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1 ==========
2 Middleware
3 ==========
4
5 Middleware is a framework of hooks into Django's request/response processing.
6 It's a light, low-level "plugin" system for globally altering Django's input
7 and/or output.
8
9 Each middleware component is responsible for doing some specific function. For
10 example, Django includes a middleware component, ``XViewMiddleware``, that adds
11 an ``"X-View"`` HTTP header to every response to a ``HEAD`` request.
12
13 This document explains all middleware components that come with Django, how to
14 use them, and how to write your own middleware.
15
16 Activating middleware
17 =====================
18
19 To activate a middleware component, add it to the ``MIDDLEWARE_CLASSES`` list
20 in your Django settings. In ``MIDDLEWARE_CLASSES``, each middleware component
21 is represented by a string: the full Python path to the middleware's class
22 name. For example, here's the default ``MIDDLEWARE_CLASSES`` created by
23 ``django-admin.py startproject``::
24
25     MIDDLEWARE_CLASSES = (
26         'django.middleware.common.CommonMiddleware',
27         'django.contrib.sessions.middleware.SessionMiddleware',
28         'django.contrib.auth.middleware.AuthenticationMiddleware',
29         'django.middleware.doc.XViewMiddleware',
30     )
31
32 Django applies middleware in the order it's defined in ``MIDDLEWARE_CLASSES``,
33 except in the case of response and exception middleware, which is applied in
34 reverse order.
35
36 A Django installation doesn't require any middleware -- e.g.,
37 ``MIDDLEWARE_CLASSES`` can be empty, if you'd like -- but it's strongly
38 suggested that you use ``CommonMiddleware``.
39
40 Available middleware
41 ====================
42
43 django.middleware.cache.CacheMiddleware
44 ---------------------------------------
45
46 Enables site-wide cache. If this is enabled, each Django-powered page will be
47 cached for as long as the ``CACHE_MIDDLEWARE_SECONDS`` setting defines. See
48 the `cache documentation`_.
49
50 .. _`cache documentation`: http://www.djangoproject.com/documentation/cache/#the-per-site-cache
51
52 django.middleware.common.CommonMiddleware
53 -----------------------------------------
54
55 Adds a few conveniences for perfectionists:
56
57 * Forbids access to user agents in the ``DISALLOWED_USER_AGENTS`` setting,
58   which should be a list of strings.
59
60 * Performs URL rewriting based on the ``APPEND_SLASH`` and ``PREPEND_WWW``
61   settings. If ``APPEND_SLASH`` is ``True``, URLs that lack a trailing
62   slash will be redirected to the same URL with a trailing slash, unless the
63   last component in the path contains a period. So ``foo.com/bar`` is
64   redirected to ``foo.com/bar/``, but ``foo.com/bar/file.txt`` is passed
65   through unchanged.
66
67   If ``PREPEND_WWW`` is ``True``, URLs that lack a leading "www." will be
68   redirected to the same URL with a leading "www."
69
70   Both of these options are meant to normalize URLs. The philosophy is that
71   each URL should exist in one, and only one, place. Technically a URL
72   ``foo.com/bar`` is distinct from ``foo.com/bar/`` -- a search-engine
73   indexer would treat them as separate URLs -- so it's best practice to
74   normalize URLs.
75
76 * Handles ETags based on the ``USE_ETAGS`` setting. If ``USE_ETAGS`` is set
77   to ``True``, Django will calculate an ETag for each request by
78   MD5-hashing the page content, and it'll take care of sending
79   ``Not Modified`` responses, if appropriate.
80
81 django.middleware.doc.XViewMiddleware
82 -------------------------------------
83
84 Sends custom ``X-View`` HTTP headers to HEAD requests that come from IP
85 addresses defined in the ``INTERNAL_IPS`` setting. This is used by Django's
86 automatic documentation system.
87
88 django.middleware.gzip.GZipMiddleware
89 -------------------------------------
90
91 Compresses content for browsers that understand gzip compression (all modern
92 browsers).
93
94 django.middleware.http.ConditionalGetMiddleware
95 -----------------------------------------------
96
97 Handles conditional GET operations. If the response has a ``ETag`` or
98 ``Last-Modified`` header, and the request has ``If-None-Match`` or
99 ``If-Modified-Since``, the response is replaced by an HttpNotModified.
100
101 Also removes the content from any response to a HEAD request and sets the
102 ``Date`` and ``Content-Length`` response-headers.
103
104 django.middleware.http.SetRemoteAddrFromForwardedFor
105 ----------------------------------------------------
106
107 **New in Django development version**
108
109 Sets ``request['REMOTE_ADDR']`` based on ``request.['HTTP_X_FORWARDED_FOR']``,
110 if the latter is set. This is useful if you're sitting behind a reverse proxy
111 that causes each request's ``REMOTE_ADDR`` to be set to ``127.0.0.1``.
