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  1. =====================
  2. How to install Django
  3. =====================
  4. This document will get you up and running with Django.
  5. Install Python
  6. ==============
  7. Being a Python Web framework, Django requires Python. It works with Python 2.7,
  8. 3.2 or 3.3.
  9. Get the latest version of Python at http://www.python.org/download/ or with
  10. your operating system's package manager.
  11. .. admonition:: Django on Jython
  12. If you use Jython_ (a Python implementation for the Java platform), you'll
  13. need to follow a few additional steps. See :doc:`/howto/jython` for details.
  14. .. _jython: http://jython.org/
  15. .. admonition:: Python on Windows
  16. On Windows, you might need to adjust your ``PATH`` environment variable
  17. to include paths to Python executable and additional scripts. For example,
  18. if your Python is installed in ``C:\Python27\``, the following paths need
  19. to be added to ``PATH``::
  20. C:\Python27\;C:\Python27\Scripts;
  21. Install Apache and mod_wsgi
  22. =============================
  23. If you just want to experiment with Django, skip ahead to the next
  24. section; Django includes a lightweight web server you can use for
  25. testing, so you won't need to set up Apache until you're ready to
  26. deploy Django in production.
  27. If you want to use Django on a production site, use `Apache`_ with
  28. `mod_wsgi`_. mod_wsgi can operate in one of two modes: an embedded
  29. mode and a daemon mode. In embedded mode, mod_wsgi is similar to
  30. mod_perl -- it embeds Python within Apache and loads Python code into
  31. memory when the server starts. Code stays in memory throughout the
  32. life of an Apache process, which leads to significant performance
  33. gains over other server arrangements. In daemon mode, mod_wsgi spawns
  34. an independent daemon process that handles requests. The daemon
  35. process can run as a different user than the Web server, possibly
  36. leading to improved security, and the daemon process can be restarted
  37. without restarting the entire Apache Web server, possibly making
  38. refreshing your codebase more seamless. Consult the mod_wsgi
  39. documentation to determine which mode is right for your setup. Make
  40. sure you have Apache installed, with the mod_wsgi module activated.
  41. Django will work with any version of Apache that supports mod_wsgi.
  42. See :doc:`How to use Django with mod_wsgi </howto/deployment/wsgi/modwsgi>`
  43. for information on how to configure mod_wsgi once you have it
  44. installed.
  45. If you can't use mod_wsgi for some reason, fear not: Django supports many other
  46. deployment options. One is :doc:`uWSGI </howto/deployment/wsgi/uwsgi>`; it works
  47. very well with `nginx`_. Additionally, Django follows the WSGI spec
  48. (:pep:`3333`), which allows it to run on a variety of server platforms. See the
  49. `server-arrangements wiki page`_ for specific installation instructions for
  50. each platform.
  51. .. _Apache: http://httpd.apache.org/
  52. .. _nginx: http://nginx.org/
  53. .. _mod_wsgi: http://code.google.com/p/modwsgi/
  54. .. _server-arrangements wiki page: https://code.djangoproject.com/wiki/ServerArrangements
  55. .. _database-installation:
  56. Get your database running
  57. =========================
  58. If you plan to use Django's database API functionality, you'll need to make
  59. sure a database server is running. Django supports many different database
  60. servers and is officially supported with PostgreSQL_, MySQL_, Oracle_ and
  61. SQLite_.
  62. If you are developing a simple project or something you don't plan to deploy
  63. in a production environment, SQLite is generally the simplest option as it
  64. doesn't require running a separate server. However, SQLite has many differences
  65. from other databases, so if you are working on something substantial, it's
  66. recommended to develop with the same database as you plan on using in
  67. production.
  68. In addition to the officially supported databases, there are :ref:`backends
  69. provided by 3rd parties <third-party-notes>` that allow you to use other
  70. databases with Django.
  71. In addition to a database backend, you'll need to make sure your Python
  72. database bindings are installed.
  73. * If you're using PostgreSQL, you'll need the `postgresql_psycopg2`_ package.
  74. You might want to refer to our :ref:`PostgreSQL notes <postgresql-notes>` for
  75. further technical details specific to this database.
  76. If you're on Windows, check out the unofficial `compiled Windows version`_.
  77. * If you're using MySQL, you'll need the ``MySQL-python`` package, version
  78. 1.2.1p2 or higher. You will also want to read the database-specific
  79. :ref:`notes for the MySQL backend <mysql-notes>`.
  80. * If you're using SQLite you might want to read the :ref:`SQLite backend notes
  81. <sqlite-notes>`.
  82. * If you're using Oracle, you'll need a copy of cx_Oracle_, but please
  83. read the database-specific :ref:`notes for the Oracle backend <oracle-notes>`
  84. for important information regarding supported versions of both Oracle and
  85. ``cx_Oracle``.
  86. * If you're using an unofficial 3rd party backend, please consult the
  87. documentation provided for any additional requirements.
