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I'm running a Django app on Apache + mod_python. When I make some changes to the code, sometimes they have effect immediately, other times they don't, until I restart Apache. However I don't really want to do that since it's a production server running other stuff too. Is there some other way to force that?

Just to make it clear, since I see some people get it wrong, I'm talking about a production environment. For development I'm using Django's development server, of course.

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4 Answers

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If possible, you should switch to mod_wsgi. This is now the recommended way to serve Django anyway, and is much more efficient in terms of memory and server resources.

In mod_wsgi, each site has a .wsgi file associated with it. To restart a site, just touch the relevant file, and only that code will be reloaded.

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I'm a bit scared of this XXgi things after all the trouble I had with FastCGI (sure, it was Lighttpd, but still): stackoverflow.com/questions/393637/…. Didn't know wsgi is the recommended way to deploy Django now. It used to be mod_python, right? Anyway, I'll look into it. Thanks! – ibz Jul 3 at 10:12
s/this things/these things/ :) – ibz Jul 3 at 10:13
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As noted elsewhere, you must use mod_wsgi daemon mode to get feature whereby a reload will occur when WSGI script file is touched. – Graham Dumpleton Jul 3 at 10:20
@ibz: mod_wsgi is so different from fastcgi that they are not comparable in any way. – S.Lott Jul 3 at 12:14
Note that (as Graham Dumpleton mentions below) the touch-.wsgi-file-to-restart only works in daemon mode, not embedded mode. – Carl Meyer Jul 3 at 21:13
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As others have suggested, use mod_wsgi instead. To get the ability for automatic reloading, through touching the WSGI script file, or through a monitor that looks for code changes, you must be using daemon mode on UNIX. A slight of hand can be used to achieve same on Windows when using embedded mode. All the details can be found in:

http://code.google.com/p/modwsgi/wiki/ReloadingSourceCode

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You can reduce number of connections to 1 by setting "MaxRequestsPerChild 1" in your httpd.conf file. But do it only on test server, not production.

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If you don't want to kill existing connections and still restart apache you can restart it "gracefully" by performing "apache2ctl gracefully" - all existing connections will be allowed to complete.

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"apache2ctl gracefully" sounds like a neat thing. Will definitely look into that, even though it's not exactly what I was looking for. Thanks for the tip! – ibz Jul 3 at 10:10
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Use a test server included in Django. (like ./manage.py runserver 0.0.0.0:8080) It will do most things you would need during development. The only drawback is that it cannot handle simultaneous requests with multi-threading.

I've heard that there is a trick that setting Apache's max instances to 1 so that every code change is reflected immediately--but because you said you're running other services, so this may not be your case.

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Thats "MaxRequestsPerChild 1" set in httpd.conf as told by zdmytriv, but DO NOT do this for site handling any load. – uswaretech Jul 3 at 9:22

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