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django-upgrade

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Automatically upgrade your Django project code.


Improve your code quality with my book Boost Your Django DX which covers using pre-commit, django-upgrade, and many other tools. I wrote django-upgrade whilst working on the book!


Installation

Use pip:

python -m pip install django-upgrade

Python 3.9 to 3.13 supported.

(Python 3.12+ is required to correctly apply fixes within f-strings.)

pre-commit hook

You can also install django-upgrade as a pre-commit hook. Add the following to the repos section of your .pre-commit-config.yaml file (docs), above any code formatters (such as Black):

-   repo: https://github.com/adamchainz/django-upgrade
    rev: ""  # replace with latest tag on GitHub
    hooks:
    -   id: django-upgrade
        args: [--target-version, "5.0"]   # Replace with Django version

Then, upgrade your entire project:

pre-commit run django-upgrade --all-files

Commit any changes. In the process, your other hooks will run, potentially reformatting django-upgrade’s changes to match your project’s code style.

Keep the hook installed in order to upgrade all code added to your project. pre-commit’s autoupdate command will also let you take advantage of future django-upgrade features.

Usage

django-upgrade is a commandline tool that rewrites files in place. Pass your Django version as <major>.<minor> to the --target-version flag and a list of files. django-upgrade’s fixers will rewrite your code to avoid DeprecationWarnings and use some new features.

For example:

django-upgrade --target-version 5.0 example/core/models.py example/settings.py

django-upgrade focuses on upgrading your code and not on making it look nice. Run django-upgrade before formatters like Black.

Some of django-upgrade’s fixers make changes to models that need migrations:

  • index_together
  • null_boolean_field

Add a test for pending migrations to ensure that you do not miss these.

django-upgrade does not have any ability to recurse through directories. Use the pre-commit integration, globbing, or another technique for applying to many files. Some fixers depend on the names of containing directories to activate, so ensure you run django-upgrade with paths relative to the root of your project. For example, with git ls-files | xargs:

git ls-files -z -- '*.py' | xargs -0 django-upgrade --target-version 5.0

…or PowerShell’s ForEach-Object:

git ls-files -- '*.py' | %{django-upgrade --target-version 5.0 $_}

The full list of fixers is documented below.

Options

--target-version

The version of Django to target, in the format <major>.<minor>. django-upgrade enables all of its fixers for versions up to and including the target version.

This option defaults to 2.2, the oldest supported version when this project was created. See the list of available versions with django-upgrade --help.

--exit-zero-even-if-changed

Exit with a zero return code even if files have changed. By default, django-upgrade uses the failure return code 1 if it changes any files, which may stop scripts or CI pipelines.

--only <fixer_name>

Run only the named fixer (names are documented below). The fixer must still be enabled by --target-version. Select multiple fixers with multiple --only options.

For example:

django-upgrade --target-version 5.0 --only admin_allow_tags --only admin_decorators example/core/admin.py

--skip <fixer_name>

Skip the named fixer. Skip multiple fixers with multiple --skip options.

For example:

django-upgrade --target-version 5.0 --skip admin_register example/core/admin.py

--list-fixers

List all available fixers’ names and then exit. All other options are ignored when listing fixers.

For example:

django-upgrade --list-fixers

History

django-codemod is a pre-existing, more complete Django auto-upgrade tool, written by Bruno Alla. Unfortunately its underlying library LibCST is particularly slow, making it annoying to run django-codemod on every commit and in CI.

django-upgrade is an experiment in reimplementing such a tool using the same techniques as the fantastic pyupgrade. The tool leans on the standard library’s ast and tokenize modules, the latter via the tokenize-rt wrapper. This means it will always be fast and support the latest versions of Python.

For a quick benchmark: running django-codemod against a medium Django repository with 153k lines of Python takes 133 seconds. pyupgrade and django-upgrade both take less than 0.5 seconds.

Fixers

All Versions

The below fixers run regardless of the target version.

