.. contents::
.. warning::
This recipe has been deprecated in favor of `djc.recipe2`_.
If you are starting a new project,
**don't use this package**,
use `djc.recipe2`_.
This package might see minor bug fixes to keep existing buildouts running,
but it won't gain new features.
This recipe allows you to setup a Django_ project through `zc.buildout`_.
Usage
*****
The main scope of the recipe is to abstract out the ``settings.py`` file,
allowing settings to reside inside the buildout instead of having them reside
into code (leading to an awkard handling of the same in respect to versioning,
for example). The ``settings.py`` file is generated by a template, either the
default one, the default one and a user extension, or a totally new one.
The template uses the Tempita_ templating system.
The most basic usage of this recipe is as follows: ::
[buildout]
parts = django
[django]
recipe = djc.recipe
project = my.project
Where ``my.project`` is an importable package containing a ``urls`` module and
a ``templates`` directory.
As you see, very few options are specified here: the defaults are used to build
up the ``settings.py`` file.
Of course, real examples tend to be slightly more complex: see Options_,
`Default template options`_ and `Example usage`_ for more details.
Running tests
*************
The ``README.txt`` located within the package also acts as main doctest.
To run the tests, check out the source, and then bootstrap and run the buildout::
$ python bootstrap.py
$ bin/buildout
Then you can run the tests using::
$ bin/test
Links
*****
- Code repository: http://github.com/abstract-open-solutions/djc.recipe
- Discussions at https://groups.google.com/group/djcrecipe
- Comments and questions at info@abstract.it
.. _Django: http://www.djangoproject.com/
.. _`zc.buildout`: http://www.buildout.org/
.. _Satchmo: http://www.satchmoproject.com
.. _`djc.recipe2`: http://pypi.python.org/pypi/djc.recipe2
Detailed Documentation
**********************
Options
=======
The options of this recipe are not fixed, as many of those are used exclusively
within the settings template file (see Templating_).
Here we present the options that have an impact on the recipe aswell:
project
This identifies a python module (in dotted notation) that can serve as
project package. The bare minimum for a project package is to contain a
``urls.py`` file and a ``templates`` directory. It is mandatory unless both
the ``urlconf`` and ``templates`` option are defined.
urlconf
Identifies the module that contains the url definition: if omitted the file
``urls.py`` inside the module given as ``project`` is used.
templates
Identifies the templates directory. If omitted, the directory named
``templates`` located in the module given as ``project`` is used.
static-directory
Identifies the folder into which static content (images, CSS and
Javascripts) will go. Relatives path are considered relative to the
buildout directory. The directory will be created if not present, and
nothing will be done if it already exists. If omitted, defaults to
``static``.
media-directory
Identifies the folder into which uploaded files will go. If omitted,
defaults to ``media``.
settings-template
If specified, the given template is used to generate the ``settings.py``
file, if not provided, the default template will be used. See Templating_
for more details.
settings-template-extension
If specified, the given template is appended to the template specified by
``settings template`` or to the default one.
static-origin
If specified, defines directories from which to copy the static files that
have to go in ``static-directory``: see `Static origin`_ for more details.
link-static-origin
Boolean value, defaults to ``false``. If set, the files will be symlinked
instead of copied. Does work only on unix.
media-origin
If specified, defines directories from which to copy the data files that
have to go in ``media-directory``: see ``static-origin`` option for
details.
base-settings
A settings module (only absolute imports) that is extended by the current
settings, for example ``my.module.settings``.
If specified, the defaults for ``apps``, ``middleware`` and
``template-loaders`` becomes an empty string (resulting into them not being
written at all).
It is unset by default.
wsgi
Defaults to ``false``. If set to ``true`` (or ``on`` or ``1``) creates a
script in ``parts/$partname`` named ``$partname.wsgi.py`` that can be used
as WSGI script in Apache or other WSGI enabled webserver.
wsgi-logfile
If set, the log will be redirected here: defaults to not being set.
wsgi-loglevel
Sets the log level: it is only processed if ``wsgi-loglevel`` is also set.
The accepted values are: ``debug``, ``info``, ``warning``, ``error``,
``critical``
coding
The encoding of the resulting settings file. Defaults to ``utf-8``.
Advanced options
----------------
.. note:: All these options are optional and should not be necessary under
normal conditions, but might be useful to advanced users.
The following advanced options are supported:
extra-paths
A number of non-standard paths where additional python modules are located.
pth-files
A number of pth-files from which to load additional python modulesthat
should be present in the buildout.
initialization
Allows extra python code to be added to both the manage and the *WSGI*
script: see `Custom initialization`_ for more details.
environment-vars
Allows one to override OS environment vars by setting them during
``manage.py`` run. One environment variable name and value per line, space
separated. Variable values can be hardcoded or buildout template mechanism
can be used where you refer to other variables set in buildout.
Example::
environment-vars =
GOOGLE_APPENGINE_PROJECT_ROOT ${buildout:appengine-base-path}
TZ Europe/Helsinki
You might want to also check ``gocept.recipe.env`` buildout recipe if you
wish to extend existing environment variables, like ``PATH``.
