Refs #9893, #18515.

Thanks Russell for the report.
This commit is contained in:
Aymeric Augustin 2012-12-27 09:37:57 +01:00
parent b3a8c9dab8
commit db278c3bf9
3 changed files with 1 additions and 44 deletions

View File

@ -3,7 +3,6 @@ import os
from django import forms
from django.db.models.fields import Field
from django.core.exceptions import ValidationError
from django.core.files.base import File
from django.core.files.storage import default_storage
from django.core.files.images import ImageFile
@ -207,10 +206,6 @@ class FileDescriptor(object):
class FileField(Field):
default_error_messages = {
'max_length': _('Filename is %(extra)d characters too long.')
}
# The class to wrap instance attributes in. Accessing the file object off
# the instance will always return an instance of attr_class.
attr_class = FieldFile
@ -233,25 +228,6 @@ class FileField(Field):
kwargs['max_length'] = kwargs.get('max_length', 100)
super(FileField, self).__init__(verbose_name, name, **kwargs)
def validate(self, value, model_instance):
"""
Validates that the generated file name still fits within max_length.
"""
# The generated file name stored in the database is generally longer
# than the uploaded file name. Using the length of generated name in
# the error message would be confusing. However, in the common case
# (ie. upload_to='path/to/upload/dir'), the length of the generated
# name equals the length of the uploaded name plus a constant. Thus
# we can tell the user how much shorter the name should be (roughly).
if value and value._committed:
filename = value.name
else:
filename = self.generate_filename(model_instance, value.name)
length = len(filename)
if self.max_length and length > self.max_length:
error_values = {'extra': length - self.max_length}
raise ValidationError(self.error_messages['max_length'] % error_values)
def get_internal_type(self):
return "FileField"

View File

@ -26,5 +26,5 @@ class Storage(models.Model):
normal = models.FileField(storage=temp_storage, upload_to='tests')
custom = models.FileField(storage=temp_storage, upload_to=custom_upload_to)
random = models.FileField(storage=temp_storage, upload_to=random_upload_to, max_length=16)
random = models.FileField(storage=temp_storage, upload_to=random_upload_to)
default = models.FileField(storage=temp_storage, upload_to='tests', default='tests/default.txt')

View File

@ -5,7 +5,6 @@ import shutil
import tempfile
from django.core.cache import cache
from django.core.exceptions import ValidationError
from django.core.files import File
from django.core.files.base import ContentFile
from django.core.files.uploadedfile import SimpleUploadedFile
@ -103,24 +102,6 @@ class FileStorageTests(TestCase):
obj4.random.save("random_file", ContentFile("random content"))
self.assertTrue(obj4.random.name.endswith("/random_file"))
def test_max_length(self):
"""
Test that FileField validates the length of the generated file name
that will be stored in the database. Regression for #9893.
"""
# upload_to = 'unused', so file names are saved as '456/xxxxx'.
# max_length = 16, so names longer than 12 characters are rejected.
s1 = Storage(random=SimpleUploadedFile(12 * 'x', b"content"))
s1.full_clean()
with self.assertRaises(ValidationError):
Storage(random=SimpleUploadedFile(13 * 'x', b"content")).full_clean()
# Ticket #18515: validation for an already saved file should not check
# against a regenerated file name (and potentially raise a ValidationError
# if max_length is exceeded
s1.save()
s1.full_clean()
class FileTests(unittest.TestCase):
def test_context_manager(self):