Base image for Django projects.
You can inherit from this base image for your Django project.
It supposes that the project is laid down with the following structure:
├── docker-compose.yml
├── .gitignore
└── webapp # The django app
├── conf # Settings go here
│ ├── __init__.py # Make it a module
│ ├── base.py # Base settings
│ ├── development.py # Development overrides
│ ├── production.py # Production specific stuff
│ ├── urls.py # Root urlconf
│ └── wsgi.py # WSGI app (for gunicorn)
├── Dockerfile
├── .dockerignore
├── entrypoint-pre.sh # See entrypoint
├── requirements.txt # App requirements
└── src
└── myproject # The app(s) egg(s)
An example Dockerfile
for a custom project might look like this:
FROM abstracttechnology/django:latest
MAINTAINER Foo Bar <foo.bar@example.com>
COPY entrypoint-pre.sh entrypoint-pre.sh
COPY requirements.txt requirements.txt
COPY src/ src/
USER root
RUN chown -R webapp:webapp .
USER webapp
RUN virtualenv . && \
./bin/pip install --upgrade pip && \
./bin/pip install -r requirements.txt && \
cd src/myproject && \
../../bin/python setup.py develop
COPY conf/ conf/
USER root
RUN chown -R webapp:webapp .
USER webapp
This will end up configuring a container with your app django app in it, with an entrypoint that offers the following base commands:
run
to run the app with Gunicorn (4 sync workers)manage
to launchmanage.py
commands (arguments are passed to the manage script)
These two commands are launched using conf/production.py
as settings module (which might extend from a common conf/base.py
module).
There are other two commands that will instead run using conf/development.py
,
develop-run
and develop-manage
.
If a command is not recognized, it executed as-is (this allows you to launch other programs, or a shell for debug).
If you need any extra steps to be executed any time the container starts,
before any command, add a entrypoint-pre.sh
to the root
(as done in the example).
For example, if your postgres container is slow to boot up, you can put in that file:
source check_up.bash
check_up "postgresql" ${POSTGRES_PORT_5432_TCP_ADDR} 5432
Supposing your container is called postgres
,
if it's called database
change POSTGRES_PORT_5432_TCP_ADDR
to DATABASE_PORT_5432_TCP_ADDR
.
Similarly, if you want to handle extra "commands" in the entrypoint,
you can add a entrypoint-extras.sh
file, with a construct like this:
case $1 in
foo)
echo "Foo"
;;
bar)
echo "Bar"
;;
esac
Remember to always make .sh
files executable.
And that's all, happy Django-ing.