See `Custom initialization`_ for more details and an example.
Templating
==========
The ``settings.py`` file is generated by interpolating the options of the
buildout section with a template, be it the default one or the one provided by
the ``settings-template`` option.
The template must be a valid Tempita_ template, to which the whole options of
the current buildout section is passed as namespace, integrated as follow:
1. In the options name, all minuses (``-``) are converted to underscores
(``_``)
2. The option ``name`` and ``secret`` are added, respectively mapping to the
buildout section name and to a randomly-generated secret [#]_.
3. A serie of functions is added to the namespace to simplify the handling of
some situations, see below for more details.
Functions
---------
A certain number of functions can be used inside the templates:
absolute_url
Takes a path and, if it is relative, concatenates it with the buildout
location to make it absolute.
listify
Takes a chunk of data, splits it into lines, trims those lines and returns
the obtained list, from which void strings are purged.
rfc822tuplize
This function is quite specialized and takes any string in the form
``Full Name <email.address@example.com>`` into a tuple composed by the full
name and the mail address. It will return a tuple with the unchanged data
if the data fed in does not conform to the specifics.
boolify
This functions returns ``True`` if the data fed is is any of ``true``,
``on``, ``1`` (case- insensitive) and ``False`` otherwise
join
Equivalent of string's ``join()`` method, with the data to join as first
parameter, the *infix* as second and two optional parameters *prefix*
(added just one to the beginning) and *suffix* (added just one to the end)
dump
An alias of ``repr``.
Default template options
------------------------
The default template accepts a number of options. They are to be considered all
optional, as sensible defaults will be provided if omitted.
database
The settings of the default Django database, in the form
``engine=<backend> (user=<user> password=<password>) (host=<host>) (port=<port>) name=<name> (options=(<options>))``.
Parenthesized values are to be considered as optional. It is to be noted
that the options are expected to be enclosed within parentesis (``(``),
separated by comma and in the form ``<name>=<value>``.
An example url might be:
``engine=django.db.backends.mysql user=usr password=pwd host=localhost port=3306 name=mydb options=(opt1=val1,opt2=val2)``
where ``usr``, ``pwd``, ``mydb`` etc should be replaced by your
configuration values.
Defaults to
``engine=django.db.backends.sqlite3 name=/${buildout:directory}/storage.db``
.. note::
The old url-like format is still functioning but is currently
deprecated and might be removed in the future.
additional-databases
A list of databases in the form ``name=parameters``, each on one line,
where ``name`` is the Django-internal database name and ``parameters`` is
the database settings in the same form as that provided by ``database``
media-url
The static content prefix path. Defaults to ``media``
admin-media
The admin only static content prefix path. Defaults to ``admin_media``
timezone
The timezone: defaults to ``America/Chicago``
language-code
The language code: defaults to ``en-us``
use-l10n
Whether to use *l10n* or not: defaults to ``true``
server-mail
The email address from which site-generate mails come from. Defaults to
``root@localhost``
admins
The list of site admins, in *RFC822* form. Defaults to
``John Smith <root@localhost>``
managers
The list of managers: same as for *admins*. Defaults to copy the value of
*admins*
middleware
The list of middleware classes to load. If an empty string, the value is
not written at all.
apps
The list of apps to load. If empty, the value is not written at all.
template-loaders
The list of template loaders to use. If empty, the value is not written at
all.
debug
If ``true``, activates debug mode. Defaults to ``false``
internal-ips
The IPs that are allowed to see full stack traces when in debug. Defaults
to ``127.0.0.1``
site-id
The Django site id. Defaults to unset.
template-context-processors
The Django template context processors. Defaults to unset.
authentication-backends
The Django authentication backends. Defaults to unset
languages
A list of supported languages in the form ``code Fullname``, for example
``en-us English (US)``. Defaults to unset.
mail-backend
The mail backend to use. Defaults to
``django.core.mail.backends.smtp.EmailBackend``.
mail-filepath
The directory to use if the file mail backend is used [#]_.
smtp-host
The SMTP host to use when sending mail. Defaults to unset.
smtp-port
The SMTP server port. Defaults to unset.
smtp-user
The username to use to connect to the SMTP server. Defaults to unset.
smtp-password
The password to use to connect to the SMTP server. This is not valid if
``smtp-user`` is not set aswell. Defaults to unset.
smtp-tls
Whether TLS should be used when connecting to the SMTP server (boolean
option). Defaults to ``false``.
site-domain
The site domain. Defaults to unset.
site-name
The site title. Defaults to unset.
cache-backend
The cache backend. Defaults to ``locmem:///``.
cache-timeout
The cache timeout in seconds. Defaults to ``60*5``.
cache-prefix
The cache prefix (prefixed at all cache IDs). Defaults to ``Z``.
fixture-dirs
The directories into which search for fixtures. Not set by default.
