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Hosting a Django application on AWS EC2 (running AMI Linux) - steps involved
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As a newbie, I recently went through the process of migrating my Django application that was developed and tested on a Windows environment onto AWS (AMI Linux) to host it using Apache and mod_wsgi. The source code for the application was on GitHub. | |
My sincere thanks to the people who have contributed the References that I've listed in my notes below. They were immensely helpful for me to get through this process. | |
I'm posting my notes compiling all the steps involved, in case it helps others. | |
This is NOT production level hosting. | |
I Creating AWS account and instances | |
===================================== | |
Reference : http://docs.aws.amazon.com/gettingstarted/latest/wah-linux/web-app-hosting-intro.html | |
- Logged into AWS website with my existing account | |
- Created IAM credentials | |
- Logged out of AWS, and signed in with IAM credentials | |
- Created keypair, security group, AWS VPC, public/private subnets, routes, and redundant EC2 instances (loaded with AMI Linux) | |
- Note: Did not launch RDS instances, because that is not part of the free tier service. | |
On Windows laptop: | |
- Installed PuTTY on Windows laptop, used PuTTYgen to generate pvt key (.ppk file) from downloaded keypair (.pem file) | |
- Used PuTTY and connected to AWS EC2's public ip-address as ec2-user over SSH with pvt key generated above | |
II Installing required packages on AWS EC2 | |
=========================================== | |
References: | |
https://gist.github.com/havencruise/8307140 | |
http://simononsoftware.com/virtualenv-tutorial-part-2/ | |
http://nickpolet.com/blog/deploying-django-on-aws/1/ | |
http://thecodeship.com/deployment/deploy-django-apache-virtualenv-and-mod_wsgi/ | |
https://code.google.com/p/modwsgi/wiki/IntegrationWithDjango | |
On AWS EC2, Python v2.6.9 is pre-installed, but Django 1.7 (which I used) requires Python 2.7 or higher. | |
Hence need to create virtualenv to isolate the two Python environments. Even otherwise, it is a good practice to isolate the Python instance used for your project from that used by the host machine for its own applications. | |
On AWS EC2: | |
$ sudo yum update ----> get latest security patches and bugfixes | |
$ sudo yum install http ---> installed Apache web server ver 2.2.29 and its dependencies | |
$ sudo yum install httpd-devel ---> httpd-devel ver 2.2.9, needed to make mod_wsgi as an Apache module | |
$ sudo yum install mysql mysql-server mysql-devel --> installed MySQL 5.5-1.6, MySQL Server 5.5-1.6 | |
$ sudo service httpd start ---> To start Apache server | |
Connect via browser to http://<ip address>:80 ---> It will display the test page for Amazon Linux AMI with Apache! | |
---------------------------------------- Setting up Python environment and modules ------------------------------------------------- | |
$ curl "https://bootstrap.pypa.io/get-pip.py" -o "get-pip.py" ---> install get-pip script | |
$ sudo python get-pip.py ---> execute the script and install pip. Henceforth, use PIP to install all Python packages | |
$ sudo pip install virtualenv --> installed virtualenv-12.0.7, to isolate Python 2.7 used for Django and the Python2.6.9 on AWS EC2 | |
$ sudo pip install virtualenvwrapper ; source /usr/bin/virtualenvwrapper.sh --> provides wrapper commands to create/activate/deactivate/remove a virtual environment | |
$ sudo yum install python27 --> installed Python 2.7.8 (as Django 1.7 is incompatible with Python 2.6) | |
$ which python27 ---> gives path as /usr/bin/python27 | |
$ mkvirtualenv test_env -p /usr/bin/python27 ---> associates this virtual environment test_env with the Python 2.7 interpreter | |
