Can I run django server ingnore part of the project in Django?
I have a Django project with several apps, and one of the apps is need to import openstacksdk(because it relay on many linux libs, in Mac env is very troublesome ), so I must work in the Linux operate system. but now I have done that app which must import openstacksdk.
Now I cloned the project from Linux to my mac, there will report error which related to openstacksdk.
This is the directory of my project:
So, is there a way only to debug the apps that do not contain the openstacksdk-related app?
You can use Vagrant or some other virtual machine to run Linux on your Mac. I am working on a Django project in Windows and another developer is using Linux and another is using Mac and we can all run the same code because we have identical environments installed inside Vagrant. Takes a bit of work to set up initially, but it should solve the problem. Make sure to install an OS in Vagrant that is close to (identical isn't always possible, unfortunately) the production server OS.
I am currently trying to insert Docker in my Python development workflow of non-web applications.
What are the current best practices in Python development using Docker and an IDE?
I need the possibility to isolate my environments with Docker and debug my code.
On the web I found many articles about the use of Docker to deploy your code:
Production deployments: how to build Docker images ready to spin with your application already packaged inside
Development environments that mirror production: extension of the above, where you can use a container to fully QA the current status of a project before deploying to production while developing
I found a lot less about an actual development workflow, apart from some tips on how to use containers with shared volumes mapped to the directories on the host while developing web applications. This approach does not apply to non-web applications and it has some issues where a simple reload (with a LiveReload-like mechanism) is not enough so you need to restart your container(s).
The closest writing I could find is this "Eight Docker Development Patterns" blog post, but it does not consider an IDE (like PyCharm I am using now).
Maybe this question is the result of the 3-4 hours (and counting) spent configuring PyCharm to use a remote Python interpreter running in a Docker container. I expected a much better integration between the two.
Actually, I believe that using the Docker interpreter in PyCharm is the way to go. Which version of PyCharm do you have? If you have the 2016 version, it should be set up within seconds. You just have to make sure your docker machine is running and you must have your image built that you would like to use with your project. PyCharm will find the Docker machine in the "add remote interpreter" dialog automatically. Then select your image and you're all set up.
You can run your code as usual then, almost without any delay.
Here's what worked for me: https://www.jetbrains.com/help/pycharm/2016.1/configuring-remote-interpreters-via-docker.html
And make sure to update PyCharm, that solved some issues I had.
I am evaluating python for web development (mod_wsgi) and have noticed that on windows I have to restart Apache after changing my python source code. On Ubuntu the problem doesn't exists, probably because linux supports wsgi daemon mode.
Are there any way to have hot deployment during web development on windows, like configuring apache, replacing web server, some IDE, etc?
Accordning to the links in the comments above, restarts after source changes are always necessary on windows. On linux you still need to touch the wsgi file after source changes. Is it only me that finds this being a major drawback, compared to PHP?
I'm investigating ways to add vagrant to my development environment. I do most of my web development in python, and I'm interested in python-related specifics, however the question is more general.
I like the idea of having all development-related stuff isolated in virtual machine, but I haven't yet discovered an effective way to work with it. Basically, I see 3 ways to set it up:
Have all services (such as database server, MQ, etc) as well as an application under development to run in VM. Developer would ssh to VM and edit sources there, run app, tests, etc, all in an ssh terminal.
Same as 1), but edit sources on host machine in mapped directory with normal GUI editor. Run application and tests on vagrant via ssh. This seems to be most popular way to use vagrant.
Host only external services in VM. Install app dependencies into virtualenv on host machine and run app and tests from there.
All of these approaches have their own flaws:
Developing in text console is just too inconvenient, and this is the show-stopper for me. While I'm experienced ViM user and could live with it, I can't recommend this approach to anyone used to work in any graphical IDE.
You can develop with your familiar tools, but you cannot use autocompletion, since all python libs are installed in VM. Your tracebacks will point to non-local files. You will not be able to open library sources in your editor, ctags will not work.
Losing most of "isolation" feature: you have to install all compilers, *-dev libraries yourself to install python dependencies and run an app. It is pretty easy on linux, but it might be much harder to set them all up on OSX and on Windows it is next to impossible I guess.
So, the question is: is there any remedy for problems of 2nd and 3rd approaches? More specifically, how is it possible to create an isolated and easily replicatable environment, and yet enjoy all the comfort of development on host machine?
In most IDE you can add "library" path which are outside the project so that your code completion etc works. About the traceback, I'm unfamiliar with python but this sounds like issue that are resolved by "mapping" paths between servers and dev machine. This is generally the reason why #2 is often the way to go (Except when you have a team willing to do #1).