  88. If you plan to use Django's ``manage.py migrate`` command to automatically
  89. create database tables for your models (after first installing Django and
  90. creating a project), you'll need to ensure that Django has permission to create
  91. and alter tables in the database you're using; if you plan to manually create
  92. the tables, you can simply grant Django ``SELECT``, ``INSERT``, ``UPDATE`` and
  93. ``DELETE`` permissions. After creating a database user with these
  94. permissions, you'll specify the details in your project's settings file,
  95. see :setting:`DATABASES` for details.
  96. If you're using Django's :doc:`testing framework</topics/testing/index>` to test
  97. database queries, Django will need permission to create a test database.
  98. .. _PostgreSQL: http://www.postgresql.org/
  99. .. _MySQL: http://www.mysql.com/
  100. .. _postgresql_psycopg2: http://initd.org/psycopg/
  101. .. _compiled Windows version: http://stickpeople.com/projects/python/win-psycopg/
  102. .. _SQLite: http://www.sqlite.org/
  103. .. _pysqlite: http://trac.edgewall.org/wiki/PySqlite
  104. .. _cx_Oracle: http://cx-oracle.sourceforge.net/
  105. .. _Oracle: http://www.oracle.com/
  106. .. _Sybase SQL Anywhere: http://code.google.com/p/sqlany-django/
  107. .. _IBM DB2: http://code.google.com/p/ibm-db/
  108. .. _Microsoft SQL Server 2005: https://bitbucket.org/Manfre/django-mssql/
  109. .. _Firebird: http://code.google.com/p/django-firebird/
  110. .. _ODBC: http://code.google.com/p/django-pyodbc/
  111. .. _removing-old-versions-of-django:
  112. Remove any old versions of Django
  113. =================================
  114. If you are upgrading your installation of Django from a previous version,
  115. you will need to uninstall the old Django version before installing the
  116. new version.
  117. If you installed Django using pip_ or ``easy_install`` previously, installing
  118. with pip_ or ``easy_install`` again will automatically take care of the old
  119. version, so you don't need to do it yourself.
  120. If you previously installed Django using ``python setup.py install``,
  121. uninstalling is as simple as deleting the ``django`` directory from your Python
  122. ``site-packages``. To find the directory you need to remove, you can run the
  123. following at your shell prompt (not the interactive Python prompt):
  124. .. code-block:: bash
  125. python -c "import sys; sys.path = sys.path[1:]; import django; print(django.__path__)"
  126. .. _install-django-code:
  127. Install the Django code
  128. =======================
  129. Installation instructions are slightly different depending on whether you're
  130. installing a distribution-specific package, downloading the latest official
  131. release, or fetching the latest development version.
  132. It's easy, no matter which way you choose.
  133. Installing a distribution-specific package
  134. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  135. Check the :doc:`distribution specific notes </misc/distributions>` to see if
  136. your platform/distribution provides official Django packages/installers.
  137. Distribution-provided packages will typically allow for automatic installation
  138. of dependencies and easy upgrade paths.
  139. .. _installing-official-release:
  140. Installing an official release with ``pip``
  141. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  142. This is the recommended way to install Django.
  143. 1. Install pip_. The easiest is to use the `standalone pip installer`_. If your
  144. distribution already has ``pip`` installed, you might need to update it if
  145. it's outdated. (If it's outdated, you'll know because installation won't
  146. work.)
  147. 2. (optional) Take a look at virtualenv_ and virtualenvwrapper_. These tools
  148. provide isolated Python environments, which are more practical than
  149. installing packages systemwide. They also allow installing packages
  150. without administrator privileges. It's up to you to decide if you want to
  151. learn and use them.
  152. 3. If you're using Linux, Mac OS X or some other flavor of Unix, enter the
  153. command ``sudo pip install Django`` at the shell prompt. If you're using
  154. Windows, start a command shell with administrator privileges and run
  155. the command ``pip install Django``. This will install Django in your Python
  156. installation's ``site-packages`` directory.
  157. If you're using a virtualenv, you don't need ``sudo`` or administrator
  158. privileges, and this will install Django in the virtualenv's
  159. ``site-packages`` directory.
  160. .. _pip: http://www.pip-installer.org/
  161. .. _virtualenv: http://www.virtualenv.org/
  162. .. _virtualenvwrapper: http://virtualenvwrapper.readthedocs.org/en/latest/
  163. .. _standalone pip installer: http://www.pip-installer.org/en/latest/installing.html#using-the-installer
  164. Installing an official release manually
  165. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  166. 1. Download the latest release from our `download page`_.
  167. 2. Untar the downloaded file (e.g. ``tar xzvf Django-X.Y.tar.gz``,
  168. where ``X.Y`` is the version number of the latest release).
  169. If you're using Windows, you can download the command-line tool
  170. bsdtar_ to do this, or you can use a GUI-based tool such as 7-zip_.
  171. 3. Change into the directory created in step 2 (e.g. ``cd Django-X.Y``).
  172. 4. If you're using Linux, Mac OS X or some other flavor of Unix, enter the
  173. command ``sudo python setup.py install`` at the shell prompt. If you're
  174. using Windows, start a command shell with administrator privileges and
  175. run the command ``python setup.py install``. This will install Django in
  176. your Python installation's ``site-packages`` directory.
