first commit

This commit is contained in:
s457957 2020-11-22 13:08:09 -08:00
parent 85f2fc04ec
commit aa65386b01
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.idea/.gitignore vendored Normal file
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# Default ignored files
/shelf/
/workspace.xml
# Datasource local storage ignored files
/dataSources/
/dataSources.local.xml
# Editor-based HTTP Client requests
/httpRequests/

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<component name="InspectionProjectProfileManager">
<settings>
<option name="USE_PROJECT_PROFILE" value="false" />
<version value="1.0" />
</settings>
</component>

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.idea/misc.xml Normal file
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<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<project version="4">
<component name="ProjectRootManager" version="2" project-jdk-name="Python 3.8 (timefall)" project-jdk-type="Python SDK" />
</project>

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.idea/modules.xml Normal file
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<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<project version="4">
<component name="ProjectModuleManager">
<modules>
<module fileurl="file://$PROJECT_DIR$/.idea/timefall.iml" filepath="$PROJECT_DIR$/.idea/timefall.iml" />
</modules>
</component>
</project>

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<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<module type="PYTHON_MODULE" version="4">
<component name="FacetManager">
<facet type="django" name="Django">
<configuration>
<option name="rootFolder" value="$MODULE_DIR$" />
<option name="settingsModule" value="timefall/settings.py" />
<option name="manageScript" value="$MODULE_DIR$/manage.py" />
<option name="environment" value="&lt;map/&gt;" />
<option name="doNotUseTestRunner" value="false" />
<option name="trackFilePattern" value="migrations" />
</configuration>
</facet>
</component>
<component name="NewModuleRootManager">
<content url="file://$MODULE_DIR$" />
<orderEntry type="inheritedJdk" />
<orderEntry type="sourceFolder" forTests="false" />
</component>
<component name="TemplatesService">
<option name="TEMPLATE_CONFIGURATION" value="Django" />
<option name="TEMPLATE_FOLDERS">
<list>
<option value="$MODULE_DIR$/templates" />
</list>
</option>
</component>
</module>

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<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<project version="4">
<component name="VcsDirectoryMappings">
<mapping directory="" vcs="Git" />
<mapping directory="$PROJECT_DIR$" vcs="Git" />
</component>
</project>

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employee_module/admin.py Normal file
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from django.contrib import admin
# Register your models here.

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employee_module/apps.py Normal file
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from django.apps import AppConfig
class EmployeeModuleConfig(AppConfig):
name = 'employee_module'

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from django.db import models
# Create your models here.

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employee_module/tests.py Normal file
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from django.test import TestCase
# Create your tests here.

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employee_module/views.py Normal file
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from django.shortcuts import render
from django.http import HttpResponse
# Create your views here.

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hr_module/__init__.py Normal file
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hr_module/admin.py Normal file
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from django.contrib import admin
# Register your models here.

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hr_module/apps.py Normal file
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from django.apps import AppConfig
class HrModuleConfig(AppConfig):
name = 'hr_module'

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hr_module/models.py Normal file
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from django.db import models
# Create your models here.
class Employee(models.Model):
person_id = models.IntegerField(blank=False,
null=False,
unique=True)
first_name = models.CharField(max_length=200,
null=False,
blank=False)
last_name = models.CharField(max_length=200,
null=False,
blank=False)
department = models.CharField(max_length=200,
null=False,
blank=False)
manager_id = models.IntegerField()

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from django.test import TestCase
# Create your tests here.

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hr_module/urls.py Normal file
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from django.urls import path
from . import views
urlpatterns = [
path('', views.index, name='index'),
]

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hr_module/views.py Normal file
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from django.shortcuts import render
from django.http import HttpResponse
# Create your views here.
def index(request):
return HttpResponse("Hello, world. You're at the app index.")

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#!/usr/bin/env python
"""Django's command-line utility for administrative tasks."""
import os
import sys
def main():
"""Run administrative tasks."""
os.environ.setdefault('DJANGO_SETTINGS_MODULE', 'timefall.settings')
try:
from django.core.management import execute_from_command_line
except ImportError as exc:
raise ImportError(
"Couldn't import Django. Are you sure it's installed and "
"available on your PYTHONPATH environment variable? Did you "
"forget to activate a virtual environment?"
) from exc
execute_from_command_line(sys.argv)
if __name__ == '__main__':
main()

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manager_module/admin.py Normal file
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from django.contrib import admin
# Register your models here.

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from django.apps import AppConfig
class ManagerModuleConfig(AppConfig):
name = 'manager_module'

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manager_module/models.py Normal file
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from django.db import models
# Create your models here.

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manager_module/tests.py Normal file
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from django.test import TestCase
# Create your tests here.

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manager_module/views.py Normal file
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from django.shortcuts import render
# Create your views here.

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"""
ASGI config for timefall project.
It exposes the ASGI callable as a module-level variable named ``application``.
For more information on this file, see
https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/3.1/howto/deployment/asgi/
"""
import os
from django.core.asgi import get_asgi_application
os.environ.setdefault('DJANGO_SETTINGS_MODULE', 'timefall.settings')
application = get_asgi_application()

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"""
Django settings for timefall project.
Generated by 'django-admin startproject' using Django 3.1.3.
For more information on this file, see
https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/3.1/topics/settings/
For the full list of settings and their values, see
https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/3.1/ref/settings/
"""
from pathlib import Path
# Build paths inside the project like this: BASE_DIR / 'subdir'.
BASE_DIR = Path(__file__).resolve().parent.parent
# Quick-start development settings - unsuitable for production
# See https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/3.1/howto/deployment/checklist/
# SECURITY WARNING: keep the secret key used in production secret!
SECRET_KEY = 'tx#+u3u-r1$n_4r(!6vvcb@1f5!z21^74w(zesiz$&59&72$kq'
# SECURITY WARNING: don't run with debug turned on in production!
DEBUG = True
ALLOWED_HOSTS = []
# Application definition
INSTALLED_APPS = [
'django.contrib.admin',
'django.contrib.auth',
'django.contrib.contenttypes',
'django.contrib.sessions',
'django.contrib.messages',
'django.contrib.staticfiles',
]
MIDDLEWARE = [
'django.middleware.security.SecurityMiddleware',
'django.contrib.sessions.middleware.SessionMiddleware',
'django.middleware.common.CommonMiddleware',
'django.middleware.csrf.CsrfViewMiddleware',
'django.contrib.auth.middleware.AuthenticationMiddleware',
'django.contrib.messages.middleware.MessageMiddleware',
'django.middleware.clickjacking.XFrameOptionsMiddleware',
]
ROOT_URLCONF = 'timefall.urls'
TEMPLATES = [
{
'BACKEND': 'django.template.backends.django.DjangoTemplates',
'DIRS': [BASE_DIR / 'templates']
,
'APP_DIRS': True,
'OPTIONS': {
'context_processors': [
'django.template.context_processors.debug',
'django.template.context_processors.request',
'django.contrib.auth.context_processors.auth',
'django.contrib.messages.context_processors.messages',
],
},
},
]
WSGI_APPLICATION = 'timefall.wsgi.application'
# Database
# https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/3.1/ref/settings/#databases
DATABASES = {
'default': {
'ENGINE': 'django.db.backends.sqlite3',
'NAME': BASE_DIR / 'db.sqlite3',
}
}
# Password validation
# https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/3.1/ref/settings/#auth-password-validators
AUTH_PASSWORD_VALIDATORS = [
{
'NAME': 'django.contrib.auth.password_validation.UserAttributeSimilarityValidator',
},
{
'NAME': 'django.contrib.auth.password_validation.MinimumLengthValidator',
},
{
'NAME': 'django.contrib.auth.password_validation.CommonPasswordValidator',
},
{
'NAME': 'django.contrib.auth.password_validation.NumericPasswordValidator',
},
]
# Internationalization
# https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/3.1/topics/i18n/
LANGUAGE_CODE = 'en-us'
TIME_ZONE = 'UTC'
USE_I18N = True
USE_L10N = True
USE_TZ = True
# Static files (CSS, JavaScript, Images)
# https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/3.1/howto/static-files/
STATIC_URL = '/static/'

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"""timefall URL Configuration
The `urlpatterns` list routes URLs to views. For more information please see:
https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/3.1/topics/http/urls/
Examples:
Function views
1. Add an import: from my_app import views
2. Add a URL to urlpatterns: path('', views.home, name='home')
Class-based views
1. Add an import: from other_app.views import Home
2. Add a URL to urlpatterns: path('', Home.as_view(), name='home')
Including another URLconf
1. Import the include() function: from django.urls import include, path
2. Add a URL to urlpatterns: path('blog/', include('blog.urls'))
"""
from django.contrib import admin
from django.urls import path, include
urlpatterns = [
path('admin/', admin.site.urls),
path('hr_module/', include('hr_module.urls')),
]

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"""
WSGI config for timefall project.
It exposes the WSGI callable as a module-level variable named ``application``.
For more information on this file, see
https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/3.1/howto/deployment/wsgi/
"""
import os
from django.core.wsgi import get_wsgi_application
os.environ.setdefault('DJANGO_SETTINGS_MODULE', 'timefall.settings')
application = get_wsgi_application()

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<#
.Synopsis
Activate a Python virtual environment for the current PowerShell session.
.Description
Pushes the python executable for a virtual environment to the front of the
$Env:PATH environment variable and sets the prompt to signify that you are
in a Python virtual environment. Makes use of the command line switches as
well as the `pyvenv.cfg` file values present in the virtual environment.
.Parameter VenvDir
Path to the directory that contains the virtual environment to activate. The
default value for this is the parent of the directory that the Activate.ps1
script is located within.
.Parameter Prompt
The prompt prefix to display when this virtual environment is activated. By
default, this prompt is the name of the virtual environment folder (VenvDir)
surrounded by parentheses and followed by a single space (ie. '(.venv) ').
.Example
Activate.ps1
Activates the Python virtual environment that contains the Activate.ps1 script.
.Example
Activate.ps1 -Verbose
Activates the Python virtual environment that contains the Activate.ps1 script,
and shows extra information about the activation as it executes.
.Example
Activate.ps1 -VenvDir C:\Users\MyUser\Common\.venv
Activates the Python virtual environment located in the specified location.
.Example
Activate.ps1 -Prompt "MyPython"
Activates the Python virtual environment that contains the Activate.ps1 script,
and prefixes the current prompt with the specified string (surrounded in
parentheses) while the virtual environment is active.
.Notes
On Windows, it may be required to enable this Activate.ps1 script by setting the
execution policy for the user. You can do this by issuing the following PowerShell
command:
PS C:\> Set-ExecutionPolicy -ExecutionPolicy RemoteSigned -Scope CurrentUser
For more information on Execution Policies:
https://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkID=135170
#>
Param(
[Parameter(Mandatory = $false)]
[String]
$VenvDir,
[Parameter(Mandatory = $false)]
[String]
$Prompt
)
<# Function declarations --------------------------------------------------- #>
<#
.Synopsis
Remove all shell session elements added by the Activate script, including the
addition of the virtual environment's Python executable from the beginning of
the PATH variable.
.Parameter NonDestructive
If present, do not remove this function from the global namespace for the
session.
#>
function global:deactivate ([switch]$NonDestructive) {
# Revert to original values
# The prior prompt:
if (Test-Path -Path Function:_OLD_VIRTUAL_PROMPT) {
Copy-Item -Path Function:_OLD_VIRTUAL_PROMPT -Destination Function:prompt
Remove-Item -Path Function:_OLD_VIRTUAL_PROMPT
}
# The prior PYTHONHOME:
if (Test-Path -Path Env:_OLD_VIRTUAL_PYTHONHOME) {
Copy-Item -Path Env:_OLD_VIRTUAL_PYTHONHOME -Destination Env:PYTHONHOME
Remove-Item -Path Env:_OLD_VIRTUAL_PYTHONHOME
}
# The prior PATH:
if (Test-Path -Path Env:_OLD_VIRTUAL_PATH) {
Copy-Item -Path Env:_OLD_VIRTUAL_PATH -Destination Env:PATH
Remove-Item -Path Env:_OLD_VIRTUAL_PATH
}
# Just remove the VIRTUAL_ENV altogether:
if (Test-Path -Path Env:VIRTUAL_ENV) {
Remove-Item -Path env:VIRTUAL_ENV
}
# Just remove the _PYTHON_VENV_PROMPT_PREFIX altogether:
if (Get-Variable -Name "_PYTHON_VENV_PROMPT_PREFIX" -ErrorAction SilentlyContinue) {
Remove-Variable -Name _PYTHON_VENV_PROMPT_PREFIX -Scope Global -Force
}
# Leave deactivate function in the global namespace if requested:
if (-not $NonDestructive) {
Remove-Item -Path function:deactivate
}
}
<#
.Description
Get-PyVenvConfig parses the values from the pyvenv.cfg file located in the
given folder, and returns them in a map.
For each line in the pyvenv.cfg file, if that line can be parsed into exactly
two strings separated by `=` (with any amount of whitespace surrounding the =)
then it is considered a `key = value` line. The left hand string is the key,
the right hand is the value.
If the value starts with a `'` or a `"` then the first and last character is
stripped from the value before being captured.
.Parameter ConfigDir
Path to the directory that contains the `pyvenv.cfg` file.
#>
function Get-PyVenvConfig(
[String]
$ConfigDir
) {
Write-Verbose "Given ConfigDir=$ConfigDir, obtain values in pyvenv.cfg"
# Ensure the file exists, and issue a warning if it doesn't (but still allow the function to continue).
$pyvenvConfigPath = Join-Path -Resolve -Path $ConfigDir -ChildPath 'pyvenv.cfg' -ErrorAction Continue
# An empty map will be returned if no config file is found.
$pyvenvConfig = @{ }
if ($pyvenvConfigPath) {
Write-Verbose "File exists, parse `key = value` lines"
$pyvenvConfigContent = Get-Content -Path $pyvenvConfigPath
$pyvenvConfigContent | ForEach-Object {
$keyval = $PSItem -split "\s*=\s*", 2
if ($keyval[0] -and $keyval[1]) {
$val = $keyval[1]
# Remove extraneous quotations around a string value.
if ("'""".Contains($val.Substring(0, 1))) {
$val = $val.Substring(1, $val.Length - 2)
}
$pyvenvConfig[$keyval[0]] = $val
Write-Verbose "Adding Key: '$($keyval[0])'='$val'"
}
}
}
return $pyvenvConfig
}
<# Begin Activate script --------------------------------------------------- #>
# Determine the containing directory of this script
$VenvExecPath = Split-Path -Parent $MyInvocation.MyCommand.Definition
$VenvExecDir = Get-Item -Path $VenvExecPath
Write-Verbose "Activation script is located in path: '$VenvExecPath'"
Write-Verbose "VenvExecDir Fullname: '$($VenvExecDir.FullName)"
Write-Verbose "VenvExecDir Name: '$($VenvExecDir.Name)"
# Set values required in priority: CmdLine, ConfigFile, Default
# First, get the location of the virtual environment, it might not be
# VenvExecDir if specified on the command line.
if ($VenvDir) {
Write-Verbose "VenvDir given as parameter, using '$VenvDir' to determine values"
}
else {
Write-Verbose "VenvDir not given as a parameter, using parent directory name as VenvDir."
$VenvDir = $VenvExecDir.Parent.FullName.TrimEnd("\\/")
Write-Verbose "VenvDir=$VenvDir"
}
# Next, read the `pyvenv.cfg` file to determine any required value such
# as `prompt`.
$pyvenvCfg = Get-PyVenvConfig -ConfigDir $VenvDir
# Next, set the prompt from the command line, or the config file, or
# just use the name of the virtual environment folder.
if ($Prompt) {
Write-Verbose "Prompt specified as argument, using '$Prompt'"
}
else {
Write-Verbose "Prompt not specified as argument to script, checking pyvenv.cfg value"
if ($pyvenvCfg -and $pyvenvCfg['prompt']) {
Write-Verbose " Setting based on value in pyvenv.cfg='$($pyvenvCfg['prompt'])'"
$Prompt = $pyvenvCfg['prompt'];
}
else {
Write-Verbose " Setting prompt based on parent's directory's name. (Is the directory name passed to venv module when creating the virutal environment)"
Write-Verbose " Got leaf-name of $VenvDir='$(Split-Path -Path $venvDir -Leaf)'"
$Prompt = Split-Path -Path $venvDir -Leaf
}
}
Write-Verbose "Prompt = '$Prompt'"
Write-Verbose "VenvDir='$VenvDir'"
# Deactivate any currently active virtual environment, but leave the
# deactivate function in place.
deactivate -nondestructive
# Now set the environment variable VIRTUAL_ENV, used by many tools to determine
# that there is an activated venv.
$env:VIRTUAL_ENV = $VenvDir
if (-not $Env:VIRTUAL_ENV_DISABLE_PROMPT) {
Write-Verbose "Setting prompt to '$Prompt'"
# Set the prompt to include the env name
# Make sure _OLD_VIRTUAL_PROMPT is global
function global:_OLD_VIRTUAL_PROMPT { "" }
Copy-Item -Path function:prompt -Destination function:_OLD_VIRTUAL_PROMPT
New-Variable -Name _PYTHON_VENV_PROMPT_PREFIX -Description "Python virtual environment prompt prefix" -Scope Global -Option ReadOnly -Visibility Public -Value $Prompt
function global:prompt {
Write-Host -NoNewline -ForegroundColor Green "($_PYTHON_VENV_PROMPT_PREFIX) "
_OLD_VIRTUAL_PROMPT
}
}
# Clear PYTHONHOME
if (Test-Path -Path Env:PYTHONHOME) {
Copy-Item -Path Env:PYTHONHOME -Destination Env:_OLD_VIRTUAL_PYTHONHOME
Remove-Item -Path Env:PYTHONHOME
}
# Add the venv to the PATH
Copy-Item -Path Env:PATH -Destination Env:_OLD_VIRTUAL_PATH
$Env:PATH = "$VenvExecDir$([System.IO.Path]::PathSeparator)$Env:PATH"

