Is there a way to run PHP scripts in django? I have a plugin in TinyMCE that runs PHP scripts, and it is able to work using XAMPP's Apache. However, Django does support running of PHP script and therefore the plugin is not able to work. I would like to know if there is a way to configure Django to run PHP scripts.
Any help or pointers appreciated. Many Thanks!
Django isn't a HTTP server. You need a HTTP server like Apache, Nginx, etc along with the correct php module to run your PHP script.
Then you can configure Django to run on the same server. Here's an howto for running Django with Apache https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/dev/howto/deployment/wsgi/modwsgi/. Then you can configure your PHP script to run on the same server.
After that, how your PHP script interacts with Django project is implementation specific.
Well, there's Django-php which lets you run PHP in Django templates - http://animuchan.net/django_php/
Though I'd draw your attention to the FAQ section of that website.
Related
I created a website that uses vuejs as the frontend and django as the backend with another service running behind everything that im making api calls to.
So django is setup in a way to look at the dist folder of Vuejs and serve it if you run manage.py runserver. but the problem is that my service that I created is
is also in python and it needs to run in a virtualenv in order to work (It uses tensorflow 1.15.2 and this can only run in a contained environment)
I'm sitting here and wondering how I can deploy the django application and keep the virtualenv active and Im coming up with nothing, I've tried doing some research on this but everything I found was not relevant to my problem. I've deployed it and when I close the ssh connection the virtualenv stops.
If there is anyone that can enlighten my ways I would appreciate it.
i think you need to nginx: https://www.digitalocean.com/community/tutorials/how-to-set-up-django-with-postgres-nginx-and-gunicorn-on-ubuntu-16-04
if you are search for keep states just in terminal i suggest tmux https://github.com/tmux/tmux/wiki
You can use uWSGI and nginx to deploy Django apps on server. Here's helpful articles:
https://www.digitalocean.com/community/tutorials/how-to-set-up-uwsgi-and-nginx-to-serve-python-apps-on-centos-7
https://www.digitalocean.com/community/tutorials/how-to-set-up-uwsgi-and-nginx-to-serve-python-apps-on-centos-7
Django official docs also has a page about it: https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/3.1/howto/deployment/wsgi/uwsgi/
There are articles from developers so you can refer them in case you get stuck anywhere:
https://www.freecodecamp.org/news/django-uwsgi-nginx-postgresql-setup-on-aws-ec2-ubuntu16-04-with-python-3-6-6c58698ae9d3/
https://medium.com/#biswashirok/deploying-django-python-3-6-to-digital-ocean-with-uwsgi-nginx-ubuntu-18-04-3f8c2731ade1
I'm in a university and I'm provided with a public_html folder where I can put my CGI scripts. For eg. when I put PHP scripts and visit them from my browser, it works correctly and the PHP is properly interpreted.
I wish to run Django apps in this environment and I know that the university runs an apache server and had mod_php and mod_python installed, although I think I'm not allowed to modify the httpd.conf etc.
All the tutorials that I've read about Django on mod_python ask me to modify the httpd.conf, is there any way I can get my Django site running by making non-sudo changes only?
You can try to put your directives in a .htaccess file in your directory. Dependent on the server config, it might work.
I am quite a noob when it comes to deploying a Django project. I'd like to know what are the various methods to deploy Django project and which one is the most preferred.
The Django documentation lists Apache/mod_wsgi, Apache/mod_python and FastCGI etc.
mod_python is deprecated now, one should use mod_wsgi instead.
Django with mod_wsgi is easy to setup, but:
you can only use one python version at a time [edit: you even can only use the python version mod_wsgi was compiled for]
[edit: seems if I'm wrong on mod_wsgi not supporting virtualenv: it does]
So for multiple sites (targeting different django/python versions) on a server mod_wsgi is not
the best solution.
FastCGI can be used with virtualenv, also with different python versions, as you run it with
./manage.py runfcgi …
and then configure your webserver to use this fcgi interface.
The new, hot stuff about django deployment seems to be gunicorn. It's a webserver that implements wsgi and is typically used as backend with a "big" webserver as proxy.
Deployment with gunicorn feels a lot like fcgi: you run a process doing the django processing stuff with manage.py, and a webserver as frontend to the world.
But gunicorn deployment has some advantages over fcgi:
speed - I didn't find the sources, but benchmarks say fcgi is not as fast as the f suggests
config files, for fcgi you must do all configuration on the commandline when executing the manage.py command. This comes unhandy when running multiple django instances via an init.d (unix-like OS' system service startup). It's always the same cmdline, with just different configuration files
gunicorn can drop privileges: no need to do this in your init.d script, and it's easy to switch to one user per django instance
gunicorn behaves more like a daemon: writing pidfile and logfile, forking to the background etc. makes again using it in an init.d script easier.
Thus, I would suggest to use the gunicorn solution, unless you have a single site on a single server with low traffic, than you could use the wsgi solution. But I think in the long run you're more happy with gunicorn.
If you have a django only webserver, I would suggest to use nginx as frontendproxy, as it's the best performing (again this is based on benchmarks I read in some blogposts - don't have the url anymore).
Personally I use apache as frontendproxy, as I need it for other sites hosted on the server.
A simple setup instruction for django deployment could be found here:
http://ericholscher.com/blog/2010/aug/16/lessons-learned-dash-easy-django-deployment/
My init.d script for gunicorn is located at github:
https://gist.github.com/753053
Unfortunately I did not yet blog about it, but an experienced sysadmin should be able to do the required setup.
Use the Nginx/Apache/mod-wsgi and you can't go wrong.
If you prefer a simple alternative, just use Apache.
There is a very good deployment document: http://lethain.com/entry/2009/feb/13/the-django-and-ubuntu-intrepid-almanac/
I myself have faced a lot of problems in deploying Django Projects and automating the deployment process. Apache and mod_wsgi were like curse for Django Deployment. There are several tools like Nginx, Gunicorn, SupervisorD and Fabric which are trending for Django deployment. At first I used/configured them individually without Deployment automation which took a lot of time(I had to maintain testing as well as production servers for my client and had to update them as soon as a new feature was tested and approved.) but then I stumbled upon django-fagungis, which totally automates my Django Deployment from cloning my project from bitbucket to deploying on my remote server (it uses Nginx, Gunicorn, SupervisorD, Fabtic and virtualenv and also installs all the dependencies on the fly), all with just three commands :) You can find more about it in my blog post here. Now I even don't have to get involved in this process(which used to take a lot of my time) and one of my junior developers runs those three commands of django-fagungis mentioned here on his local machine and we get a crisp new copy of our project deployed in minutes without any hassle:)
I want to install an existing django app, djangopeople.net. The code is at http://github.com/simonw/djangopeople.net.
I installed django and I understand how to create a new django project.
But how do you deploy an existing app? I know how this works in Rails or Symfony, but I don't really get the django concept here.
Where do I put the files? Which scripts do I run?
Thanks for the steps.
Why is this any different from deploying your own applications? Just put them somewhere in your PYTHONPATH and set up mod_wsgi or whatever to serve them.
Can anyone let me know how to deploy a flask app on a personal website using CPanel
I have tried running it through the virtualenv but did not work
Flask is a micro framework that runs in a Python instance, and not as a set of files that are served from a web server, like HTML or PHP. Most likely you will need another hosting provider that hosts web applications like Heroku or use a VPS instead.
On the other hand, most shared hosting providers do not allow you to install custom libraries that need to be compiled.