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Before starting on this article, be sure that you have gone through the previous 2 in this series. You can find them here:
Installing Django on Ubuntu 12.04
Installing mod_wsgi on Ubuntu 12.04
First of all, we will navigate to the home directory. Create a new directory and switch into it:
mkdir -p ~/public_html/domain1.com cd ~/public_html/domain1.com
After that, go ahead and create a project with the help of the django-admin.py tool.
django-admin.py startproject MyTestProject
To serve a Django app properly, it is important for Apache to know that it is supposed to forward certain types of requests to mod_wsgi. It is also important to create wsgi file that tells mod_wsgi how to handle these requests. We will setup a virtual host to accomplish these tasks. It will tell Apache the location of wsgi file and setup the file accordingly.
Open up the new virtual host file.
sudo nano /etc/apache2/sites-available/domain1.com
Next, enter below definition for the virtual host:
<VirtualHost *:80> ServerName domain1.com ServerAlias www.domain1.com WSGIScriptAlias / /home/username/public_html/domain1.com/MyTestProject.wsgi </VirtualHost>
Once we have instructed apache to use the wsgi file specified above and pass the receiving request to mod_wsgi, we will create the mod_wsgi file itself.
nano ~/public_html/domain1.com/MyTestProject.wsgi
Type in the following configuration:
import os import sys sys.path.append('~/public_html/domain1.com/') os.environ['DJANGO_SETTINGS_MODULE'] = 'MyTestProject.settings' import django.core.handlers.wsgi application = django.core.handlers.wsgi.WSGIHandler()
This definition ensures that the necessary modules will be imported. Moreover, it appends the Django project’s path to Python’s path and sets up a number of variables that helps mod_wsgi to work. Once you are done with it, you will need to enable the virtual host and restart Apache.
sudo a2ensite domain1.com sudo /etc/init.d/apache2 reload
If everything goes as expected, you will be able to see your domain (droplet IP) in the browser, and get the newly created application. Reload Apache in case you receive any NameVirtualHost or port errors.
There is a caveat to virtual host definitions. Static content is not supported. To serve the static content properly, you can update few settings in the file MyTestProject/settings.py and use following definition of virtual host.
<VirtualHost *:80> ServerName domain1.com ServerAlias www.domain1.com WSGIScriptAlias / /home/username/public_html/domain1.com/MyTestProject.wsgi Alias /static/ /home/username/public_html/domain1.com/static/ <Location "/static/"> Options -Indexes </Location> </VirtualHost>
The Alias Directive lets Apache know that it should not allow Django or mod_wsgi to handle anything located under the /static/ directory of your domain. You can use any directory but make sure that it is available under /home/username/public_html/domain1.com/. In our example, the name of the directory is static. Update settings.py by setting the variables for MEDIA_ROOT and MEDIA_URL.
nano /home/username/public_html/domain1.com/MyMyTestProject/settings.py
Find and update the settings below.
MEDIA_ROOT = '/home/username/public_html/domain1.com/static/' MEDIA_URL = '/static/'
Finally, restart Apache to the changes into effect.
sudo /etc/init.d/apache2 reload
You can access any items that have been placed in the MEDIA_ROOT through http://www.domain1.com/static/path/to/file.
It is a good idea to get into the habit of restarting apache every time you make changes to the project.
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I couldn’t get this working with Django 1.4. I used the wsgi.py file that is created with the project. Then I had to add the following lines to it so it would find the settings file:
base = os.path.dirname(os.path.dirname(file)) base_parent = os.path.dirname(base) sys.path.append(base) sys.path.append(base_parent)
Thanks a lot, it worked awesome. First time I tried Python, first time I tried Django and just worked straight away. This never happened before! Great tutorial, thanks again.
Tried it with Django 1.5. Didn’t work too well for me. Everything seemed to go more or less smoothly, but after I created the .wsgi file and restarted apache I noticed that nothing changed, still get the default apache web page rather than the Django app page.
I’m open to suggestions
Here is a full tutorial I wrote for setting up django 1.4 project on Apache2 with mod_wsgi and virtual env http://thecodeship.com/deployment/deploy-django-apache-virtualenv-and-mod_wsgi/ based from my experiences on digitalocean Ubuntu VPS. Hope you find it helpful.
Hi, I’m getting a 500 Internal Server Error. Where would I find an error log to review?
Answer, the log file is here: /var/log/apache2/error.log
On reading the output, the issue is here:
ImportError: Could not import settings ‘MyTestProject.settings’ (Is it on sys.path?): No module named MyTestProject.settings
Any suggestions?
Thanks, Matt
katlis’ comment above has provided me with the solution I needed.
I’ve followed the steps in this and the previous two pages for setting up django and I can’t get any further than the default apache2 ‘It works’ page.
sudo service apache2 restart gives the following;
“apache2: could not reliably determine the serv’s fully qualified domain name, using 127.0.0.1 for servername”
If I attempt, service apache2 restart , I instead get,
“(13) Permission denied: make_sock: could not bind to address 0.0.0.0:80 no listening sockets available, shutting down”
I’m relatively new to this but I’m presuming that something is blocking port 80. Does anyone know where to go from here with this?
Problem fixed. I had to run, sudo a2dissite default
Then I had to modify my wsgi.py file in my django project folder to include sys.path.append(‘/home/username/public_html/domain1.com/MyProject/’)
(This is so apache2 can find the settings module)
terminal > django-admin.py startproject MyTestProject -bash: django-admin.py: command not found
:( Try:
terminal > django-admin startproject MyTestProject
:)