I highly recommend epdb (Extended Python Debugger).
https://bitbucket.org/dugan/epdb
One thing I love about epdb for debugging Django or other Python webservers is the epdb.serve() command. This sets a trace and serves this on a local port that you can connect to. Typical use case:
I have a view that I want to go through step-by-step. I'll insert the following at the point I want to set the trace.
import epdb; epdb.serve()
Once this code gets executed, I open a Python interpreter and connect to the serving instance. I can analyze all the values and step through the code using the standard pdb commands like n, s, etc.
In [2]: import epdb; epdb.connect()
(Epdb) request
<WSGIRequest
path:/foo,
GET:<QueryDict: {}>,
POST:<QuestDict: {}>,
...
>
(Epdb) request.session.session_key
'i31kq7lljj3up5v7hbw9cff0rga2vlq5'
(Epdb) list
85 raise some_error.CustomError()
86
87 # Example login view
88 def login(request, username, password):
89 import epdb; epdb.serve()
90 -> return my_login_method(username, password)
91
92 # Example view to show session key
93 def get_session_key(request):
94 return request.session.session_key
95
And tons more that you can learn about typing epdb help at any time.
If you want to serve or connect to multiple epdb instances at the same time, you can specify the port to listen on (default is 8080). I.e.
import epdb; epdb.serve(4242)
>> import epdb; epdb.connect(host='192.168.3.2', port=4242)
host defaults to 'localhost' if not specified. I threw it in here to demonstrate how you can use this to debug something other than a local instance, like a development server on your local LAN. Obviously, if you do this be careful that the set trace never makes it onto your production server!
As a quick note, you can still do the same thing as the accepted answer with epdb (import epdb; epdb.set_trace()) but I wanted to highlight the serve functionality since I've found it so useful.