The Django source code repository

When deploying a Django application into a real production environment, youwill almost always want to use an official packaged release of Django.

However, if you’d like to try out in-development code from an upcoming releaseor contribute to the development of Django, you’ll need to obtain a clone ofDjango’s source code repository.

This document covers the way the code repository is laid out and how to workwith and find things in it.

High-level overview

The Django source code repository uses Git to track changes to the codeover time, so you’ll need a copy of the Git client (a program called git)on your computer, and you’ll want to familiarize yourself with the basics ofhow Git works.

Git’s website offers downloads for various operating systems. The site alsocontains vast amounts of documentation.

The Django Git repository is located online at github.com/django/django. It contains the full source code for allDjango releases, which you can browse online.

The Git repository includes several branches:

  • master contains the main in-development code which will becomethe next packaged release of Django. This is where most developmentactivity is focused.
  • stable/A.B.x are the branches where release preparation work happens.They are also used for bugfix and security releases which occur as necessaryafter the initial release of a feature version.
  • soc20XX/<project> branches were used by students who worked on Djangoduring the 2009 and 2010 Google Summer of Code programs.
  • attic/<project> branches were used to develop major or experimental newfeatures without affecting the rest of Django’s code.The Git repository also contains tags. These are the exact revisions fromwhich packaged Django releases were produced, since version 1.0.

The source code for the Djangoproject.comwebsite can be found at github.com/django/djangoproject.com.

The master branch

If you’d like to try out the in-development code for the next release ofDjango, or if you’d like to contribute to Django by fixing bugs or developingnew features, you’ll want to get the code from the master branch.

Note that this will get all of Django: in addition to the top-leveldjango module containing Python code, you’ll also get a copy of Django’sdocumentation, test suite, packaging scripts and other miscellaneous bits.Django’s code will be present in your clone as a directory nameddjango.

To try out the in-development code with your own applications, place thedirectory containing your clone on your Python import path. Then importstatements which look for Django will find the django module within yourclone.

If you’re going to be working on Django’s code (say, to fix a bug ordevelop a new feature), you can probably stop reading here and moveover to the documentation for contributing to Django, which covers things like the preferredcoding style and how to generate and submit a patch.

Other branches

Django uses branches to prepare for releases of Django.

In the past when Django was hosted on Subversion, branches were also used forfeature development. Now Django is hosted on Git and feature development isdone on contributor’s forks, but the Subversion feature branches remain in Gitfor historical reference.

Stable branches

These branches can be found in the repository as stable/A.B.xbranches and will be created right after the first alpha is tagged.

For example, immediately after Django 1.5 alpha 1 was tagged, the branchstable/1.5.x was created and all further work on preparing the code for thefinal 1.5 release was done there.

These branches also provide bugfix and security support as described inSupported versions.

For example, after the release of Django 1.5, the branch stable/1.5.xreceives only fixes for security and critical stability bugs, which areeventually released as Django 1.5.1 and so on, stable/1.4.x receives onlysecurity and data loss fixes, and stable/1.3.x no longer receives anyupdates.

Historical information

This policy for handling stable/A.B.x branches was adopted startingwith the Django 1.5 release cycle.

Previously, these branches weren’t created until right after the releasesand the stabilization work occurred on the main repository branch. Thus,no new feature development work for the next release of Django could becommitted until the final release happened.

For example, shortly after the release of Django 1.3 the branchstable/1.3.x was created. Official support for that release has expired,and so it no longer receives direct maintenance from the Django project.However, that and all other similarly named branches continue to exist, andinterested community members have occasionally used them to provideunofficial support for old Django releases.

Feature-development branches

Historical information

Since Django moved to Git in 2012, anyone can clone the repository andcreate their own branches, alleviating the need for official branches inthe source code repository.

The following section is mostly useful if you’re exploring the repository’shistory, for example if you’re trying to understand how some features weredesigned.

Feature-development branches tend by their nature to be temporary. Someproduce successful features which are merged back into Django’s master tobecome part of an official release, but others do not; in either case, therecomes a time when the branch is no longer being actively worked on by anydeveloper. At this point the branch is considered closed.

Unfortunately, Django used to be maintained with the Subversion revisioncontrol system, that has no standard way of indicating this. As a workaround,branches of Django which are closed and no longer maintained were moved intoattic.