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# This file must be used with "source bin/activate" *from bash*
# you cannot run it directly
deactivate () {
# reset old environment variables
if [ -n "${_OLD_VIRTUAL_PATH:-}" ] ; then
PATH="${_OLD_VIRTUAL_PATH:-}"
export PATH
unset _OLD_VIRTUAL_PATH
fi
if [ -n "${_OLD_VIRTUAL_PYTHONHOME:-}" ] ; then
PYTHONHOME="${_OLD_VIRTUAL_PYTHONHOME:-}"
export PYTHONHOME
unset _OLD_VIRTUAL_PYTHONHOME
fi
# This should detect bash and zsh, which have a hash command that must
# be called to get it to forget past commands. Without forgetting
# past commands the $PATH changes we made may not be respected
if [ -n "${BASH:-}" -o -n "${ZSH_VERSION:-}" ] ; then
hash -r
fi
if [ -n "${_OLD_VIRTUAL_PS1:-}" ] ; then
PS1="${_OLD_VIRTUAL_PS1:-}"
export PS1
unset _OLD_VIRTUAL_PS1
fi
unset VIRTUAL_ENV
if [ ! "${1:-}" = "nondestructive" ] ; then
# Self destruct!
unset -f deactivate
fi
}
# unset irrelevant variables
deactivate nondestructive
VIRTUAL_ENV="/home/pavel/PycharmProjects/timefall/venv"
export VIRTUAL_ENV
_OLD_VIRTUAL_PATH="$PATH"
PATH="$VIRTUAL_ENV/bin:$PATH"
export PATH
# unset PYTHONHOME if set
# this will fail if PYTHONHOME is set to the empty string (which is bad anyway)
# could use `if (set -u; : $PYTHONHOME) ;` in bash
if [ -n "${PYTHONHOME:-}" ] ; then
_OLD_VIRTUAL_PYTHONHOME="${PYTHONHOME:-}"
unset PYTHONHOME
fi
if [ -z "${VIRTUAL_ENV_DISABLE_PROMPT:-}" ] ; then
_OLD_VIRTUAL_PS1="${PS1:-}"
if [ "x(venv) " != x ] ; then
PS1="(venv) ${PS1:-}"
else
if [ "`basename \"$VIRTUAL_ENV\"`" = "__" ] ; then
# special case for Aspen magic directories
# see http://www.zetadev.com/software/aspen/
PS1="[`basename \`dirname \"$VIRTUAL_ENV\"\``] $PS1"
else
PS1="(`basename \"$VIRTUAL_ENV\"`)$PS1"
fi
fi
export PS1
fi
# This should detect bash and zsh, which have a hash command that must
# be called to get it to forget past commands. Without forgetting
# past commands the $PATH changes we made may not be respected
if [ -n "${BASH:-}" -o -n "${ZSH_VERSION:-}" ] ; then
hash -r
fi

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# This file must be used with "source bin/activate.csh" *from csh*.
# You cannot run it directly.
# Created by Davide Di Blasi <davidedb@gmail.com>.
# Ported to Python 3.3 venv by Andrew Svetlov <andrew.svetlov@gmail.com>
alias deactivate 'test $?_OLD_VIRTUAL_PATH != 0 && setenv PATH "$_OLD_VIRTUAL_PATH" && unset _OLD_VIRTUAL_PATH; rehash; test $?_OLD_VIRTUAL_PROMPT != 0 && set prompt="$_OLD_VIRTUAL_PROMPT" && unset _OLD_VIRTUAL_PROMPT; unsetenv VIRTUAL_ENV; test "\!:*" != "nondestructive" && unalias deactivate'
# Unset irrelevant variables.
deactivate nondestructive
setenv VIRTUAL_ENV "/home/pavel/PycharmProjects/timefall/venv"
set _OLD_VIRTUAL_PATH="$PATH"
setenv PATH "$VIRTUAL_ENV/bin:$PATH"
set _OLD_VIRTUAL_PROMPT="$prompt"
if (! "$?VIRTUAL_ENV_DISABLE_PROMPT") then
if ("venv" != "") then
set env_name = "venv"
else
if (`basename "VIRTUAL_ENV"` == "__") then
# special case for Aspen magic directories
# see http://www.zetadev.com/software/aspen/
set env_name = `basename \`dirname "$VIRTUAL_ENV"\``
else
set env_name = `basename "$VIRTUAL_ENV"`
endif
endif
set prompt = "[$env_name] $prompt"
unset env_name
endif
alias pydoc python -m pydoc
rehash

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# This file must be used with ". bin/activate.fish" *from fish* (http://fishshell.org)
# you cannot run it directly
function deactivate -d "Exit virtualenv and return to normal shell environment"
# reset old environment variables
if test -n "$_OLD_VIRTUAL_PATH"
set -gx PATH $_OLD_VIRTUAL_PATH
set -e _OLD_VIRTUAL_PATH
end
if test -n "$_OLD_VIRTUAL_PYTHONHOME"
set -gx PYTHONHOME $_OLD_VIRTUAL_PYTHONHOME
set -e _OLD_VIRTUAL_PYTHONHOME
end
if test -n "$_OLD_FISH_PROMPT_OVERRIDE"
functions -e fish_prompt
set -e _OLD_FISH_PROMPT_OVERRIDE
functions -c _old_fish_prompt fish_prompt
functions -e _old_fish_prompt
end
set -e VIRTUAL_ENV
if test "$argv[1]" != "nondestructive"
# Self destruct!
functions -e deactivate
end
end
# unset irrelevant variables
deactivate nondestructive
set -gx VIRTUAL_ENV "/home/pavel/PycharmProjects/timefall/venv"
set -gx _OLD_VIRTUAL_PATH $PATH
set -gx PATH "$VIRTUAL_ENV/bin" $PATH
# unset PYTHONHOME if set
if set -q PYTHONHOME
set -gx _OLD_VIRTUAL_PYTHONHOME $PYTHONHOME
set -e PYTHONHOME
end
if test -z "$VIRTUAL_ENV_DISABLE_PROMPT"
# fish uses a function instead of an env var to generate the prompt.
# save the current fish_prompt function as the function _old_fish_prompt
functions -c fish_prompt _old_fish_prompt
# with the original prompt function renamed, we can override with our own.
function fish_prompt
# Save the return status of the last command
set -l old_status $status
# Prompt override?
if test -n "(venv) "
printf "%s%s" "(venv) " (set_color normal)
else
# ...Otherwise, prepend env
set -l _checkbase (basename "$VIRTUAL_ENV")
if test $_checkbase = "__"
# special case for Aspen magic directories
# see http://www.zetadev.com/software/aspen/
printf "%s[%s]%s " (set_color -b blue white) (basename (dirname "$VIRTUAL_ENV")) (set_color normal)
else
printf "%s(%s)%s" (set_color -b blue white) (basename "$VIRTUAL_ENV") (set_color normal)
end
end
# Restore the return status of the previous command.
echo "exit $old_status" | .
_old_fish_prompt
end
set -gx _OLD_FISH_PROMPT_OVERRIDE "$VIRTUAL_ENV"
end

8
venv/bin/django-admin Executable file
View File

@ -0,0 +1,8 @@
#!/home/pavel/PycharmProjects/timefall/venv/bin/python
# -*- coding: utf-8 -*-
import re
import sys
from django.core.management import execute_from_command_line
if __name__ == '__main__':
sys.argv[0] = re.sub(r'(-script\.pyw|\.exe)?$', '', sys.argv[0])
sys.exit(execute_from_command_line())

21
venv/bin/django-admin.py Executable file
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@ -0,0 +1,21 @@
#!/home/pavel/PycharmProjects/timefall/venv/bin/python
# When the django-admin.py deprecation ends, remove this script.
import warnings
from django.core import management
try:
from django.utils.deprecation import RemovedInDjango40Warning
except ImportError:
raise ImportError(
'django-admin.py was deprecated in Django 3.1 and removed in Django '
'4.0. Please manually remove this script from your virtual environment '
'and use django-admin instead.'
)
if __name__ == "__main__":
warnings.warn(
'django-admin.py is deprecated in favor of django-admin.',
RemovedInDjango40Warning,
)
management.execute_from_command_line()

8
venv/bin/easy_install Executable file
View File

@ -0,0 +1,8 @@
#!/home/pavel/PycharmProjects/timefall/venv/bin/python
# -*- coding: utf-8 -*-
import re
import sys
from setuptools.command.easy_install import main
if __name__ == '__main__':
sys.argv[0] = re.sub(r'(-script\.pyw|\.exe)?$', '', sys.argv[0])
sys.exit(main())

8
venv/bin/easy_install-3.8 Executable file
View File

@ -0,0 +1,8 @@
#!/home/pavel/PycharmProjects/timefall/venv/bin/python
# -*- coding: utf-8 -*-
import re
import sys
from setuptools.command.easy_install import main
if __name__ == '__main__':
sys.argv[0] = re.sub(r'(-script\.pyw|\.exe)?$', '', sys.argv[0])
sys.exit(main())

8
venv/bin/pip Executable file
View File

@ -0,0 +1,8 @@
#!/home/pavel/PycharmProjects/timefall/venv/bin/python
# -*- coding: utf-8 -*-
import re
import sys
from pip._internal.cli.main import main
if __name__ == '__main__':
sys.argv[0] = re.sub(r'(-script\.pyw|\.exe)?$', '', sys.argv[0])
sys.exit(main())

8
venv/bin/pip3 Executable file
View File

@ -0,0 +1,8 @@
#!/home/pavel/PycharmProjects/timefall/venv/bin/python
# -*- coding: utf-8 -*-
import re
import sys
from pip._internal.cli.main import main
if __name__ == '__main__':
sys.argv[0] = re.sub(r'(-script\.pyw|\.exe)?$', '', sys.argv[0])
sys.exit(main())

8
venv/bin/pip3.8 Executable file
View File

@ -0,0 +1,8 @@
#!/home/pavel/PycharmProjects/timefall/venv/bin/python
# -*- coding: utf-8 -*-
import re
import sys
from pip._internal.cli.main import main
if __name__ == '__main__':
sys.argv[0] = re.sub(r'(-script\.pyw|\.exe)?$', '', sys.argv[0])
sys.exit(main())

1
venv/bin/python Symbolic link
View File

@ -0,0 +1 @@
python3.8

1
venv/bin/python3 Symbolic link
View File

@ -0,0 +1 @@
python3.8

1
venv/bin/python3.8 Symbolic link
View File

@ -0,0 +1 @@
/usr/bin/python3.8

8
venv/bin/sqlformat Executable file
View File

@ -0,0 +1,8 @@
#!/home/pavel/PycharmProjects/timefall/venv/bin/python
# -*- coding: utf-8 -*-
import re
import sys
from sqlparse.__main__ import main
if __name__ == '__main__':
sys.argv[0] = re.sub(r'(-script\.pyw|\.exe)?$', '', sys.argv[0])
sys.exit(main())