Versioned blocks

Name: versioned_branches

Removes outdated comparisons and blocks from if statements comparing to django.VERSION. Supports comparisons of the form:

if django.VERSION <comparator> (<X>, <Y>):
    ...

Where <comparator> is one of <, <= , >, or >=, and <X> and <Y> are integer literals. A single else block may be present, but elif is not supported.

-if django.VERSION < (4, 1):
-    class RenameIndex:
-        ...

-if django.VERSION >= (4, 1):
-    constraint.validate()
-else:
-    custom_validation(constraint)
+constraint.validate()

See also pyupgrade’s similar feature that removes outdated code from checks on the Python version.

Versioned test skip decorators

Name: versioned_test_skip_decorators

Removes outdated test skip decorators that compare to django.VERSION. Like the above, it requires comparisons of the form:

django.VERSION <comparator> (<X>, <Y>)

Supports these test skip decorators:

For example:

 import unittest

 import django
 import pytest
 from django.test import TestCase

 class ExampleTests(TestCase):
-    @unittest.skipIf(django.VERSION < (5, 1), "Django 5.1+")
     def test_one(self):
         ...

-    @unittest.skipUnless(django.VERSION >= (5, 1), "Django 5.1+")
     def test_two(self):
         ...

-    @pytest.mark.skipif(django.VERSION < (5, 1), reason="Django 5.1+")
     def test_three(self):
         ...

-@unittest.skipIf(django.VERSION < (5, 1), "Django 5.1+")
 class Example2Tests(TestCase):
     ...

-@pytest.mark.skipif(django.VERSION < (5, 1), reason="Django 5.1+")
 class Example3Tests(TestCase):
     ...

Django 5.1

Release Notes

CheckConstraint condition argument

Name: check_constraint_condition

Rewrites calls to CheckConstraint and built-in subclasses from the old check argument to the new name condition.

-CheckConstraint(check=Q(amount__gte=0))
+CheckConstraint(condition=Q(amount__gte=0))

Django 5.0

Release Notes

format_html() calls

Name: format_html

Rewrites format_html() calls without args or kwargs but using str.format(). Such calls are most likely incorrectly applying formatting without escaping, making them vulnerable to HTML injection. Such use cases are why calling format_html() without any arguments or keyword arguments was deprecated in Ticket #34609.

 from django.utils.html import format_html

-format_html("<marquee>{}</marquee>".format(message))
+format_html("<marquee>{}</marquee>", message)

-format_html("<marquee>{name}</marquee>".format(name=name))
+format_html("<marquee>{name}</marquee>", name=name)

Django 4.2

Release Notes

STORAGES setting

Name: settings_storages

Combines deprecated settings DEFAULT_FILE_STORAGE and STATICFILES_STORAGE into the new STORAGES setting, within settings files. Only applies if all old settings are defined as strings, at module level, and a STORAGES setting hasn’t been defined.

Settings files are heuristically detected as modules with the whole word “settings” somewhere in their path. For example myproject/settings.py or myproject/settings/production.py.

-DEFAULT_FILE_STORAGE = "example.storages.ExtendedFileSystemStorage"
-STATICFILES_STORAGE = "example.storages.ExtendedS3Storage"
+STORAGES = {
+    "default": {
+        "BACKEND": "example.storages.ExtendedFileSystemStorage",
+    },
+    "staticfiles": {
+        "BACKEND": "example.storages.ExtendedS3Storage",
+    },
+}

If the module has a from ... import * with a module path mentioning “settings”, django-upgrade makes an educated guess that a base STORAGES setting is imported from there. It then uses ** to extend that with any values in the current module:

 from example.settings.base import *
-DEFAULT_FILE_STORAGE = "example.storages.S3Storage"
+STORAGES = {
+    **STORAGES,
+    "default": {
+        "BACKEND": "example.storages.S3Storage",
+    },
+}

Test client HTTP headers

Name: test_http_headers

Transforms HTTP headers from the old WSGI kwarg format to use the new headers dictionary, for:

  • Client method like self.client.get()
  • Client instantiation
  • RequestFactory instantiation
-response = self.client.get("/", HTTP_ACCEPT="text/plain")
+response = self.client.get("/", headers={"accept": "text/plain"})

 from django.test import Client
-Client(HTTP_ACCEPT_LANGUAGE="fr-fr")
+Client(headers={"accept-language": "fr-fr"})

 from django.test import RequestFactory
-RequestFactory(HTTP_USER_AGENT="curl")
+RequestFactory(headers={"user-agent": "curl"})

index_together deprecation

Name: index_together

Rewrites index_together declarations into indexes declarations in model Meta classes.

 from django.db import models

 class Duck(models.Model):
     class Meta:
-       index_together = [["bill", "tail"]]
+       indexes = [models.Index(fields=["bill", "tail"])]

assertFormsetError and assertQuerysetEqual

Name: assert_set_methods

Rewrites calls to these test case methods from the old names to the new ones with capitalized “Set”.

-self.assertFormsetError(response.context["form"], "username", ["Too long"])
+self.assertFormSetError(response.context["form"], "username", ["Too long"])

-self.assertQuerysetEqual(authors, ["Brad Dayley"], lambda a: a.name)
+self.assertQuerySetEqual(authors, ["Brad Dayley"], lambda a: a.name)

Django 4.1

Release Notes

django.utils.timezone.utc deprecations

Name: utils_timezone

Rewrites imports of django.utils.timezone.utc to use datetime.timezone.utc. Requires an existing import of the datetime module.

 import datetime
-from django.utils.timezone import utc

-calculate_some_datetime(utc)
+calculate_some_datetime(datetime.timezone.utc)
 import datetime as dt
 from django.utils import timezone


-do_a_thing(timezone.utc)
+do_a_thing(dt.timezone.utc)

assertFormError() and assertFormsetError()

Name: assert_form_error

Rewrites calls to these test case methods from the old signatures to the new ones.

-self.assertFormError(response, "form", "username", ["Too long"])
+self.assertFormError(response.context["form"], "username", ["Too long"])

-self.assertFormError(response, "form", "username", None)
+self.assertFormError(response.context["form"], "username", [])

-self.assertFormsetError(response, "formset", 0, "username", ["Too long"])
+self.assertFormsetError(response.context["formset"], 0, "username", ["Too long"])

-self.assertFormsetError(response, "formset", 0, "username", None)
+self.assertFormsetError(response.context["formset"], 0, "username", [])

Django 4.0

Release Notes

USE_L10N

Name: use_l10n

Removes the deprecated USE_L10N setting if set to its default value of True.

Settings files are heuristically detected as modules with the whole word “settings” somewhere in their path. For example myproject/settings.py or myproject/settings/production.py.

-USE_L10N = True

lookup_needs_distinct

Name: admin_lookup_needs_distinct

Renames the undocumented django.contrib.admin.utils.lookup_needs_distinct to lookup_spawns_duplicates:

-from django.contrib.admin.utils import lookup_needs_distinct
+from django.contrib.admin.utils import lookup_spawns_duplicates

-if lookup_needs_distinct(self.opts, search_spec):
+if lookup_spawns_duplicates(self.opts, search_spec):
    ...

Compatibility imports

Rewrites some compatibility imports:

  • django.utils.translation.template.TRANSLATOR_COMMENT_MARK in django.template.base
-from django.template.base import TRANSLATOR_COMMENT_MARK
+from django.utils.translation.template import TRANSLATOR_COMMENT_MARK

Django 3.2

Release Notes

@admin.action()

Name: admin_decorators

Rewrites functions that have admin action attributes assigned to them to use the new @admin.action() decorator. This only applies in files that use from django.contrib import admin or from django.contrib.gis import admin.

 from django.contrib import admin

 # Module-level actions:

+@admin.action(
+    description="Publish articles",
+)
 def make_published(modeladmin, request, queryset):
     ...

-make_published.short_description = "Publish articles"

 # …and within classes:

 @admin.register(Book)
 class BookAdmin(admin.ModelAdmin):
+    @admin.action(
+        description="Unpublish articles",
+        permissions=("unpublish",),
+    )
     def make_unpublished(self, request, queryset):
         ...

