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purpose

This is a template for new django projects -- to standardize on some nice features/practices, and to get up and running, locally, easily and quickly. It provides instructions for getting the template from GitHub, customizing it, starting the webapp, and lists a few things to try with the webapp running. Finally, it lists the nice features/practices, and also shows typical usage.

on this page...


local quick-start

Notes about the quick-start instructions...

  • The instructions below assume:

    • a unix-like environment (ie Mac, Linux, or Windows Subsystem for Linux (WSL)).
    • you've installed uv (link)
  • The instructions below reference x_project_stuff, x_project, and x_app. In all cases replace with the name of your project, like: isbn_api_project_stuff, isbn_api_project, and isbn_api_app.

  • The update_project_and_app_references.py script (link) deletes the cloned .git directory (in addition to its main purpose to rename the project). Why? So you don't accidentally start building away and commit to the template repo. After this installation, creating a new git repo is one of the first things you should do.

  • When you start the webapp via runserver, you'll get a message that there are migrations that need to be run, with instructions. You can go ahead and do that, or do it later.

## setup directories
$ mkdir ./x_project_stuff
$ cd ./x_project_stuff/
$ mkdir ./logs
$ mkdir ./DBs

## get the project-code
$ git clone https://github.com/Brown-University-Library/django_template_42_project.git

## update project-name (line below is a single long line; clarifying in case it wraps)
$ uv run --python 3.8 ./django_template_42_project/update_project_and_app_references.py --target_dir "./django_template_42_project/" --new_project_name "x_project" --new_app_name "x_app"  

## setup the envar-settings
$ cd ./x_project/
$ cp ./config/dotenv_example_file.txt ../.env

## run the app
$ uv run ./manage.py runserver

That's it!


stuff to try

  • Open a browser to http://127.0.0.1:8000/. That'll redirect to http://127.0.0.1:8000/info/.

  • Try adding ?format=json to the info url to see the data feeding the the template.

  • Try http://127.0.0.1:8000/error_check/. You'll see the intentionally-raised error in the browser (would result in a 404 on production), but if you want to confirm that this really would send an email, open another terminal window and type:

    $ python3 -m smtpd -n -c DebuggingServer localhost:1026

    You won't initially see anything, but if you reload the error-check url, and then check this terminal window again, you'll see the email-data that would have been sent.

  • Try http://127.0.0.1:8000/version/. Once you git init, git add --all, and git commit -am "initial commit", it'll show the branch and commit -- very handy for dev and prod confirmations.

  • Try $ uv run ./manage.py test. There are two simple tests that should pass.

  • Check out the logs (project_stuff/logs/). The envar log-level is DEBUG, easily changed. On the servers that should be INFO or higher, and remember to rotate them, not via python's log-rotate -- but by the server's log-rotate.

Next -- well, the sky's the limit!


nice features/practices

  • Nothing private is in the project-repo; avoids using the .gitignore for security.
  • Shows pattern to keep views.py functions short-ish, to act as manager functions (eg views.version()).
  • Shows pattern to expose the data used by the page via adding ?format=json (eg views.info()). Useful for developing the front-end and troubleshooting.
  • Log-formatting shows useful stuff.
  • Git branch/commit url is constructed in a way that avoids the new git dubious ownership error.
  • Includes a couple of client-get tests that respond differentially to dev and prod settings.
  • Includes a dev-only error-check url (enables confirmation that email-admins-on-error is set up correctly).
  • Uses python-dotenv.
  • Specifies compatible package versions for reliable staging and prod deployment.
    • Uses tilde-comparators in the .in requirements files for stable upgrades.
    • Uses layered base.in and server.in requirements files which will produce .txt files -- for clarity re what's really in the venv.
  • Shows one possible pattern to make async calls (app/lib/version_helper.manage_git_calls()) and gather together the results.
  • This webapp doesn't access the db much, but if it did, and you wanted to inspect the sql generated by the ORM, uncomment out the django.db.backends logger in settings.py.
  • Includes a default config-file for ruff, a fast, extensible python linter that can integrate with many popular code editors such as VS Code, PyCharm, and others.

regular setup

The local quick-start instructions above are to get you up-and-running super quickly and easily. Below are instructions for a more typical local virtual-environment architecture (they assume you've already followed the local quick-start instructions).

Make the venv...

$ cd ./x_project_stuff/
$ uv venv ./your_venv --python 3.8.10
$ cd ./x_project
$ source ../your_venv/bin/activate
(your_venv) $ uv pip sync ./config/requirements/requirements_base.txt

That's a one-time setup. For regular use...

$ cd ./x_project_stuff/x_project
$ source ../your_venv/bin/activate
(your_venv) $ python ./manage.py runserver