At work we upgraded to the shiny-new Django 1.0, and we had to make a lot of small changes in the process. Most were what you would expect: adapting to the 1.0 way from the older 0.96 code we had been using.

But some of them were undoing ad-hoc patches to Django that we had accreted over the two years we’d been banging away at it. Over the course of a week or so, we’d found dozens of things broken, pointing to work yet to be done to finish the 1.0 upgrade, just as you’d expect. We have a large code base, and many things changed between 0.96 and 1.0.

Yesterday, I couldn’t log in on my dev server. Everyone else had been working just fine for the last few days, so it seemed mysterious. I asked our main Django guy Dave for help, and together we logged some session information, saw that there was no session being established at all. He realized what the problem was. “Oh, I changed SESSION_COOKIE_DOMAIN back to a string, we don’t use the list any more.” Turns out it was one of our ad-hoc Django changes that we threw overboard, and my settings file still had the old setting in it.

This is where the software should have diagnosed itself. If the settings/main.py file had these two lines added to it:

if isinstance ( SESSION_COOKIE_DOMAIN , list ):

raise Exception ( "SESSION_COOKIE_DOMAIN should be just a string now." )



Then I would have immediately gotten an exception on my server console (and browser) pointing to precisely what the problem was. I could have fixed it, and been running in two minutes, rather than being frustrated for half and hour, and bother Dave for another ten minutes.

Our development team is small (five), and all sit next to each other most days of the week, so the cost of this sort of out of band communication about changes to infrastructure is small. Also, I seem to have been the only developer who had a list in their settings file. So perhaps the cost here was a total of about an hour. Not so much, but adding those two lines in the first place would have cost about five minutes. And in addition to the five developers, there are probably five other “development environments” floating around for other purposes: intern work, demos, backups, evaluation tarballs sent to other groups, etc, and who knows if those will have the same problem.

And besides the simple time spent, there’s the loss of focus, the distraction of the other developers, the frustration, and so on. Developer attention is a very valuable resource. A speed bump like this in the road is like a CPU cache miss: your pipelines are flushed, and you have to re-focus. The time taken doesn’t tell the whole story.

Yesterday was just one of those days, because later, I was entering a zipcode into my dev machine, and was consistently told that there were no facilities near that zipcode, even though I knew there should be.

Turns out that somehow, my database table of zipcodes was empty. We still don’t know how that happened, but it would have been great if the software could have helped diagnose this anomalous condition. I changed this:

try :

z = ZipCode . objects . get ( pk = zipcode )

except ZipCode . DoesNotExist :

raise KeyError



to this:

try :

z = ZipCode . objects . get ( pk = zipcode )

except ZipCode . DoesNotExist :

if settings . DEBUG :

# Sometimes the problem isn't one bad zipcode, but that there

# are no zipcodes in the db at all!

if ZipCode . objects . all () . count () == 0 :

print "*** You have no zipcodes! Run bin/load_zipcodes.py"

raise KeyError



It would have been another half-hour saved. I don’t know how the zipcodes were deleted, so it’s hard to guess how often someone will be in this position again, but I know it is worth it to add these sorts of diagnostics. I’ll take a guess that the next time the zipcodes are missing will be five minutes before a critical demo, when everyone is panicky and no one will be able to think through the possible causes clearly. An unambiguous diagnostic will be very welcome.

Take the time to make your software self-diagnosing. The more you can automate about the job of writing software, the better your software will be.