{% if False %} Installation ------------
To start a new project with this template:
django-admin.py startproject \ --template=https://github.com/caktus/django-project-template/zipball/master \ --extension=py,rst,yml \ --name=Makefile,gulpfile.js,package.json <project_name>
{% endif %} {{ project_name|title }} ========================
Below you will find basic setup and deployment instructions for the {{ project_name }} project. To begin you should have the following applications installed on your local development system:
- Python >= 3.5
- NodeJS >= 4.2
- pip >= 1.5
- virtualenv >= 1.10
- virtualenvwrapper >= 3.0
- Postgres >= 9.3
- git >= 1.7
A note on NodeJS 4.2 for Ubuntu users: this LTS release may not be available through the Ubuntu repository, but you can configure a PPA from which it may be installed:
curl -sL https://deb.nodesource.com/setup_4.x | sudo -E bash - sudo apt-get install -y nodejs
You may also follow the manual instructions if you wish to configure the PPA yourself:
https://github.com/nodesource/distributions#manual-installation
The Django version configured in this template is conservative. If you want to
use a newer version, edit requirements/base.txt
.
First clone the repository from Github and switch to the new directory:
$ git clone [email protected]:[ORGANIZATION]/{{ project_name }}.git $ cd {{ project_name }}
To setup your local environment you can use the quickstart make target setup, which will install both Python and Javascript dependencies (via pip and npm) into a virtualenv named "{{ project_name }}", configure a local django settings file, and create a database via Postgres named "{{ project_name }}" with all migrations run:
$ make setup $ workon {{ project_name }}
If you require a non-standard setup, you can walk through the manual setup steps below making adjustments as necessary to your needs.
To setup your local environment you should create a virtualenv and install the necessary requirements:
# Check that you have python3.5 installed $ which python3.5 $ mkvirtualenv {{ project_name }} -p `which python3.5` ({{ project_name }})$ pip install -r requirements/dev.txt ({{ project_name }})$ npm install
Next, we'll set up our local environment variables. We use django-dotenv to help with this. It reads environment variables
located in a file name .env
in the top level directory of the project. The only variable we need
to start is DJANGO_SETTINGS_MODULE
:
({{ project_name }})$ cp {{ project_name }}/settings/local.example.py {{ project_name }}/settings/local.py ({{ project_name }})$ echo "DJANGO_SETTINGS_MODULE={{ project_name }}.settings.local" > .env
Create the Postgres database and run the initial migrate:
({{ project_name }})$ createdb -E UTF-8 {{ project_name }} ({{ project_name }})$ python manage.py migrate
If you want to use Travis to test your project,
rename project.travis.yml
to .travis.yml
, overwriting the .travis.yml
that currently exists. (That one is for testing the template itself.):
({{ project_name }})$ mv project.travis.yml .travis.yml
You should be able to run the development server via the configured dev script:
({{ project_name }})$ npm run dev
Or, on a custom port and address:
({{ project_name }})$ npm run dev -- --address=0.0.0.0 --port=8020
Any changes made to Python, Javascript or Less files will be detected and rebuilt transparently as long as the development server is running.
The deployment of requires Fabric but Fabric does not yet support Python 3. You must either create a new virtualenv for the deployment:
# Create a new virtualenv for the deployment $ mkvirtualenv {{ project_name }}-deploy -p `which python2.7` ({{ project_name }}-deploy)$ pip install -r requirements/deploy.txt
or install the deploy requirements globally:
$ sudo pip install -r requirements/deploy.txt
You can deploy changes to a particular environment with
the deploy
command:
$ fab staging deploy
New requirements or migrations are detected by parsing the VCS changes and will be installed/run automatically.