Opened 10 years ago
Closed 10 years ago
#23305 closed Cleanup/optimization (worksforme)
Models that are imported on app's import time are invisible to makemigrations when the application is relabeld
Reported by: | Rafał Pitoń | Owned by: | Bryce Caine |
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Component: | Documentation | Version: | 1.7-rc-2 |
Severity: | Normal | Keywords: | afraid-to-commit |
Cc: | cmawebsite@… | Triage Stage: | Accepted |
Has patch: | yes | Needs documentation: | no |
Needs tests: | no | Patch needs improvement: | no |
Easy pickings: | no | UI/UX: | no |
Description (last modified by )
Models that are imported in app's __init__.py
, or by modules imported from that become invisible for Django if app uses apps.py and AppConfig.
To reproduce it create app with basic config and simple model in models.py. If this model is imported inside __init__.py
, or other module imported in __init__.py
, it will become invisible to makemigrations.
Tried this both with default_app_config as well as giving full path to AppConfig in INSTALLED_APPS.
I'm running latest code from 1.7 branch.
EDIT by (c-schmitt): This Bug Report only works when you import an Model in __init__.py
and relabel your application in AppConfig.
I attached a Test that could be applied to stable/1.7.x
and the user that submitted the bug also has an example application on github.
Attachments (1)
Change History (22)
comment:1 by , 10 years ago
Description: | modified (diff) |
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comment:2 by , 10 years ago
Component: | Uncategorized → Migrations |
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Description: | modified (diff) |
Severity: | Normal → Release blocker |
Summary: | Models that are imported on app's import time are invisible to makemessages → Models that are imported on app's import time are invisible to makemigrations |
comment:3 by , 10 years ago
Resolution: | → invalid |
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Status: | new → closed |
I cannot replicate this; I've tried importing the models in init.py directly, and via a submodule, with and without preexisting migrations directories, and all variants work perfectly. On master, this does raise the deprecation warning:
/home/andrew/Programs/DjangoTest/app_a/models.py:4: RemovedInDjango19Warning: Model class app_a.models.ModelTest doesn't declare an explicit app_label and either isn't in an application in INSTALLED_APPS or else was imported before its application was loaded. This will no longer be supported in Django 1.9. class ModelTest(models.Model):
but it still works.
I'm closing as INVALID, but if you can supply me with either exact steps to follow or an example project and console commands to follow, and that causes the bug, we can reopen.
comment:4 by , 10 years ago
I've tried the same (just a little bit slower) and I've ran it against 1.7 and every test worked fine. Even when I imported the Model in apps.py.
I've created some unittests for that but It always worked as expected.
Also you should consider reading this: https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/dev/ref/applications/#django.apps.AppConfig.ready
comment:5 by , 10 years ago
After creating custom project from scratch I can say that this indeed works. However I've created test case closer to what I'm experiencing and I've that it all boils down to presence to custom label attribute in AppConfig. As soon as that attribute is set to anything but default, model vanishes from makemigrations sight.
Here's source:
https://github.com/rafalp/Django-23305
Output looks like this:
> python manage.py makemigrations custom_admin No changes detected in app 'custom_admin'
So I'm in doubt now. Am I using labels wrong, or there's bug somewhere?
Either way thanks for attention and time!
comment:6 by , 10 years ago
Okai it seems that this bug is valid and only applies when you set a label on AppConfig and import a model in __init__.py
I also append some unit tests that could be used
by , 10 years ago
Attachment: | ticket_23305.diff added |
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comment:7 by , 10 years ago
Resolution: | invalid |
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Status: | closed → new |
comment:8 by , 10 years ago
Description: | modified (diff) |
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Summary: | Models that are imported on app's import time are invisible to makemigrations → Models that are imported on app's import time are invisible to makemigrations when the application is relabeld |
comment:9 by , 10 years ago
Description: | modified (diff) |
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comment:10 by , 10 years ago
Description: | modified (diff) |
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comment:11 by , 10 years ago
Cc: | added |
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comment:12 by , 10 years ago
Severity: | Release blocker → Normal |
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OK, I'm going to demote this from release blocker, as it's a combination of two unusual things that there's an easy recovery from (setting app_label in the model's Meta field, or just not doing the imports in init)
In particular, by importing the models before the app's initialised, you're doing something that we've already started down a deprecation path, and it's complex enough to fix this bug that it's going to potentially cause more problems than it solves for the 1.7 release.
comment:13 by , 10 years ago
Couldn't we just document that? I mean "Don't import Models on __init__.py
, it leaves to inconsistent behavior"
comment:14 by , 10 years ago
Component: | Migrations → Documentation |
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Triage Stage: | Unreviewed → Accepted |
Type: | Bug → Cleanup/optimization |
comment:15 by , 10 years ago
Keywords: | afraid-to-commit added |
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I've marked this ticket as especially suitable for people following the Don't be afraid to commit tutorial at the DjangoCon US 2014 sprints.
If you're tackling this ticket, please don't hesitate to ask me for guidance if you'd like any, either at the sprints themselves, or here or on the Django IRC channels, where I can be found as EvilDMP.
comment:16 by , 10 years ago
Owner: | changed from | to
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Status: | new → assigned |
comment:17 by , 10 years ago
Tested adding the documentation-item locally, which generated this html when doing a make html
:
<div class="admonition warning"> <p class="first admonition-title">Warning</p> <p class="last">Additionally, avoid importing models in __init__.py; doing so leads to inconsistent behavior.</p> </div>
comment:19 by , 10 years ago
Has patch: | set |
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comment:20 by , 10 years ago
This is already documented further in that file: "*At this stage, your code shouldn't import any models!*"
The problem isn't restricted to my_app/__init__.py
; any model import triggered, even indirectly, by my_app/__init__.py
or my_app/apps.py
will have the same effect.
This raises a PendingDeprecationWarning, which is silent by default, but which you may display by running python -Wall
. In 1.8 it will raise a DeprecationWarning, which is loud by default, and in 1.9 it will raise an exception. So the silent failure only happens in 1.7.
comment:21 by , 10 years ago
Resolution: | → worksforme |
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Status: | assigned → closed |
I've fixed your Headline and marked it as a release blocker (since I think this bug should not be in 1.7, but maybe a core could change it to the correct status.)