View File

@ -0,0 +1,981 @@
Django was originally created in late 2003 at World Online, the Web division
of the Lawrence Journal-World newspaper in Lawrence, Kansas.
Here is an inevitably incomplete list of MUCH-APPRECIATED CONTRIBUTORS --
people who have submitted patches, reported bugs, added translations, helped
answer newbie questions, and generally made Django that much better:
Aaron Cannon <cannona@fireantproductions.com>
Aaron Swartz <http://www.aaronsw.com/>
Aaron T. Myers <atmyers@gmail.com>
Abeer Upadhyay <ab.esquarer@gmail.com>
Abhijeet Viswa <abhijeetviswa@gmail.com>
Abhinav Patil <https://github.com/ubadub/>
Abhishek Gautam <abhishekg1128@yahoo.com>
Adam Allred <adam.w.allred@gmail.com>
Adam Bogdał <adam@bogdal.pl>
Adam Donaghy
Adam Johnson <https://github.com/adamchainz>
Adam Malinowski <https://adammalinowski.co.uk/>
Adam Vandenberg
Adiyat Mubarak <adiyatmubarak@gmail.com>
Adnan Umer <u.adnan@outlook.com>
Adrian Holovaty <adrian@holovaty.com>
Adrien Lemaire <lemaire.adrien@gmail.com>
Afonso Fernández Nogueira <fonzzo.django@gmail.com>
AgarFu <heaven@croasanaso.sytes.net>
Ahmad Alhashemi <trans@ahmadh.com>
Ahmad Al-Ibrahim
Ahmed Eltawela <https://github.com/ahmedabt>
ajs <adi@sieker.info>
Akash Agrawal <akashrocksha@gmail.com>
Akis Kesoglou <akiskesoglou@gmail.com>
Aksel Ethem <aksel.ethem@gmail.com>
Akshesh Doshi <aksheshdoshi+django@gmail.com>
alang@bright-green.com
Alasdair Nicol <https://al.sdair.co.uk/>
Albert Wang <https://github.com/albertyw/>
Alcides Fonseca
Aldian Fazrihady <mobile@aldian.net>
Aleksandra Sendecka <asendecka@hauru.eu>
Aleksi Häkli <aleksi.hakli@iki.fi>
Alexander Dutton <dev@alexdutton.co.uk>
Alexander Myodov <alex@myodov.com>
Alexandr Tatarinov <tatarinov1997@gmail.com>
Alex Aktsipetrov <alex.akts@gmail.com>
Alex Becker <https://alexcbecker.net/>
Alex Couper <http://alexcouper.com/>
Alex Dedul
Alex Gaynor <alex.gaynor@gmail.com>
Alex Hill <alex@hill.net.au>
Alex Ogier <alex.ogier@gmail.com>
Alex Robbins <alexander.j.robbins@gmail.com>
Alexey Boriskin <alex@boriskin.me>
Alexey Tsivunin <most-208@yandex.ru>
Aljosa Mohorovic <aljosa.mohorovic@gmail.com>
Amit Chakradeo <https://amit.chakradeo.net/>
Amit Ramon <amit.ramon@gmail.com>
Amit Upadhyay <http://www.amitu.com/blog/>
A. Murat Eren <meren@pardus.org.tr>
Ana Belen Sarabia <belensarabia@gmail.com>
Ana Krivokapic <https://github.com/infraredgirl>
Andi Albrecht <albrecht.andi@gmail.com>
André Ericson <de.ericson@gmail.com>
Andrei Kulakov <andrei.avk@gmail.com>
Andreas
Andreas Mock <andreas.mock@web.de>
Andreas Pelme <andreas@pelme.se>
Andrés Torres Marroquín <andres.torres.marroquin@gmail.com>
Andrew Brehaut <https://brehaut.net/blog>
Andrew Clark <amclark7@gmail.com>
Andrew Durdin <adurdin@gmail.com>
Andrew Godwin <andrew@aeracode.org>
Andrew Pinkham <http://AndrewsForge.com>
Andrews Medina <andrewsmedina@gmail.com>
Andriy Sokolovskiy <me@asokolovskiy.com>
Andy Dustman <farcepest@gmail.com>
Andy Gayton <andy-django@thecablelounge.com>
andy@jadedplanet.net
Anssi Kääriäinen <akaariai@gmail.com>
ant9000@netwise.it
Anthony Briggs <anthony.briggs@gmail.com>
Anton Samarchyan <desecho@gmail.com>
Antoni Aloy
Antonio Cavedoni <http://cavedoni.com/>
Antonis Christofides <anthony@itia.ntua.gr>
Antti Haapala <antti@industrialwebandmagic.com>
Antti Kaihola <http://djangopeople.net/akaihola/>
Anubhav Joshi <anubhav9042@gmail.com>
Aram Dulyan
arien <regexbot@gmail.com>
Armin Ronacher
Aron Podrigal <aronp@guaranteedplus.com>
Artem Gnilov <boobsd@gmail.com>
Arthur <avandorp@gmail.com>
Arthur Koziel <http://arthurkoziel.com>
Arthur Rio <arthur.rio44@gmail.com>
Arvis Bickovskis <viestards.lists@gmail.com>
Aryeh Leib Taurog <http://www.aryehleib.com/>
A S Alam <aalam@users.sf.net>
Asif Saif Uddin <auvipy@gmail.com>
atlithorn <atlithorn@gmail.com>
Audrey Roy <http://audreymroy.com/>
av0000@mail.ru
Axel Haustant <noirbizarre@gmail.com>
Aymeric Augustin <aymeric.augustin@m4x.org>
Bahadır Kandemir <bahadir@pardus.org.tr>
Baishampayan Ghose
Baptiste Mispelon <bmispelon@gmail.com>
Barry Pederson <bp@barryp.org>
Bartolome Sanchez Salado <i42sasab@uco.es>
Bartosz Grabski <bartosz.grabski@gmail.com>
Bashar Al-Abdulhadi
Bastian Kleineidam <calvin@debian.org>
Batiste Bieler <batiste.bieler@gmail.com>
Batman
Batuhan Taskaya <batuhanosmantaskaya@gmail.com>
Baurzhan Ismagulov <ibr@radix50.net>
Ben Dean Kawamura <ben.dean.kawamura@gmail.com>
Ben Firshman <ben@firshman.co.uk>
Ben Godfrey <http://aftnn.org>
Benjamin Wohlwend <piquadrat@gmail.com>
Ben Khoo <khoobks@westnet.com.au>
Ben Slavin <benjamin.slavin@gmail.com>
Ben Sturmfels <ben@sturm.com.au>
Berker Peksag <berker.peksag@gmail.com>
Bernd Schlapsi
Bernhard Essl <me@bernhardessl.com>
berto
Bill Fenner <fenner@gmail.com>
Bjørn Stabell <bjorn@exoweb.net>
Bo Marchman <bo.marchman@gmail.com>
Bogdan Mateescu
Bojan Mihelac <bmihelac@mihelac.org>
Bouke Haarsma <bouke@haarsma.eu>
Božidar Benko <bbenko@gmail.com>
Brad Melin <melinbrad@gmail.com>
Brandon Chinn <https://brandonchinn178.github.io/>
Brant Harris
Brendan Hayward <brendanhayward85@gmail.com>
Brendan Quinn <brendan@cluefulmedia.com>
Brenton Simpson <http://theillustratedlife.com>
Brett Cannon <brett@python.org>
Brett Hoerner <bretthoerner@bretthoerner.com>
Brian Beck <http://blog.brianbeck.com/>
Brian Fabian Crain <http://www.bfc.do/>
Brian Harring <ferringb@gmail.com>
Brian Helba <brian.helba@kitware.com>
Brian Ray <http://brianray.chipy.org/>
Brian Rosner <brosner@gmail.com>
Bruce Kroeze <https://coderseye.com/>
Bruno Alla <alla.brunoo@gmail.com>
Bruno Renié <buburno@gmail.com>
brut.alll@gmail.com
Bryan Chow <bryan at verdjn dot com>
Bryan Veloso <bryan@revyver.com>
bthomas
btoll@bestweb.net
C8E
Caio Ariede <caio.ariede@gmail.com>
Calvin Spealman <ironfroggy@gmail.com>
Cameron Curry
Cameron Knight (ckknight)
Can Burak Çilingir <canburak@cs.bilgi.edu.tr>
Can Sarıgöl <ertugrulsarigol@gmail.com>
Carl Meyer <carl@oddbird.net>
Carles Pina i Estany <carles@pina.cat>
Carlos Eduardo de Paula <carlosedp@gmail.com>
Carlos Matías de la Torre <cmdelatorre@gmail.com>
Carlton Gibson <carlton.gibson@noumenal.es>
cedric@terramater.net
Chad Whitman <chad.whitman@icloud.com>
ChaosKCW
Charlie Leifer <coleifer@gmail.com>
charly.wilhelm@gmail.com
Chason Chaffin <chason@gmail.com>
Cheng Zhang
Chris Adams
Chris Beaven <smileychris@gmail.com>
Chris Bennett <chrisrbennett@yahoo.com>
Chris Cahoon <chris.cahoon@gmail.com>
Chris Chamberlin <dja@cdc.msbx.net>
Chris Jerdonek
Chris Jones <chris@brack3t.com>
Chris Lamb <chris@chris-lamb.co.uk>
Chris Streeter <chris@chrisstreeter.com>
Christian Barcenas <christian@cbarcenas.com>
Christian Metts
Christian Oudard <christian.oudard@gmail.com>
Christian Tanzer <tanzer@swing.co.at>
Christoffer Sjöbergsson
Christophe Pettus <xof@thebuild.com>
Christopher Adams <http://christopheradams.info>
Christopher Babiak <chrisbabiak@gmail.com>
Christopher Lenz <https://www.cmlenz.net/>
Christoph Mędrela <chris.medrela@gmail.com>
Chris Wagner <cw264701@ohio.edu>
Chris Wesseling <Chris.Wesseling@cwi.nl>
Chris Wilson <chris+github@qwirx.com>
Claude Paroz <claude@2xlibre.net>
Clint Ecker
colin@owlfish.com
Colin Wood <cwood06@gmail.com>
Collin Anderson <cmawebsite@gmail.com>
Collin Grady <collin@collingrady.com>
Colton Hicks <coltonbhicks@gmail.com>
Craig Blaszczyk <masterjakul@gmail.com>
crankycoder@gmail.com
Curtis Maloney (FunkyBob) <curtis@tinbrain.net>
dackze+django@gmail.com
Dagur Páll Ammendrup <dagurp@gmail.com>
Dane Springmeyer
Dan Fairs <dan@fezconsulting.com>
Daniel Alves Barbosa de Oliveira Vaz <danielvaz@gmail.com>
Daniel Duan <DaNmarner@gmail.com>
Daniele Procida <daniele@vurt.org>
Daniel Greenfeld
dAniel hAhler
Daniel Jilg <daniel@breakthesystem.org>
Daniel Lindsley <daniel@toastdriven.com>
Daniel Poelzleithner <https://poelzi.org/>
Daniel Pyrathon <pirosb3@gmail.com>
Daniel Roseman <http://roseman.org.uk/>
Daniel Tao <https://philosopherdeveloper.com/>
Daniel Wiesmann <daniel.wiesmann@gmail.com>
Danilo Bargen
Dan Johnson <danj.py@gmail.com>
Dan Palmer <dan@danpalmer.me>
Dan Poirier <poirier@pobox.com>
Dan Stephenson <http://dan.io/>
Dan Watson <http://danwatson.net/>
dave@thebarproject.com
David Ascher <https://ascher.ca/>
David Avsajanishvili <avsd05@gmail.com>
David Blewett <david@dawninglight.net>
David Brenneman <http://davidbrenneman.com>
David Cramer <dcramer@gmail.com>
David Danier <david.danier@team23.de>
David Eklund
David Foster <david@dafoster.net>
David Gouldin <dgouldin@gmail.com>
david@kazserve.org
David Krauth
David Larlet <https://larlet.fr/david/>
David Reynolds <david@reynoldsfamily.org.uk>
David Sanders <dsanders11@ucsbalum.com>
David Schein
David Tulig <david.tulig@gmail.com>
David Wobrock <david.wobrock@gmail.com>
Davide Ceretti <dav.ceretti@gmail.com>
Deep L. Sukhwani <deepsukhwani@gmail.com>
Deepak Thukral <deep.thukral@gmail.com>
Denis Kuzmichyov <kuzmichyov@gmail.com>
Dennis Schwertel <dennisschwertel@gmail.com>
Derek Willis <http://blog.thescoop.org/>
Deric Crago <deric.crago@gmail.com>
deric@monowerks.com
Deryck Hodge <http://www.devurandom.org/>
Dimitris Glezos <dimitris@glezos.com>
Dirk Datzert <dummy@habmalnefrage.de>
Dirk Eschler <dirk.eschler@gmx.net>
Dmitri Fedortchenko <zeraien@gmail.com>
Dmitry Jemerov <intelliyole@gmail.com>
dne@mayonnaise.net
Dolan Antenucci <antenucci.d@gmail.com>
Donald Harvey <donald@donaldharvey.co.uk>
Donald Stufft <donald@stufft.io>
Don Spaulding <donspauldingii@gmail.com>
Doug Beck <doug@douglasbeck.com>
Doug Napoleone <doug@dougma.com>
dready <wil@mojipage.com>
dusk@woofle.net
Dustyn Gibson <miigotu@gmail.com>
Ed Morley <https://github.com/edmorley>
eibaan@gmail.com
elky <http://elky.me/>
Emmanuelle Delescolle <https://github.com/nanuxbe>
Emil Stenström <em@kth.se>
enlight
Enrico <rico.bl@gmail.com>
Eric Boersma <eric.boersma@gmail.com>
Eric Brandwein <brandweineric@gmail.com>
Eric Floehr <eric@intellovations.com>
Eric Florenzano <floguy@gmail.com>
Eric Holscher <http://ericholscher.com>
Eric Moritz <http://eric.themoritzfamily.com/>
Eric Palakovich Carr <carreric@gmail.com>
Erik Karulf <erik@karulf.com>
Erik Romijn <django@solidlinks.nl>
eriks@win.tue.nl
Erwin Junge <erwin@junge.nl>
Esdras Beleza <linux@esdrasbeleza.com>
Espen Grindhaug <http://grindhaug.org/>
Eugene Lazutkin <http://lazutkin.com/blog/>
Evan Grim <https://github.com/egrim>
Fabrice Aneche <akh@nobugware.com>
Farhaan Bukhsh <farhaan.bukhsh@gmail.com>
favo@exoweb.net
fdr <drfarina@gmail.com>
Federico Capoano <nemesis@ninux.org>
Felipe Lee <felipe.lee.garcia@gmail.com>
Filip Noetzel <http://filip.noetzel.co.uk/>
Filip Wasilewski <filip.wasilewski@gmail.com>
Finn Gruwier Larsen <finn@gruwier.dk>
Flávio Juvenal da Silva Junior <flavio@vinta.com.br>
flavio.curella@gmail.com
Florian Apolloner <florian@apolloner.eu>
Florian Moussous <florian.moussous@gmail.com>
Fran Hrženjak <fran.hrzenjak@gmail.com>
Francisco Albarran Cristobal <pahko.xd@gmail.com>
Francisco Couzo <franciscouzo@gmail.com>
François Freitag <mail@franek.fr>
Frank Tegtmeyer <fte@fte.to>
Frank Wierzbicki
Frank Wiles <frank@revsys.com>
František Malina <fmalina@gmail.com>
Fraser Nevett <mail@nevett.org>
Gabriel Grant <g@briel.ca>
Gabriel Hurley <gabriel@strikeawe.com>
gandalf@owca.info
Garry Lawrence
Garry Polley <garrympolley@gmail.com>
Garth Kidd <http://www.deadlybloodyserious.com/>
Gary Wilson <gary.wilson@gmail.com>
Gasper Koren
Gasper Zejn <zejn@kiberpipa.org>
Gavin Wahl <gavinwahl@gmail.com>
Ge Hanbin <xiaomiba0904@gmail.com>
geber@datacollect.com
Geert Vanderkelen
George Karpenkov <george@metaworld.ru>
George Song <george@damacy.net>
George Vilches <gav@thataddress.com>
Georg "Hugo" Bauer <gb@hugo.westfalen.de>
Georgi Stanojevski <glisha@gmail.com>
Gerardo Orozco <gerardo.orozco.mosqueda@gmail.com>
Gil Gonçalves <lursty@gmail.com>
Girish Kumar <girishkumarkh@gmail.com>
Gisle Aas <gisle@aas.no>
Glenn Maynard <glenn@zewt.org>
glin@seznam.cz
GomoX <gomo@datafull.com>
Gonzalo Saavedra <gonzalosaavedra@gmail.com>
Gopal Narayanan <gopastro@gmail.com>
Graham Carlyle <graham.carlyle@maplecroft.net>
Grant Jenks <contact@grantjenks.com>
Greg Chapple <gregchapple1@gmail.com>
Gregor Allensworth <greg.allensworth@gmail.com>
Gregor Müllegger <gregor@muellegger.de>
Grigory Fateyev <greg@dial.com.ru>
Grzegorz Ślusarek <grzegorz.slusarek@gmail.com>
Guilherme Mesquita Gondim <semente@taurinus.org>
Guillaume Pannatier <guillaume.pannatier@gmail.com>
Gustavo Picon
hambaloney
Hang Park <hangpark@kaist.ac.kr>
Hannes Ljungberg <hannes.ljungberg@gmail.com>
Hannes Struß <x@hannesstruss.de>
Hasan Ramezani <hasan.r67@gmail.com>
Hawkeye
Helen Sherwood-Taylor <helen@rrdlabs.co.uk>
Henrique Romano <onaiort@gmail.com>
Henry Dang <henrydangprg@gmail.com>
Hidde Bultsma
Himanshu Chauhan <hchauhan1404@outlook.com>
hipertracker@gmail.com
Hiroki Kiyohara <hirokiky@gmail.com>
Honza Král <honza.kral@gmail.com>
Horst Gutmann <zerok@zerokspot.com>
Hugo Osvaldo Barrera <hugo@barrera.io>
HyukJin Jang <wkdgurwls00@naver.com>
Hyun Mi Ae
Iacopo Spalletti <i.spalletti@nephila.it>
Ian A Wilson <http://ianawilson.com>
Ian Clelland <clelland@gmail.com>
Ian G. Kelly <ian.g.kelly@gmail.com>
Ian Holsman <http://feh.holsman.net/>
Ian Lee <IanLee1521@gmail.com>
Ibon <ibonso@gmail.com>
Idan Gazit <idan@gazit.me>
Idan Melamed
Ifedapo Olarewaju <ifedapoolarewaju@gmail.com>
Igor Kolar <ike@email.si>
Illia Volochii <illia.volochii@gmail.com>
Ilya Semenov <semenov@inetss.com>
Ingo Klöcker <djangoproject@ingo-kloecker.de>
I.S. van Oostveen <v.oostveen@idca.nl>
ivan.chelubeev@gmail.com
Ivan Sagalaev (Maniac) <http://www.softwaremaniacs.org/>
Jaap Roes <jaap.roes@gmail.com>
Jack Moffitt <https://metajack.im/>
Jacob Burch <jacobburch@gmail.com>
Jacob Green
Jacob Kaplan-Moss <jacob@jacobian.org>
Jakub Paczkowski <jakub@paczkowski.eu>
Jakub Wilk <jwilk@jwilk.net>
Jakub Wiśniowski <restless.being@gmail.com>
james_027@yahoo.com
James Aylett
James Bennett <james@b-list.org>
James Murty
James Tauber <jtauber@jtauber.com>
James Timmins <jameshtimmins@gmail.com>
James Turk <dev@jamesturk.net>
James Wheare <django@sparemint.com>
Jannis Leidel <jannis@leidel.info>
Janos Guljas
Jan Pazdziora
Jan Rademaker
Jarek Głowacki <jarekwg@gmail.com>
Jarek Zgoda <jarek.zgoda@gmail.com>
Jason Davies (Esaj) <https://www.jasondavies.com/>
Jason Huggins <http://www.jrandolph.com/blog/>
Jason McBrayer <http://www.carcosa.net/jason/>
jason.sidabras@gmail.com
Jason Yan <tailofthesun@gmail.com>
Javier Mansilla <javimansilla@gmail.com>
Jay Parlar <parlar@gmail.com>
Jay Welborn <jesse.welborn@gmail.com>
Jay Wineinger <jay.wineinger@gmail.com>
J. Clifford Dyer <jcd@sdf.lonestar.org>
jcrasta@gmail.com
jdetaeye
Jeff Anderson <jefferya@programmerq.net>
Jeff Balogh <jbalogh@mozilla.com>
Jeff Hui <jeffkhui@gmail.com>
Jeffrey Gelens <jeffrey@gelens.org>
Jeff Triplett <jeff.triplett@gmail.com>
Jeffrey Yancey <jeffrey.yancey@gmail.com>
Jens Diemer <django@htfx.de>
Jens Page
Jensen Cochran <jensen.cochran@gmail.com>
Jeong-Min Lee <falsetru@gmail.com>
Jérémie Blaser <blaserje@gmail.com>
Jeremy Bowman <https://github.com/jmbowman>
Jeremy Carbaugh <jcarbaugh@gmail.com>
Jeremy Dunck <jdunck@gmail.com>
Jeremy Lainé <jeremy.laine@m4x.org>
Jesse Young <adunar@gmail.com>
Jezeniel Zapanta <jezeniel.zapanta@gmail.com>
jhenry <jhenry@theonion.com>
Jim Dalton <jim.dalton@gmail.com>
Jimmy Song <jaejoon@gmail.com>
Jiri Barton
Joachim Jablon <ewjoachim@gmail.com>
Joao Oliveira <joaoxsouls@gmail.com>
Joao Pedro Silva <j.pedro004@gmail.com>
Joe Heck <http://www.rhonabwy.com/wp/>
Joel Bohman <mail@jbohman.com>
Joel Heenan <joelh-django@planetjoel.com>
Joel Watts <joel@joelwatts.com>
Joe Topjian <http://joe.terrarum.net/geek/code/python/django/>
Johan C. Stöver <johan@nilling.nl>
Johann Queuniet <johann.queuniet@adh.naellia.eu>
john@calixto.net
John D'Agostino <john.dagostino@gmail.com>
John D'Ambrosio <dambrosioj@gmail.com>
John Huddleston <huddlej@wwu.edu>
John Moses <moses.john.r@gmail.com>
John Paulett <john@paulett.org>
John Shaffer <jshaffer2112@gmail.com>
Jökull Sólberg Auðunsson <jokullsolberg@gmail.com>
Jon Dufresne <jon.dufresne@gmail.com>
Jonas Haag <jonas@lophus.org>
Jonatas C. D. <jonatas.cd@gmail.com>
Jonathan Buchanan <jonathan.buchanan@gmail.com>
Jonathan Daugherty (cygnus) <http://www.cprogrammer.org/>
Jonathan Feignberg <jdf@pobox.com>
Jonathan Slenders
Jordan Dimov <s3x3y1@gmail.com>
Jordi J. Tablada <jordi.joan@gmail.com>
Jorge Bastida <me@jorgebastida.com>
Jorge Gajon <gajon@gajon.org>
José Tomás Tocino García <josetomas.tocino@gmail.com>
Josef Rousek <josef.rousek@gmail.com>
Joseph Kocherhans <joseph@jkocherhans.com>
Josh Smeaton <josh.smeaton@gmail.com>
Joshua Cannon <joshdcannon@gmail.com>
Joshua Ginsberg <jag@flowtheory.net>
Jozko Skrablin <jozko.skrablin@gmail.com>
J. Pablo Fernandez <pupeno@pupeno.com>
jpellerin@gmail.com
Juan Catalano <catalanojuan@gmail.com>
Juan Manuel Caicedo <juan.manuel.caicedo@gmail.com>
Juan Pedro Fisanotti <fisadev@gmail.com>
Julia Elman
Julia Matsieva <julia.matsieva@gmail.com>
Julian Bez
