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More documentation updates

pull/262/head
Armin Ronacher 14 years ago
parent
commit
115d31ddbf
  1. 5
      CHANGES
  2. 47
      docs/upgrading.rst
  3. 2
      flask/app.py

5
CHANGES

@ -38,13 +38,16 @@ Release date to be announced, codename to be selected
- Added `create_jinja_loader` to override the loader creation process.
- Implemented a silent flag for `config.from_pyfile`.
- Added `teardown_request` decorator, for functions that should run at the end
of a request regardless of whether an exception occurred.
of a request regardless of whether an exception occurred. Also the behavior
for `after_request` was changed. It's now no longer executed when an exception
is raised. See :ref:`upgrading-to-new-teardown-handling`
- Implemented :func:`flask.has_request_context`
- Added :func:`safe_join`
- The automatic JSON request data unpacking now looks at the charset
mimetype parameter.
- Don't modify the session on :func:`flask.get_flashed_messages` if there
are no messages in the session.
- `before_request` handlers are now able to abort requests with errors.
Version 0.6.1
-------------

47
docs/upgrading.rst

@ -22,6 +22,11 @@ installation, make sure to pass it the ``-U`` parameter::
Version 0.7
-----------
The following backwards incompatible changes exist from 0.6 to 0.7
Bug in Request Locals
`````````````````````
Due to a bug in earlier implementations the request local proxies now
raise a :exc:`RuntimeError` instead of an :exc:`AttributeError` when they
are unbound. If you caught these exceptions with :exc:`AttributeError`
@ -44,6 +49,48 @@ New code::
return send_file(my_file_object, add_etags=False)
.. _upgrading-to-new-teardown-handling:
Upgrading to new Teardown Handling
``````````````````````````````````
We streamlined the behavior of the callbacks for request handling. For
things that modify the response the :meth:`~flask.Flask.after_request`
decorators continue to work as expected, but for things that absolutely
must happen at the end of request we introduced the new
:meth:`~flask.Flask.teardown_request` decorator. Unfortunately that
change also made after-request work differently under error conditions.
It's not consistently skipped if exceptions happen whereas previously it
might have been called twice to ensure it is executed at the end of the
request.
If you have database connection code that looks like this::
@app.after_request
def after_request(response):
g.db.close()
return response
You are now encouraged to use this instead::
@app.teardown_request
def after_request(exception):
g.db.close()
On the upside this change greatly improves the internal code flow and
makes it easier to customize the dispatching and error handling. This
makes it now a lot easier to write unit tests as you can prevent closing
down of database connections for a while. You can take advantage of the
fact that the teardown callbacks are called when the response context is
removed from the stack so a test can query the database after request
handling::
with app.test_client() as client:
resp = client.get('/')
# g.db is still bound if there is such a thing
# and here it's gone
Version 0.6
-----------

2
flask/app.py

@ -831,6 +831,8 @@ class Flask(_PackageBoundObject):
"""Dispatches the request and on top of that performs request
pre and postprocessing as well as HTTP exception catching and
error handling.
.. versionadded:: 0.7
"""
try:
request_started.send(self)

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