-    make_unpublished.allowed_permissions = ("unpublish",)
-    make_unpublished.short_description = "Unpublish articles"

@admin.display()

Name: admin_decorators

Rewrites functions that have admin display attributes assigned to them to use the new @admin.display() decorator. This only applies in files that use from django.contrib import admin or from django.contrib.gis import admin.

 from django.contrib import admin

 # Module-level display functions:

+@admin.display(
+    description="NAME",
+)
 def upper_case_name(obj):
     ...

-upper_case_name.short_description = "NAME"

 # …and within classes:

 @admin.register(Book)
 class BookAdmin(admin.ModelAdmin):
+    @admin.display(
+        description='Is Published?',
+        boolean=True,
+        ordering='-publish_date',
+    )
     def is_published(self, obj):
         ...

-    is_published.boolean = True
-    is_published.admin_order_field = '-publish_date'
-    is_published.short_description = 'Is Published?'

BaseCommand.requires_system_checks

Name: management_commands

Rewrites the requires_system_checks attributes of management command classes from bools to "__all__" or [] as appropriate. This only applies in command files, which are heuristically detected as files with management/commands somewhere in their path.

 from django.core.management.base import BaseCommand

 class Command(BaseCommand):
-    requires_system_checks = True
+    requires_system_checks = "__all__"

 class SecondCommand(BaseCommand):
-    requires_system_checks = False
+    requires_system_checks = []

EmailValidator

Name: email_validator

Rewrites the whitelist keyword argument to its new name allowlist.

 from django.core.validators import EmailValidator

-EmailValidator(whitelist=["example.com"])
+EmailValidator(allowlist=["example.com"])

default_app_config

Name: default_app_config

Removes module-level default_app_config assignments from __init__.py files:

-default_app_config = 'my_app.apps.AppConfig'

Django 3.1

Release Notes

JSONField

Name: compatibility_imports

Rewrites imports of JSONField and related transform classes from those in django.contrib.postgres to the new all-database versions. Ignores usage in migration files, since Django kept the old class around to support old migrations. You will need to make migrations after this fix makes changes to models.

-from django.contrib.postgres.fields import JSONField
+from django.db.models import JSONField

PASSWORD_RESET_TIMEOUT_DAYS

Name: password_reset_timeout_days

Rewrites the setting PASSWORD_RESET_TIMEOUT_DAYS to PASSWORD_RESET_TIMEOUT, adding the multiplication by the number of seconds in a day.

Settings files are heuristically detected as modules with the whole word “settings” somewhere in their path. For example myproject/settings.py or myproject/settings/production.py.

-PASSWORD_RESET_TIMEOUT_DAYS = 4
+PASSWORD_RESET_TIMEOUT = 60 * 60 * 24 * 4

Signal

Name: signal_providing_args

Removes the deprecated documentation-only providing_args argument.

 from django.dispatch import Signal
-my_cool_signal = Signal(providing_args=["documented", "arg"])
+my_cool_signal = Signal()

get_random_string

Name: crypto_get_random_string

Injects the now-required length argument, with its previous default 12.

 from django.utils.crypto import get_random_string
-key = get_random_string(allowed_chars="01234567899abcdef")
+key = get_random_string(length=12, allowed_chars="01234567899abcdef")

NullBooleanField

Name: null_boolean_field

Transforms the NullBooleanField() model field to BooleanField(null=True). Applied only in model files, not migration files, since Django kept the old class around to support old migrations. You will need to make migrations after this fix makes changes to models.

-from django.db.models import Model, NullBooleanField
+from django.db.models import Model, BooleanField

 class Book(Model):
-    valuable = NullBooleanField("Valuable")
+    valuable = BooleanField("Valuable", null=True)

ModelMultipleChoiceField

Name: forms_model_multiple_choice_field

Replace list error message key with list_invalid on forms ModelMultipleChoiceField.

