If you're on Linux, you'll receive this error.
First and foremost, Django does not have a production server, just a very basic development server and uses port 8080 by default.
when you execute the command
python manage.py runserver
you tell django to start its development server and it runs so you can test your web app before deployment to a production server.
Django Documentation -> django-admin -> Run Server
The way to access the server is to use your browser and plug in the URL in the address bar as so
localhost:8080
by default, most HTTP applications run on port 80 unless otherwise stated. For example, your MySQL server could run on port 3306 by default.
Basically, you can think of ports as old school telephone lines that connect you to whom ever your looking to communicate with.
There's nothing really special about any of this. You should probably play with bottle to get the basics down first; just a friendly suggestion.
You can dig in to the details on the website. While not secure, you can use sudo
to run on port 80, but for security reasons you should avoid it.
@mtt2p mentions a serverfault post that does a great job of the why
I'm sure there's a way to tell the server to allow only local connections, but you should only use 0.0.0.0:80 when you want to show off your work to other people or see what your web app looks like on other devices.
In the long run, sudo
is just easier and quicker, but lazy and insecure.
This is a link that explains it in the context of a virtualenv.
Django runserver error when specifying port
The answer states
I guess the sudo command will run the process in the superuser
context, and the superuser context lack virtualenv settings.
Make a shell script to set the virtualenv and call manage.py
runserver, then sudo this script instead.
You should note that the answer explaining a virtualenv based context is also insecure. It should just be run as
sudo python manage.py runserver 80
not
sudo bash script-name
outside of a virtualenv. Doing so defeats the purpose of sand-boxing your application. If you ignore this, you'll be exposing yourself to a race condition.
runserver
with uwsgi.