A Django newbie question:
What is the recommended way of handling settings for local development and the production server? Some of them (like Constants, etc) can be changed/accessed in both, but some of them (like paths to static files) need to remain different, and hence should not be overwritten everytime the new code is deployed...

Currently, I am adding all constants to settings.py. But every time I change some constant locally, I have to copy it to the production server and edit the file for production specific changes... :(

Edit: looks like there is no standard answer to this question, I've accepted the most popular method.

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10 Answers

up vote 14 down vote accepted

settings.py

try:
   from local_settings import *
except ImportError, e:
   pass

You can override what needed in local_settings.py; it should stay out of your version control then. But since you mention copying I'm guessing you use none ;)

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To ease tracking/deployment of new settings, use a "local_settings.py" on the production/testing machines and none on development. – John Mee Jul 14 '10 at 12:18
That's the way I do - adding those lines at the end of settings.py so they can override the default settings – daonb Aug 18 '10 at 8:14
Cleanest way, especially if you're using version control. – Pilgrim Apr 22 '11 at 1:11
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I use a settings_local.py and a settings_production.py. After trying several options I've found that it's easy to waste time with complex solutions when simply having two settings files feels easy and fast.

When you use mod_python/mod_wsgi for your Django project you need to point it to your settings file. If you point it to app/settings_local.py on your local server and app/settings_production.py on your production server then life becomes easy. Just edit the appropriate settings file and restart the server (Django development server will restart automatically).

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And what about the local development server? is there a way to tell the django webserver (run using python manage.py runserver), which settings file to use? – akv Oct 26 '09 at 18:15
1  
@akv if you add --settings=[module name] (no .py extension) to the end of the runserver command you can specify which settings file to use. If you're going to do that, do yourself a favor and make a shell script/batch file with the development settings configured. Trust me, your fingers will thank you. – T. Stone Oct 26 '09 at 18:50
this is the solution I use. hacking up a settings file to be used for both production or development is messy – George Oct 26 '09 at 19:17
2  
I think its better to use settings.py in development, as you don't have to specify it all the time. – Andre Bossard Jul 8 '10 at 7:35
Am I correct in assuming this method requires importing of the settings module via the proxy, django.conf.settings? Otherwise you'd need to edit import declarations to point at the correct settings file when pushing live. – Groady Jan 12 '11 at 11:51
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I use a slightly modified version of the "if DEBUG" style of settings that Harper Shelby posted. Obviously depending on the environment (win/linux/etc.) the code might need to be tweaked a bit.

I was in the past using the "if DEBUG" but I found that occasionally I needed to do testing with DEUBG set to False. What I really wanted to distinguish if the environment was production or development, which gave me the freedom to choose the DEBUG level.

PRODUCTION_SERVERS = ['WEBSERVER1','WEBSERVER2',]
if os.environ['COMPUTERNAME'] in PRODUCTION_SERVERS:
    PRODUCTION = True
else:
    PRODUCTION = False

DEBUG = not PRODUCTION
TEMPLATE_DEBUG = DEBUG

# ...

if PRODUCTION:
    DATABASE_HOST = '192.168.1.1'
else:
    DATABASE_HOST = 'localhost'

I'd still consider this way of settings a work in progress. I haven't seen any one way to handling Django settings that covered all the bases and at the same time wasn't a total hassle to setup (I'm not down with the 5x settings files methods).

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This is the kind of thing that Django's settings being an actual code file allows, and I was hinting at. I haven't done anything like this myself, but it's definitely the sort of solution that might be a better general answer than mine. – Harper Shelby Oct 26 '09 at 18:38
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Remember that settings.py is a live code file. Assuming that you don't have DEBUG set on production (which is a best practice), you can do something like:

if DEBUG:
    STATIC_PATH = /path/to/dev/files
else:
    STATIC_PATH = /path/to/production/files

Pretty basic, but you could, in theory, go up to any level of complexity based on just the value of DEBUG - or any other variable or code check you wanted to use.

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My solution to that problem is also somewhat of a mix of some solutions already stated here:

  • I keep a file called local_settings.py that has the content USING_LOCAL = True in dev and USING_LOCAL = False in prod
  • In settings.py I do an import on that file to get the USING_LOCAL setting

I then base all my environment-dependent settings on that one:

DEBUG = USING_LOCAL
if USING_LOCAL:
    # dev database settings
else:
    # prod database settings

I prefer this to having two separate settings.py files that I need to maintain as I can keep my settings structured in a single file easier than having them spread across several files. Like this, when I update a setting I don't forget to do it for both environments.