Deprecated options
------------------
These options are still supported within templates, but they are pending
deletion.
database-engine
The database engine to use.
database-name
The name of the database to use.
database-user
The username to use when connecting to the database server. Defaults to
empty string.
database-password
The password to use when connecting to the database server. Defaults to
empty string.
database-host
The host on which the database server resides. Defaults to empty string.
database-port
The port on which the database server accepts connections. Defaults to
empty string.
Example usage
=============
As first thing, we need to have a Django project egg around. We have made a
very simple one just for testing and we have created a source distribution for
it located in ``packages``.
This is of course not the only way you can distribute and obtain the project
egg: for example, during developement, it is recommended to use `mr.developer`_
for that.
That cleared, we create the most simple buildout conceivable using this recipe ::
>>> write('buildout.cfg',
... """
... [buildout]
... parts = django
... offline = false
... download-cache = %s
... newest = false
... index = http://pypi.python.org/simple/
... find-links = packages
...
... [django]
... recipe = djc.recipe
... project = dummydjangoprj
... """ % cache_dir)
And run it ::
>>> print "start\n", system(buildout)
start
...
Installing django.
Getting distribution for 'dummydjangoprj'.
...
django: Generating settings in ...
django: Making empty static directory ...
django: Creating script at ...
Generated script ...
...
<BLANKLINE>
This generated some files and directories for us:
1. A Django ``manage.py`` wrapper located at ``bin/django``
2. A media directory (empty) at ``static`` (default option)
3. A settings file located in ``parts/django/djc_recipe_django/settings.py``
So, as we can see, we have a ``static`` directory in the root, a ``bin/django``
script and a ``parts/django`` part ::
>>> ls(sample_buildout)
- .installed.cfg
- .secret.cfg
d bin
- buildout.cfg
d develop-eggs
d eggs
d media
d packages
d parts
d src
d static
>>> ls('bin')
- buildout
- django
>>> ls('parts')
d buildout
d django
Let's look at this first ::
>>> ls('parts', 'django')
d djc_recipe_django
>>> ls('parts', 'django', 'djc_recipe_django')
- __init__.py
- settings.py
Therefore, we can see how ``djc_recipe_django`` is actually an importable
python module.
If we examine it::
>>> cat('parts', 'django', 'djc_recipe_django', 'settings.py')
# coding=utf-8
SERVER_EMAIL = 'root@localhost'
ADMINS = (
<BLANKLINE>
('John Smith', 'root@localhost'),
)
MANAGERS = ADMINS
<BLANKLINE>
<BLANKLINE>
DATABASES = {'default': {'ENGINE': 'django.db.backends.sqlite3', 'NAME': '/sample-buildout/storage.db'}}
<BLANKLINE>
TIME_ZONE = 'America/Chicago'
<BLANKLINE>
LANGUAGE_CODE = 'en-us'
<BLANKLINE>
USE_L10N = True
<BLANKLINE>
STATIC_ROOT = '.../static'
<BLANKLINE>
STATIC_URL = '/static/'
<BLANKLINE>
MEDIA_ROOT = '.../media'
<BLANKLINE>
MEDIA_URL = '/media/'
<BLANKLINE>
ADMIN_MEDIA_PREFIX = '/admin_media/'
<BLANKLINE>
SECRET_KEY = '...'
<BLANKLINE>
ROOT_URLCONF = 'dummydjangoprj.urls'
<BLANKLINE>
<BLANKLINE>
TEMPLATE_DIRS = (
'.../dummydjangoprj/templates',
)
<BLANKLINE>
EMAIL_BACKEND = 'django.core.mail.backends.smtp.EmailBackend'
EMAIL_USE_TLS = False
<BLANKLINE>
CACHE_BACKEND = 'locmem:///'
CACHE_TIMEOUT = 60*5
CACHE_PREFIX = 'Z'
<BLANKLINE>
DEBUG = False
TEMPLATE_DEBUG = DEBUG
As you can see, this is pretty much the standard Django ``settings.py`` as
created by Django's ``django-admin``. It has the peculiarity of not residing in
a module, however, but is loaded at run time into the appropriate manage script
as a *ghost* module named ``_django_settings``.
Let's have a look at the manage script ::
>>> cat('bin', 'django')
#!...
<BLANKLINE>
import sys
sys.path[0:0] = [
...
]
<BLANKLINE>
import djc.recipe.manage
<BLANKLINE>
if __name__ == '__main__':
djc.recipe.manage.main('djc_recipe_django.settings')
As we can see, the ``main()`` function of the ``manage`` module is called,
passing in the file with the settings as only argument.
We can now try to set up an example development environment, passing
``debug = true`` to it::
>>> write('buildout.cfg',
... """
... [buildout]
... parts = django
... offline = false
... download-cache = %s
... newest = false
... index = http://pypi.python.org/simple/
... find-links = packages
...
... [django]
... recipe = djc.recipe
... project = dummydjangoprj
... debug = true
... """ % cache_dir)
>>> print "start\n", system(buildout)
start
...