Julien Phalip <jphalip@gmail.com>
Junyoung Choi <cupjoo@gmail.com>
junzhang.jn@gmail.com
Jure Cuhalev <gandalf@owca.info>
Justin Bronn <jbronn@gmail.com>
Justine Tunney <jtunney@gmail.com>
Justin Lilly <justinlilly@gmail.com>
Justin Michalicek <jmichalicek@gmail.com>
Justin Myles Holmes <justin@slashrootcafe.com>
Jyrki Pulliainen <jyrki.pulliainen@gmail.com>
Kadesarin Sanjek
Karderio <karderio@gmail.com>
Karen Tracey <kmtracey@gmail.com>
Karol Sikora <elektrrrus@gmail.com>
Katherine “Kati” Michel <kthrnmichel@gmail.com>
Kathryn Killebrew <kathryn.killebrew@gmail.com>
Katie Miller <katie@sub50.com>
Keith Bussell <kbussell@gmail.com>
Kenneth Love <kennethlove@gmail.com>
Kent Hauser <kent@khauser.net>
Kevin Grinberg <kevin@kevingrinberg.com>
Kevin Kubasik <kevin@kubasik.net>
Kevin McConnell <kevin.mcconnell@gmail.com>
Kieran Holland <http://www.kieranholland.com>
kilian <kilian.cavalotti@lip6.fr>
Kim Joon Hwan 김준환 <xncbf12@gmail.com>
Klaas van Schelven <klaas@vanschelven.com>
knox <christobzr@gmail.com>
konrad@gwu.edu
Kowito Charoenratchatabhan <kowito@felspar.com>
Krišjānis Vaiders <krisjanisvaiders@gmail.com>
krzysiek.pawlik@silvermedia.pl
Krzysztof Jurewicz <krzysztof.jurewicz@gmail.com>
Krzysztof Kulewski <kulewski@gmail.com>
kurtiss@meetro.com
Lakin Wecker <lakin@structuredabstraction.com>
Lars Yencken <lars.yencken@gmail.com>
Lau Bech Lauritzen
Laurent Luce <https://www.laurentluce.com/>
Laurent Rahuel <laurent.rahuel@gmail.com>
lcordier@point45.com
Leah Culver <leah.culver@gmail.com>
Leandra Finger <leandra.finger@gmail.com>
Lee Reilly <lee@leereilly.net>
Lee Sanghyuck <shlee322@elab.kr>
Leo "hylje" Honkanen <sealage@gmail.com>
Leo Shklovskii
Leo Soto <leo.soto@gmail.com>
lerouxb@gmail.com
Lex Berezhny <lex@damoti.com>
Liang Feng <hutuworm@gmail.com>
limodou
Lincoln Smith <lincoln.smith@anu.edu.au>
Liu Yijie <007gzs@gmail.com>
Loek van Gent <loek@barakken.nl>
Loïc Bistuer <loic.bistuer@sixmedia.com>
Lowe Thiderman <lowe.thiderman@gmail.com>
Luan Pablo <luanpab@gmail.com>
Lucas Connors <https://www.revolutiontech.ca/>
Luciano Ramalho
Ludvig Ericson <ludvig.ericson@gmail.com>
Luis C. Berrocal <luis.berrocal.1942@gmail.com>
Łukasz Langa <lukasz@langa.pl>
Łukasz Rekucki <lrekucki@gmail.com>
Luke Granger-Brown <django@lukegb.com>
Luke Plant <L.Plant.98@cantab.net>
Maciej Fijalkowski
Maciej Wiśniowski <pigletto@gmail.com>
Mads Jensen <https://github.com/atombrella>
Makoto Tsuyuki <mtsuyuki@gmail.com>
Malcolm Tredinnick
Manuel Saelices <msaelices@yaco.es>
Manuzhai
Marc Aymerich Gubern
Marc Egli <frog32@me.com>
Marcel Telka <marcel@telka.sk>
Marc Fargas <telenieko@telenieko.com>
Marc Garcia <marc.garcia@accopensys.com>
Marcin Wróbel
Marc Remolt <m.remolt@webmasters.de>
Marc Tamlyn <marc.tamlyn@gmail.com>
Marc-Aurèle Brothier <ma.brothier@gmail.com>
Marian Andre <django@andre.sk>
Marijn Vriens <marijn@metronomo.cl>
Mario Gonzalez <gonzalemario@gmail.com>
Mariusz Felisiak <felisiak.mariusz@gmail.com>
Mark Biggers <biggers@utsl.com>
Mark Gensler <mark.gensler@protonmail.com>
mark@junklight.com
Mark Lavin <markdlavin@gmail.com>
Mark Sandstrom <mark@deliciouslynerdy.com>
Markus Amalthea Magnuson <markus.magnuson@gmail.com>
Markus Holtermann <https://markusholtermann.eu>
Marten Kenbeek <marten.knbk+django@gmail.com>
Marti Raudsepp <marti@juffo.org>
martin.glueck@gmail.com
Martin Green
Martin Kosír <martin@martinkosir.net>
Martin Mahner <https://www.mahner.org/>
Martin Maney <http://www.chipy.org/Martin_Maney>
Martin von Gagern <gagern@google.com>
Mart Sõmermaa <http://mrts.pri.ee/>
Marty Alchin <gulopine@gamemusic.org>
Masashi Shibata <m.shibata1020@gmail.com>
masonsimon+django@gmail.com
Massimiliano Ravelli <massimiliano.ravelli@gmail.com>
Massimo Scamarcia <massimo.scamarcia@gmail.com>
Mathieu Agopian <mathieu.agopian@gmail.com>
Matías Bordese
Matt Boersma <matt@sprout.org>
Matt Croydon <http://www.postneo.com/>
Matt Deacalion Stevens <matt@dirtymonkey.co.uk>
Matt Dennenbaum
Matthew Flanagan <https://wadofstuff.blogspot.com/>
Matthew Schinckel <matt@schinckel.net>
Matthew Somerville <matthew-django@dracos.co.uk>
Matthew Tretter <m@tthewwithanm.com>
Matthew Wilkes <matt@matthewwilkes.name>
Matthias Kestenholz <mk@406.ch>
Matthias Pronk <django@masida.nl>
Matt Hoskins <skaffenuk@googlemail.com>
Matt McClanahan <https://mmcc.cx/>
Matt Riggott
Matt Robenolt <m@robenolt.com>
Mattia Larentis <mattia@laretis.eu>
Mattia Procopio <promat85@gmail.com>
Mattias Loverot <mattias@stubin.se>
mattycakes@gmail.com
Max Burstein <http://maxburstein.com>
Max Derkachev <mderk@yandex.ru>
Maxime Lorant <maxime.lorant@gmail.com>
Maxime Turcotte <maxocub@riseup.net>
Maximilian Merz <django@mxmerz.de>
Maximillian Dornseif <md@hudora.de>
mccutchen@gmail.com
Meir Kriheli <http://mksoft.co.il/>
Michael S. Brown <michael@msbrown.net>
Michael Hall <mhall1@ualberta.ca>
Michael Josephson <http://www.sdjournal.com/>
Michael Manfre <mmanfre@gmail.com>
michael.mcewan@gmail.com
Michael Placentra II <someone@michaelplacentra2.net>
Michael Radziej <mir@noris.de>
Michael Sanders <m.r.sanders@gmail.com>
Michael Schwarz <michi.schwarz@gmail.com>
Michael Sinov <sihaelov@gmail.com>
Michael Thornhill <michael.thornhill@gmail.com>
Michal Chruszcz <troll@pld-linux.org>
michal@plovarna.cz
Michał Modzelewski <michal.modzelewski@gmail.com>
Mihai Damian <yang_damian@yahoo.com>
Mihai Preda <mihai_preda@yahoo.com>
Mikaël Barbero <mikael.barbero nospam at nospam free.fr>
Mike Axiak <axiak@mit.edu>
Mike Grouchy <https://mikegrouchy.com/>
Mike Malone <mjmalone@gmail.com>
Mike Richardson
Mike Wiacek <mjwiacek@google.com>
Mikhail Korobov <kmike84@googlemail.com>
Mikko Hellsing <mikko@sorl.net>
Mikołaj Siedlarek <mikolaj.siedlarek@gmail.com>
milkomeda
Milton Waddams
mitakummaa@gmail.com
mmarshall
Moayad Mardini <moayad.m@gmail.com>
Morgan Aubert <morgan.aubert@zoho.com>
Moritz Sichert <moritz.sichert@googlemail.com>
Morten Bagai <m@bagai.com>
msaelices <msaelices@gmail.com>
msundstr
Mushtaq Ali <mushtaak@gmail.com>
Mykola Zamkovoi <nickzam@gmail.com>
Nadège Michel <michel.nadege@gmail.com>
Nagy Károly <charlie@rendszergazda.com>
Nasimul Haque <nasim.haque@gmail.com>
Nasir Hussain <nasirhjafri@gmail.com>
Natalia Bidart <nataliabidart@gmail.com>
Nate Bragg <jonathan.bragg@alum.rpi.edu>
Nathan Gaberel <nathan@gnab.fr>
Neal Norwitz <nnorwitz@google.com>
Nebojša Dorđević
Ned Batchelder <https://nedbatchelder.com/>
Nena Kojadin <nena@kiberpipa.org>
Niall Dalton <niall.dalton12@gmail.com>
Niall Kelly <duke.sam.vimes@gmail.com>
Nick Efford <nick@efford.org>
Nick Lane <nick.lane.au@gmail.com>
Nick Pope <nick@nickpope.me.uk>
Nick Presta <nick@nickpresta.ca>
Nick Sandford <nick.sandford@gmail.com>
Nick Sarbicki <nick.a.sarbicki@gmail.com>
Niclas Olofsson <n@niclasolofsson.se>
Nicola Larosa <nico@teknico.net>
Nicolas Lara <nicolaslara@gmail.com>
Nicolas Noé <nicolas@niconoe.eu>
Niran Babalola <niran@niran.org>
Nis Jørgensen <nis@superlativ.dk>
Nowell Strite <https://nowell.strite.org/>
Nuno Mariz <nmariz@gmail.com>
oggie rob <oz.robharvey@gmail.com>
oggy <ognjen.maric@gmail.com>
Oliver Beattie <oliver@obeattie.com>
Oliver Rutherfurd <http://rutherfurd.net/>
Olivier Sels <olivier.sels@gmail.com>
Olivier Tabone <olivier.tabone@ripplemotion.fr>
Orestis Markou <orestis@orestis.gr>
Orne Brocaar <http://brocaar.com/>
Oscar Ramirez <tuxskar@gmail.com>
Ossama M. Khayat <okhayat@yahoo.com>
Owen Griffiths
Pablo Martín <goinnn@gmail.com>
Panos Laganakos <panos.laganakos@gmail.com>
Paolo Melchiorre <paolo@melchiorre.org>
Pascal Hartig <phartig@rdrei.net>
Pascal Varet
Patrik Sletmo <patrik.sletmo@gmail.com>
Paul Bissex <http://e-scribe.com/>
Paul Collier <paul@paul-collier.com>
Paul Collins <paul.collins.iii@gmail.com>
Paul Donohue <django@PaulSD.com>
Paul Lanier <planier@google.com>
Paul McLanahan <paul@mclanahan.net>
Paul McMillan <Paul@McMillan.ws>
Paulo Poiati <paulogpoiati@gmail.com>
Paulo Scardine <paulo@scardine.com.br>
Paul Smith <blinkylights23@gmail.com>
Pavel Kulikov <kulikovpavel@gmail.com>
pavithran s <pavithran.s@gmail.com>
Pavlo Kapyshin <i@93z.org>
permonik@mesias.brnonet.cz
Petar Marić <http://www.petarmaric.com/>
Pete Crosier <pete.crosier@gmail.com>
peter@mymart.com
Peter Sheats <sheats@gmail.com>
Peter van Kampen
Peter Zsoldos <http://zsoldosp.eu>
Pete Shinners <pete@shinners.org>
Petr Marhoun <petr.marhoun@gmail.com>
pgross@thoughtworks.com
phaedo <http://phaedo.cx/>
phil.h.smith@gmail.com
Philip Lindborg <philip.lindborg@gmail.com>
Philippe Raoult <philippe.raoult@n2nsoft.com>
phil@produxion.net
Piotr Jakimiak <piotr.jakimiak@gmail.com>
Piotr Lewandowski <piotr.lewandowski@gmail.com>
plisk
polpak@yahoo.com
pradeep.gowda@gmail.com
Preston Holmes <preston@ptone.com>
Preston Timmons <prestontimmons@gmail.com>
Priyansh Saxena <askpriyansh@gmail.com>
Przemysław Buczkowski <przemub@przemub.pl>
Przemysław Suliga <http://suligap.net>
Qi Zhao <zhaoqi99@outlook.com>
Rachel Tobin <rmtobin@me.com>
Rachel Willmer <http://www.willmer.com/kb/>
Radek Švarz <https://www.svarz.cz/translate/>
Raffaele Salmaso <raffaele@salmaso.org>
Rajesh Dhawan <rajesh.dhawan@gmail.com>
Ramez Ashraf <ramezashraf@gmail.com>
Ramin Farajpour Cami <ramin.blackhat@gmail.com>
Ramiro Morales <ramiro@rmorales.net>
Ramon Saraiva <ramonsaraiva@gmail.com>
Ram Rachum <ram@rachum.com>
Randy Barlow <randy@electronsweatshop.com>
Raphaël Barrois <raphael.barrois@m4x.org>
Raphael Michel <mail@raphaelmichel.de>
Raúl Cumplido <raulcumplido@gmail.com>
Rebecca Smith <rebkwok@gmail.com>
Remco Wendt <remco.wendt@gmail.com>
Renaud Parent <renaud.parent@gmail.com>
Renbi Yu <averybigant@gmail.com>
Reza Mohammadi <reza@zeerak.ir>
rhettg@gmail.com
Ricardo Javier Cárdenes Medina <ricardo.cardenes@gmail.com>
ricardojbarrios@gmail.com
Riccardo Di Virgilio
Riccardo Magliocchetti <riccardo.magliocchetti@gmail.com>
Richard Davies <richard.davies@elastichosts.com>
Richard House <Richard.House@i-logue.com>
Rick Wagner <rwagner@physics.ucsd.edu>
Rigel Di Scala <rigel.discala@propylon.com>
Robert Coup
Robert Myers <myer0052@gmail.com>
Roberto Aguilar <roberto@baremetal.io>
Robert Rock Howard <http://djangomojo.com/>
Robert Wittams
Rob Golding-Day <rob@golding-day.com>
Rob Hudson <https://rob.cogit8.org/>
Rob Nguyen <tienrobertnguyenn@gmail.com>
Robin Munn <http://www.geekforgod.com/>
Rodrigo Pinheiro Marques de Araújo <fenrrir@gmail.com>
Romain Garrigues <romain.garrigues.cs@gmail.com>
Ronny Haryanto <https://ronny.haryan.to/>
Ross Poulton <ross@rossp.org>
Rozza <ross.lawley@gmail.com>
Rudolph Froger <rfroger@estrate.nl>
Rudy Mutter
Rune Rønde Laursen <runerl@skjoldhoej.dk>
Russell Cloran <russell@rucus.net>
Russell Keith-Magee <russell@keith-magee.com>
Russ Webber
Ryan Hall <ryanhall989@gmail.com>
ryankanno
Ryan Kelly <ryan@rfk.id.au>
Ryan Niemeyer <https://profiles.google.com/ryan.niemeyer/about>
Ryan Petrello <ryan@ryanpetrello.com>
Ryan Rubin <ryanmrubin@gmail.com>
Ryno Mathee <rmathee@gmail.com>
Sachin Jat <sanch.jat@gmail.com>
Sage M. Abdullah <https://github.com/laymonage>
Sam Newman <http://www.magpiebrain.com/>
Sander Dijkhuis <sander.dijkhuis@gmail.com>
Sanket Saurav <sanketsaurav@gmail.com>
Sanyam Khurana <sanyam.khurana01@gmail.com>
Sarthak Mehrish <sarthakmeh03@gmail.com>
schwank@gmail.com
Scot Hacker <shacker@birdhouse.org>
Scott Barr <scott@divisionbyzero.com.au>
Scott Fitsimones <scott@airgara.ge>
Scott Pashley <github@scottpashley.co.uk>
scott@staplefish.com
Sean Brant
Sebastian Hillig <sebastian.hillig@gmail.com>
Sebastian Spiegel <https://www.tivix.com/>
Segyo Myung <myungsekyo@gmail.com>
Selwin Ong <selwin@ui.co.id>
Sengtha Chay <sengtha@e-khmer.com>
Senko Rašić <senko.rasic@dobarkod.hr>
serbaut@gmail.com
Sergei Maertens <sergeimaertens@gmail.com>
Sergey Fedoseev <fedoseev.sergey@gmail.com>
Sergey Kolosov <m17.admin@gmail.com>
Seth Hill <sethrh@gmail.com>
Shai Berger <shai@platonix.com>
Shannon -jj Behrens <https://www.jjinux.com/>
Shawn Milochik <shawn@milochik.com>
Silvan Spross <silvan.spross@gmail.com>
Simeon Visser <http://simeonvisser.com>
Simon Blanchard
Simon Charette <charette.s@gmail.com>
Simon Greenhill <dev@simon.net.nz>
Simon Litchfield <simon@quo.com.au>
Simon Meers <simon@simonmeers.com>
Simon Williams
Simon Willison <simon@simonwillison.net>
Sjoerd Job Postmus
Slawek Mikula <slawek dot mikula at gmail dot com>
sloonz <simon.lipp@insa-lyon.fr>
smurf@smurf.noris.de
sopel
Srinivas Reddy Thatiparthy <thatiparthysreenivas@gmail.com>
Stanislas Guerra <stan@slashdev.me>
Stanislaus Madueke
Stanislav Karpov <work@stkrp.ru>
starrynight <cmorgh@gmail.com>
Stefan R. Filipek
Stefane Fermgier <sf@fermigier.com>
Stefano Rivera <stefano@rivera.za.net>
Stéphane Raimbault <stephane.raimbault@gmail.com>
Stephan Jaekel <steph@rdev.info>
Stephen Burrows <stephen.r.burrows@gmail.com>
Steven L. Smith (fvox13) <steven@stevenlsmith.com>
Steven Noorbergen (Xaroth) <xaroth+django@xaroth.nl>
Stuart Langridge <https://www.kryogenix.org/>
Subhav Gautam <subhavgautam@yahoo.co.uk>
Sujay S Kumar <sujay.skumar141295@gmail.com>
Sune Kirkeby <https://ibofobi.dk/>
Sung-Jin Hong <serialx.net@gmail.com>
SuperJared
Susan Tan <susan.tan.fleckerl@gmail.com>
Sutrisno Efendi <kangfend@gmail.com>
Swaroop C H <http://www.swaroopch.info>
Szilveszter Farkas <szilveszter.farkas@gmail.com>
Taavi Teska <taaviteska@gmail.com>
Tai Lee <real.human@mrmachine.net>
Takashi Matsuo <matsuo.takashi@gmail.com>
Tareque Hossain <http://www.codexn.com>
Taylor Mitchell <taylor.mitchell@gmail.com>
Terry Huang <terryh.tp@gmail.com>
thebjorn <bp@datakortet.no>
Thejaswi Puthraya <thejaswi.puthraya@gmail.com>
Thijs van Dien <thijs@vandien.net>
Thom Wiggers
Thomas Chaumeny <t.chaumeny@gmail.com>
Thomas Güttler <hv@tbz-pariv.de>
Thomas Kerpe <thomas@kerpe.net>
Thomas Sorrel
Thomas Steinacher <http://www.eggdrop.ch/>
Thomas Stromberg <tstromberg@google.com>
Thomas Tanner <tanner@gmx.net>
tibimicu@gmx.net
Tim Allen <tim@pyphilly.org>
Tim Givois <tim.givois.mendez@gmail.com>
Tim Graham <timograham@gmail.com>
Tim Heap <tim@timheap.me>
Tim Saylor <tim.saylor@gmail.com>
Tobias Kunze <rixx@cutebit.de>
Tobias McNulty <https://www.caktusgroup.com/blog/>
tobias@neuyork.de
Todd O'Bryan <toddobryan@mac.com>
Tom Carrick <https://www.carrick.eu>
Tom Christie <tom@tomchristie.com>
Tom Forbes <tom@tomforb.es>
Tom Insam
Tom Tobin
Tomáš Ehrlich <tomas.ehrlich@gmail.com>
Tomáš Kopeček <permonik@m6.cz>
Tome Cvitan <tome@cvitan.com>
Tomek Paczkowski <tomek@hauru.eu>
Tomer Chachamu
Tommy Beadle <tbeadle@gmail.com>
Tore Lundqvist <tore.lundqvist@gmail.com>
torne-django@wolfpuppy.org.uk
Travis Cline <travis.cline@gmail.com>
Travis Pinney
Travis Swicegood <travis@domain51.com>
Travis Terry <tdterry7@gmail.com>
Trevor Caira <trevor@caira.com>
Trey Long <trey@ktrl.com>
tstromberg@google.com
tt@gurgle.no
Tyler Tarabula <tyler.tarabula@gmail.com>
Tyson Clugg <tyson@clugg.net>
Tyson Tate <tyson@fallingbullets.com>
Unai Zalakain <unai@gisa-elkartea.org>
Valentina Mukhamedzhanova <umirra@gmail.com>
valtron
Vasiliy Stavenko <stavenko@gmail.com>
Vasil Vangelovski
Vibhu Agarwal <vibhu-agarwal.github.io>
Victor Andrée
viestards.lists@gmail.com
Viktor Danyliuk <v.v.danyliuk@gmail.com>
Ville Säävuori <https://www.unessa.net/>
Vinay Karanam <https://github.com/vinayinvicible>
Vinay Sajip <vinay_sajip@yahoo.co.uk>
Vincent Foley <vfoleybourgon@yahoo.ca>
Vinny Do <vdo.code@gmail.com>
Vitaly Babiy <vbabiy86@gmail.com>
Vladimir Kuzma <vladimirkuzma.ch@gmail.com>
Vlado <vlado@labath.org>
Vsevolod Solovyov
Vytis Banaitis <vytis.banaitis@gmail.com>
wam-djangobug@wamber.net
Wang Chun <wangchun@exoweb.net>
Warren Smith <warren@wandrsmith.net>
Waylan Limberg <waylan@gmail.com>
Wiktor Kołodziej <wiktor@pykonik.org>
Wiley Kestner <wiley.kestner@gmail.com>
Wiliam Alves de Souza <wiliamsouza83@gmail.com>
Will Ayd <william.ayd@icloud.com>
William Schwartz <wkschwartz@gmail.com>
Will Hardy <django@willhardy.com.au>
Wilson Miner <wminer@gmail.com>
Wim Glenn <hey@wimglenn.com>
wojtek
Xavier Francisco <xavier.n.francisco@gmail.com>
Xia Kai <https://blog.xiaket.org/>
Yann Fouillat <gagaro42@gmail.com>
Yann Malet
Yasushi Masuda <whosaysni@gmail.com>
ye7cakf02@sneakemail.com
ymasuda@ethercube.com
Yoong Kang Lim <yoongkang.lim@gmail.com>
Yusuke Miyazaki <miyazaki.dev@gmail.com>
Zac Hatfield-Dodds <zac.hatfield.dodds@gmail.com>
Zachary Voase <zacharyvoase@gmail.com>
Zach Liu <zachliu@gmail.com>
Zach Thompson <zthompson47@gmail.com>
Zain Memon
Zak Johnson <zakj@nox.cx>
Žan Anderle <zan.anderle@gmail.com>
Zbigniew Siciarz <zbigniew@siciarz.net>
zegor
Zeynel Özdemir <ozdemir.zynl@gmail.com>
Zlatko Mašek <zlatko.masek@gmail.com>
zriv <https://github.com/zriv>
<Please alphabetize new entries>
A big THANK YOU goes to:
Rob Curley and Ralph Gage for letting us open-source Django.
Frank Wiles for making excellent arguments for open-sourcing, and for
his sage sysadmin advice.
Ian Bicking for convincing Adrian to ditch code generation.
Mark Pilgrim for "Dive Into Python" (https://www.diveinto.org/python3/).
Guido van Rossum for creating Python.

