modwsgi.txt 8.8 KB

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  1. ==========================================
  2. How to use Django with Apache and mod_wsgi
  3. ==========================================
  4. Deploying Django with Apache_ and `mod_wsgi`_ is a tried and tested way to get
  5. Django into production.
  6. .. _Apache: https://httpd.apache.org/
  7. .. _mod_wsgi: http://www.modwsgi.org/
  8. mod_wsgi is an Apache module which can host any Python WSGI_ application,
  9. including Django. Django will work with any version of Apache which supports
  10. mod_wsgi.
  11. .. _WSGI: http://www.wsgi.org
  12. The `official mod_wsgi documentation`_ is fantastic; it's your source for all
  13. the details about how to use mod_wsgi. You'll probably want to start with the
  14. `installation and configuration documentation`_.
  15. .. _official mod_wsgi documentation: https://modwsgi.readthedocs.org/
  16. .. _installation and configuration documentation: https://modwsgi.readthedocs.org/en/develop/installation.html
  17. Basic configuration
  18. ===================
  19. Once you've got mod_wsgi installed and activated, edit your Apache server's
  20. ``httpd.conf`` file and add the following. If you are using a version of Apache
  21. older than 2.4, replace ``Require all granted`` with ``Allow from all`` and
  22. also add the line ``Order deny,allow`` above it.
  23. .. code-block:: apache
  24. WSGIScriptAlias / /path/to/mysite.com/mysite/wsgi.py
  25. WSGIPythonPath /path/to/mysite.com
  26. <Directory /path/to/mysite.com/mysite>
  27. <Files wsgi.py>
  28. Require all granted
  29. </Files>
  30. </Directory>
  31. The first bit in the ``WSGIScriptAlias`` line is the base URL path you want to
  32. serve your application at (``/`` indicates the root url), and the second is the
  33. location of a "WSGI file" -- see below -- on your system, usually inside of
  34. your project package (``mysite`` in this example). This tells Apache to serve
  35. any request below the given URL using the WSGI application defined in that
  36. file.
  37. The ``WSGIPythonPath`` line ensures that your project package is available for
  38. import on the Python path; in other words, that ``import mysite`` works.
  39. The ``<Directory>`` piece just ensures that Apache can access your
  40. :file:`wsgi.py` file.
  41. Next we'll need to ensure this :file:`wsgi.py` with a WSGI application object
  42. exists. As of Django version 1.4, :djadmin:`startproject` will have created one
  43. for you; otherwise, you'll need to create it. See the :doc:`WSGI overview
  44. documentation</howto/deployment/wsgi/index>` for the default contents you
  45. should put in this file, and what else you can add to it.
  46. .. warning::
  47. If multiple Django sites are run in a single mod_wsgi process, all of them
  48. will use the settings of whichever one happens to run first. This can be
  49. solved by changing::
  50. os.environ.setdefault("DJANGO_SETTINGS_MODULE", "{{ project_name }}.settings")
  51. in ``wsgi.py``, to::
  52. os.environ["DJANGO_SETTINGS_MODULE"] = "{{ project_name }}.settings"
  53. or by :ref:`using mod_wsgi daemon mode<daemon-mode>` and ensuring that each
  54. site runs in its own daemon process.
  55. .. admonition:: Fixing ``UnicodeEncodeError`` for file uploads
  56. If you get a ``UnicodeEncodeError`` when uploading files with file names
  57. that contain non-ASCII characters, make sure Apache is configured to accept
  58. non-ASCII file names::
  59. export LANG='en_US.UTF-8'
  60. export LC_ALL='en_US.UTF-8'
  61. A common location to put this configuration is ``/etc/apache2/envvars``.
  62. See the :ref:`unicode-files` section of the Unicode reference guide for
  63. details.
  64. Using a virtualenv
  65. ==================
  66. If you install your project's Python dependencies inside a `virtualenv`_,
  67. you'll need to add the path to this virtualenv's ``site-packages`` directory to
  68. your Python path as well. To do this, add an additional path to your
  69. ``WSGIPythonPath`` directive, with multiple paths separated by a colon (``:``)
  70. if using a UNIX-like system, or a semicolon (``;``) if using Windows. If any
  71. part of a directory path contains a space character, the complete argument
  72. string to ``WSGIPythonPath`` must be quoted:
  73. .. code-block:: apache
  74. WSGIPythonPath /path/to/mysite.com:/path/to/your/venv/lib/python3.X/site-packages
  75. Make sure you give the correct path to your virtualenv, and replace
  76. ``python3.X`` with the correct Python version (e.g. ``python3.4``).
