values that may no longer be valid.
Therefore, Django has the following policy with respect to changes in
local flavor:
* At the time of a Django release, the data and algorithms
contained in :mod:`django.contrib.localflavor` will, to the best
of our ability, reflect the officially gazetted policies of the
appropriate local government authority. If a province has been
added, altered, or removed, that change will be reflected in
Django's localflavor.
* These changes will *not* be backported to the previous stable
release. Upgrading a minor version of Django should not require
any data migration or audits for UI changes; therefore, if you
want to get the latest province list, you will either need to
upgrade your Django install, or backport the province list you
need.
* For one release, the affected localflavor module will raise a
``RuntimeWarning`` when it is imported.
* The change will be announced in the release notes as a backwards
incompatible change requiring attention. The change will also be
annotated in the documentation for the localflavor module.
* Where necessary and feasible, a migration script will be provided
to aid the migration process.
For example, Django 1.2 contains an Indonesian localflavor. It has a
province list that includes "Nanggroe Aceh Darussalam (NAD)" as a
province. The Indonesian government has changed the official name of
the province to "Aceh (ACE)". As a result, Django 1.3 does *not*
contain "Nanggroe Aceh Darussalam (NAD)" in the province list, but
*does* contain "Aceh (ACE)".

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@ -129,6 +129,35 @@ in the file. See any of the existing flavors for examples.
.. _create a ticket: http://code.djangoproject.com/simpleticket
Localflavor and backwards compatibility
=======================================
As documented in our :ref:`API stability
<misc-api-stability-localflavor>` policy, Django will always attempt
to make :mod:`django.contrib.localflavor` reflect the officially
gazetted policies of the appropriate local government authority. For
example, if a government body makes a change to add, alter, or remove
a province (or state, or county), that change will be reflected in
Django's localflavor in the next stable Django release.
When a backwards-incompatible change is made (for example, the removal
or renaming of a province) the localflavor in question will raise a
warning when that localflavor is imported. This provides a runtime
indication that something may require attention.
However, once you have addressed the backwards compatibility (for
example, auditing your code to see if any data migration is required),
the warning serves no purpose. The warning can then be supressed.
For example, to suppress the warnings raised by the Indonesian
localflavor you would use the following code::
import warnings
warnings.filterwarnings('ignore',
category=RuntimeWarning,
module='django.contrib.localflavor.id')
from django.contrib.localflavor.id import forms as id_forms
Argentina (``ar``)
=============================================
@ -234,7 +263,7 @@ Brazil (``br``)
.. class:: br.forms.BRCPFField
A form field that validates input as `Brazilian CPF`_.
Input can either be of the format XXX.XXX.XXX-VD or be a group of 11 digits.
.. _Brazilian CPF: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cadastro_de_Pessoas_F%C3%ADsicas
@ -242,7 +271,7 @@ Brazil (``br``)
.. class:: br.forms.BRCNPJField
A form field that validates input as `Brazilian CNPJ`_.
Input can either be of the format XX.XXX.XXX/XXXX-XX or be a group of 14
digits.
@ -443,6 +472,11 @@ Indonesia (``id``)
A ``Select`` widget that uses a list of Indonesian provinces as its choices.
.. versionchanged:: 1.3
The province "Nanggroe Aceh Darussalam (NAD)" has been removed
from the province list in favor of the new official designation
"Aceh (ACE)".
.. class:: id.forms.IDPhoneNumberField
A form field that validates input as an Indonesian telephone number.

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@ -209,6 +209,17 @@ problem.
.. _Scunthorpe problem: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scunthorpe_problem
.. _commit that implemented this change: http://code.djangoproject.com/changeset/13996
Localflavor changes
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Django 1.3 introduces the following backwards-incompatible changes to
local flavors:
* Indonesia (id) -- The province "Nanggroe Aceh Darussalam (NAD)"
has been removed from the province list in favor of the new
official designation "Aceh (ACE)".
.. _deprecated-features-1.3:
Features deprecated in 1.3