-forms.ModelMultipleChoiceField(error_messages={"list": "Enter multiple values."})
+forms.ModelMultipleChoiceField(error_messages={"invalid_list": "Enter multiple values."})

Django 3.0

Release Notes

django.utils.encoding aliases

Name: utils_encoding

Rewrites smart_text() to smart_str(), and force_text() to force_str().

-from django.utils.encoding import force_text, smart_text
+from django.utils.encoding import force_str, smart_str


-force_text("yada")
-smart_text("yada")
+force_str("yada")
+smart_str("yada")

django.utils.http deprecations

Name: utils_http:

Rewrites the urlquote(), urlquote_plus(), urlunquote(), and urlunquote_plus() functions to the urllib.parse versions. Also rewrites the internal function is_safe_url() to url_has_allowed_host_and_scheme().

-from django.utils.http import urlquote
+from urllib.parse import quote

-escaped_query_string = urlquote(query_string)
+escaped_query_string = quote(query_string)

django.utils.text deprecation

Name: utils_text

Rewrites unescape_entities() with the standard library html.escape().

-from django.utils.text import unescape_entities
+import html

-unescape_entities("some input string")
+html.escape("some input string")

django.utils.translation deprecations

Name: utils_translation

Rewrites the ugettext(), ugettext_lazy(), ugettext_noop(), ungettext(), and ungettext_lazy() functions to their non-u-prefixed versions.

-from django.utils.translation import ugettext as _, ungettext
+from django.utils.translation import gettext as _, ngettext

-ungettext("octopus", "octopodes", n)
+ngettext("octopus", "octopodes", n)

Django 2.2

Release Notes

HttpRequest.headers

Name: request_headers

Rewrites use of request.META to read HTTP headers to instead use request.headers. Header lookups are done in lowercase per the HTTP/2 specification.

-request.META['HTTP_ACCEPT_ENCODING']
+request.headers['accept-encoding']

-self.request.META.get('HTTP_SERVER', '')
+self.request.headers.get('server', '')

-request.META.get('CONTENT_LENGTH')
+request.headers.get('content-length')

-"HTTP_SERVER" in request.META
+"server" in request.headers

QuerySetPaginator

Name: queryset_paginator

Rewrites deprecated alias django.core.paginator.QuerySetPaginator to Paginator.

-from django.core.paginator import QuerySetPaginator
+from django.core.paginator import Paginator

-QuerySetPaginator(...)
+Paginator(...)

FixedOffset

Name: timezone_fixedoffset

Rewrites deprecated class FixedOffset(x, y)) to timezone(timedelta(minutes=x), y)

Known limitation: this fixer will leave code broken with an ImportError if FixedOffset is called with only *args or **kwargs.

-from django.utils.timezone import FixedOffset
-FixedOffset(120, "Super time")
+from datetime import timedelta, timezone
+timezone(timedelta(minutes=120), "Super time")

FloatRangeField

Name: postgres_float_range_field

Rewrites model and form fields using FloatRangeField to DecimalRangeField, from the relevant django.contrib.postgres modules.

 from django.db.models import Model
-from django.contrib.postgres.fields import FloatRangeField
+from django.contrib.postgres.fields import DecimalRangeField

 class MyModel(Model):
-    my_field = FloatRangeField("My range of numbers")
+    my_field = DecimalRangeField("My range of numbers")

TestCase class database declarations

Name: testcase_databases

Rewrites the allow_database_queries and multi_db attributes of Django’s TestCase classes to the new databases attribute. This only applies in test files, which are heuristically detected as files with either “test” or “tests” somewhere in their path.

Note that this will only rewrite to databases = [] or databases = "__all__". With multiple databases you can save some test time by limiting test cases to the databases they require (which is why Django made the change).

 from django.test import SimpleTestCase

 class MyTests(SimpleTestCase):
-    allow_database_queries = True
+    databases = "__all__"

     def test_something(self):
         self.assertEqual(2 * 2, 4)

Django 2.1

Release Notes

No fixers yet.