Installing django.
django: Making ... a module
django: Generating settings in ...
django: Making empty static directory ...
django: Creating script at ...
Generated script ...
<BLANKLINE>
And look at the generated settings::
>>> cat('parts', 'django', 'djc_recipe_django', 'settings.py')
# coding=utf-8
SERVER_EMAIL = 'root@localhost'
ADMINS = (
<BLANKLINE>
('John Smith', 'root@localhost'),
)
MANAGERS = ADMINS
<BLANKLINE>
<BLANKLINE>
DATABASES = {'default': {'ENGINE': 'django.db.backends.sqlite3', 'NAME': '/sample-buildout/storage.db'}}
<BLANKLINE>
TIME_ZONE = 'America/Chicago'
<BLANKLINE>
LANGUAGE_CODE = 'en-us'
<BLANKLINE>
USE_L10N = True
<BLANKLINE>
STATIC_ROOT = '.../static'
<BLANKLINE>
STATIC_URL = '/static/'
<BLANKLINE>
MEDIA_ROOT = '.../media'
<BLANKLINE>
MEDIA_URL = '/media/'
<BLANKLINE>
ADMIN_MEDIA_PREFIX = '/admin_media/'
<BLANKLINE>
SECRET_KEY = '...'
<BLANKLINE>
ROOT_URLCONF = 'dummydjangoprj.urls'
<BLANKLINE>
<BLANKLINE>
TEMPLATE_DIRS = (
'.../dummydjangoprj/templates',
)
<BLANKLINE>
EMAIL_BACKEND = 'django.core.mail.backends.smtp.EmailBackend'
EMAIL_USE_TLS = False
<BLANKLINE>
CACHE_BACKEND = 'locmem:///'
CACHE_TIMEOUT = 60*5
CACHE_PREFIX = 'Z'
<BLANKLINE>
DEBUG = True
TEMPLATE_DEBUG = DEBUG
<BLANKLINE>
INTERNAL_IPS = (
'127.0.0.1',
)
Template overriding
-------------------
As it was said in Templating_, the default template can be overridden or
extended.
Let's start by extending it: ::
>>> write('template-extension.py.in',
... """
... # Here we can extend the template, using variables pulled in from the
... # buildout section, with the dashes converted to underscores
... MY_CONFIG_VARIABLE = '{{config_variable_one}}'
... """)
>>> write('buildout.cfg',
... """
... [buildout]
... parts = django
... offline = false
... download-cache = %s
... newest = false
... index = http://pypi.python.org/simple/
... find-links = packages
...
... [django]
... recipe = djc.recipe
... project = dummydjangoprj
... settings-template-extension = template-extension.py.in
... config-variable-one = test
... """ % cache_dir)
Launch the buildout and then take a look at the generated ``settings.py``
file ::
>>> print system(buildout)
Uninstalling django.
Installing django.
...
Generated script ...
<BLANKLINE>
>>> cat('parts', 'django', 'djc_recipe_django', 'settings.py')
# coding=utf-8
SERVER_EMAIL = 'root@localhost'
ADMINS = (
<BLANKLINE>
('John Smith', 'root@localhost'),
)
MANAGERS = ADMINS
<BLANKLINE>
<BLANKLINE>
DATABASES = {'default': {'ENGINE': 'django.db.backends.sqlite3', 'NAME': '/sample-buildout/storage.db'}}
<BLANKLINE>
TIME_ZONE = 'America/Chicago'
<BLANKLINE>
LANGUAGE_CODE = 'en-us'
<BLANKLINE>
USE_L10N = True
<BLANKLINE>
STATIC_ROOT = '.../static'
<BLANKLINE>
STATIC_URL = '/static/'
<BLANKLINE>
MEDIA_ROOT = '.../media'
<BLANKLINE>
MEDIA_URL = '/media/'
<BLANKLINE>
ADMIN_MEDIA_PREFIX = '/admin_media/'
<BLANKLINE>
SECRET_KEY = '...'
<BLANKLINE>
ROOT_URLCONF = 'dummydjangoprj.urls'
<BLANKLINE>
<BLANKLINE>
TEMPLATE_DIRS = (
'.../dummydjangoprj/templates',
)
<BLANKLINE>
EMAIL_BACKEND = 'django.core.mail.backends.smtp.EmailBackend'
EMAIL_USE_TLS = False
<BLANKLINE>
CACHE_BACKEND = 'locmem:///'
CACHE_TIMEOUT = 60*5
CACHE_PREFIX = 'Z'
<BLANKLINE>
DEBUG = False
TEMPLATE_DEBUG = DEBUG
<BLANKLINE>
<BLANKLINE>
# Extension template template-extension.py.in
<BLANKLINE>
<BLANKLINE>
# Here we can extend the template, using variables pulled in from the
# buildout section, with the dashes converted to underscores
MY_CONFIG_VARIABLE = 'test'
As you can see, the aditional template has been simply appended to the default,
and the variable ``config-variable-one`` has been substituted.