  77. .. _virtualenv: http://www.virtualenv.org
  78. .. _daemon-mode:
  79. Using mod_wsgi daemon mode
  80. ==========================
  81. "Daemon mode" is the recommended mode for running mod_wsgi (on non-Windows
  82. platforms). To create the required daemon process group and delegate the
  83. Django instance to run in it, you will need to add appropriate
  84. ``WSGIDaemonProcess`` and ``WSGIProcessGroup`` directives. A further change
  85. required to the above configuration if you use daemon mode is that you can't
  86. use ``WSGIPythonPath``; instead you should use the ``python-path`` option to
  87. ``WSGIDaemonProcess``, for example:
  88. .. code-block:: apache
  89. WSGIDaemonProcess example.com python-path=/path/to/mysite.com:/path/to/venv/lib/python2.7/site-packages
  90. WSGIProcessGroup example.com
  91. If you want to serve your project in a subdirectory
  92. (``https://example.com/mysite`` in this example), you can add ``WSGIScriptAlias``
  93. to the configuration above:
  94. .. code-block:: apache
  95. WSGIScriptAlias /mysite /path/to/mysite.com/mysite/wsgi.py process-group=example.com
  96. See the official mod_wsgi documentation for `details on setting up daemon
  97. mode`_.
  98. .. _details on setting up daemon mode: https://code.google.com/p/modwsgi/wiki/QuickConfigurationGuide#Delegation_To_Daemon_Process
  99. .. _serving-files:
  100. Serving files
  101. =============
  102. Django doesn't serve files itself; it leaves that job to whichever Web
  103. server you choose.
  104. We recommend using a separate Web server -- i.e., one that's not also running
  105. Django -- for serving media. Here are some good choices:
  106. * Nginx_
  107. * A stripped-down version of Apache_
  108. If, however, you have no option but to serve media files on the same Apache
  109. ``VirtualHost`` as Django, you can set up Apache to serve some URLs as
  110. static media, and others using the mod_wsgi interface to Django.
  111. This example sets up Django at the site root, but explicitly serves
  112. ``robots.txt``, ``favicon.ico``, any CSS file, and anything in the
  113. ``/static/`` and ``/media/`` URL space as a static file. All other URLs
  114. will be served using mod_wsgi:
  115. .. code-block:: apache
  116. Alias /robots.txt /path/to/mysite.com/static/robots.txt
  117. Alias /favicon.ico /path/to/mysite.com/static/favicon.ico
  118. Alias /media/ /path/to/mysite.com/media/
  119. Alias /static/ /path/to/mysite.com/static/
  120. <Directory /path/to/mysite.com/static>
  121. Require all granted
  122. </Directory>
  123. <Directory /path/to/mysite.com/media>
  124. Require all granted
  125. </Directory>
  126. WSGIScriptAlias / /path/to/mysite.com/mysite/wsgi.py
  127. <Directory /path/to/mysite.com/mysite>
  128. <Files wsgi.py>
  129. Require all granted
  130. </Files>
  131. </Directory>
  132. If you are using a version of Apache older than 2.4, replace
  133. ``Require all granted`` with ``Allow from all`` and also add the line
  134. ``Order deny,allow`` above it.
  135. .. _Nginx: http://wiki.nginx.org/Main
  136. .. _Apache: https://httpd.apache.org/
  137. .. More details on configuring a mod_wsgi site to serve static files can be found
  138. .. in the mod_wsgi documentation on `hosting static files`_.
  139. .. _hosting static files: https://code.google.com/p/modwsgi/wiki/ConfigurationGuidelines#Hosting_Of_Static_Files
  140. .. _serving-the-admin-files:
  141. Serving the admin files
  142. =======================
  143. When :mod:`django.contrib.staticfiles` is in :setting:`INSTALLED_APPS`, the
  144. Django development server automatically serves the static files of the
  145. admin app (and any other installed apps). This is however not the case when you
  146. use any other server arrangement. You're responsible for setting up Apache, or
  147. whichever Web server you're using, to serve the admin files.
  148. The admin files live in (:file:`django/contrib/admin/static/admin`) of the
  149. Django distribution.
  150. We **strongly** recommend using :mod:`django.contrib.staticfiles` to handle the
  151. admin files (along with a Web server as outlined in the previous section; this
  152. means using the :djadmin:`collectstatic` management command to collect the
  153. static files in :setting:`STATIC_ROOT`, and then configuring your Web server to
  154. serve :setting:`STATIC_ROOT` at :setting:`STATIC_URL`), but here are three
  155. other approaches:
  156. 1. Create a symbolic link to the admin static files from within your
  157. document root (this may require ``+FollowSymLinks`` in your Apache
  158. configuration).
  159. 2. Use an ``Alias`` directive, as demonstrated above, to alias the appropriate
  160. URL (probably :setting:`STATIC_URL` + ``admin/``) to the actual location of
  161. the admin files.
  162. 3. Copy the admin static files so that they live within your Apache
  163. document root.
  164. Authenticating against Django's user database from Apache
  165. =========================================================
  166. Django provides a handler to allow Apache to authenticate users directly
  167. against Django's authentication backends. See the :doc:`mod_wsgi authentication
  168. documentation </howto/deployment/wsgi/apache-auth>`.