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{% comment %}

Django Project Package Template

This is a template for a Django 2.x project.

The project has a layout so that it can be build as a wheel, one type of Python packages.

Features

  • setup() is configured using a setup.cfg file.
  • The version is defined in {{ project_name }}.__version__.
  • Source code is located in a src directory to prevent side effects.
  • All apps use the {{ project_name }}.apps namespace.
  • All configuration modules use the {{ project_name }}.conf namespace.
  • {{ project_name }}.conf.settings uses pathlib instead of os and os.path.
  • Many settings can be defined using environment variables and parsed with envparse.
  • All templates, static files and locales will be included in the wheel.
  • All code follows the Black code style.
  • All docstrings follow PEP 257 conventions.
  • Django Debug Toolbar, IPython and check-manifest are already added to the development dependencies.
  • A Sublime Text project configuration is already included.

Usage

Use the following startproject command to create a new project using this template:

python3 -m django startproject --extension=cfg,gitignore,gitkeep,in,md,sublime-project \
    --template=https://github.com/keimlink/django-project-package-template/archive/master.zip \
    name [directory]

Tip: If you want to create the project in your current working directory use . as directory argument.

Testbed

A testbed to quickly test the project template can be found in the separate django-project-package-template-testbed repository.

License

Distributed under the MIT License.

Copyright 2018-2019 Markus Zapke-Gründemann

All text below the horizontal line is the template for the new project's README.


{% endcomment %}# {{ project_name|title }}

Describe your project in one sentence.

Quickstart

Install the project and the development dependencies into a virtual environment:

python3 -m venv .venv
source .venv/bin/activate
python3 -m pip install --upgrade pip setuptools wheel
python3 -m pip install --editable ".[dev]"
./manage.py migrate
./manage.py createsuperuser
./manage.py runserver

Starting a New App

First create a new directory in the apps directory:

mkdir src/{{ project_name }}/apps/name

Then pass the path to the new directory to the [startapp](https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/{{ docs_version }}/ref/django-admin/#django-admin-startapp) command:

./manage.py startapp name src/{{ project_name }}/apps/name

Deployment

The following list describes only the absolute necessary steps to outline a deployment for a Django project wheel. For example a component to serve static files is missing - you could use WhiteNoise to do this.

Also see [How to use Django with Gunicorn](https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/{{ docs_version }}/howto/deployment/wsgi/gunicorn/) and [Deployment Checklist](https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/{{ docs_version }}/howto/deployment/checklist/) for more information.

  1. Add your favorite WSGI HTTP server, e.g. Gunicorn, to install_requires in setup.cfg.
  2. Check if all files are included in the package:
    check-manifest
  3. Build a wheel of the project.
    ./setup.py bdist_wheel
  4. Copy the wheel file from the dist directory to the server to be deployed.
  5. Create a minimal configuration on the server using environment variables.
    export DJANGO_SETTINGS_MODULE={{ project_name }}.conf.settings
    export DJANGO_ALLOWED_HOSTS=www.example.com
    export DJANGO_DEBUG=False
  6. Install the wheel and [collect the static files](https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/{{ docs_version }}/ref/contrib/staticfiles/#django-admin-collectstatic):
    python3 -m pip install --find-links=/path/to/wheel_dir {{ project_name }}
    django-project collectstatic --no-input
  7. Start Gunicorn like this:
    gunicorn {{ project_name }}.wsgi

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