Added status property to the user model.
This is to accommodate the ability to exclude users from using the website.
Note that since the access modules is currently undergoing some reconstruction changing the status will not actually effect the User yet.
Patch by: Lennard de Rijk
Reviewed by: to-be-reviewed
from django import http
from django.template import Context, RequestContext, loader
def page_not_found(request, template_name='404.html'):
"""
Default 404 handler.
Templates: `404.html`
Context:
request_path
The path of the requested URL (e.g., '/app/pages/bad_page/')
"""
t = loader.get_template(template_name) # You need to create a 404.html template.
return http.HttpResponseNotFound(t.render(RequestContext(request, {'request_path': request.path})))
def server_error(request, template_name='500.html'):
"""
500 error handler.
Templates: `500.html`
Context: None
"""
t = loader.get_template(template_name) # You need to create a 500.html template.
return http.HttpResponseServerError(t.render(Context({})))
def shortcut(request, content_type_id, object_id):
# TODO: Remove this in Django 2.0.
# This is a legacy view that depends on the contenttypes framework.
# The core logic was moved to django.contrib.contenttypes.views after
# Django 1.0, but this remains here for backwards compatibility.
# Note that the import is *within* this function, rather than being at
# module level, because we don't want to assume people have contenttypes
# installed.
from django.contrib.contenttypes.views import shortcut as real_shortcut
return real_shortcut(request, content_type_id, object_id)