112
113 **Important note:** This does NOT validate ``HTTP_X_FORWARDED_FOR``. If you're
114 not behind a reverse proxy that sets ``HTTP_X_FORWARDED_FOR`` automatically, do
115 not use this middleware. Anybody can spoof the value of
116 ``HTTP_X_FORWARDED_FOR``, and because this sets ``REMOTE_ADDR`` based on
117 ``HTTP_X_FORWARDED_FOR``, that means anybody can "fake" their IP address. Only
118 use this when you can absolutely trust the value of ``HTTP_X_FORWARDED_FOR``.
119
120 django.contrib.sessions.middleware.SessionMiddleware
121 ----------------------------------------------------
122
123 Enables session support. See the `session documentation`_.
124
125 .. _`session documentation`: http://www.djangoproject.com/documentation/sessions/
126
127 django.contrib.auth.middleware.AuthenticationMiddleware
128 -------------------------------------------------------
129
130 Adds the ``user`` attribute, representing the currently-logged-in user, to
131 every incoming ``HttpRequest`` object. See `Authentication in Web requests`_.
132
133 .. _Authentication in Web requests: http://www.djangoproject.com/documentation/authentication/#authentication-in-web-requests
134
135 django.middleware.transaction.TransactionMiddleware
136 ---------------------------------------------------
137
138 Binds commit and rollback to the request/response phase. If a view function runs
139 successfully, a commit is done. If it fails with an exception, a rollback is
140 done.
141
142 The order of this middleware in the stack is important: middleware modules
143 running outside of it run with commit-on-save - the default Django behavior.
144 Middleware modules running inside it (coming later in the stack) will be under
145 the same transaction control as the view functions.
146
147 See the `transaction management documentation`_.
148
149 .. _`transaction management documentation`: http://www.djangoproject.com/documentation/transactions/
150
151 Writing your own middleware
152 ===========================
153
154 Writing your own middleware is easy. Each middleware component is a single
155 Python class that defines one or more of the following methods:
156
157 process_request
158 ---------------
159
160 Interface: ``process_request(self, request)``
161
162 ``request`` is an ``HttpRequest`` object. This method is called on each
163 request, before Django decides which view to execute.
164
165 ``process_request()`` should return either ``None`` or an ``HttpResponse``
166 object. If it returns ``None``, Django will continue processing this request,
167 executing any other middleware and, then, the appropriate view. If it returns
168 an ``HttpResponse`` object, Django won't bother calling ANY other middleware or
169 the appropriate view; it'll return that ``HttpResponse``.
170
171 process_view
172 ------------
173
174 Interface: ``process_view(self, request, view_func, view_args, view_kwargs)``
175
176 ``request`` is an ``HttpRequest`` object. ``view_func`` is the Python function
177 that Django is about to use. (It's the actual function object, not the name of
178 the function as a string.) ``view_args`` is a list of positional arguments that
179 will be passed to the view, and ``view_kwargs`` is a dictionary of keyword
180 arguments that will be passed to the view. Neither ``view_args`` nor
181 ``view_kwargs`` include the first view argument (``request``).
182
183 ``process_view()`` is called just before Django calls the view. It should
184 return either ``None`` or an ``HttpResponse`` object. If it returns ``None``,
185 Django will continue processing this request, executing any other
186 ``process_view()`` middleware and, then, the appropriate view. If it returns an
187 ``HttpResponse`` object, Django won't bother calling ANY other middleware or
188 the appropriate view; it'll return that ``HttpResponse``.
189
190 process_response
191 ----------------
192
193 Interface: ``process_response(self, request, response)``
194
195 ``request`` is an ``HttpRequest`` object. ``response`` is the ``HttpResponse``
196 object returned by a Django view.
197
198 ``process_response()`` should return an ``HttpResponse`` object. It could alter
199 the given ``response``, or it could create and return a brand-new
200 ``HttpResponse``.
201
202 process_exception
203 -----------------
204
205 Interface: ``process_exception(self, request, exception)``
206
207 ``request`` is an ``HttpRequest`` object. ``exception`` is an ``Exception``
208 object raised by the view function.
209
210 Django calls ``process_exception()`` when a view raises an exception.
211 ``process_exception()`` should return either ``None`` or an ``HttpResponse``
212 object. If it returns an ``HttpResponse`` object, the response will be returned
213 to the browser. Otherwise, default exception handling kicks in.
214
215 Guidelines
216 ----------
217
218     * Middleware classes don't have to subclass anything.
219
220     * The middleware class can live anywhere on your Python path. All Django
221       cares about is that the ``MIDDLEWARE_CLASSES`` setting includes the path
222       to it.
223
224     * Feel free to look at Django's available middleware for examples. The
225       core Django middleware classes are in ``django/middleware/`` in the
226       Django distribution. The session middleware is in ``django/contrib/sessions``.
227
228     * If you write a middleware component that you think would be useful to
229       other people, contribute to the community! Let us know, and we'll
230       consider adding it to Django.
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