If, instead, we totally override the template: ::
>>> write('template.py.in',
... """
... # Total override
... FOODS = (
... {{join(listify(foods), "',\\n '", "'", "',")}}
... )
... """)
>>> write('buildout.cfg',
... """
... [buildout]
... parts = django
... offline = false
... download-cache = %s
... newest = false
... index = http://pypi.python.org/simple/
... find-links = packages
...
... [django]
... recipe = djc.recipe
... project = dummydjangoprj
... settings-template = template.py.in
... foods =
... spam
... spam
... eggs
... spam
... """ % cache_dir)
Launch the buildout and then take a look at the generated ``settings.py``
file ::
>>> print system(buildout)
Uninstalling django.
Installing django.
...
Generated script ...
<BLANKLINE>
>>> cat('parts', 'django', 'djc_recipe_django', 'settings.py')
# Total override
FOODS = (
'spam',
'spam',
'eggs',
'spam',
)
As you can see, the builtin template has been totally discarded.
Static origin
=============
Static files are generally not served through Django_, but instead the
front-end web server takes care to serve them by exposing a directory on the
filesystem to the web.
However, many static files (think ``.js`` or ``.css``) are part of the
functionality of a project or application, and would be interesting to be able
to distribute them alongside the code.
.. note:: The method here described works only for applications and packages
that are not installed as zipped modules: for example the egg default format
is a zipped file that does not get extracted after installation unless a
proper option is passed to ``easy_install``
The relevant resources can be included in the distributed package and use of
the ``static-origin`` option will allow them to be copied into the
``static-directory`` folder (see Options_).
A similar feature is present for media files (e.g. image uploads) as well
(option ``media-origin``, which ends up into ``media-directory``).
``static-origin`` can contain a list of static file sources, and each item of
the list can be either in the form ``package:directory`` or
``package:directory:destination``; ``package`` being the full dotted name of
the importable module, ``directory`` the path to the directory inside the
module containing static data, and ``destination`` an optional subdirectory
inside ``static-directory`` where to copy the files.
Let's then begin from the first, simple case, with a single source of static
data.
The source of static data is the package ``dummydjangoapp1``, residing as a
developement package inside ``src``. ::
>>> ls('src', 'dummydjangoapp1', 'dummydjangoapp1', 'static')
- lib1.js
- main.css
>>> cat('src', 'dummydjangoapp1', 'dummydjangoapp1', 'static', 'main.css')
body { font-family: "Helvetica" "Arial" sans-serif; }
Let's create a buildout config and run it ::
>>> write('buildout.cfg',
... """
... [buildout]
... parts = django
... offline = false
... download-cache = %s
... newest = false
... index = http://pypi.python.org/simple/
... find-links = packages
... develop = src/dummydjangoapp1
... eggs = dummydjangoapp1
...
... [django]
... recipe = djc.recipe
... project = dummydjangoprj
... static-directory = static
... static-origin = dummydjangoapp1:static
... """ % cache_dir)
>>> rmdir('static')
>>> print system(buildout)
Develop: '.../dummydjangoapp1'
Uninstalling django.
Installing django.
...
django: Making static directory '.../static'
...
Generated script ...
<BLANKLINE>
And now let's see what's in ``static`` ::
>>> ls('static')
- lib1.js
- main.css
>>> cat('static', 'main.css')
body { font-family: "Helvetica" "Arial" sans-serif; }
Let's now try using *two* sources: the second is another dummy app, named
``dummydjangoapp2``, that like the first one resides in ``src``.
Let's see what's in its ``static`` for us: ::
>>> ls('src', 'dummydjangoapp2', 'dummydjangoapp2', 'static')
- lib2.js
- main.css
It seems this app too defines a ``main.css``, so let's look at the content: ::
>>> cat('src', 'dummydjangoapp2', 'dummydjangoapp2', 'static', 'main.css')
h1 { color: #92B8D8; }
But this poses a problem! What happens when I put this as second source, and
both define ``main.css``? Well, the intuitive thing to do here is probably to
override the file, so that the source at the bottom is the top *skin layer*.
So if we have this buildout ::
>>> write('buildout.cfg',
... """
... [buildout]
... parts = django
... offline = false
... download-cache = %s
... newest = false
... index = http://pypi.python.org/simple/
... find-links = packages
... develop =
... src/dummydjangoapp1
... src/dummydjangoapp2
... eggs =
... dummydjangoapp1
... dummydjangoapp2
...
... [django]
... recipe = djc.recipe
... project = dummydjangoprj
... static-directory = static
... static-origin =
... dummydjangoapp1:static
... dummydjangoapp2:static
... """ % cache_dir)
It is reasonable to expect that, after running it, the content of the
``main.css`` file is the one provided by the version held by
``dummydjangoapp2`` rather than the one held by ``dummydjangoapp2``.
A quick run and inspect confirms this: ::
>>> rmdir('static')
>>> print system(buildout)
Develop: '.../dummydjangoapp1'
Develop: '.../dummydjangoapp2'
Uninstalling django.
