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Upgrading to Newer Releases
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===========================
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Flask itself is changing like any software is changing over time. Most of
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the changes are the nice kind, the kind where you don't have th change
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anything in your code to profit from a new release.
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However every once in a while there are changes that do require some
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changes in your code or there are changes that make it possible for you to
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improve your own code quality by taking advantage of new features in
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Flask.
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This section of the documentation enumerates all the changes in Flask from
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release to release and how you can change your code to have a painless
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updating experience.
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If you want to use the `easy_install` command to upgrade your Flask
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installation, make sure to pass it the ``-U`` parameter::
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$ easy_install -U Flask
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Version 0.6
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-----------
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Flask 0.6 comes with a backwards incompatible change which affects the
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order of after-request handlers. Previously they were called in the order
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of the registration, now they are called in reverse order. This change
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was made so that Flask behaves more like people expected it to work and
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how other systems handle request pre- and postprocessing. If you
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dependend on the order of execution of post-request functions, be sure to
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change the order.
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Version 0.5
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-----------
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Flask 0.5 is the first release that comes as a Python package instead of a
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single module. There were a couple of internal refactoring so if you
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depend on undocumented internal details you probably have to adapt the
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imports.
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The following changes may be relevant to your application:
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- autoescaping no longer happens for all templates. Instead it is
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configured to only happen on files ending with ``.html``, ``.htm``,
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``.xml`` and ``.xhtml``. If you have templates with different
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extensions you should override the
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:meth:`~flask.Flask.select_jinja_autoescape` method.
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- Flask no longer supports zipped applications in this release. This
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functionality might come back in future releases if there is demand
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for this feature. Removing support for this makes the Flask internal
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code easier to understand and fixes a couple of small issues that make
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debugging harder than necessary.
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- The `create_jinja_loader` function is gone. If you want to customize
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the Jinja loader now, use the
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:meth:`~flask.Flask.create_jinja_environment` method instead.
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Version 0.4
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-----------
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For application developers there are no changes that require changes in
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your code. In case you are developing on a Flask extension however, and
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that extension has a unittest-mode you might want to link the activation
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of that mode to the new ``TESTING`` flag.
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Version 0.3
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-----------
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Flask 0.3 introduces configuration support and logging as well as
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categories for flashing messages. All these are features that are 100%
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backwards compatible but you might want to take advantage of them.
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Configuration Support
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`````````````````````
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The configuration support makes it easier to write any kind of application
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that requires some sort of configuration. (Which most likely is the case
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for any application out there).
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If you previously had code like this::
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app.debug = DEBUG
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app.secret_key = SECRET_KEY
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You no longer have to do that, instead you can just load a configuration
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into the config object. How this works is outlined in :ref:`config`.
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Logging Integration
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```````````````````
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Flask now configures a logger for you with some basic and useful defaults.
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If you run your application in production and want to profit from
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automatic error logging, you might be interested in attaching a proper log
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handler. Also you can start logging warnings and errors into the logger
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when appropriately. For more information on that, read
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:ref:`application-errors`.
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Categories for Flash Messages
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`````````````````````````````
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Flash messages can now have categories attached. This makes it possible
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to render errors, warnings or regular messages differently for example.
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This is an opt-in feature because it requires some rethinking in the code.
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Read all about that in the :ref:`message-flashing-pattern` pattern.
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