From c01dcbad59b27679bc15bd3213bfad49e6443dde Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Stephen Finucane Date: Fri, 24 Nov 2017 19:37:42 +0000 Subject: Remove support for Django 1.6, 1.7 These versions are massively outdated and the only reason for keeping them was to allow installation on RHEL 7 using the version provided via EPEL. No one's actually using this so just kill it. This also allows us to remove support for django-filter 0.11, which was only retained for use with these older versions of Django. Signed-off-by: Stephen Finucane Reviewed-by: Daniel Axtens --- docs/deployment/upgrading.rst | 90 +++---------------------------------------- 1 file changed, 5 insertions(+), 85 deletions(-) (limited to 'docs/deployment') diff --git a/docs/deployment/upgrading.rst b/docs/deployment/upgrading.rst index 2c2766c..d368509 100644 --- a/docs/deployment/upgrading.rst +++ b/docs/deployment/upgrading.rst @@ -59,94 +59,14 @@ management commands: Upgrade Your Database --------------------- -Migrations of the database can be tricky. Prior to `v1.0.0`__, database -migrations were provided by way of manual, SQL migration scripts. After this -release, Patchwork moved to support `Django migrations`__. If you are -upgrading from `v1.0.0` or later, it is likely that you can rely entirely on -the later to bring your database up-to-date. This can be done like so: +New versions of Patchwork may provide a number of schema and/or data migrations +which must be applied before starting the instance. To do this, run the +*migrate* management command: .. code-block:: shell $ ./manage.py migrate -However, there are a number of scenarios in which you may need to fall back to -the provided SQL migrations or provide your own: +For more information on migrations, refer to `the Django documentation`__. -* You are using Django < 1.6 - - Patchwork supports Django 1.6. However, Django Migrations was added in 1.7 - and is `not available for previous versions`__. As such, you must continue to - use manual migrations or upgrade your version of Django. For many of the - migrations, this can be done automatically: - - .. code-block:: shell - - $ ./manage.py sqlmigrate patchwork 0003_add_check_model - - However, this only works for schema migrations. For data migrations, - however, this will fail. In this cases, these migrations will need to be - handwritten. - -* You are using Django > 1.6, but upgrading from Patchwork < 1.0.0 - - Patchwork only started providing migrations in `v1.0.0`. SQL migrations are - provided for versions prior to this and must be applied to get the database - to the "initial" state that Django migrations expects. - -* You have diverged from upstream Patchwork - - If you have applied custom patches that change the database models, the - database in an "inconsistent state" and the provided migrations will likely - fail to apply. - -Steps to handle the latter two of these are described below. - -__ https://github.com/getpatchwork/patchwork/releases/tag/v1.0.0 -__ https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/1.8/topics/migrations/ -__ http://blog.allenap.me/2015/05/south-south-2-and-django-migrations.html - -Upgrading a pre-v1.0.0 Patchwork instance -~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ - -The process for this type of upgrade is quite simple: upgrade using manual SQL -upgrades until better options become available. As such, you should apply all -unapplied SQL migrations that are not duplicated by Django migrations. Once -such duplication occurs, rely on the Django migrations only and continue to do -so going forward. - -Upgrading a "diverged" Patchwork instance -~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ - -This type of upgrade is a little trickier. There are two options you can take: - -1. Bring your Patchwork instance back in sync with upstream - -2. Provide your own migrations - -The former option is particularly suitable if you decide to upstream your -change or decide it's not valuable enough to retain. This will require either -reworking any migrations that exist prior to your feature being upstreamed, or -deleting any added database fields and tables, respectively. In both cases, -manually, hand-written SQL migrations will be required to get the databse into -a consistent state (remember: **backup**!). Once this is done, you can resume -using the upstream-provided migrations, ensuring any Django migrations that you -may have skipped are not applied again: - -.. code-block:: shell - - $ ./manage.py migrate 000x-abc --fake # when 000x-abc is last "skippable" - -It's worth adding that with the databases now back in sync it should be -possible to return to using upstream code rather than maintaining a fork. - -The latter option is best chosen if you wish to retain the aforementioned fork. -How you do this depends on the extensiveness of your changes, but getting the -latest version of Patchwork, deleting the provided migrations, applying any -patches you may have and regenerating the migrations seems like the best -option. - -.. note:: - - To prevent the latter case above from occurring, we'd ask that you submit - any patches you may have to the upstream Patchwork so that the wider - community can benefit from this new functionality. +__ https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/1.11/topics/migrations/ -- cgit v1.2.3