Installing django.
...
django: Making static directory '.../static'
...
Generated script ...
<BLANKLINE>
>>> ls('static')
- lib1.js
- lib2.js
- main.css
>>> cat('static', 'main.css')
h1 { color: #92B8D8; }
However, I might not want the ``main.css`` override to happen, or any other
clash between applications, for that matter. That is easily solved by a
buildout written like this ::
>>> write('buildout.cfg',
... """
... [buildout]
... parts = django
... offline = false
... download-cache = %s
... newest = false
... index = http://pypi.python.org/simple/
... find-links = packages
... develop =
... src/dummydjangoapp1
... src/dummydjangoapp2
... eggs =
... dummydjangoapp1
... dummydjangoapp2
...
... [django]
... recipe = djc.recipe
... project = dummydjangoprj
... static-directory = static
... static-origin =
... dummydjangoapp1:static:app1
... dummydjangoapp2:static:app2
... """ % cache_dir)
It is to be noticed that the ``static-origin`` values have now three elements,
the latter being the destination directory, which is defined as a subdirectory
of ``static``: in this case, both apps live in their subdirectory and no clash
happens ::
>>> rmdir('static')
>>> print system(buildout)
Develop: '.../dummydjangoapp1'
Develop: '.../dummydjangoapp2'
Uninstalling django.
Installing django.
...
django: Making static directory '.../static'
...
Generated script ...
<BLANKLINE>
>>> ls('static')
d app1
d app2
>>> ls('static', 'app1')
- lib1.js
- main.css
>>> cat('static', 'app1', 'main.css')
body { font-family: "Helvetica" "Arial" sans-serif; }
>>> ls('static', 'app2')
- lib2.js
- main.css
>>> cat('static', 'app2', 'main.css')
h1 { color: #92B8D8; }
Of course, this behaviour is not usefol only in this case: an application might
actually require you to put the static files in a precise subdirectory
irrespective of the fact that other apps might be present or a clash occur.
WSGI
====
The ``wsgi`` option will create a small module [#]_ inside ``parts``, that will
allow you to hook your application to an upstream ``wsgi`` server.
In order to have the ``buildout``, we must set the ``wsgi`` option of the
recipe to ``true``: ::
>>> write('buildout.cfg',
... """
... [buildout]
... parts = django
... offline = false
... download-cache = %s
... newest = false
... index = http://pypi.python.org/simple/
... find-links = packages
...
... [django]
... recipe = djc.recipe
... project = dummydjangoprj
... wsgi = true
... """ % cache_dir)
And launch the buildout: ::
>>> print "start\n", system(buildout)
start
...
Installing django.
...
django: Generating settings in ...
...
django: Creating script at .../bin/django
Generated script '.../bin/django'.
django: Creating script at .../parts/django/djc_recipe_django/app.py
Generated script '.../parts/django/djc_recipe_django/app.py'.
<BLANKLINE>
The script will then create inside ``parts/<part_name>/djc_recipe_<part_name>``
a python module containing an ``app.py`` file, which can be loaded by
``Apache`` or ``uwsgi``: ::
>>> ls('parts', 'django', 'djc_recipe_django')
- __init__.py
- app.py
- settings.py
>>> cat('parts', 'django', 'djc_recipe_django', 'app.py')
#!...
<BLANKLINE>
<BLANKLINE>
import sys
sys.path[0:0] = [
...
]
<BLANKLINE>
import djc.recipe.wsgi
<BLANKLINE>
application = djc.recipe.wsgi.main('djc_recipe_django.settings')
<BLANKLINE>
def app_factory(global_config, **local_config):
"""This function wraps our simple WSGI app so it
can be used with paste.deploy"""
return application
This will take care to inject all the needed paths into ``sys.path``, so no
further meddling should be needed.
Most *WSGI* servers do handle logging effectively by themselves, however if
this was not the case, an option to have a separate log output can be used:
``wsgi-logfile``, if set, will cause all the applicative log output to be
written to the specified file.
Let's write the buildout ::
>>> write('buildout.cfg',
... """
... [buildout]
... parts = django
... offline = false
... download-cache = %s
... newest = false
... index = http://pypi.python.org/simple/
... find-links = packages
...
... [django]
... recipe = djc.recipe
... project = dummydjangoprj
... wsgi = true
... wsgi-logfile = wsgi.log
... """ % cache_dir)
Launch it ::
>>> print "start\n", system(buildout)
start
...
Installing django.
...
django: Generating settings in ...
...
django: Creating script at .../bin/django
Generated script '.../bin/django'.
django: Creating script at .../parts/django/djc_recipe_django/app.py
Generated script '.../parts/django/djc_recipe_django/app.py'.
<BLANKLINE>
And check what changes ::
>>> cat('parts', 'django', 'djc_recipe_django', 'app.py')
#!...
<BLANKLINE>
<BLANKLINE>
import sys
sys.path[0:0] = [
...
