When django upgrades to a new version things break across the entire django package, including things which we don't conciously use but are internal dependencies within django. These were 'the way to do it' when troggle was first written for django 0.7 in 2006. So upgrading troggle to a new django version requires not just a broad beadth of knowledge across troggle, but also across the entire breadth of django itself. And the error messages are sometimes very unhelpful.
Release Series | Latest Release | End of support | End of security fixes |
---|---|---|---|
3.2 LTS | April 2021 | December 2021 | April 2024 |
3.1 | 3.1.7 | April 2021 | December 2021 |
3.0 | 3.0.13 | August 2020 | April 2021 |
2.2 LTS | 2.2.20 | December 2019 | April 2022 |
1.11 LTS | 1.11.29 | December 2017 | April 2020 |
Django release 2.2.20 is major-version 2, minor-version 2, and patch-release 20. 2.2 is the "feature release" and patch releases within each feature release are not meant to break anything. They are just to fix bugs.
Things will break between feature releases which come out every 8 months.
Documentation for the plugins is highly variable and plugin projects, being run by volunteers, can just die unexpectedly. For django-registration there are two sources of current information:
Docs: django-registration 3.1
PyPi: django-registration 3.1
but only one of these (PyPi) gives release history data - which is what you need if you get behind with the django upgrades.
Django plugin documentation cannot be relied upon to tell you which version of django they require. They will complain when you run them if your version of django is too old though. Some experimentation is required.
[ However django-extensions looks like it could be useful explicitly to help us through the upgrade process: pypi.org/project/django-extensions/ (only available for django 2.2 and later). ]
There are six critical tricks that make everything much, much easier:
The individual releases within a minor version don't break anything but do fix bugs. So if you are on 1.10.x there is no point in getting 1.11.1 to work and you should go straight to 1.11.29 .
check --deploy gives django warnings about security issues in your settings as well as django deprecation warnings.
-Wall is a standard python option and gives warnings of deprecated python features used by django and all the current plugins. So it tells us that django 1.11.29 is using a deprecated python language feature which will be removed from the language in python 3.9 . Python version compatibilities are documented at the top of each x.0 release note. From Django 3.0 it requires python 3.6.
You can upgrade the version of python installed within pip venv but not downgrade. So get that first venv installed right.
Here is example of installed (Version) and most-recent-available (Latest) verisons of pip installations.
Package Version Latest Type
---------- ------- ------ -----
Django 2.2.19 3.2 wheel
docutils 0.14 0.17 wheel
This only gives any output for packages which are not the most recent. To see what is actually installed use
$ pip freeze
confusable-homoglyphs==3.2.0
Django==2.2.19
docutils==0.17
Pillow==8.2.0
pytz==2021.1
sqlparse==0.4.1
Unidecode==1.2.0
Although the above all work fine, on debian buster we are actually using the standard installs which are older:
$ pip freeze
confusable-homoglyphs==3.2.0
Django==2.2.19
docutils==0.14
Pillow==5.4.1
pytz==2019.1
sqlparse==0.2.4
Unidecode==1.0.23
To upgrade pip istelf, do $ pip install --upgrade pip
On the expo server we run MariaDB as the database which has its own dependencies. In particular
mysqlclient==1.3.10
which is technically incompatible with Django 2.2 which requires 1.3.13. This incompatibility is a policy choice by the Django team. Wookey ran the Django system tests with this (April 2020) and it works fine.
We should not need to anything until we move from django 2.2 LTS to 3.2 LTS which we may never do.
Current upgrade status is documented: here.
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