Django upgrade from 1.10 to 1.11 DeprecationWarning

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I am trying to upgrade my project from Django 1.10 to 1.11:

>>> django.VERSION
(1, 10, 0, 'final', 1)

When I run python -Wall manage.py test, I get the following error message:

C:\Users\Environments\lib\site-packages\django\contrib\auth\base_user.py:52: DeprecationWarning: __class__ not set defining 'AbstractBaseUser' as <class 'django.contrib.auth.base_user.AbstractBaseUser'>. Was __classcell__ propagated to type.__new__? class AbstractBaseUser(models.Model):

I have looked around but could not find a solution to address this complaint. Given that I am extending the user class, this should not be particular to my project. So, has anyone found a way to resolve this?

class User(AbstractBaseUser, PermissionsMixin):
    """
    Custom user class
    """
    USER_TYPE = (
        ('owner', 'Owner'),
        ('developer', 'Developer'),
        ('general contractor', 'General Contractor'),
        ('general contractor\'s employee', 'General Contractor\'s Employee'),
        ('consultant', 'Consultant'),
        ('subcontractor', 'Subcontractor'),
        ('home owners', 'Home Owners'),
        ('construction financier', 'Construction Financier'),
        ('lawyer', 'Lawyer'),
        ('accountant', 'Accountant'),
        )

    email = models.EmailField(verbose_name = 'email address',unique = True, db_index = True)
    # email is the unique field that can be used for identification purposes


    joined = models.DateTimeField(auto_now_add = True)
    is_active = models.BooleanField(default = True)
    is_admin = models.BooleanField(default = False)
    is_superuser = models.BooleanField(default = False)
    #is_staff = models.BooleanField(default = False)
    user_type = models.CharField(max_length = 30, choices = USER_TYPE)
    group = models.ManyToManyField(Group, related_name = 'users')
    permission = models.ManyToManyField(Permission, related_name = 'users')

    objects = CustomUserManager()

    # Added:
    #company = models.ForeignKey(Company, related_name = 'users')

    USERNAME_FIELD = 'email'  # the unique identifier (mandatory)  The filed must have unique=True set in its definition (see above)


    def get_full_name(self):
        return self.email

    def get_short_name(self):
        return self.email

    def has_perm(self, perm, obj=None):
        ''' Does the user have a specific permission'''
        return True   # This may need to be changed depending on the object we want to find permission for

    def has_module_perms(self, app_label):
        ''' Does the user have permission to view the app 'app_label'? The default answer is yes.
        This may be modified later on. '''

        return True

    @property
    def is_staff(self):
        ''' Is the user a member of staff? '''
        return self.is_admin

    def __unicode__(self):
        return '{user_email}, {user_title} joined on {joined_date}'.format(user_email = self.email,
                                                                           user_title = self.user_type,
                                                                           joined_date = self.joined)
    def __str__(self):
        return '{user_email}, {user_title} joined on {joined_date}'.format(user_email = self.email,
                                                                           user_title = self.user_type,
                                                                           joined_date = self.joined)   
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kungphu On

This appears to be an issue with Django in Python 3.6 that doesn't impact 3.5. Downgrading from 3.6.x to 3.5.x should result in this going away, though it's not clear from your post whether it's actually causing problems at runtime or whether it's just an incorrectly triggered warning.