]
<BLANKLINE>
import djc.recipe.wsgi
<BLANKLINE>
application = djc.recipe.wsgi.main(..., logfile = '.../wsgi.log')
<BLANKLINE>
def app_factory(global_config, **local_config):
"""This function wraps our simple WSGI app so it
can be used with paste.deploy"""
return application
As you can see, the log file parameter is passed to the application: it is to
be noted that all relative paths are intended as relative to the buildout root.
Custom initialization
=====================
Sometimes we have the need to add some particular initialization code to both
the manage script and the *WSGI* application, or have certain environment
variables set in that process without recurring to esoteric configuration.
The first need is resolved by the ``initialization`` option: suppose we want
our manage and *WSGI* scripts to check that an integer is really an integer
before starting (hence safely aborting if the world has turned upside down).
We would write our buildout::
>>> write('buildout.cfg', #doctest:-NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE
... """
... [buildout]
... parts = django
... offline = false
... download-cache = %s
... newest = false
... index = http://pypi.python.org/simple/
... find-links = packages
...
... [django]
... recipe = djc.recipe
... project = dummydjangoprj
... wsgi = true
... initialization =
... >>> if not isinstance(1, int):
... ... raise TypeError("World has turned upside down")
... """ % cache_dir)
And launch it::
>>> print "start\n", system(buildout)
start
...
Installing django.
...
django: Generating settings in ...
...
django: Creating script at .../bin/django
Generated script '.../bin/django'.
django: Creating script at .../parts/django/djc_recipe_django/app.py
Generated script '.../parts/django/djc_recipe_django/app.py'.
<BLANKLINE>
And see that our code is present in both ``bin/django`` and ``app.py``::
>>> cat('bin', 'django') #doctest:-NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE
#!...
<BLANKLINE>
import sys
sys.path[0:0] = [
...
]
<BLANKLINE>
<BLANKLINE>
<BLANKLINE>
if not isinstance(1, int):
raise TypeError("World has turned upside down")
<BLANKLINE>
<BLANKLINE>
import djc.recipe.manage
<BLANKLINE>
if __name__ == '__main__':
djc.recipe.manage.main('djc_recipe_django.settings')
>>> cat('parts', 'django', 'djc_recipe_django', 'app.py') #doctest:-NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE
#!...
<BLANKLINE>
<BLANKLINE>
import sys
sys.path[0:0] = [
...
]
<BLANKLINE>
<BLANKLINE>
if not isinstance(1, int):
raise TypeError("World has turned upside down")
<BLANKLINE>
<BLANKLINE>
import djc.recipe.wsgi
<BLANKLINE>
application = djc.recipe.wsgi.main('djc_recipe_django.settings')
<BLANKLINE>
def app_factory(global_config, **local_config):
"""This function wraps our simple WSGI app so it
can be used with paste.deploy"""
return application
It is important to note that the first line of the python code was prepended
with ``>>>`` while all the subsequent lines were prepended with ``...`` (plus a
space, on both). This syntax is necessary if you want to preserve indentation:
if you don't want, you can omit them but you must make sure to *never have
constructs*.
A slightly more useful example would be the need to have special environment
variables set before django is initialized, for example one might want to set
``GOOGLE_APPENGINE_PROJECT_ROOT`` to ``/my/path``.
In order to do so, the ``environment-vars`` option is used::::
>>> write('buildout.cfg',
... """
... [buildout]
... parts = django
... offline = false
... download-cache = %s
... newest = false
... index = http://pypi.python.org/simple/
... find-links = packages
...
... [django]
... recipe = djc.recipe
... project = dummydjangoprj
... wsgi = true
... environment-vars =
... GOOGLE_APPENGINE_PROJECT_ROOT /my/path
... """ % cache_dir)
The buildout is launched::
>>> print "start\n", system(buildout)
start
...
Installing django.
...
django: Generating settings in ...
...
django: Creating script at .../bin/django
Generated script '.../bin/django'.
django: Creating script at .../parts/django/djc_recipe_django/app.py
Generated script '.../parts/django/djc_recipe_django/app.py'.
<BLANKLINE>
And see that environment variables initialization code is present (via
``os.environ``) in both ``bin/django`` and ``app.py``::
>>> cat('bin', 'django')
#!...
<BLANKLINE>
import sys
sys.path[0:0] = [
...
]
<BLANKLINE>
<BLANKLINE>
<BLANKLINE>
import os
os.environ["GOOGLE_APPENGINE_PROJECT_ROOT"] = r"/my/path"
<BLANKLINE>
<BLANKLINE>
import djc.recipe.manage
<BLANKLINE>
if __name__ == '__main__':
djc.recipe.manage.main('djc_recipe_django.settings')
>>> cat('parts', 'django', 'djc_recipe_django', 'app.py')
#!...
<BLANKLINE>
<BLANKLINE>
import sys
sys.path[0:0] = [
...