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pip

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Copyright (c) Django Software Foundation and individual contributors.
All rights reserved.
Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without modification,
are permitted provided that the following conditions are met:
1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright notice,
this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright
notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the
documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
3. Neither the name of Django nor the names of its contributors may be used
to endorse or promote products derived from this software without
specific prior written permission.
THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND CONTRIBUTORS "AS IS" AND
ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED
WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE
DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE COPYRIGHT OWNER OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE FOR
ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES
(INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES;
LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON
ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT
(INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS
SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.

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Django is licensed under the three-clause BSD license; see the file
LICENSE for details.
Django includes code from the Python standard library, which is licensed under
the Python license, a permissive open source license. The copyright and license
is included below for compliance with Python's terms.
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Copyright (c) 2001-present Python Software Foundation; All Rights Reserved
A. HISTORY OF THE SOFTWARE
==========================
Python was created in the early 1990s by Guido van Rossum at Stichting
Mathematisch Centrum (CWI, see http://www.cwi.nl) in the Netherlands
as a successor of a language called ABC. Guido remains Python's
principal author, although it includes many contributions from others.
In 1995, Guido continued his work on Python at the Corporation for
National Research Initiatives (CNRI, see http://www.cnri.reston.va.us)
in Reston, Virginia where he released several versions of the
software.
In May 2000, Guido and the Python core development team moved to
BeOpen.com to form the BeOpen PythonLabs team. In October of the same
year, the PythonLabs team moved to Digital Creations, which became
Zope Corporation. In 2001, the Python Software Foundation (PSF, see
https://www.python.org/psf/) was formed, a non-profit organization
created specifically to own Python-related Intellectual Property.
Zope Corporation was a sponsoring member of the PSF.
All Python releases are Open Source (see http://www.opensource.org for
the Open Source Definition). Historically, most, but not all, Python
releases have also been GPL-compatible; the table below summarizes
the various releases.
Release Derived Year Owner GPL-
from compatible? (1)
0.9.0 thru 1.2 1991-1995 CWI yes
1.3 thru 1.5.2 1.2 1995-1999 CNRI yes
1.6 1.5.2 2000 CNRI no
2.0 1.6 2000 BeOpen.com no
1.6.1 1.6 2001 CNRI yes (2)
2.1 2.0+1.6.1 2001 PSF no
2.0.1 2.0+1.6.1 2001 PSF yes
2.1.1 2.1+2.0.1 2001 PSF yes
2.1.2 2.1.1 2002 PSF yes
2.1.3 2.1.2 2002 PSF yes
2.2 and above 2.1.1 2001-now PSF yes
Footnotes:
(1) GPL-compatible doesn't mean that we're distributing Python under
the GPL. All Python licenses, unlike the GPL, let you distribute
a modified version without making your changes open source. The
GPL-compatible licenses make it possible to combine Python with
other software that is released under the GPL; the others don't.
(2) According to Richard Stallman, 1.6.1 is not GPL-compatible,
because its license has a choice of law clause. According to
CNRI, however, Stallman's lawyer has told CNRI's lawyer that 1.6.1
is "not incompatible" with the GPL.
Thanks to the many outside volunteers who have worked under Guido's
direction to make these releases possible.
B. TERMS AND CONDITIONS FOR ACCESSING OR OTHERWISE USING PYTHON
===============================================================
PYTHON SOFTWARE FOUNDATION LICENSE VERSION 2
--------------------------------------------
1. This LICENSE AGREEMENT is between the Python Software Foundation
("PSF"), and the Individual or Organization ("Licensee") accessing and
otherwise using this software ("Python") in source or binary form and
its associated documentation.
2. Subject to the terms and conditions of this License Agreement, PSF hereby
grants Licensee a nonexclusive, royalty-free, world-wide license to reproduce,
analyze, test, perform and/or display publicly, prepare derivative works,
distribute, and otherwise use Python alone or in any derivative version,
provided, however, that PSF's License Agreement and PSF's notice of copyright,
i.e., "Copyright (c) 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010,
2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019, 2020 Python Software Foundation;
All Rights Reserved" are retained in Python alone or in any derivative version
prepared by Licensee.
3. In the event Licensee prepares a derivative work that is based on
or incorporates Python or any part thereof, and wants to make
the derivative work available to others as provided herein, then
Licensee hereby agrees to include in any such work a brief summary of
the changes made to Python.
4. PSF is making Python available to Licensee on an "AS IS"
basis. PSF MAKES NO REPRESENTATIONS OR WARRANTIES, EXPRESS OR
IMPLIED. BY WAY OF EXAMPLE, BUT NOT LIMITATION, PSF MAKES NO AND
DISCLAIMS ANY REPRESENTATION OR WARRANTY OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS
FOR ANY PARTICULAR PURPOSE OR THAT THE USE OF PYTHON WILL NOT
INFRINGE ANY THIRD PARTY RIGHTS.
5. PSF SHALL NOT BE LIABLE TO LICENSEE OR ANY OTHER USERS OF PYTHON
FOR ANY INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES OR LOSS AS
A RESULT OF MODIFYING, DISTRIBUTING, OR OTHERWISE USING PYTHON,
OR ANY DERIVATIVE THEREOF, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY THEREOF.
6. This License Agreement will automatically terminate upon a material
breach of its terms and conditions.
7. Nothing in this License Agreement shall be deemed to create any
relationship of agency, partnership, or joint venture between PSF and
Licensee. This License Agreement does not grant permission to use PSF
trademarks or trade name in a trademark sense to endorse or promote
products or services of Licensee, or any third party.
8. By copying, installing or otherwise using Python, Licensee
agrees to be bound by the terms and conditions of this License
Agreement.
BEOPEN.COM LICENSE AGREEMENT FOR PYTHON 2.0
-------------------------------------------
BEOPEN PYTHON OPEN SOURCE LICENSE AGREEMENT VERSION 1
1. This LICENSE AGREEMENT is between BeOpen.com ("BeOpen"), having an
office at 160 Saratoga Avenue, Santa Clara, CA 95051, and the
Individual or Organization ("Licensee") accessing and otherwise using
this software in source or binary form and its associated
documentation ("the Software").
2. Subject to the terms and conditions of this BeOpen Python License
Agreement, BeOpen hereby grants Licensee a non-exclusive,
royalty-free, world-wide license to reproduce, analyze, test, perform
and/or display publicly, prepare derivative works, distribute, and
otherwise use the Software alone or in any derivative version,
provided, however, that the BeOpen Python License is retained in the
Software, alone or in any derivative version prepared by Licensee.
3. BeOpen is making the Software available to Licensee on an "AS IS"
basis. BEOPEN MAKES NO REPRESENTATIONS OR WARRANTIES, EXPRESS OR
IMPLIED. BY WAY OF EXAMPLE, BUT NOT LIMITATION, BEOPEN MAKES NO AND
DISCLAIMS ANY REPRESENTATION OR WARRANTY OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS
FOR ANY PARTICULAR PURPOSE OR THAT THE USE OF THE SOFTWARE WILL NOT
INFRINGE ANY THIRD PARTY RIGHTS.
4. BEOPEN SHALL NOT BE LIABLE TO LICENSEE OR ANY OTHER USERS OF THE
SOFTWARE FOR ANY INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES OR LOSS
AS A RESULT OF USING, MODIFYING OR DISTRIBUTING THE SOFTWARE, OR ANY
DERIVATIVE THEREOF, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY THEREOF.
5. This License Agreement will automatically terminate upon a material
breach of its terms and conditions.
6. This License Agreement shall be governed by and interpreted in all
respects by the law of the State of California, excluding conflict of
law provisions. Nothing in this License Agreement shall be deemed to
create any relationship of agency, partnership, or joint venture
between BeOpen and Licensee. This License Agreement does not grant
permission to use BeOpen trademarks or trade names in a trademark
sense to endorse or promote products or services of Licensee, or any
third party. As an exception, the "BeOpen Python" logos available at
http://www.pythonlabs.com/logos.html may be used according to the
permissions granted on that web page.
7. By copying, installing or otherwise using the software, Licensee
agrees to be bound by the terms and conditions of this License
Agreement.
CNRI LICENSE AGREEMENT FOR PYTHON 1.6.1
---------------------------------------
1. This LICENSE AGREEMENT is between the Corporation for National
Research Initiatives, having an office at 1895 Preston White Drive,
Reston, VA 20191 ("CNRI"), and the Individual or Organization
("Licensee") accessing and otherwise using Python 1.6.1 software in
source or binary form and its associated documentation.
2. Subject to the terms and conditions of this License Agreement, CNRI
hereby grants Licensee a nonexclusive, royalty-free, world-wide
license to reproduce, analyze, test, perform and/or display publicly,
prepare derivative works, distribute, and otherwise use Python 1.6.1
alone or in any derivative version, provided, however, that CNRI's
License Agreement and CNRI's notice of copyright, i.e., "Copyright (c)
1995-2001 Corporation for National Research Initiatives; All Rights
Reserved" are retained in Python 1.6.1 alone or in any derivative
version prepared by Licensee. Alternately, in lieu of CNRI's License
Agreement, Licensee may substitute the following text (omitting the
quotes): "Python 1.6.1 is made available subject to the terms and
conditions in CNRI's License Agreement. This Agreement together with
Python 1.6.1 may be located on the Internet using the following
unique, persistent identifier (known as a handle): 1895.22/1013. This
Agreement may also be obtained from a proxy server on the Internet
using the following URL: http://hdl.handle.net/1895.22/1013".
3. In the event Licensee prepares a derivative work that is based on
or incorporates Python 1.6.1 or any part thereof, and wants to make
the derivative work available to others as provided herein, then
Licensee hereby agrees to include in any such work a brief summary of
the changes made to Python 1.6.1.
4. CNRI is making Python 1.6.1 available to Licensee on an "AS IS"
basis. CNRI MAKES NO REPRESENTATIONS OR WARRANTIES, EXPRESS OR
IMPLIED. BY WAY OF EXAMPLE, BUT NOT LIMITATION, CNRI MAKES NO AND
DISCLAIMS ANY REPRESENTATION OR WARRANTY OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS
FOR ANY PARTICULAR PURPOSE OR THAT THE USE OF PYTHON 1.6.1 WILL NOT
INFRINGE ANY THIRD PARTY RIGHTS.
5. CNRI SHALL NOT BE LIABLE TO LICENSEE OR ANY OTHER USERS OF PYTHON
1.6.1 FOR ANY INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES OR LOSS AS
A RESULT OF MODIFYING, DISTRIBUTING, OR OTHERWISE USING PYTHON 1.6.1,
OR ANY DERIVATIVE THEREOF, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY THEREOF.
6. This License Agreement will automatically terminate upon a material
breach of its terms and conditions.
7. This License Agreement shall be governed by the federal
intellectual property law of the United States, including without
limitation the federal copyright law, and, to the extent such
U.S. federal law does not apply, by the law of the Commonwealth of
Virginia, excluding Virginia's conflict of law provisions.
Notwithstanding the foregoing, with regard to derivative works based
on Python 1.6.1 that incorporate non-separable material that was
previously distributed under the GNU General Public License (GPL), the
law of the Commonwealth of Virginia shall govern this License
Agreement only as to issues arising under or with respect to
Paragraphs 4, 5, and 7 of this License Agreement. Nothing in this
License Agreement shall be deemed to create any relationship of
agency, partnership, or joint venture between CNRI and Licensee. This
License Agreement does not grant permission to use CNRI trademarks or
trade name in a trademark sense to endorse or promote products or
services of Licensee, or any third party.
8. By clicking on the "ACCEPT" button where indicated, or by copying,
installing or otherwise using Python 1.6.1, Licensee agrees to be
bound by the terms and conditions of this License Agreement.
ACCEPT
CWI LICENSE AGREEMENT FOR PYTHON 0.9.0 THROUGH 1.2
--------------------------------------------------
Copyright (c) 1991 - 1995, Stichting Mathematisch Centrum Amsterdam,
The Netherlands. All rights reserved.
Permission to use, copy, modify, and distribute this software and its
documentation for any purpose and without fee is hereby granted,
provided that the above copyright notice appear in all copies and that
both that copyright notice and this permission notice appear in
supporting documentation, and that the name of Stichting Mathematisch
Centrum or CWI not be used in advertising or publicity pertaining to
distribution of the software without specific, written prior
permission.
STICHTING MATHEMATISCH CENTRUM DISCLAIMS ALL WARRANTIES WITH REGARD TO
THIS SOFTWARE, INCLUDING ALL IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND
FITNESS, IN NO EVENT SHALL STICHTING MATHEMATISCH CENTRUM BE LIABLE
FOR ANY SPECIAL, INDIRECT OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES OR ANY DAMAGES
WHATSOEVER RESULTING FROM LOSS OF USE, DATA OR PROFITS, WHETHER IN AN
ACTION OF CONTRACT, NEGLIGENCE OR OTHER TORTIOUS ACTION, ARISING OUT
OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE USE OR PERFORMANCE OF THIS SOFTWARE.