  177. .. admonition:: Removing an old version
  178. If you use this installation technique, it is particularly important
  179. that you :ref:`remove any existing
  180. installations<removing-old-versions-of-django>` of Django
  181. first. Otherwise, you can end up with a broken installation that
  182. includes files from previous versions that have since been removed from
  183. Django.
  184. .. _download page: https://www.djangoproject.com/download/
  185. .. _bsdtar: http://gnuwin32.sourceforge.net/packages/bsdtar.htm
  186. .. _7-zip: http://www.7-zip.org/
  187. .. _installing-development-version:
  188. Installing the development version
  189. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  190. .. admonition:: Tracking Django development
  191. If you decide to use the latest development version of Django,
  192. you'll want to pay close attention to `the development timeline`_,
  193. and you'll want to keep an eye on the :ref:`release notes for the
  194. upcoming release <development_release_notes>`. This will help you stay
  195. on top of any new features you might want to use, as well as any changes
  196. you'll need to make to your code when updating your copy of Django.
  197. (For stable releases, any necessary changes are documented in the
  198. release notes.)
  199. .. _the development timeline: https://code.djangoproject.com/timeline
  200. If you'd like to be able to update your Django code occasionally with the
  201. latest bug fixes and improvements, follow these instructions:
  202. 1. Make sure that you have Git_ installed and that you can run its commands
  203. from a shell. (Enter ``git help`` at a shell prompt to test this.)
  204. 2. Check out Django's main development branch (the 'trunk' or 'master') like
  205. so:
  206. .. code-block:: bash
  207. git clone git://github.com/django/django.git django-trunk
  208. This will create a directory ``django-trunk`` in your current directory.
  209. 3. Make sure that the Python interpreter can load Django's code. The most
  210. convenient way to do this is via pip_. Run the following command:
  211. .. code-block:: bash
  212. sudo pip install -e django-trunk/
  213. (If using a virtualenv_ you can omit ``sudo``.)
  214. This will make Django's code importable, and will also make the
  215. ``django-admin.py`` utility command available. In other words, you're all
  216. set!
  217. If you don't have pip_ available, see the alternative instructions for
  218. `installing the development version without pip`_.
  219. .. warning::
  220. Don't run ``sudo python setup.py install``, because you've already
  221. carried out the equivalent actions in step 3.
  222. When you want to update your copy of the Django source code, just run the
  223. command ``git pull`` from within the ``django-trunk`` directory. When you do
  224. this, Git will automatically download any changes.
  225. .. _Git: http://git-scm.com/
  226. .. _`modify Python's search path`: http://docs.python.org/install/index.html#modifying-python-s-search-path
  227. .. _installing-the-development-version-without-pip:
  228. Installing the development version without pip
  229. ----------------------------------------------
  230. If you don't have pip_, you can instead manually `modify Python's search
  231. path`_.
  232. First follow steps 1 and 2 above, so that you have a ``django-trunk`` directory
  233. with a checkout of Django's latest code in it. Then add a ``.pth`` file
  234. containing the full path to the ``django-trunk`` directory to your system's
  235. ``site-packages`` directory. For example, on a Unix-like system:
  236. .. code-block:: bash
  237. echo WORKING-DIR/django-trunk > SITE-PACKAGES-DIR/django.pth
  238. In the above line, change ``WORKING-DIR/django-trunk`` to match the full path
  239. to your new ``django-trunk`` directory, and change ``SITE-PACKAGES-DIR`` to
  240. match the location of your system's ``site-packages`` directory.
  241. The location of the ``site-packages`` directory depends on the operating
  242. system, and the location in which Python was installed. To find your system's
  243. ``site-packages`` location, execute the following:
  244. .. code-block:: bash
  245. python -c "from distutils.sysconfig import get_python_lib; print(get_python_lib())"
  246. (Note that this should be run from a shell prompt, not a Python interactive
  247. prompt.)
  248. Some Debian-based Linux distributions have separate ``site-packages``
  249. directories for user-installed packages, such as when installing Django from
  250. a downloaded tarball. The command listed above will give you the system's
  251. ``site-packages``, the user's directory can be found in ``/usr/local/lib/``
  252. instead of ``/usr/lib/``.
  253. Next you need to make the ``django-admin.py`` utility available in your
  254. shell PATH.
  255. On Unix-like systems, create a symbolic link to the file
  256. ``django-trunk/django/bin/django-admin.py`` in a directory on your system
  257. path, such as ``/usr/local/bin``. For example:
  258. .. code-block:: bash
  259. ln -s WORKING-DIR/django-trunk/django/bin/django-admin.py /usr/local/bin/
  260. (In the above line, change WORKING-DIR to match the full path to your new
  261. ``django-trunk`` directory.)
  262. This simply lets you type ``django-admin.py`` from within any directory,
  263. rather than having to qualify the command with the full path to the file.
  264. On Windows systems, the same result can be achieved by copying the file
  265. ``django-trunk/django/bin/django-admin.py`` to somewhere on your system
  266. path, for example ``C:\Python27\Scripts``.