I'm running Mac OS X Leopard and wanted to know what the easy way to setup a web development environment to use Python, MySQL, Apache on my machine which would allow me to develop on my Mac and then easily move it to a host in the future.
I've been trying to get mod_wsgi installed and configured to work with Django and have a headache now. Are there any web hosts that currently use mod_wsgi besides Google, so I could just develop there?
FWIW, we've found virtualenv [http://pypi.python.org/pypi/virtualenv] to be an invaluable part of our dev setup. We typically work on multiple projects that use different versions of Python libraries etc. It's very difficult to do this on one machine without some way to provide a localized, customized Python environment, as virtualenv does.
Most Python applications are moving away from mod_python. It can vary by framework or provider, but most development effort is going into mod_wsgi.
Using the WSGI standard will make your Python application server agnostic, and allow for other nice additions like WSGI middleware. Other providers may only provide CGI (which won't scale well performance wise), or FastCGI.
I've worked with Django using only the included server in the manager.py script and have not had any trouble moving to a production environment.
If you put your application in a host that does the environment configuration for you (like WebFaction) you should not have problems moving from development to production.
I run a Linux virtual machine on my Mac laptop. This allows me to keep my development environment and production environments perfectly in sync (and make snapshots for easy experimentation / rollback). I've found VMWare Fusion works the best, but there are free open source alternatives such as VirtualBox if you just want to get your feet wet.
I share the source folders from the guest Linux operating system on my Mac and edit them with the Mac source editor of my choosing (I use Eclipse / PyDev because the otherwise excellent TextMate doesn't deal well with Chinese text yet). I've documented the software setup for the guest Linux operating system here; it's optimized for serving multiple Django applications (including geodjango).
For extra added fun, you can edit your Mac's /etc/hosts file to make yourdomainname.com resolve to your guest Linux boxes internal IP address and have a simple way to work on / test multiple web projects online or offline without too much hassle.
What you're looking for is Mod_Python. It's an Apache-based interpreter for Python. Check it out here:
http://www.modpython.org/
Google App Engine has done it for you. Some limitations but it works great, and it gives you a path to hosting free.
Of course Mac OS X, in recent versions, comes with Python and Apache. However you may want to have more flexibility in the versions you use, or you may not like the tweaks Apple has made to the way they are configured. A good way to get a more generic set of tools, including MySQL, is to install them anew. This will help your portability issues. The frameworks can be installed relatively easily with one of these open source package providers.
Fink
MacPorts
MAMP
mod_wsgi is really, really simple.
Pyerweb is a really simple (~90 lines including comments/whitespace) WSGI-compliant routing-framework I wrote. Basically the WSGI API is just a function that gets passed environ, and wsgi_start_response, and it returns a string.
envrion is a dict with the request info, for example environ['PATH_INFO'] is the request URI)
wsgi_start_response which is a callable function which you execute to set the headers,:
wsgi_start_response(output_response, output_headers)
output_response is the string containing the HTTP status you wish to send (200 OK etc), and output_headers is a list-of-tuples containing your headers (for example, [("Content-type", "text/html")] would set the content-type)
Then the function returns a string containing your output.. That's all there is to it!
To run it, using spawning you can just do spawn scriptname.my_wsgi_function_nae and it will start listening on port 8080.
To use it via mod_wsgi, it's documentation is good, http://code.google.com/p/modwsgi/wiki/QuickConfigurationGuide and there is a django specific section
The up-side to using mod_wsgi is it's the standard for serving Python web-applications. I recently decided to play with Google App Engine, and was surprised when Pyerweb (which I linked to at the start of this answer) worked perfectly on it, completely unintentionally. I was even more impressed when I noticed Django applications run on it too.. Standardisation is a good thing!
You may want to look into web2py. It includes an administration interface to develop via your browser. All you need in one package, including Python.
Check out WebFaction—although I don't use them (nor am I related to / profit from their business in any way). I've read over and over how great their service is and particularly how Django-friendly they are. There's a specific post in their forums about getting up and running with Django and mod_wsgi.
Like others before me in this thread, I highly recommend using Ian Bicking's virtualenv to isolate your development environment; there's a dedicated page in the mod_wsgi documentation for exactly that sort of setup.
I'd also urge you to check out pip, which is basically a smarter easy_install which knows about virtualenv. Pip does two really nice things for virtualenv-style development:
Knows how to install from source control (SVN, Git, etc...)
Knows how to "freeze" an existing development environement's requirements so that you can create that environment somewhere else—very very nice for multiple developers or deployment.