Django Tutorial
Following Django tutorial from Django website
Virtual Environment
Make virtual environment in root of the project with:
python3 -m venv virtual-env
Activate it with:
source virtual-env/bin/activate
Install Requirements with:
(virtual-env) ~/mysite$ python -m pip install -r requirements.txt
Database setup
You need to be in mysite folder for this command:
(virtual-env) ~/mysite$ python manage.py migrate
To load initial data:
(virtual-env) ~/mysite$ python manage.py loaddata polls/fixtures/initial_data.json
To dump your data to initial_data.json:
(virtual-env) ~/mysite$ python manage.py dumpdata polls > polls/fixtures/initial_data.json
The development web server
You need to be in mysite folder for this command:
(virtual-env) ~/mysite$ python manage.py runserver
Changing the port
By default, the runserver command starts the development server on the internal IP at port 8000.
If you want to change the server’s port, pass it as a command-line argument. For instance, this command starts the server on port 8080:
(virtual-env) ~/mysite$ python manage.py runserver 8080
If you want to change the server’s IP, pass it along with the port. For example, to listen on all available public IPs (which is useful if you are running Vagrant or want to show off your work on other computers on the network), use:
(virtual-env) ~/mysite$ python manage.py runserver 0:8000
0 is a shortcut for 0.0.0.0. Full docs for the development server can be found in the runserver reference.
Django admin
Create superuser like this:
(virtual-env) ~/mysite$ python manage.py createsuperuser
Username: admin
Email address: admin@admin.com
Password:
Password (again):
Superuser created successfully.
After this you can use Django admin. Just go to the page http://127.0.0.1:8000/admin/ and use credential you just entered.