]
<BLANKLINE>
<BLANKLINE>
<BLANKLINE>
import os
os.environ["GOOGLE_APPENGINE_PROJECT_ROOT"] = r"/my/path"
<BLANKLINE>
<BLANKLINE>
import djc.recipe.wsgi
<BLANKLINE>
application = djc.recipe.wsgi.main('djc_recipe_django.settings')
<BLANKLINE>
def app_factory(global_config, **local_config):
"""This function wraps our simple WSGI app so it
can be used with paste.deploy"""
return application
.. _Tempita: http://pypi.python.org/pypi/Tempita/
.. _`mr.developer`: http://pypi.python.org/pypi/mr.developer
.. [#] In all truth, it tries to read it from ``.secret.txt``: that failing the
secret code is generated and written to said file to be used
subsequently.
.. [#] For further information, refer to Django's docs at
http://docs.djangoproject.com/en/1.3/ref/settings/#email-file-path
.. [#] The small module is needed because ``uwsgi`` will refuse to load a rogue
script, but will load a module (hence, with some ``PYTHONPATH`` magic,
all comes along)
Contributors
************
* Simone Deponti <simone.deponti@abstract.it>, Initial Author
* Bruno Ripa <bruno.ripa@abstract.it>
* Mikko Ohtamaa (@moo9000)
* Dimitri Roche
Inital developement sponsored by `Abstract Open Solutions`_
.. _`Abstract Open Solutions`: http://www.abstract.it
Change history
**************
0.9.7 (2012-07-02)
==================
- Made SETTINGS_NAME configurable [Simone Deponti]
- Made several things more pythonic [Simone Deponti]
- Deprecated the version [Simone Deponti]
0.9.6 (2012-02-10)
==================
- Added *use-l10n* option to default template [Simone Deponti]
0.9.5 (2012-01-12)
==================
- Fixed media directory deletion bug [Simone Deponti]
0.9.4 (2012-01-03)
==================
- Fixed another bug with the copier when removing linked trees [Simone Deponti]
0.9.3 (2012-01-02)
==================
- Fixed bug with static directory copying [Simone Deponti]
0.9.2 (2011-12-23)
==================
- Added proper "smart" symlinking of static and origin [Simone Deponti]
0.9.1 (2011-12-13)
==================
- Fixed reST annoyance [Simone Deponti]
0.9 (2011-12-13)
================
- Added indentation preservation for initialization code. [Simone Deponti]
- Added a new default way to express databases [Simone Deponti]
- Added the ability to reference other sections. [Simone Deponti]
- Made 'settings.py' importable. [Simone Deponti]
- Sped up tests. [Simone Deponti]
0.8.1 (2011-09-22)
==================
- Fixed MANIFEST.in [Simone Deponti]
0.8 (2011-09-22)
================
- Refactored environment variables support [Simone Deponti]
- Added initialization support [Simone Deponti]
- Fixed documentation and added tests [Simone Deponti]
0.7.4 (2011-09-15)
==================
- Changed repository location [Simone Deponti]
- Made DEBUG explicit [Simone Deponti]
- Fixed paths on Windows [Dimitri Roche]
0.7.3 (2011-03-30)
==================
- Added environment-variables support [Mikko Ohtamaa]
0.7.2 (2010-11-18)
==================
- Fixed logging and added loglevel [Simone Deponti]
0.7.1 (2010-09-23)
==================
- Fixed multiple link bug [Simone Deponti]
0.7 (2010-09-23)
================
- Added ability to symlink the static origin [Simone Deponti]
- Refactored working set computation to achieve better
performances [Simone Deponti]
0.6.1 (2010-07-22)
==================
- Fixed encoding bug. [Simone Deponti]
0.6 (2010-07-20)
================
- Added new mail settings, restructured defaults. [Simone Deponti]
- Added support for multiple databases and new-style database settings.
[Simone Deponti]
- Fixed bugs in the tests and documentation. [Simone Deponti]
0.5.1 (2010-06-07)
==================
- Made the wsgi module more paster-compatible
0.5 (2010-06-03)
================
.. note:: This release is potentially backwards-incompatible: ``media-url`` and
``media-directory`` are now named ``static-url`` and
``static-directory`` respectively.
- Fixed MEDIA_URL mess [Simone Deponti]
- Added INTERNAL_IPS support [Simone Deponti]
- No defaults for middleware, template loaders and apps [Simone Deponti]
0.3.2 (2010-06-01)
==================
- Fixed WSGI support (uwsgi, custom loggers) [Simone Deponti]
- Fixed import bugs [Simone Deponti]
0.3.1 (2010-05-19)
==================
aka "Never release between midnight and 6am":
- Fixed absolute path bug for fixture dirs in default template [Simone Deponti]
- Fixed small template extension bug [Simone Deponti]
0.3 (2010-05-19)
================
- Added multiple media-origin support [Simone Deponti]
- Added fixture-dirs support [Simone Deponti]
0.2 (2010-05-17)
================
- First public release [Simone Deponti]
0.1 (2010-04-22)
================
- Created package [Simone Deponti]