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Metadata-Version: 2.1
Name: Django
Version: 3.1.3
Summary: A high-level Python Web framework that encourages rapid development and clean, pragmatic design.
Home-page: https://www.djangoproject.com/
Author: Django Software Foundation
Author-email: foundation@djangoproject.com
License: BSD-3-Clause
Project-URL: Documentation, https://docs.djangoproject.com/
Project-URL: Release notes, https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/stable/releases/
Project-URL: Funding, https://www.djangoproject.com/fundraising/
Project-URL: Source, https://github.com/django/django
Project-URL: Tracker, https://code.djangoproject.com/
Platform: UNKNOWN
Classifier: Development Status :: 5 - Production/Stable
Classifier: Environment :: Web Environment
Classifier: Framework :: Django
Classifier: Intended Audience :: Developers
Classifier: License :: OSI Approved :: BSD License
Classifier: Operating System :: OS Independent
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3 :: Only
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.6
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.7
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.8
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.9
Classifier: Topic :: Internet :: WWW/HTTP
Classifier: Topic :: Internet :: WWW/HTTP :: Dynamic Content
Classifier: Topic :: Internet :: WWW/HTTP :: WSGI
Classifier: Topic :: Software Development :: Libraries :: Application Frameworks
Classifier: Topic :: Software Development :: Libraries :: Python Modules
Requires-Python: >=3.6
Requires-Dist: asgiref (<4,>=3.2.10)
Requires-Dist: pytz
Requires-Dist: sqlparse (>=0.2.2)
Provides-Extra: argon2
Requires-Dist: argon2-cffi (>=16.1.0) ; extra == 'argon2'
Provides-Extra: bcrypt
Requires-Dist: bcrypt ; extra == 'bcrypt'
======
Django
======
Django is a high-level Python Web framework that encourages rapid development
and clean, pragmatic design. Thanks for checking it out.
All documentation is in the "``docs``" directory and online at
https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/stable/. If you're just getting started,
here's how we recommend you read the docs:
* First, read ``docs/intro/install.txt`` for instructions on installing Django.
* Next, work through the tutorials in order (``docs/intro/tutorial01.txt``,
``docs/intro/tutorial02.txt``, etc.).
* If you want to set up an actual deployment server, read
``docs/howto/deployment/index.txt`` for instructions.
* You'll probably want to read through the topical guides (in ``docs/topics``)
next; from there you can jump to the HOWTOs (in ``docs/howto``) for specific
problems, and check out the reference (``docs/ref``) for gory details.
* See ``docs/README`` for instructions on building an HTML version of the docs.
Docs are updated rigorously. If you find any problems in the docs, or think
they should be clarified in any way, please take 30 seconds to fill out a
ticket here: https://code.djangoproject.com/newticket
To get more help:
* Join the ``#django`` channel on irc.freenode.net. Lots of helpful people hang
out there. See https://freenode.net/kb/answer/chat if you're new to IRC.
* Join the django-users mailing list, or read the archives, at
https://groups.google.com/group/django-users.
To contribute to Django:
* Check out https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/dev/internals/contributing/ for
information about getting involved.
To run Django's test suite:
* Follow the instructions in the "Unit tests" section of
``docs/internals/contributing/writing-code/unit-tests.txt``, published online at
https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/dev/internals/contributing/writing-code/unit-tests/#running-the-unit-tests

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Wheel-Version: 1.0
Generator: bdist_wheel (0.34.2)
Root-Is-Purelib: true
Tag: py3-none-any

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[console_scripts]
django-admin = django.core.management:execute_from_command_line

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django

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import sys
import os
import re
import importlib
import warnings
is_pypy = '__pypy__' in sys.builtin_module_names
def warn_distutils_present():
if 'distutils' not in sys.modules:
return
if is_pypy and sys.version_info < (3, 7):
# PyPy for 3.6 unconditionally imports distutils, so bypass the warning
# https://foss.heptapod.net/pypy/pypy/-/blob/be829135bc0d758997b3566062999ee8b23872b4/lib-python/3/site.py#L250
return
warnings.warn(
"Distutils was imported before Setuptools, but importing Setuptools "
"also replaces the `distutils` module in `sys.modules`. This may lead "
"to undesirable behaviors or errors. To avoid these issues, avoid "
"using distutils directly, ensure that setuptools is installed in the "
"traditional way (e.g. not an editable install), and/or make sure "
"that setuptools is always imported before distutils.")
def clear_distutils():
if 'distutils' not in sys.modules:
return
warnings.warn("Setuptools is replacing distutils.")
mods = [name for name in sys.modules if re.match(r'distutils\b', name)]
for name in mods:
del sys.modules[name]
def enabled():
"""
Allow selection of distutils by environment variable.
"""
which = os.environ.get('SETUPTOOLS_USE_DISTUTILS', 'stdlib')
return which == 'local'
def ensure_local_distutils():
clear_distutils()
distutils = importlib.import_module('setuptools._distutils')
distutils.__name__ = 'distutils'
sys.modules['distutils'] = distutils
# sanity check that submodules load as expected
core = importlib.import_module('distutils.core')
assert '_distutils' in core.__file__, core.__file__
def do_override():
"""
Ensure that the local copy of distutils is preferred over stdlib.
See https://github.com/pypa/setuptools/issues/417#issuecomment-392298401
for more motivation.
"""
if enabled():
warn_distutils_present()
ensure_local_distutils()
class DistutilsMetaFinder:
def find_spec(self, fullname, path, target=None):
if path is not None:
return
method_name = 'spec_for_{fullname}'.format(**locals())
method = getattr(self, method_name, lambda: None)
return method()
def spec_for_distutils(self):
import importlib.abc
import importlib.util
class DistutilsLoader(importlib.abc.Loader):
def create_module(self, spec):
return importlib.import_module('setuptools._distutils')
def exec_module(self, module):
pass
return importlib.util.spec_from_loader('distutils', DistutilsLoader())
def spec_for_pip(self):
"""
Ensure stdlib distutils when running under pip.
See pypa/pip#8761 for rationale.
"""
if self.pip_imported_during_build():
return
clear_distutils()
self.spec_for_distutils = lambda: None
@staticmethod
def pip_imported_during_build():
"""
Detect if pip is being imported in a build script. Ref #2355.
"""
import traceback
return any(
frame.f_globals['__file__'].endswith('setup.py')
for frame, line in traceback.walk_stack(None)
)
DISTUTILS_FINDER = DistutilsMetaFinder()
def add_shim():
sys.meta_path.insert(0, DISTUTILS_FINDER)
def remove_shim():
try:
sys.meta_path.remove(DISTUTILS_FINDER)
except ValueError:
pass

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__import__('_distutils_hack').do_override()

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pip

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Copyright (c) Django Software Foundation and individual contributors.
All rights reserved.
Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without modification,
are permitted provided that the following conditions are met:
1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright notice,
this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright
notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the
documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
3. Neither the name of Django nor the names of its contributors may be used
to endorse or promote products derived from this software without
specific prior written permission.
THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND CONTRIBUTORS "AS IS" AND
ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED
WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE
DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE COPYRIGHT OWNER OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE FOR
ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES
(INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES;
LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON
ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT
(INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS
SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.

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Metadata-Version: 2.1
Name: asgiref
Version: 3.3.1
Summary: ASGI specs, helper code, and adapters
Home-page: https://github.com/django/asgiref/
Author: Django Software Foundation
Author-email: foundation@djangoproject.com
License: BSD
Project-URL: Documentation, https://asgi.readthedocs.io/
Project-URL: Further Documentation, https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/stable/topics/async/#async-adapter-functions
Project-URL: Changelog, https://github.com/django/asgiref/blob/master/CHANGELOG.txt
Platform: UNKNOWN
Classifier: Development Status :: 5 - Production/Stable
Classifier: Environment :: Web Environment
Classifier: Intended Audience :: Developers
Classifier: License :: OSI Approved :: BSD License
Classifier: Operating System :: OS Independent
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3 :: Only
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.5
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.6
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.7
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.8
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.9
Classifier: Topic :: Internet :: WWW/HTTP
Requires-Python: >=3.5
Provides-Extra: tests
Requires-Dist: pytest ; extra == 'tests'
Requires-Dist: pytest-asyncio ; extra == 'tests'
asgiref
=======
.. image:: https://api.travis-ci.org/django/asgiref.svg
:target: https://travis-ci.org/django/asgiref
.. image:: https://img.shields.io/pypi/v/asgiref.svg
:target: https://pypi.python.org/pypi/asgiref
ASGI is a standard for Python asynchronous web apps and servers to communicate
with each other, and positioned as an asynchronous successor to WSGI. You can
read more at https://asgi.readthedocs.io/en/latest/
This package includes ASGI base libraries, such as:
* Sync-to-async and async-to-sync function wrappers, ``asgiref.sync``
* Server base classes, ``asgiref.server``
* A WSGI-to-ASGI adapter, in ``asgiref.wsgi``
Function wrappers
-----------------
These allow you to wrap or decorate async or sync functions to call them from
the other style (so you can call async functions from a synchronous thread,
or vice-versa).
In particular:
* AsyncToSync lets a synchronous subthread stop and wait while the async
function is called on the main thread's event loop, and then control is
returned to the thread when the async function is finished.
* SyncToAsync lets async code call a synchronous function, which is run in
a threadpool and control returned to the async coroutine when the synchronous
function completes.
The idea is to make it easier to call synchronous APIs from async code and
asynchronous APIs from synchronous code so it's easier to transition code from
one style to the other. In the case of Channels, we wrap the (synchronous)
Django view system with SyncToAsync to allow it to run inside the (asynchronous)
ASGI server.
Note that exactly what threads things run in is very specific, and aimed to
keep maximum compatibility with old synchronous code. See
"Synchronous code & Threads" below for a full explanation. By default,
``sync_to_async`` will run all synchronous code in the program in the same
thread for safety reasons; you can disable this for more performance with
``@sync_to_async(thread_sensitive=False)``, but make sure that your code does
not rely on anything bound to threads (like database connections) when you do.
Threadlocal replacement
-----------------------
This is a drop-in replacement for ``threading.local`` that works with both
threads and asyncio Tasks. Even better, it will proxy values through from a
task-local context to a thread-local context when you use ``sync_to_async``
to run things in a threadpool, and vice-versa for ``async_to_sync``.
If you instead want true thread- and task-safety, you can set
``thread_critical`` on the Local object to ensure this instead.
Server base classes
-------------------
Includes a ``StatelessServer`` class which provides all the hard work of
writing a stateless server (as in, does not handle direct incoming sockets
but instead consumes external streams or sockets to work out what is happening).
An example of such a server would be a chatbot server that connects out to
a central chat server and provides a "connection scope" per user chatting to
it. There's only one actual connection, but the server has to separate things
into several scopes for easier writing of the code.
You can see an example of this being used in `frequensgi <https://github.com/andrewgodwin/frequensgi>`_.
WSGI-to-ASGI adapter
--------------------
Allows you to wrap a WSGI application so it appears as a valid ASGI application.
Simply wrap it around your WSGI application like so::
asgi_application = WsgiToAsgi(wsgi_application)
The WSGI application will be run in a synchronous threadpool, and the wrapped
ASGI application will be one that accepts ``http`` class messages.
Please note that not all extended features of WSGI may be supported (such as
file handles for incoming POST bodies).
Dependencies
------------
``asgiref`` requires Python 3.5 or higher.
Contributing
------------
Please refer to the
`main Channels contributing docs <https://github.com/django/channels/blob/master/CONTRIBUTING.rst>`_.
Testing
'''''''
To run tests, make sure you have installed the ``tests`` extra with the package::
cd asgiref/
pip install -e .[tests]
pytest
Building the documentation
''''''''''''''''''''''''''
The documentation uses `Sphinx <http://www.sphinx-doc.org>`_::
cd asgiref/docs/
pip install sphinx
To build the docs, you can use the default tools::
sphinx-build -b html . _build/html # or `make html`, if you've got make set up
cd _build/html
python -m http.server
...or you can use ``sphinx-autobuild`` to run a server and rebuild/reload
your documentation changes automatically::
pip install sphinx-autobuild
sphinx-autobuild . _build/html
Implementation Details
----------------------
Synchronous code & threads
''''''''''''''''''''''''''
The ``asgiref.sync`` module provides two wrappers that let you go between
asynchronous and synchronous code at will, while taking care of the rough edges
for you.
Unfortunately, the rough edges are numerous, and the code has to work especially
hard to keep things in the same thread as much as possible. Notably, the
restrictions we are working with are:
* All synchronous code called through ``SyncToAsync`` and marked with
``thread_sensitive`` should run in the same thread as each other (and if the
outer layer of the program is synchronous, the main thread)
* If a thread already has a running async loop, ``AsyncToSync`` can't run things
on that loop if it's blocked on synchronous code that is above you in the
call stack.
The first compromise you get to might be that ``thread_sensitive`` code should
just run in the same thread and not spawn in a sub-thread, fulfilling the first
restriction, but that immediately runs you into the second restriction.
The only real solution is to essentially have a variant of ThreadPoolExecutor
that executes any ``thread_sensitive`` code on the outermost synchronous
thread - either the main thread, or a single spawned subthread.
This means you now have two basic states:
* If the outermost layer of your program is synchronous, then all async code
run through ``AsyncToSync`` will run in a per-call event loop in arbitrary
sub-threads, while all ``thread_sensitive`` code will run in the main thread.
* If the outermost layer of your program is asynchronous, then all async code
runs on the main thread's event loop, and all ``thread_sensitive`` synchronous
code will run in a single shared sub-thread.
Cruicially, this means that in both cases there is a thread which is a shared
resource that all ``thread_sensitive`` code must run on, and there is a chance
that this thread is currently blocked on its own ``AsyncToSync`` call. Thus,
``AsyncToSync`` needs to act as an executor for thread code while it's blocking.
The ``CurrentThreadExecutor`` class provides this functionality; rather than
simply waiting on a Future, you can call its ``run_until_future`` method and
it will run submitted code until that Future is done. This means that code
inside the call can then run code on your thread.
Maintenance and Security
------------------------
To report security issues, please contact security@djangoproject.com. For GPG
signatures and more security process information, see
https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/dev/internals/security/.
To report bugs or request new features, please open a new GitHub issue.
This repository is part of the Channels project. For the shepherd and maintenance team, please see the
`main Channels readme <https://github.com/django/channels/blob/master/README.rst>`_.