Django 2.0

Release Notes

URL’s

Name: django_urls

Rewrites imports of include() and url() from django.conf.urls to django.urls. url() calls using compatible regexes are rewritten to the new path() syntax, otherwise they are converted to call re_path().

-from django.conf.urls import include, url
+from django.urls import include, path, re_path

 urlpatterns = [
-    url(r'^$', views.index, name='index'),
+    path('', views.index, name='index'),
-    url(r'^about/$', views.about, name='about'),
+    path('about/', views.about, name='about'),
-    url(r'^post/(?P<slug>[-a-zA-Z0-9_]+)/$', views.post, name='post'),
+    path('post/<slug:slug>/', views.post, name='post'),
-    url(r'^weblog', include('blog.urls')),
+    re_path(r'^weblog', include('blog.urls')),
 ]

Existing re_path() calls are also rewritten to the path() syntax when eligible.

-from django.urls import include, re_path
+from django.urls import include, path, re_path

 urlpatterns = [
-    re_path(r'^about/$', views.about, name='about'),
+    path('about/', views.about, name='about'),
     re_path(r'^post/(?P<slug>[\w-]+)/$', views.post, name='post'),
 ]

The compatible regexes that will be converted to use path converters are the following:

  • [^/]+str
  • [0-9]+int
  • [-a-zA-Z0-9_]+slug
  • [0-9a-f]{8}-[0-9a-f]{4}-[0-9a-f]{4}-[0-9a-f]{4}-[0-9a-f]{12}uuid
  • .+path

These are taken from the path converter classes.

For some cases, this change alters the type of the arguments passed to the view, from str to the converted type (e.g. int). This is not guaranteed backwards compatible: there is a chance that the view expects a string, rather than the converted type. But, pragmatically, it seems 99.9% of views do not require strings, and instead work with either strings or the converted type. Thus, you should test affected paths after this fixer makes any changes.

Note that [\w-] is sometimes used for slugs, but is not converted because it might be incompatible. That pattern matches all Unicode word characters, such as “α”, unlike Django's slug converter, which only matches Latin characters.

lru_cache

Name: compatibility_imports

Rewrites imports of lru_cache from django.utils.functional to use functools.

-from django.utils.functional import lru_cache
+from functools import lru_cache

ContextDecorator

Rewrites imports of ContextDecorator from django.utils.decorators to use contextlib.

-from django.utils.decorators import ContextDecorator
+from contextlib import ContextDecorator

<func>.allow_tags = True

Name: admin_allow_tags

Removes assignments of allow_tags attributes to True. This was an admin feature to allow display functions to return HTML without marking it as unsafe, deprecated in Django 1.9. In practice, most display functions that return HTML already use format_html() or similar, so the attribute wasn’t necessary. This only applies in files that use from django.contrib import admin or from django.contrib.gis import admin.

 from django.contrib import admin

 def upper_case_name(obj):
     ...

-upper_case_name.allow_tags = True

Django 1.11

Release Notes

Compatibility imports

Name: compatibility_imports

Rewrites some compatibility imports:

  • django.core.exceptions.EmptyResultSet in django.db.models.query, django.db.models.sql, and django.db.models.sql.datastructures
  • django.core.exceptions.FieldDoesNotExist in django.db.models.fields

Whilst mentioned in the Django 3.1 release notes, these have been possible since Django 1.11.

-from django.db.models.query import EmptyResultSet
+from django.core.exceptions import EmptyResultSet

-from django.db.models.fields import FieldDoesNotExist
+from django.core.exceptions import FieldDoesNotExist

Django 1.10

Release Notes

request.user boolean attributes

Name: request_user_attributes

Rewrites calls to request.user.is_authenticated() and request.user.is_anonymous() to remove the parentheses, per the deprecation.

-request.user.is_authenticated()
+request.user.is_authenticated

-self.request.user.is_anonymous()
+self.request.user.is_anonymous

Compatibility imports

Rewrites some compatibility imports:

  • django.templatetags.static.static in django.contrib.staticfiles.templatetags.staticfiles

    (Whilst mentioned in the Django 2.1 release notes, this has been possible since Django 1.10.)