[Note: If not using virtualenvwrapper, the commands are: | |
$ virtualenv virtualenv-27 ---> creates new directory virtualenv-27 and installs python, pip, etc in subdirectories | |
$ source virtualenv-27/bin/activate --> activates new shell in this virtual environment ] | |
(test_env)$ pip install Django==1.7 ---> installed Django ver 1.7, compatible with Python 2.7.x | |
-------------------------- Installing mod_wsgi ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- | |
Django uses mod_wsgi (WSGI = Web Server Gateway Interface) to deploy applications on Apache httpd server. | |
mod_wsgi exists as a Python module, as well as an Apache module. | |
On Windows laptop: | |
From https://pypi.python.org/pypi/mod_wsgi/4.4.10 | |
Downloaded mod_wsgi-4.4.10.tar.gz onto Windows | |
Installed pscp and ftp'd the file to AWS EC2 instance : | |
C:\ pscp -i <keypair.ppk> <source file> ec2-user@<ip address>:/home/ec2-user | |
On AWS EC2 : | |
$ tar xvf mod_wsgi-4.4.10.tar.gz --> unzips and untars contents into mod_wsgi-4.4.10 directory | |
$ sudo yum install python27-devel --> Python 2.7 development package, needed to make mod_wsgi as a Python module | |
$ cd mod_wsgi-4.4.10 | |
$ workon test_env ---> to choose Python27 to compile with | |
This step needs to be repeated every time a new virtualenv is created : | |
---------------------------------------------------------------------- | |
(test_env)$ python setup.py install --> makes and installs mod_wsgi-express script under /home/ec2-user/.virtualenvs/test_env/bin | |
and /home/ec2-user/.virtualenvs/test_env/lib/python2.7/site-packages/mod_wsgi-4.4.10-py2.7-linux-x86_64.egg | |
(test_env)$ sudo make install --> makes and installs the Apache module into the standard location for all Apache modules. In this case, /usr/lib64/httpd/modules | |
---------------------------Stitching together Django, mod_wsgi and Apache for a test_site project ------------------------------------- | |
$mkdir test | |
$cd test | |
(test_env)$ django-admin.py startproject test_site --> results in the following directory structure : | |
/home/ec2-user/test/ | |
test_site/ | |
manage.py | |
test_site/ | |
settings.py | |
wsgi.py | |
Edit Django project files: | |
---------------------------- | |
In file settings.py, add to | |
INSTALLED_APPs = ( | |
................. | |
'mod_wsgi.server', | |
) | |
Edit wsgi.py to add the lines: | |
import sys | |
sys.path.append('home/ec2-user/test/test_site') | |
before the line (auto-generated by Django): | |
os.environ.setdefault("DJANGO_SETTINGS_MODULE", "test_site.settings") | |
Tell Apache server about wsgi: | |
------------------------------- | |
$ cd /etc/httpd/conf.d | |
Create a new file wsgi.conf | |
$ sudo vim wsgi.com | |
and add this line in it : | |
LoadModule wsgi_module modules/mod_wsgi.so ---> this will look where all Apache modules are ie /usr/lib64/httpd/modules | |
$ cd /etc/httpd/conf | |
$ sudo vim httpd.conf | |
and add these lines in it: | |
WSGIScriptAlias / /home/ec2-user/test/test_site/test_site/wsgi.py | |
WSGIPythonPath /home/ec2-user/test:/home/ec2-user/.virtualenvs/test_env/lib/python2.7/site-packages | |
<Directory /home/ec2-user/test/test_site/test_site> | |
<Files wsgi.py> | |
Order deny,allow | |
Allow from all | |
</Files> | |
</Directory> | |
$ sudo service httpd restart ---> To restart Apache server | |
Ensure that others have execute permissions on /home/ec2-user : chmod o+x /home/ec2-user, | |
because Apache will point the root directory / to sub-directories of /home/ec2-user | |
Pointing the browser to http://<ip address>:80 now shows the default Django page! | |
III Migrating my own Django project from a Windows environment to AWS EC2 | |
========================================================================= | |
On Windows laptop: | |
C:\ cd <path\to\myproject> | |