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Wheel-Version: 1.0
Generator: bdist_wheel (0.34.2)
Root-Is-Purelib: true
Tag: py3-none-any

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asgiref

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__version__ = "3.3.1"

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import asyncio
import inspect
def is_double_callable(application):
"""
Tests to see if an application is a legacy-style (double-callable) application.
"""
# Look for a hint on the object first
if getattr(application, "_asgi_single_callable", False):
return False
if getattr(application, "_asgi_double_callable", False):
return True
# Uninstanted classes are double-callable
if inspect.isclass(application):
return True
# Instanted classes depend on their __call__
if hasattr(application, "__call__"):
# We only check to see if its __call__ is a coroutine function -
# if it's not, it still might be a coroutine function itself.
if asyncio.iscoroutinefunction(application.__call__):
return False
# Non-classes we just check directly
return not asyncio.iscoroutinefunction(application)
def double_to_single_callable(application):
"""
Transforms a double-callable ASGI application into a single-callable one.
"""
async def new_application(scope, receive, send):
instance = application(scope)
return await instance(receive, send)
return new_application
def guarantee_single_callable(application):
"""
Takes either a single- or double-callable application and always returns it
in single-callable style. Use this to add backwards compatibility for ASGI
2.0 applications to your server/test harness/etc.
"""
if is_double_callable(application):
application = double_to_single_callable(application)
return application

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import queue
import threading
import time
from concurrent.futures import Executor, Future
class _WorkItem(object):
"""
Represents an item needing to be run in the executor.
Copied from ThreadPoolExecutor (but it's private, so we're not going to rely on importing it)
"""
def __init__(self, future, fn, args, kwargs):
self.future = future
self.fn = fn
self.args = args
self.kwargs = kwargs
def run(self):
if not self.future.set_running_or_notify_cancel():
return
try:
result = self.fn(*self.args, **self.kwargs)
except BaseException as exc:
self.future.set_exception(exc)
# Break a reference cycle with the exception 'exc'
self = None
else:
self.future.set_result(result)
class CurrentThreadExecutor(Executor):
"""
An Executor that actually runs code in the thread it is instantiated in.
Passed to other threads running async code, so they can run sync code in
the thread they came from.
"""
def __init__(self):
self._work_thread = threading.current_thread()
self._work_queue = queue.Queue()
self._broken = False
def run_until_future(self, future):
"""
Runs the code in the work queue until a result is available from the future.
Should be run from the thread the executor is initialised in.
"""
# Check we're in the right thread
if threading.current_thread() != self._work_thread:
raise RuntimeError(
"You cannot run CurrentThreadExecutor from a different thread"
)
# Keep getting work items and checking the future
try:
while True:
# Get a work item and run it
try:
work_item = self._work_queue.get(block=False)
except queue.Empty:
# See if the future is done (we only exit if the work queue is empty)
if future.done():
return
# Prevent hot-looping on nothing
time.sleep(0.001)
else:
work_item.run()
del work_item
finally:
self._broken = True
def submit(self, fn, *args, **kwargs):
# Check they're not submitting from the same thread
if threading.current_thread() == self._work_thread:
raise RuntimeError(
"You cannot submit onto CurrentThreadExecutor from its own thread"
)
# Check they're not too late or the executor errored
if self._broken:
raise RuntimeError("CurrentThreadExecutor already quit or is broken")
# Add to work queue
f = Future()
work_item = _WorkItem(f, fn, args, kwargs)
self._work_queue.put(work_item)
# Return the future
return f

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import random
import string
import sys
import threading
import weakref
class Local:
"""
A drop-in replacement for threading.locals that also works with asyncio
Tasks (via the current_task asyncio method), and passes locals through
sync_to_async and async_to_sync.
Specifically:
- Locals work per-coroutine on any thread not spawned using asgiref
- Locals work per-thread on any thread not spawned using asgiref
- Locals are shared with the parent coroutine when using sync_to_async
- Locals are shared with the parent thread when using async_to_sync
(and if that thread was launched using sync_to_async, with its parent
coroutine as well, with this working for indefinite levels of nesting)
Set thread_critical to True to not allow locals to pass from an async Task
to a thread it spawns. This is needed for code that truly needs
thread-safety, as opposed to things used for helpful context (e.g. sqlite
does not like being called from a different thread to the one it is from).
Thread-critical code will still be differentiated per-Task within a thread
as it is expected it does not like concurrent access.
This doesn't use contextvars as it needs to support 3.6. Once it can support
3.7 only, we can then reimplement the storage more nicely.
"""
CLEANUP_INTERVAL = 60 # seconds
def __init__(self, thread_critical=False):
self._thread_critical = thread_critical
self._thread_lock = threading.RLock()
self._context_refs = weakref.WeakSet()
# Random suffixes stop accidental reuse between different Locals,
# though we try to force deletion as well.
self._attr_name = "_asgiref_local_impl_%s_%s" % (
id(self),
"".join(random.choice(string.ascii_letters) for i in range(8)),
)
def _get_context_id(self):
"""
Get the ID we should use for looking up variables
"""
# Prevent a circular reference
from .sync import AsyncToSync, SyncToAsync
# First, pull the current task if we can
context_id = SyncToAsync.get_current_task()
context_is_async = True
# OK, let's try for a thread ID
if context_id is None:
context_id = threading.current_thread()
context_is_async = False
# If we're thread-critical, we stop here, as we can't share contexts.
if self._thread_critical:
return context_id
# Now, take those and see if we can resolve them through the launch maps
for i in range(sys.getrecursionlimit()):
try:
if context_is_async:
# Tasks have a source thread in AsyncToSync
context_id = AsyncToSync.launch_map[context_id]
context_is_async = False
else:
# Threads have a source task in SyncToAsync
context_id = SyncToAsync.launch_map[context_id]
context_is_async = True
except KeyError:
break
else:
# Catch infinite loops (they happen if you are screwing around
# with AsyncToSync implementations)
raise RuntimeError("Infinite launch_map loops")
return context_id
def _get_storage(self):
context_obj = self._get_context_id()
if not hasattr(context_obj, self._attr_name):
setattr(context_obj, self._attr_name, {})
self._context_refs.add(context_obj)
return getattr(context_obj, self._attr_name)
def __del__(self):
try:
for context_obj in self._context_refs:
try:
delattr(context_obj, self._attr_name)
except AttributeError:
pass
except TypeError:
# WeakSet.__iter__ can crash when interpreter is shutting down due
# to _IterationGuard being None.
pass
def __getattr__(self, key):
with self._thread_lock:
storage = self._get_storage()
if key in storage:
return storage[key]
else:
raise AttributeError("%r object has no attribute %r" % (self, key))
def __setattr__(self, key, value):
if key in ("_context_refs", "_thread_critical", "_thread_lock", "_attr_name"):
return super().__setattr__(key, value)
with self._thread_lock:
storage = self._get_storage()
storage[key] = value
def __delattr__(self, key):
with self._thread_lock:
storage = self._get_storage()
if key in storage:
del storage[key]
else:
raise AttributeError("%r object has no attribute %r" % (self, key))

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import asyncio
import logging
import time
import traceback
from .compatibility import guarantee_single_callable
logger = logging.getLogger(__name__)
class StatelessServer:
"""
Base server class that handles basic concepts like application instance
creation/pooling, exception handling, and similar, for stateless protocols
(i.e. ones without actual incoming connections to the process)
Your code should override the handle() method, doing whatever it needs to,
and calling get_or_create_application_instance with a unique `scope_id`
and `scope` for the scope it wants to get.
If an application instance is found with the same `scope_id`, you are
given its input queue, otherwise one is made for you with the scope provided
and you are given that fresh new input queue. Either way, you should do
something like:
input_queue = self.get_or_create_application_instance(
"user-123456",
{"type": "testprotocol", "user_id": "123456", "username": "andrew"},
)
input_queue.put_nowait(message)
If you try and create an application instance and there are already
`max_application` instances, the oldest/least recently used one will be
reclaimed and shut down to make space.
Application coroutines that error will be found periodically (every 100ms
by default) and have their exceptions printed to the console. Override
application_exception() if you want to do more when this happens.
If you override run(), make sure you handle things like launching the
application checker.
"""
application_checker_interval = 0.1
def __init__(self, application, max_applications=1000):
# Parameters
self.application = application
self.max_applications = max_applications
# Initialisation
self.application_instances = {}
### Mainloop and handling
def run(self):
"""
Runs the asyncio event loop with our handler loop.
"""
event_loop = asyncio.get_event_loop()
asyncio.ensure_future(self.application_checker())
try:
event_loop.run_until_complete(self.handle())
except KeyboardInterrupt:
logger.info("Exiting due to Ctrl-C/interrupt")
async def handle(self):
raise NotImplementedError("You must implement handle()")
async def application_send(self, scope, message):
"""
Receives outbound sends from applications and handles them.
"""
raise NotImplementedError("You must implement application_send()")
### Application instance management
def get_or_create_application_instance(self, scope_id, scope):
"""
Creates an application instance and returns its queue.
"""
if scope_id in self.application_instances:
self.application_instances[scope_id]["last_used"] = time.time()
return self.application_instances[scope_id]["input_queue"]
# See if we need to delete an old one
while len(self.application_instances) > self.max_applications:
self.delete_oldest_application_instance()
# Make an instance of the application
input_queue = asyncio.Queue()
application_instance = guarantee_single_callable(self.application)
# Run it, and stash the future for later checking
future = asyncio.ensure_future(
application_instance(
scope=scope,
receive=input_queue.get,
send=lambda message: self.application_send(scope, message),
)
)
self.application_instances[scope_id] = {
"input_queue": input_queue,
"future": future,
"scope": scope,
"last_used": time.time(),
}
return input_queue
def delete_oldest_application_instance(self):
"""
Finds and deletes the oldest application instance
"""
oldest_time = min(
details["last_used"] for details in self.application_instances.values()
)
for scope_id, details in self.application_instances.items():
if details["last_used"] == oldest_time:
self.delete_application_instance(scope_id)
# Return to make sure we only delete one in case two have
# the same oldest time
return
def delete_application_instance(self, scope_id):
"""
Removes an application instance (makes sure its task is stopped,
then removes it from the current set)
"""
details = self.application_instances[scope_id]
del self.application_instances[scope_id]
if not details["future"].done():
details["future"].cancel()
async def application_checker(self):
"""
Goes through the set of current application instance Futures and cleans up
any that are done/prints exceptions for any that errored.
"""
while True:
await asyncio.sleep(self.application_checker_interval)
for scope_id, details in list(self.application_instances.items()):
if details["future"].done():
exception = details["future"].exception()
if exception:
await self.application_exception(exception, details)
try:
del self.application_instances[scope_id]
except KeyError:
# Exception handling might have already got here before us. That's fine.
pass
async def application_exception(self, exception, application_details):
"""
Called whenever an application coroutine has an exception.
"""
logging.error(
"Exception inside application: %s\n%s%s",
exception,
"".join(traceback.format_tb(exception.__traceback__)),
" {}".format(exception),
)

