Skip to main content

Python

The deplo.io build environment makes use of the Paketo Python Buildpack.

Example App

We have a basic Python Django app in our examples repository. You can deploy it with nctl. The example application shows a random message on every page reload. The Django admin interface can be used to add messages. Just visit https://<URL of app>/admin to access it and use the credentials which you pass via the env variables below to login. Please also define the SECRET_KEY which is needed to secure signed data and should be kept secret.

nctl create application django-example \
--git-url=https://github.com/ninech/deploio-examples \
--git-sub-path=python/django \
--env=DJANGO_SU_NAME=admin \
--env=DJANGO_SU_EMAIL=admin@example.com \
--env=DJANGO_SU_PASSWORD=<INSERT A PASSWORD HERE> \
--env=SECRET_KEY=<LONG RANDOM STRING>

Build env considerations

There are just a few build environment variables supported by the Python buildpack. You can find them in the Paketo documentation.

Django specifics

Procfile

If you have a Django application, you will need to create a Procfile in the root of your app source code, which changes the default "web" entrypoint to a valid wsgi project configuration file, which will be served by gunicorn. For example, the Procfile in our example app looks like:

web: gunicorn deploio.wsgi

Configuring ALLOWED_HOSTS

The ALLOWED_HOSTS setting represents the permitted hostnames/domains which the Django site can serve. To allow the default deplo.io URLs for your application, you can use the following entry in your settings.py file:

ALLOWED_HOSTS = [".deploio.app"]

Please note that you will need to add all of your custom domain names to this list. So if you want your application to be served on django-app.example.com your ALLOWED_HOSTS should look like:

ALLOWED_HOSTS = [
"deploio.app",
"django-app.example.com",
]

Configuring the SECRET_KEY

The SECRET_KEY parameter is used to secure signed data in Django. It should be kept secure and so not be stored alongside your application code. One way of specifying it is to load it from the environment. You can achieve this by using the following line in your settings.py:

# The secret key can be passed via the env variable "SECRET_KEY"
SECRET_KEY = os.environ.get('SECRET_KEY')
if SECRET_KEY == None:
raise ValueError("SECRET_KEY environment variable must be set")

You then need to specify the environment variable SECRET_KEY with nctl as you can see in the Example app section.