Opened 14 years ago
Closed 14 years ago
#14903 closed Cleanup/optimization (fixed)
wsgiref usage
Reported by: | Maxim Bublis | Owned by: | nobody |
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Component: | HTTP handling | Version: | dev |
Severity: | Normal | Keywords: | |
Cc: | aymeric.augustin@… | Triage Stage: | Ready for checkin |
Has patch: | yes | Needs documentation: | no |
Needs tests: | no | Patch needs improvement: | no |
Easy pickings: | no | UI/UX: | no |
Description
Currently Django uses copy-pasted wsgiref as its development server. Since wsgiref is a part of standard Python distribution since 2.5, there is no need to distribute wsgiref implementation with Django.
The patch is not breaking current test suits. It should be applied only after official announcation of Python 2.4 support discontinue in Django. As I know, Python 2.4 support will not be dropped in coming 1.3 release, so patching should be defered.
Also this patch would possibly lead to smoother Python 3.x transition in future.
Attachments (2)
Change History (9)
by , 14 years ago
Attachment: | wsgiref_usage.diff added |
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comment:1 by , 14 years ago
Triage Stage: | Unreviewed → Accepted |
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Accepted for a future release (whenever we decide to drop Python 2.4 support; Django 1.4 is likely).
comment:2 by , 14 years ago
A quite note for potential reviewers: although the original may have been copy-pasted, It's entirely likely that we have made tweaks to address bugs along the way. Anyone reviewing this should do an audit of the blame logs and find all the places and times that we've made modifications, and make sure that those fixes either exist upstream.
comment:3 by , 14 years ago
Severity: | → Normal |
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Type: | → Cleanup/optimization |
comment:4 by , 14 years ago
Cc: | added |
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I re-did the job from scratch in order to check if I would end up with the same patch. I mostly did :)
Interesting differences with the original patch are:
- I updated the module's docstring
- I kept the customized error_status - the value in the stdlib is a bit whacky
- I kept the customized get_environ() method of WSGIRequestHandler - it's fixing a bug
- I removed the handle() method of WSGIRequestHandler - it's not changed
I compared every line I removed with the source of Python 2.5.5.
I checked the commit history for django/core/servers/basehttp.py back to r174, where the file was first committed. All changes are preserved by the patch, except the following:
- r6780 is lost. However, #6063 was re-opened and the root cause was fixed at r6895, making the change in r6780 unecessary. So it is fine.
- r6634 is lost. However, the definition of format_date_time() in wsgiref.handlers is correct. #5816 was actually introduced by a incorrect fix in r5712. I think wsgiref.handlers was fixed independently after Django forked it.
- r5511 reverts r5483.
- r5091 is lost. However, the goal was a "slight performance improvement". This does not seem a sufficient reason to keep a forked version of a module of the standard library.
- r3530 was lost by the previous patch, which would have caused a regression on #2494. I fixed that in my patch.
- r3113 was lost by the previous patch, which was probably innocuous. I fixed that in my patch.
- r2809 is the customized error_status mentioned above.
All tests pass.
Not marking this as RFC since I modified the patch, but I think it's pretty close.
by , 14 years ago
Attachment: | 14903.patch added |
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comment:6 by , 14 years ago
Component: | Core (Other) → HTTP handling |
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Easy pickings: | unset |
Triage Stage: | Accepted → Ready for checkin |
Wow, what a patch. I can confirm that all tests pass for me, so unless anyone else has problems with this, it's ready for commit.
Patch replacing current development server with wsgiref