Of course that every method has its disadvantages and this one is no exception. The problem here is that I can't overwrite the local_settings.py file whenever I push my changes into production, meaning I can't just copy all files blindly, but that's something I can live with.

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I use a variation of what jpartogi mentioned above, that I find a little shorter:

import platform
from django.core.management import execute_manager 

computername = platform.node()

try:
  settings = __import__(computername + '_settings')
except ImportError: 
  import sys
  sys.stderr.write("Error: Can't find the file '%r_settings.py' in the directory containing %r. It appears you've customized things.\nYou'll have to run django-admin.py, passing it your settings module.\n(If the file local_settings.py does indeed exist, it's causing an ImportError somehow.)\n" % (computername, __file__))
  sys.exit(1)

if __name__ == "__main__":
  execute_manager(settings)

Basically on each computer (development or production) I have the appropriate hostname_settings.py file that gets dynamically loaded.

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I differentiate it in manage.py and created two separate settings file: local_settings.py and prod_settings.py.

In manage.py I check whether the server is local server or production server. If it is a local server it would load up local_settings.py and it is a production server it would load up prod_settings.py. Basically this is how it would look like:

#!/usr/bin/env python
import sys
import socket
from django.core.management import execute_manager 

ipaddress = socket.gethostbyname( socket.gethostname() )
if ipaddress == '127.0.0.1':
    try:
        import local_settings # Assumed to be in the same directory.
        settings = local_settings
    except ImportError:
        import sys
        sys.stderr.write("Error: Can't find the file 'local_settings.py' in the directory containing %r. It appears you've customized things.\nYou'll have to run django-admin.py, passing it your settings module.\n(If the file local_settings.py does indeed exist, it's causing an ImportError somehow.)\n" % __file__)
        sys.exit(1)
else:
    try:
        import prod_settings # Assumed to be in the same directory.
        settings = prod_settings    
    except ImportError:
        import sys
        sys.stderr.write("Error: Can't find the file 'prod_settings.py' in the directory containing %r. It appears you've customized things.\nYou'll have to run django-admin.py, passing it your settings module.\n(If the file prod_settings.py does indeed exist, it's causing an ImportError somehow.)\n" % __file__)
        sys.exit(1)

if __name__ == "__main__":
    execute_manager(settings)

I found it to be easier to separate the settings file into two separate file instead of doing lots of ifs inside the settings file.

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For most of my projects I use following pattern:

  1. Create settings_base.py where I store settings that are common for all environments
  2. Whenever I need to use new environment with specific requirements I create new settings file (eg. settings_local.py) which inherits contents of settings_base.py and overrides/adds proper settings variables (from settings_base import *)

(To run manage.py with custom settings file you simply use --settings command option: manage.py <command> --settings=settings_you_wish_to_use.py)

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The problem with most of these solutions is that you either have your local settings applied before the common ones, or after them.

So it's impossible to override things like

  • the env-specific settings define the addresses for the memcached pool, and in the main settings file this value is used to configure the cache backend
  • the env-specific settings add or remove apps/middleware to the default one

at the same time.

One solution can be implemented using "ini"-style config files with the ConfigParser class. It supports multiple files, lazy string interpolation, default values and a lot of other goodies. Once a number of files have been loaded, more files can be loaded and their values will override the previous ones, if any.

You load one or more config files, depending on the machine address, environment variables and even values in previously loaded config files. Then you just use the parsed values to populate the settings.

One strategy I have successfully used has been:

  • Load a default defaults.ini file
  • Check the machine name, and load all files which matched the reversed FQDN, from the shortest match to the longest match (so, I loaded net.ini, then net.domain.ini, then net.domain.webserver01.ini, each one possibly overriding values of the previous). This account also for developers' machines, so each one could set up its preferred database driver, etc. for local development
  • Check if there is a "cluster name" declared, and in that case load cluster.cluster_name.ini, which can define things like database and cache IPs

As an example of something you can achieve with this, you can define a "subdomain" value per-env, which is then used in the default settings (as hostname: %(subdomain).whatever.net) to define all the necessary hostnames and cookie things django needs to work.

This is as DRY I could get, most (existing) files had just 3 or 4 settings. On top of this I had to manage customer configuration, so an additional set of configuration files (with things like database names, users and passwords, assigned subdomain etc) existed, one or more per customer.

One can scale this as low or as high as necessary, you just put in the config file the keys you want to configure per-environment, and once there's need for a new config, put the previous value in the default config, and override it where necessary.

This system has proven reliable and works well with version control. It has been used for long time managing two separate clusters of applications (15 or more separate instances of the django site per machine), with more than 50 customers, where the clusters were changing size and members depending on the mood of the sysadmin...

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