For reference, the following are branches whose code eventually becamepart of Django itself, and so are no longer separately maintained:

  • boulder-oracle-sprint: Added support for Oracle databases toDjango’s object-relational mapper. This has been part of Djangosince the 1.0 release.
  • gis: Added support for geographic/spatial queries to Django’sobject-relational mapper. This has been part of Django since the 1.0release, as the bundled application django.contrib.gis.
  • i18n: Added internationalization support toDjango. This has been part of Django since the 0.90 release.
  • magic-removal: A major refactoring of both the internals andpublic APIs of Django’s object-relational mapper. This has been partof Django since the 0.95 release.
  • multi-auth: A refactoring of Django’s bundledauthentication framework which added support forauthentication backends. This hasbeen part of Django since the 0.95 release.
  • new-admin: A refactoring of Django’s bundledadministrative application. This became part ofDjango as of the 0.91 release, but was superseded by anotherrefactoring (see next listing) prior to the Django 1.0 release.
  • newforms-admin: The second refactoring of Django’s bundledadministrative application. This became part of Django as of the 1.0release, and is the basis of the current incarnation ofdjango.contrib.admin.
  • queryset-refactor: A refactoring of the internals of Django’sobject-relational mapper. This became part of Django as of the 1.0release.
  • unicode: A refactoring of Django’s internals to consistently useUnicode-based strings in most places within Django and Djangoapplications. This became part of Django as of the 1.0 release.When Django moved from Subversion to Git, the information about branch mergeswasn’t preserved in the source code repository. This means that the masterbranch of Django doesn’t contain merge commits for the above branches.

However, this information is available as a grafts file. You can restore itby putting the following lines in .git/info/grafts in your local clone:

  1. ac64e91a0cadc57f4bc5cd5d66955832320ca7a1 553a20075e6991e7a60baee51ea68c8adc520d9a 0cb8e31823b2e9f05c4ae868c19f5f38e78a5f2e
  2. 79e68c225b926302ebb29c808dda8afa49856f5c d0f57e7c7385a112cb9e19d314352fc5ed5b0747 aa239e3e5405933af6a29dac3cf587b59a099927
  3. 5cf8f684237ab5addaf3549b2347c3adf107c0a7 cb45fd0ae20597306cd1f877efc99d9bd7cbee98 e27211a0deae2f1d402537f0ebb64ad4ccf6a4da
  4. f69cf70ed813a8cd7e1f963a14ae39103e8d5265 d5dbeaa9be359a4c794885c2e9f1b5a7e5e51fb8 d2fcbcf9d76d5bb8a661ee73dae976c74183098b
  5. aab3a418ac9293bb4abd7670f65d930cb0426d58 4ea7a11659b8a0ab07b0d2e847975f7324664f10 adf4b9311d5d64a2bdd58da50271c121ea22e397
  6. ff60c5f9de3e8690d1e86f3e9e3f7248a15397c8 7ef212af149540aa2da577a960d0d87029fd1514 45b4288bb66a3cda401b45901e85b645674c3988
  7. 9dda4abee1225db7a7b195b84c915fdd141a7260 4fe5c9b7ee09dc25921918a6dbb7605edb374bc9 3a7c14b583621272d4ef53061287b619ce3c290d
  8. a19ed8aea395e8e07164ff7d85bd7dff2f24edca dc375fb0f3b7fbae740e8cfcd791b8bccb8a4e66 42ea7a5ce8aece67d16c6610a49560c1493d4653
  9. 9c52d56f6f8a9cdafb231adf9f4110473099c9b5 c91a30f00fd182faf8ca5c03cd7dbcf8b735b458 4a5c5c78f2ecd4ed8859cd5ac773ff3a01bccf96
  10. 953badbea5a04159adbfa970f5805c0232b6a401 4c958b15b250866b70ded7d82aa532f1e57f96ae 5664a678b29ab04cad425c15b2792f4519f43928
  11. 471596fc1afcb9c6258d317c619eaf5fd394e797 4e89105d64bb9e04c409139a41e9c7aac263df4c 3e9035a9625c8a8a5e88361133e87ce455c4fc13
  12. 9233d0426537615e06b78d28010d17d5a66adf44 6632739e94c6c38b4c5a86cf5c80c48ae50ac49f 18e151bc3f8a85f2766d64262902a9fcad44d937

Additionally, the following branches are closed, but their code wasnever merged into Django and the features they aimed to implementwere never finished:

  • full-history
  • generic-auth
  • multiple-db-support
  • per-object-permissions
  • schema-evolution
  • schema-evolution-ng
  • search-api
  • sqlalchemyAll of the above-mentioned branches now reside in attic.

Finally, the repository contains soc2009/xxx and soc2010/xxx featurebranches, used for the 2009 and 2010 Google Summer of Code projects.

Tags

Each Django release is tagged and signed by the releaser.

The tags can be found on GitHub’s tags page.