Ultimate Django Reference (Commands, Deployment, Rest API)
Alex Merced
Co-Author of “Apache Iceberg: The Definitive Guide” | Senior Tech Evangelist at Dremio | LinkedIn Learning Instructor | Tech Content Creator
Basic Commands
Start a new project django-admin startproject <projectname>
Start a new app in your project django-admin startapp <appName>
Run Development Server python manage.py runserver
Make Migration Files for Unmigrated Changes python manage.py makemigrations`
Run Migrations python manage.py migrate
Run Development Server python manage.py runserver
Create Superuser for Admin Panel python manage.py createsuperuser --email [email protected] --username admin
Setting up the Database for Postgres
Need a psychopg2 installed to use postgres
pip install psycopg2
note: You may need to install the following for psycopg2 to install correct, google their installation, not needed for windows sudo “python3-dev” “libpq-dev”
The database configuration in settings.py
# Database # https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/3.1/ref/settings/#databases DATABASES = { 'default': { 'ENGINE': 'django.db.backends.postgresql_psycopg2', 'NAME': 'test', 'USER': 'test', 'PASSWORD': 'test', 'HOST': 'localhost', 'PORT': '5432', } }
Using a .env file with django
Install django-environ
pip install django-environ
Add the following to your settings.py, create the .env file in the same folder as your settings.py
import environ env = environ.Env() # reading .env file environ.Env.read_env()
DOCS: https://github.com/joke2k/django-environ
Using env variables in your code
env("ENV_VARIABLE")
env("ENV_VARIABLE", default="my default value")
Deploying to Heroku
Step 1 - Adjust your database settings
DATABASES = { 'default': env.db() }
*If you want to use your local database add an ENV variable, DATABASE_URL with using the db string template below
postgres://YourUserName:YourPassword@YourHost:5432/YourDatabase
Should look like this in your .env
DATABASE_URL=postgres://test:test@localhost:5432/test
Setup Your gitignore
Include this in your .gitignore in your root directory, this was generated using the site gitignore.io, a website for generating common gitignore entries.
# Created by https://www.toptal.com/developers/gitignore/api/django # Edit at https://www.toptal.com/developers/gitignore?templates=django ### Django ### *.log *.pot *.pyc __pycache__/ local_settings.py db.sqlite3 db.sqlite3-journal media # If your build process includes running collectstatic, then you probably don't need or want to include staticfiles/ # in your Git repository. Update and uncomment the following line accordingly. # <django-project-name>/staticfiles/ ### Django.Python Stack ### # Byte-compiled / optimized / DLL files *.py[cod] *$py.class # C extensions *.so # Distribution / packaging .Python build/ develop-eggs/ dist/ downloads/ eggs/ .eggs/ lib/ lib64/ parts/ sdist/ var/ wheels/ pip-wheel-metadata/ share/python-wheels/ *.egg-info/ .installed.cfg *.egg MANIFEST # PyInstaller # Usually these files are written by a python script from a template # before PyInstaller builds the exe, so as to inject date/other infos into it. *.manifest *.spec # Installer logs pip-log.txt pip-delete-this-directory.txt # Unit test / coverage reports htmlcov/ .tox/ .nox/ .coverage .coverage.* .cache nosetests.xml coverage.xml *.cover *.py,cover .hypothesis/ .pytest_cache/ pytestdebug.log # Translations *.mo # Django stuff: # Flask stuff: instance/ .webassets-cache # Scrapy stuff: .scrapy # Sphinx documentation docs/_build/ doc/_build/ # PyBuilder target/ # Jupyter Notebook .ipynb_checkpoints # IPython profile_default/ ipython_config.py # pyenv .python-version # pipenv # According to pypa/pipenv#598, it is recommended to include Pipfile.lock in version control. # However, in case of collaboration, if having platform-specific dependencies or dependencies # having no cross-platform support, pipenv may install dependencies that don't work, or not # install all needed dependencies. #Pipfile.lock # PEP 582; used by e.g. github.com/David-OConnor/pyflow __pypackages__/ # Celery stuff celerybeat-schedule celerybeat.pid # SageMath parsed files *.sage.py # Environments .env .venv env/ venv/ ENV/ env.bak/ venv.bak/ # Spyder project settings .spyderproject .spyproject # Rope project settings .ropeproject # mkdocs documentation /site # mypy .mypy_cache/ .dmypy.json dmypy.json # Pyre type checker .pyre/ # pytype static type analyzer .pytype/ # End of https://www.toptal.com/developers/gitignore/api/django
Gunicorn and the Procfile
We need Gunicorn to run our apps server so
pip install gunicorn
create a file called “Procfile” in your project root with the following.
`web: gunicorn project.wsgi
*project should be replaced with your projects name (the name of the folder your settings.py is in)
Download django-heroku
install django-heroku pip install django-heroku
add the following at the TOP of your settings.py import django_heroku
add the following at the bottom of your settings.py django_heroku.settings(locals())
*What this will do is configure your project automatically for Heroku when you deploy it
Push up to github
Create new github repository, and push to github. The ROOT of your repository should be the folder with the manage.py inside it.
Create a new Heroku Project
- Create a New Heroku Project
- Go to the resources tab and provision a new free postgres database
- Go to the deploy tab and connect your github repository to heroku
- enable automatic deployments
- do an initial deploy hitting the manual deploy button
- Don’t forget to run makemigrations and migrate, (easily done in Heroku run bash)
Django Rest Framework Reference
Install
pip install djangorestframework
then add the following to your settings.py installed apps array
'rest_framework',
ALSO MAKE SURE YOUR APP IS INSTALLED AS WELL
Make a model
In a new app make a new model in models.py. model field reference => https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/3.1/ref/models/fields/#model-field-types
from django.db import models class Dog(models.Model): name = models.CharField(max_length=100) age = models.IntegerField() class Meta: verbose_name_plural = 'dogs'
Setup Models and Serializers in your app
In your app folder create a serializers.py with the following.
from .models import Dog from rest_framework import serializers class DogSerializer(serializers.HyperlinkedModelSerializer): class Meta: model = Dog fields = ['name', 'age']
Create Views for your API
In your apps views.py create the following
from .models import Dog from rest_framework import viewsets from rest_framework import permissions from .serializers import DogSerializer class DogViewSet(viewsets.ModelViewSet): """ API endpoint that allows users to be viewed or edited. """ queryset = Dog.objects.all() serializer_class = DogSerializer permission_classes = [permissions.AllowAny] #Coule be [permissions.IsAuthenticated]
For Details on different permission sets:
- https://www.django-rest-framework.org/api-guide/permissions/
- https://www.django-rest-framework.org/api-guide/views/
Setup URLS
Now to setup the urls for our API in the urls.py in the folder that holds our settings.py.
from django.contrib import admin from django.urls import path from rest_framework import routers from project1.api import views router = routers.DefaultRouter() router.register(r'dogs', views.DogViewSet) urlpatterns = [ path('', include(router.urls)), path('api-auth/', include('rest_framework.urls', namespace='rest_framework')), path('admin/', admin.site.urls), ]
For more on how the router works, https://www.django-rest-framework.org/api-guide/routers/
Finish Up
- make migrations
- migrate
- test