I had an interesting time troubleshooting an issue with Django, WhiteNoise and static asset versioning. This may be obvious to experienced Django users, but not to me; I've maintained Flask and Rails apps before, but Django is a new beast. I'll document it here in case it helps somebody.
My goal was to set up asset versioning in a Django app to serve static files as filename.somehash.js instead of filename.js (same with other file types like css, png, etc). This is standard practice; most modern frameworks have that capability, and different ways to do it.
I had started using WhiteNoise because the internets suggested it was a much, much easier task than other ways to do it. I was hoping to do asset versioning and deploy a Cloudfront CDN at the same time, and WhiteNoise is set up to do just that.
Once everything was set up according to the documentation, I ran python manage.py collectstatic and saw the versioned file names getting generated. Checking the files themselves confirmed that. But when I loaded the app in a browser, only the unversioned file names were being requested.
After much head-scratching, I found this was because the app templates reference the static files with the standard {% load static %} method. The problem went away when I changed that to {% load static from staticfiles %} as suggested in this closed issue on the subject. Note that I didn't try the other option mentioned in that issue, {% load staticfiles %}, but that should also work.
Once the app restarted, beautiful unique file names were being requested and served. But I was occasionally getting 500 errors. I traced those back to instances where the app and WhiteNoise were being asked to serve files that no longer exist. Those references to deleted js, css, etc. files didn't actually harm the app's functionality, but when WhiteNoise is asked to serve them, it throws an exception and causes the app to 500.
That's not ideal behavior--my take is that 50x errors in a production app should never happen and always be handled gracefully when they do, so a library that causes 500s by actively raising exceptions rather than logging, catching and handling them gracefully isn't ideal. But them's the breaks, and I might yet submit a PR to the owner if I find the time.
In this particular app's case, this behavior was especially non-ideal because some of these files were referenced in commented-out JavaScript, and not actually requested; it looks like WhiteNoise and/or Django greedily consider anything that looks like a static file path to be actually requested, even if it's in code that doesn't execute.
The solution is simple--find all those dangling references and exterminate them! Use those 500s to your advantage by exercising the app and tailing your error logs. It's easy to argue that's something you should do no matter what, so it wasn't hard to convince the code owners it was the right thing to do.
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