Ojo al plato
LICENSE: MIT
Moved to settings.
First migrate sites, auth and user apps:
$ python manage.py migrate users $ python manage.py migrate sites $ python manage.py migrate auth
Then create default users admin and paco:
$ python manage.py createsuperuser
Finally run all migrations
$ python manage.py migrate
Migrate mysql database:
$ mysqldump wordpress --default-character-set=latin1 -h localhost -u wordpress -p -r mysql.dump # Remove the SET NAMES='latin1' comment at the top of the dump. $ docker-compose build mysql $ docker-compose up -d mysql $ docker exec -it <container_id> bash root@<container_id>:# mysql -uojoalplato -p --default-character-set=utf8 wordpress mysql> SET names 'utf8'; mysql> source mysql.dump;
Clone models from mysql:
$ docker-compose run django python manage.py clonemodels
Move from ng-gallery to blog images:
$ docker-compose run django python manage.py escapeng
Load restaurant database:
$ docker cp restaurant_with_coords.json <container_id>:/app/restaurant_with_coords.json $ docker-compose run django_ojoalplato python manage.py load_restaurants
To create a normal user account, just go to Sign Up and fill out the form. Once you submit it, you'll see a "Verify Your E-mail Address" page. Go to your console to see a simulated email verification message. Copy the link into your browser. Now the user's email should be verified and ready to go.
To create an superuser account, use this command:
$ python manage.py createsuperuser
For convenience, you can keep your normal user logged in on Chrome and your superuser logged in on Firefox (or similar), so that you can see how the site behaves for both kinds of users.
To run the tests, check your test coverage, and generate an HTML coverage report:
$ coverage run manage.py test $ coverage html $ open htmlcov/index.html
$ py.test
Moved to Live reloading and SASS compilation.
This app comes with Celery.
To run a celery worker:
cd ojoalplato
celery -A ojoalplato.taskapp worker -l info
Please note: For Celery's import magic to work, it is important where the celery commands are run. If you are in the same folder with manage.py, you should be right.
In development, it is often nice to be able to see emails that are being sent from your application. For that reason local SMTP server MailHog with a web interface is available as docker container.
Container mailhog will start automatically when you will run all docker containers. Please check cookiecutter-django Docker documentation for more details how to start all containers.
With MailHog running, to view messages that are sent by your application, open your browser and go to http://127.0.0.1:8025
Sentry is an error logging aggregator service. You can sign up for a free account at https://getsentry.com/signup/?code=cookiecutter or download and host it yourself. The system is setup with reasonable defaults, including 404 logging and integration with the WSGI application.
You must set the DSN url in production.
See detailed cookiecutter-django Docker documentation.