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10 years ago | |
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| .sti/bin | 10 years ago | |
| openshift | 10 years ago | |
| project | 10 years ago | |
| scripts | 10 years ago | |
| welcome | 10 years ago | |
| .gitignore | 10 years ago | |
| README.md | 10 years ago | |
| gunicorn_conf.py | 10 years ago | |
| manage.py | 10 years ago | |
| requirements.txt | 10 years ago | |
This project is meant to be forked and used to quickly deploy a Django web application to an OpenShift cluster. It assumes you have access to an existing OpenShift installation.
You can use this as a starting point to build your own application.
(optional) Create and activate a virtualenv (you may want to use virtualenvwrapper).
Fork this repo and clone your fork:
git clone https://github.com/rhcarvalho/openshift-django-quickstart.git
Install dependencies:
pip install -r requirements.txt
Create a development database:
./manage.py migrate
If everything is alright, you should be able to start the Django development server:
./manage.py runserver
Open your browser and go to http://127.0.0.1:8000, you will be greeted with a welcome page.
This is a minimal Django 1.8 project. It was created with these steps:
pip freeze > requirements.txtdjango-admin startproject PROJECT_NAME .project/settings.py to configure SECRET_KEY, DATABASE and STATIC_ROOT entries../manage.py startapp openshift, to create the welcome page's appThe file application-template.json contains an OpenShift application template that you can add you your OpenShift project with:
osc create -f application-template.jsonNow you can browse to your OpenShift web console and create a new app from the 'django-quickstart' template. After adjusting your preferences (or accepting the defaults), your application will be built and deployed.
You will probably want to set the GIT_REPOSITORY parameter to point to your fork.