  • django.urls.* in django.core.urlresolvers.*

-from django.contrib.staticfiles.templatetags.staticfiles import static
+from django.templatetags.static import static

-from django.core.urlresolvers import reverse
+from django.urls import reverse

-from django.core.urlresolvers import resolve
+from django.urls import resolve

Django 1.9

Release Notes

on_delete argument

Name: on_delete

Add on_delete=models.CASCADE to ForeignKey and OneToOneField:

 from django.db import models

-models.ForeignKey("auth.User")
+models.ForeignKey("auth.User", on_delete=models.CASCADE)

-models.OneToOneField("auth.User")
+models.OneToOneField("auth.User", on_delete=models.CASCADE)

This fixer also support from-imports:

-from django.db.models import ForeignKey
+from django.db.models import CASCADE, ForeignKey

-ForeignKey("auth.User")
+ForeignKey("auth.User", on_delete=CASCADE)

DATABASES

Name: settings_database_postgresql

Update the DATABASES setting backend path django.db.backends.postgresql_psycopg2 to use the renamed version django.db.backends.postgresql.

Settings files are heuristically detected as modules with the whole word “settings” somewhere in their path. For example myproject/settings.py or myproject/settings/production.py.

 DATABASES = {
     "default": {
-        "ENGINE": "django.db.backends.postgresql_psycopg2",
+        "ENGINE": "django.db.backends.postgresql",
         "NAME": "mydatabase",
         "USER": "mydatabaseuser",
         "PASSWORD": "mypassword",
         "HOST": "127.0.0.1",
         "PORT": "5432",
     }
 }

Compatibility imports

Name: compatibility_imports

Rewrites some compatibility imports:

  • django.forms.utils.pretty_name in django.forms.forms
  • django.forms.boundfield.BoundField in django.forms.forms
  • django.forms.widgets.SelectDateWidget in django.forms.extras

Whilst mentioned in the Django 3.1 release notes, these have been possible since Django 1.9.

-from django.forms.forms import pretty_name
+from django.forms.utils import pretty_name

Django 1.8

Release Notes

No fixers yet.

Django 1.7

Release Notes

Admin model registration

Name: admin_register

Rewrites admin.site.register() calls to the new @admin.register() decorator syntax when eligible. This only applies in files that use from django.contrib import admin or from django.contrib.gis import admin.

 from django.contrib import admin

+@admin.register(MyModel1, MyModel2)
 class MyCustomAdmin(admin.ModelAdmin):
     ...

-admin.site.register(MyModel1, MyCustomAdmin)
-admin.site.register(MyModel2, MyCustomAdmin)

This also works with custom admin sites. Such calls are detected heuristically based on three criteria:

  1. The object whose register() method is called has a name ending with site.
  2. The registered class has a name ending with Admin.
  3. The filename has the word admin somewhere in its path.
from myapp.admin import custom_site
from django.contrib import admin

+@admin.register(MyModel)
+@admin.register(MyModel, site=custom_site)
class MyModelAdmin(admin.ModelAdmin):
    pass

-custom_site.register(MyModel, MyModelAdmin)
-admin.site.register(MyModel, MyModelAdmin)

If a register() call is preceded by an unregister() call that includes the same model, it is ignored.

from django.contrib import admin


class MyCustomAdmin(admin.ModelAdmin):
    ...


admin.site.unregister(MyModel1)
admin.site.register(MyModel1, MyCustomAdmin)

Compatibility imports

Rewrites some compatibility imports:

  • django.contrib.admin.helpers.ACTION_CHECKBOX_NAME in django.contrib.admin
  • django.template.context.BaseContext, django.template.context.Context, django.template.context.ContextPopException and django.template.context.RequestContext in django.template.base
-from django.contrib.admin import ACTION_CHECKBOX_NAME
+from django.contrib.admin.helpers import ACTION_CHECKBOX_NAME

-from django.template.base import Context
+from django.template.context import Context

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