I Made one POST API in Django rest framework. It working perfectly in Postman in also chrome and other browsers but it is not working in my flutter_web project. it is giving me XMLHttpRequest error. for enable CORS I had used python -m pip install django-cors-headers.
you can check my api from https://findweight.herokuapp.com/idealweight which takes raw data for example 5.
you can check my whole error from following image:- https://i.stack.imgur.com/Fx8Xp.png
Make sure that you have applied all the migrations properly on the backend.
If not then migrate it first by python manage.py migrate.
And restart your server again and see the logs by changing DEBUG = True,
So you can see what is the error (NOTE: Make sure you change DEBUG = False before going to production).
And also, check if you have set up CORS property properly on the backend.
Related
I think this is a simple fix, but I've deployed quite a few Django apps to Heroku and I still can't figure out what's going on.
Accessing https://dundjeon-finder.herokuapp.com/ gives me a 500 error when using the browser/curl, but if I shell into the app using heroku run ./manage.py shell I can render the views no problem. My logs aren't telling me anything (just that the response is 500) despite DEBUG being set to True, and Sentry isn't receiving an error (it has previously when the database env variable was set badly), so I'm assuming it's something to do with the way the request works.
The repo is public, any help would be much appreciated! The settings file is here.
Well it was because of using asgi instead of wsgi. I'm not sure why that caused the errors, but will do some more searching.
I have been following this tutorial along to deploy my first Django site and have successfully reached the section 'Configure Nginx to Proxy Pass to Gunicorn' which all seems to be working.
My problem is that, despite my settings.py file containing the following:
# SECURITY WARNING: don't run with debug turned on in production!
DEBUG = False
I am still getting Django's debug=true 404 page with the following error:
"You're seeing this error because you have DEBUG = True in your Django settings file. Change that to False, and Django will display a standard 404 page."
I changed the file to DEBUG = False after completing the 'Configure Nginx to Proxy Pass to Gunicorn' step in the tutorial by pulling the change from my GitHub repository. Am I missing an additional step with Nginx in order to turn debug off and serve a standard 404 page?
Edit: It actually seems that any adjustments I make to the settings.py file in my repository, when pulled on to the server, don't have any effect. I commented out the whole settings.py file to see if it would break the webpage; nothing happened.
I'm guess that you does't restart web server after code editing. Try to restart your Gunicorn server, when you work with django runserver command it automatically restart web server on any change in code. Gunicorn dont do this by default, if you wanted that Gunicorn also restart server automatically, run it with --reload argument. But it dose not recommended into production
I've got some problems implementing 3rd party django package django-html5-appcache.
Documentation especify that migrate command must be executed, but when i execute command:
python manage.py migrate html5_appcache
Outputs:
"No migrations to apply"
However I decided to complete installation steps. but testing it maniffest file appears to be empty (according to docs, urls suppose to autodiscover):
CACHE MANIFEST
# version: $0$
# date: $-$
NETWORK:
*
And Chrome Console Outputs:
Creating Application Cache with manifest http://127.0.0.1:8000/manifest.appcache
127.0.0.1/:1 Application Cache Checking event
127.0.0.1/:1 Application Cache Downloading event
127.0.0.1/:1 Application Cache Progress event (0 of 0)
127.0.0.1/:1 Application Cache Cached event
Im using Django 1.7
Any body has expirience with this django package?
I suspect that you're supposed to put the following code in your urls.py to get autodiscover.
Enable appcache discovery by adding the lines below in urls.py:
import html5_appcache
html5_appcache.autodiscover()
(Source: documentation here: https://django-html5-appcache.readthedocs.org/en/latest/installation.html)
Also, python manage.py migrate commands are used to alter the DB structure and should not affect your urls.py.
Just deployed a Django app on Heroku. Everything works except for one page of my site which creates a Server 500 error (even though it works fine on my local development server).
The page raising the error doesn't do anything unusual. It makes some database calls, renders some forms, implements JQuery, etc. Any clue what this could be or how I can debug it?
Also, I thought this might be a data issue since my data in Dev doesn't match my data in production, but I checked and this doesn't seem to be the cause.
enable DEBUG=TRUE in your django settings.py file or type in console heroku logs --app your_app to get heroku server logs.
This was because I didn't include a runtime.txt telling Heroku to use Python 3 instead of 2 which subsequently raised an error in one of my views where I called super() with no args.
I installed Django, and it works. I set it up so it uses my mysql database, and I started a project. So far so good.
I followed the tutorial on setting up your first Django app over at
https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/dev/intro/tutorial01/
It is a tutorial over setting up a pre-existing poll app where everything has practically been built for you. The database structure has even been handled.
I ran:
python manage.py startapp polls
python manage.py sql polls
python manage.py syncdb
I didn't receive any kind of success message so I went into my phpmyadmin, and hooray! There are new tables and rows in my database.
Their tutorial then told me to run:
python manage.py shell
and that I'd see some database stuff, but I didn't. Why could this be? I ignored it and went on to step two. I still hadn't set DEBUG in my settings.py to False so I did. Only to get a 500 error.
After some digging I read I needed to add:
ALLOWED_HOSTS = ['my ip address'];
I did this and now after running:
python manage.py runserver myip:8000
When I try to access Django in my browser I get a
Not Found
The requested URL / was not found on this server.
Obviously / changes to a different location when navigating to those places as well, but the point is I get a 404 no matter what.
So I look at my terminal and I have a yellow message in my terminal that says.
"GET / HTTP/1.1" 404 74
and there is 1 message like this for each place I tried to access.
I'm thinking there is a Python package that I don't have installed on my server?
I do not want to use ALLOWED_HOSTS ['*'] I read that this is bad practice. I did try it and it produces the same results as using my ip address in place of the * (I just wanted to add that extra piece of info in case it helps)
If you want to use the database shell, you should run the dbshell command instead of shell as in your post, like this:
python manage.py dbshell
If you run shell, you get a Python shell, where you can easily import and inspect the Python objects of your project.
On your local PC, it's better to have DEBUG = True in your settings.py. That way you don't need to bother about ALLOWED_HOSTS, because in debug mode all hosts are allowed. Secondly, when you get a 404 error in debug mode, the page will show you the valid URLs that you can try.
The Django tutorial certainly works. The only way it won't work for you is if you missed a step or mistyped something somewhere. If you start over and pay extra attention, I think it will work.