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import asyncio
import asyncio.coroutines
import functools
import os
import sys
import threading
from concurrent.futures import Future, ThreadPoolExecutor
from .current_thread_executor import CurrentThreadExecutor
from .local import Local
try:
import contextvars # Python 3.7+ only.
except ImportError:
contextvars = None
def _restore_context(context):
# Check for changes in contextvars, and set them to the current
# context for downstream consumers
for cvar in context:
try:
if cvar.get() != context.get(cvar):
cvar.set(context.get(cvar))
except LookupError:
cvar.set(context.get(cvar))
class AsyncToSync:
"""
Utility class which turns an awaitable that only works on the thread with
the event loop into a synchronous callable that works in a subthread.
If the call stack contains an async loop, the code runs there.
Otherwise, the code runs in a new loop in a new thread.
Either way, this thread then pauses and waits to run any thread_sensitive
code called from further down the call stack using SyncToAsync, before
finally exiting once the async task returns.
"""
# Maps launched Tasks to the threads that launched them (for locals impl)
launch_map = {}
# Keeps track of which CurrentThreadExecutor to use. This uses an asgiref
# Local, not a threadlocal, so that tasks can work out what their parent used.
executors = Local()
def __init__(self, awaitable, force_new_loop=False):
self.awaitable = awaitable
try:
self.__self__ = self.awaitable.__self__
except AttributeError:
pass
if force_new_loop:
# They have asked that we always run in a new sub-loop.
self.main_event_loop = None
else:
try:
self.main_event_loop = asyncio.get_event_loop()
except RuntimeError:
# There's no event loop in this thread. Look for the threadlocal if
# we're inside SyncToAsync
main_event_loop_pid = getattr(
SyncToAsync.threadlocal, "main_event_loop_pid", None
)
# We make sure the parent loop is from the same process - if
# they've forked, this is not going to be valid any more (#194)
if main_event_loop_pid and main_event_loop_pid == os.getpid():
self.main_event_loop = getattr(
SyncToAsync.threadlocal, "main_event_loop", None
)
else:
self.main_event_loop = None
def __call__(self, *args, **kwargs):
# You can't call AsyncToSync from a thread with a running event loop
try:
event_loop = asyncio.get_event_loop()
except RuntimeError:
pass
else:
if event_loop.is_running():
raise RuntimeError(
"You cannot use AsyncToSync in the same thread as an async event loop - "
"just await the async function directly."
)
if contextvars is not None:
# Wrapping context in list so it can be reassigned from within
# `main_wrap`.
context = [contextvars.copy_context()]
else:
context = None
# Make a future for the return information
call_result = Future()
# Get the source thread
source_thread = threading.current_thread()
# Make a CurrentThreadExecutor we'll use to idle in this thread - we
# need one for every sync frame, even if there's one above us in the
# same thread.
if hasattr(self.executors, "current"):
old_current_executor = self.executors.current
else:
old_current_executor = None
current_executor = CurrentThreadExecutor()
self.executors.current = current_executor
# Use call_soon_threadsafe to schedule a synchronous callback on the
# main event loop's thread if it's there, otherwise make a new loop
# in this thread.
try:
awaitable = self.main_wrap(
args, kwargs, call_result, source_thread, sys.exc_info(), context
)
if not (self.main_event_loop and self.main_event_loop.is_running()):
# Make our own event loop - in a new thread - and run inside that.
loop = asyncio.new_event_loop()
loop_executor = ThreadPoolExecutor(max_workers=1)
loop_future = loop_executor.submit(
self._run_event_loop, loop, awaitable
)
if current_executor:
# Run the CurrentThreadExecutor until the future is done
current_executor.run_until_future(loop_future)
# Wait for future and/or allow for exception propagation
loop_future.result()
else:
# Call it inside the existing loop
self.main_event_loop.call_soon_threadsafe(
self.main_event_loop.create_task, awaitable
)
if current_executor:
# Run the CurrentThreadExecutor until the future is done
current_executor.run_until_future(call_result)
finally:
# Clean up any executor we were running
if hasattr(self.executors, "current"):
del self.executors.current
if old_current_executor:
self.executors.current = old_current_executor
if contextvars is not None:
_restore_context(context[0])
# Wait for results from the future.
return call_result.result()
def _run_event_loop(self, loop, coro):
"""
Runs the given event loop (designed to be called in a thread).
"""
asyncio.set_event_loop(loop)
try:
loop.run_until_complete(coro)
finally:
try:
# mimic asyncio.run() behavior
# cancel unexhausted async generators
if sys.version_info >= (3, 7, 0):
tasks = asyncio.all_tasks(loop)
else:
tasks = asyncio.Task.all_tasks(loop)
for task in tasks:
task.cancel()
loop.run_until_complete(asyncio.gather(*tasks, return_exceptions=True))
for task in tasks:
if task.cancelled():
continue
if task.exception() is not None:
loop.call_exception_handler(
{
"message": "unhandled exception during loop shutdown",
"exception": task.exception(),
"task": task,
}
)
if hasattr(loop, "shutdown_asyncgens"):
loop.run_until_complete(loop.shutdown_asyncgens())
finally:
loop.close()
asyncio.set_event_loop(self.main_event_loop)
def __get__(self, parent, objtype):
"""
Include self for methods
"""
func = functools.partial(self.__call__, parent)
return functools.update_wrapper(func, self.awaitable)
async def main_wrap(
self, args, kwargs, call_result, source_thread, exc_info, context
):
"""
Wraps the awaitable with something that puts the result into the
result/exception future.
"""
if context is not None:
_restore_context(context[0])
current_task = SyncToAsync.get_current_task()
self.launch_map[current_task] = source_thread
try:
# If we have an exception, run the function inside the except block
# after raising it so exc_info is correctly populated.
if exc_info[1]:
try:
raise exc_info[1]
except Exception:
result = await self.awaitable(*args, **kwargs)
else:
result = await self.awaitable(*args, **kwargs)
except Exception as e:
call_result.set_exception(e)
else:
call_result.set_result(result)
finally:
del self.launch_map[current_task]
if context is not None:
context[0] = contextvars.copy_context()
class SyncToAsync:
"""
Utility class which turns a synchronous callable into an awaitable that
runs in a threadpool. It also sets a threadlocal inside the thread so
calls to AsyncToSync can escape it.
If thread_sensitive is passed, the code will run in the same thread as any
outer code. This is needed for underlying Python code that is not
threadsafe (for example, code which handles SQLite database connections).
If the outermost program is async (i.e. SyncToAsync is outermost), then
this will be a dedicated single sub-thread that all sync code runs in,
one after the other. If the outermost program is sync (i.e. AsyncToSync is
outermost), this will just be the main thread. This is achieved by idling
with a CurrentThreadExecutor while AsyncToSync is blocking its sync parent,
rather than just blocking.
"""
# If they've set ASGI_THREADS, update the default asyncio executor for now
if "ASGI_THREADS" in os.environ:
loop = asyncio.get_event_loop()
loop.set_default_executor(
ThreadPoolExecutor(max_workers=int(os.environ["ASGI_THREADS"]))
)
# Maps launched threads to the coroutines that spawned them
launch_map = {}
# Storage for main event loop references
threadlocal = threading.local()
# Single-thread executor for thread-sensitive code
single_thread_executor = ThreadPoolExecutor(max_workers=1)
def __init__(self, func, thread_sensitive=True):
self.func = func
functools.update_wrapper(self, func)
self._thread_sensitive = thread_sensitive
self._is_coroutine = asyncio.coroutines._is_coroutine
try:
self.__self__ = func.__self__
except AttributeError:
pass
async def __call__(self, *args, **kwargs):
loop = asyncio.get_event_loop()
# Work out what thread to run the code in
if self._thread_sensitive:
if hasattr(AsyncToSync.executors, "current"):
# If we have a parent sync thread above somewhere, use that
executor = AsyncToSync.executors.current
else:
# Otherwise, we run it in a fixed single thread
executor = self.single_thread_executor
else:
executor = None # Use default
if contextvars is not None:
context = contextvars.copy_context()
child = functools.partial(self.func, *args, **kwargs)
func = context.run
args = (child,)
kwargs = {}
else:
func = self.func
# Run the code in the right thread
future = loop.run_in_executor(
executor,
functools.partial(
self.thread_handler,
loop,
self.get_current_task(),
sys.exc_info(),
func,
*args,
**kwargs
),
)
ret = await asyncio.wait_for(future, timeout=None)
if contextvars is not None:
_restore_context(context)
return ret
def __get__(self, parent, objtype):
"""
Include self for methods
"""
return functools.partial(self.__call__, parent)
def thread_handler(self, loop, source_task, exc_info, func, *args, **kwargs):
"""
Wraps the sync application with exception handling.
"""
# Set the threadlocal for AsyncToSync
self.threadlocal.main_event_loop = loop
self.threadlocal.main_event_loop_pid = os.getpid()
# Set the task mapping (used for the locals module)
current_thread = threading.current_thread()
if AsyncToSync.launch_map.get(source_task) == current_thread:
# Our parent task was launched from this same thread, so don't make
# a launch map entry - let it shortcut over us! (and stop infinite loops)
parent_set = False
else:
self.launch_map[current_thread] = source_task
parent_set = True
# Run the function
try:
# If we have an exception, run the function inside the except block
# after raising it so exc_info is correctly populated.
if exc_info[1]:
try:
raise exc_info[1]
except Exception:
return func(*args, **kwargs)
else:
return func(*args, **kwargs)
finally:
# Only delete the launch_map parent if we set it, otherwise it is
# from someone else.
if parent_set:
del self.launch_map[current_thread]
@staticmethod
def get_current_task():
"""
Cross-version implementation of asyncio.current_task()
Returns None if there is no task.
"""
try:
if hasattr(asyncio, "current_task"):
# Python 3.7 and up
return asyncio.current_task()
else:
# Python 3.6
return asyncio.Task.current_task()
except RuntimeError:
return None
# Lowercase aliases (and decorator friendliness)
async_to_sync = AsyncToSync
def sync_to_async(func=None, thread_sensitive=True):
if func is None:
return lambda f: SyncToAsync(f, thread_sensitive=thread_sensitive)
return SyncToAsync(func, thread_sensitive=thread_sensitive)

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@ -0,0 +1,97 @@
import asyncio
import time
from .compatibility import guarantee_single_callable
from .timeout import timeout as async_timeout
class ApplicationCommunicator:
"""
Runs an ASGI application in a test mode, allowing sending of
messages to it and retrieval of messages it sends.
"""
def __init__(self, application, scope):
self.application = guarantee_single_callable(application)
self.scope = scope
self.input_queue = asyncio.Queue()
self.output_queue = asyncio.Queue()
self.future = asyncio.ensure_future(
self.application(scope, self.input_queue.get, self.output_queue.put)
)
async def wait(self, timeout=1):
"""
Waits for the application to stop itself and returns any exceptions.
"""
try:
async with async_timeout(timeout):
try:
await self.future
self.future.result()
except asyncio.CancelledError:
pass
finally:
if not self.future.done():
self.future.cancel()
try:
await self.future
except asyncio.CancelledError:
pass
def stop(self, exceptions=True):
if not self.future.done():
self.future.cancel()
elif exceptions:
# Give a chance to raise any exceptions
self.future.result()
def __del__(self):
# Clean up on deletion
try:
self.stop(exceptions=False)
except RuntimeError:
# Event loop already stopped
pass
async def send_input(self, message):
"""
Sends a single message to the application
"""
# Give it the message
await self.input_queue.put(message)
async def receive_output(self, timeout=1):
"""
Receives a single message from the application, with optional timeout.
"""
# Make sure there's not an exception to raise from the task
if self.future.done():
self.future.result()
# Wait and receive the message
try:
async with async_timeout(timeout):
return await self.output_queue.get()
except asyncio.TimeoutError as e:
# See if we have another error to raise inside
if self.future.done():
self.future.result()
else:
self.future.cancel()
try:
await self.future
except asyncio.CancelledError:
pass
raise e
async def receive_nothing(self, timeout=0.1, interval=0.01):
"""
Checks that there is no message to receive in the given time.
"""
# `interval` has precedence over `timeout`
start = time.monotonic()
while time.monotonic() - start < timeout:
if not self.output_queue.empty():
return False
await asyncio.sleep(interval)
return self.output_queue.empty()

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@ -0,0 +1,128 @@
# This code is originally sourced from the aio-libs project "async_timeout",
# under the Apache 2.0 license. You may see the original project at
# https://github.com/aio-libs/async-timeout
# It is vendored here to reduce chain-dependencies on this library, and
# modified slightly to remove some features we don't use.
import asyncio
import sys
from types import TracebackType
from typing import Any, Optional, Type # noqa
PY_37 = sys.version_info >= (3, 7)
class timeout:
"""timeout context manager.
Useful in cases when you want to apply timeout logic around block
of code or in cases when asyncio.wait_for is not suitable. For example:
>>> with timeout(0.001):
... async with aiohttp.get('https://github.com') as r:
... await r.text()
timeout - value in seconds or None to disable timeout logic
loop - asyncio compatible event loop
"""
def __init__(
self,
timeout: Optional[float],
*,
loop: Optional[asyncio.AbstractEventLoop] = None
) -> None:
self._timeout = timeout
if loop is None:
loop = asyncio.get_event_loop()
self._loop = loop
self._task = None # type: Optional[asyncio.Task[Any]]
self._cancelled = False
self._cancel_handler = None # type: Optional[asyncio.Handle]
self._cancel_at = None # type: Optional[float]
def __enter__(self) -> "timeout":
return self._do_enter()
def __exit__(
self,
exc_type: Type[BaseException],
exc_val: BaseException,
exc_tb: TracebackType,
) -> Optional[bool]:
self._do_exit(exc_type)
return None
async def __aenter__(self) -> "timeout":
return self._do_enter()
async def __aexit__(
self,
exc_type: Type[BaseException],
exc_val: BaseException,
exc_tb: TracebackType,
) -> None:
self._do_exit(exc_type)
@property
def expired(self) -> bool:
return self._cancelled
@property
def remaining(self) -> Optional[float]:
if self._cancel_at is not None:
return max(self._cancel_at - self._loop.time(), 0.0)
else:
return None
def _do_enter(self) -> "timeout":
# Support Tornado 5- without timeout
# Details: https://github.com/python/asyncio/issues/392
if self._timeout is None:
return self
self._task = current_task(self._loop)
if self._task is None:
raise RuntimeError(
"Timeout context manager should be used " "inside a task"
)
if self._timeout <= 0:
self._loop.call_soon(self._cancel_task)
return self
self._cancel_at = self._loop.time() + self._timeout
self._cancel_handler = self._loop.call_at(self._cancel_at, self._cancel_task)
return self
def _do_exit(self, exc_type: Type[BaseException]) -> None:
if exc_type is asyncio.CancelledError and self._cancelled:
self._cancel_handler = None
self._task = None
raise asyncio.TimeoutError
if self._timeout is not None and self._cancel_handler is not None:
self._cancel_handler.cancel()
self._cancel_handler = None
self._task = None
return None
def _cancel_task(self) -> None:
if self._task is not None:
self._task.cancel()
self._cancelled = True
def current_task(loop: asyncio.AbstractEventLoop) -> "asyncio.Task[Any]":
if PY_37:
task = asyncio.current_task(loop=loop) # type: ignore
else:
task = asyncio.Task.current_task(loop=loop)
if task is None:
# this should be removed, tokio must use register_task and family API
if hasattr(loop, "current_task"):
task = loop.current_task() # type: ignore
return task

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from io import BytesIO
from tempfile import SpooledTemporaryFile
from asgiref.sync import AsyncToSync, sync_to_async
class WsgiToAsgi:
"""
Wraps a WSGI application to make it into an ASGI application.
"""
def __init__(self, wsgi_application):
self.wsgi_application = wsgi_application
async def __call__(self, scope, receive, send):
"""
ASGI application instantiation point.
We return a new WsgiToAsgiInstance here with the WSGI app
and the scope, ready to respond when it is __call__ed.
"""
await WsgiToAsgiInstance(self.wsgi_application)(scope, receive, send)
class WsgiToAsgiInstance:
"""
Per-socket instance of a wrapped WSGI application
"""
def __init__(self, wsgi_application):
self.wsgi_application = wsgi_application
self.response_started = False
self.response_content_length = None
async def __call__(self, scope, receive, send):
if scope["type"] != "http":
raise ValueError("WSGI wrapper received a non-HTTP scope")
self.scope = scope
with SpooledTemporaryFile(max_size=65536) as body:
# Alright, wait for the http.request messages
while True:
message = await receive()
if message["type"] != "http.request":
raise ValueError("WSGI wrapper received a non-HTTP-request message")
body.write(message.get("body", b""))
if not message.get("more_body"):
break
body.seek(0)
# Wrap send so it can be called from the subthread
self.sync_send = AsyncToSync(send)
# Call the WSGI app
await self.run_wsgi_app(body)
def build_environ(self, scope, body):
"""
Builds a scope and request body into a WSGI environ object.
"""
environ = {
"REQUEST_METHOD": scope["method"],
"SCRIPT_NAME": scope.get("root_path", "").encode("utf8").decode("latin1"),
"PATH_INFO": scope["path"].encode("utf8").decode("latin1"),
"QUERY_STRING": scope["query_string"].decode("ascii"),
"SERVER_PROTOCOL": "HTTP/%s" % scope["http_version"],
"wsgi.version": (1, 0),
"wsgi.url_scheme": scope.get("scheme", "http"),
"wsgi.input": body,
"wsgi.errors": BytesIO(),
"wsgi.multithread": True,
"wsgi.multiprocess": True,
"wsgi.run_once": False,
}
# Get server name and port - required in WSGI, not in ASGI
if "server" in scope:
environ["SERVER_NAME"] = scope["server"][0]
environ["SERVER_PORT"] = str(scope["server"][1])
else:
environ["SERVER_NAME"] = "localhost"
environ["SERVER_PORT"] = "80"
if "client" in scope:
environ["REMOTE_ADDR"] = scope["client"][0]
# Go through headers and make them into environ entries
for name, value in self.scope.get("headers", []):
name = name.decode("latin1")
if name == "content-length":
corrected_name = "CONTENT_LENGTH"
elif name == "content-type":
corrected_name = "CONTENT_TYPE"
else:
corrected_name = "HTTP_%s" % name.upper().replace("-", "_")
# HTTPbis say only ASCII chars are allowed in headers, but we latin1 just in case
value = value.decode("latin1")
if corrected_name in environ:
value = environ[corrected_name] + "," + value
environ[corrected_name] = value
return environ
def start_response(self, status, response_headers, exc_info=None):
"""
WSGI start_response callable.
"""
# Don't allow re-calling once response has begun
if self.response_started:
raise exc_info[1].with_traceback(exc_info[2])
# Don't allow re-calling without exc_info
if hasattr(self, "response_start") and exc_info is None:
raise ValueError(
"You cannot call start_response a second time without exc_info"
)
# Extract status code
status_code, _ = status.split(" ", 1)
status_code = int(status_code)
# Extract headers
headers = [
(name.lower().encode("ascii"), value.encode("ascii"))
for name, value in response_headers
]
# Extract content-length
self.response_content_length = None
for name, value in response_headers:
if name.lower() == "content-length":
self.response_content_length = int(value)
# Build and send response start message.
self.response_start = {
"type": "http.response.start",
"status": status_code,
"headers": headers,
}
@sync_to_async
def run_wsgi_app(self, body):
"""
Called in a subthread to run the WSGI app. We encapsulate like
this so that the start_response callable is called in the same thread.
"""
# Translate the scope and incoming request body into a WSGI environ
environ = self.build_environ(self.scope, body)
# Run the WSGI app
bytes_sent = 0
for output in self.wsgi_application(environ, self.start_response):
# If this is the first response, include the response headers
if not self.response_started:
self.response_started = True
self.sync_send(self.response_start)
# If the application supplies a Content-Length header
if self.response_content_length is not None:
# The server should not transmit more bytes to the client than the header allows
bytes_allowed = self.response_content_length - bytes_sent
if len(output) > bytes_allowed:
output = output[:bytes_allowed]
self.sync_send(
{"type": "http.response.body", "body": output, "more_body": True}
)
bytes_sent += len(output)
# The server should stop iterating over the response when enough data has been sent
if bytes_sent == self.response_content_length:
break
# Close connection
if not self.response_started:
self.response_started = True
self.sync_send(self.response_start)
self.sync_send({"type": "http.response.body"})

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@ -0,0 +1 @@
import os; var = 'SETUPTOOLS_USE_DISTUTILS'; enabled = os.environ.get(var, 'stdlib') == 'local'; enabled and __import__('_distutils_hack').add_shim();

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@ -0,0 +1,24 @@
from django.utils.version import get_version
VERSION = (3, 1, 3, 'final', 0)
__version__ = get_version(VERSION)
def setup(set_prefix=True):
"""
Configure the settings (this happens as a side effect of accessing the
first setting), configure logging and populate the app registry.
Set the thread-local urlresolvers script prefix if `set_prefix` is True.
"""
from django.apps import apps
from django.conf import settings
from django.urls import set_script_prefix
from django.utils.log import configure_logging
configure_logging(settings.LOGGING_CONFIG, settings.LOGGING)
if set_prefix:
set_script_prefix(
'/' if settings.FORCE_SCRIPT_NAME is None else settings.FORCE_SCRIPT_NAME
)
apps.populate(settings.INSTALLED_APPS)

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@ -0,0 +1,9 @@
"""
Invokes django-admin when the django module is run as a script.
Example: python -m django check
"""
from django.core import management
if __name__ == "__main__":
management.execute_from_command_line()

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