I have many projects working in ubuntu with python2.7 and virtualenv/virtualenvwrapper, in my work some developers works with macosx and windows, generally I create the project as usual:

django-admin.py start project x

And we use svn for cvs, but in some point, without nothing rational for me, when I try something like:

python manage.py runserver

doesn't work, but is just for me and is in my laptop, that doesn't happens in productions servers or another developers.

any ideas?

I got this error:

Error: Can't find the file 'settings.py' in the directory containing 'manage.py'. It appears you've customized things. You'll have to run django-admin.py, passing it your settings module. (If the file settings.py does indeed exist, it's causing an ImportError somehow.)

But obviously, the settings file exists and is in the same folder of manage.py file, and doesn't work just for me...

This happens too with django and appengine

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what does "python settings.py" say? – Willian May 17 '11 at 20:29
nothing, neither import settings from python interactive. – diegueus9 May 17 '11 at 20:32
Strange... maybe running python in verbose mode (-v) can help you – Willian May 17 '11 at 20:38
Sounds like you're occasionally forgetting to activate the virtualenv. – Daniel Roseman May 17 '11 at 21:24
Daniel, nop, i'm pretty sure I activate the virtualenv, in fact, i use virtalenvwrapper so, I do 'workon' – diegueus9 May 17 '11 at 21:26
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1 Answer

up vote 8 down vote accepted

I got this error:

Error: Can't find the file 'settings.py' in the directory containing 'manage.py'. It appears you've customized things. You'll have to run django-admin.py, passing it your settings module. (If the file settings.py does indeed exist, it's causing an ImportError somehow.)

The manage.py script prints that warning whenever an import error occurs, so if your settings.py module imports stuff and that causes an import error, manage.py will still print that warning.

One way to diagnose would be to (temporarily) change manage.py from

#!/usr/bin/env python
from django.core.management import execute_manager
try:
    import settings # Assumed to be in the same directory.
except ImportError:
    import sys
    sys.stderr.write("Error: Can't find the file '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 settings.py does indeed exist, it's causing an ImportError somehow.)\n" % __file__)
    sys.exit(1)

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

to

#!/usr/bin/env python
from django.core.management import execute_manager
import settings # Assumed to be in the same directory.

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

and see the stack trace that is printed when running $ python manage.py runserver.

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