C:\ pip freeze > requirements.txt ----> this generates the list of needed packages for this project. | |
FTP this file requirements.txt to AWS EC2 server. | |
The Django application code resides on GitHub. | |
On AWS EC2: | |
Pull my Django project code from GitHub to AWS | |
---------------------------------------------- | |
References : | |
https://help.github.com/articles/set-up-git/#platform-linux | |
http://git-scm.com/book/en/v2/Git-Basics-Getting-a-Git-Repository | |
Install git on AWS EC2 | |
$ sudo yum install git ---> installs git on AWS EC2 | |
Configure git with user's name and email address | |
$ git config --global user.name "MY NAME" | |
$ git config --global user.email "<email address>" | |
Enable caching of GitHub password in git for 1 hr so as to clone with HTTPS later | |
$ git config --global credential.helper cache | |
$ git config --global credential.helper 'cache --timeout=3600' | |
Clone existing repository from GitHub onto AWS EC2 | |
$ git clone -b <branch> --single-branch https://github.com/<username>/<repository>.git mysite | |
where the argument: | |
-b <branch> --> indicates which branch to clone | |
option single-branch --> tells git to fetch only this branch | |
<URL> --> is obtained by copying from GitHub repository's sidebar | |
mysite --> is the local directory to be created on AWS EC2, inside which the .git directory contains the local repository | |
This fetches all the project files for my project from GitHub. | |
Resulting directory structure: | |
/home/ec2-user/mysite/ | |
myproject/ | |
manage.py | |
myproject/ | |
settings.py | |
wsgi.py | |
Create a new virtual environment and install required packages | |
-------------------------------------------------------------- | |
$ mkvirtualenv my_env -p /usr/bin/python27 --> creates a new virtualenv my_env and activates it | |
(my_env)$ cd mod_wsgi-4.4.10 | |
(my_env)$ python setup.py install --> Installs mod_wsgi python module in my_env site-packages | |
Installing mod_wsgi-express script to /home/ec2-user/.virtualenvs/my_env/bin | |
Installed /home/ec2-user/.virtualenvs/my_env/lib/python2.7/site-packages/mod_wsgi-4.4.10-py2.7-linux-x86_64.egg | |
$ cd mysite/myproject | |
Copy the requirements.txt that was transferred from Windows into this directory. | |
$ pip install -r requirements.txt | |
Installed required packages | |
Specific edits in myproject directory : | |
--------------------------------------------------- | |
$ cd mysite/myproject/myproject | |
Edit settings.py: | |
Add to | |
INSTALLED_APPs = ( | |
................. | |
'mod_wsgi.server', | |
) | |
TEMPLATE_DIR ---> set new path on Linux | |
MEDIA_ROOT ---> set new path on Linux | |
Edit myproject/wsgi.py to add: | |
import sys | |
sys.path.append('home/ec2-user/mysite/myproject') | |
before the auto-generated line: | |
os.environ.setdefault("DJANGO_SETTINGS_MODULE", "myproject.settings") | |
Specific edits to point Apache webserver to this project: | |
----------------------------------------------------------------- | |
$ cd /etc/httpd/conf | |
$ sudo vim httpd.conf | |
and add these lines in it: | |
WSGIScriptAlias / /home/ec2-user/mysite/myproject/myproject/wsgi.py | |
WSGIPythonPath /home/ec2-user/mysite:/home/ec2-user/.virtualenvs/my_env/lib/python2.7/site-packages | |
<Directory /home/ec2-user/mysite/myproject/myproject> | |
<Files wsgi.py> | |
Order deny,allow | |
Allow from all | |
</Files> | |
</Directory> | |
$ sudo service httpd restart ---> To restart Apache server | |
Pointing the browswer to http://<ip address>:80 now shows the home page of MyProject. | |
However, it does not use the project's stylesheets and other static files. | |
Also, individual app pages cannot be loaded because the MySQL database has not been setup. | |
IV Setup MySQL database and connect via Django project | |
======================================================== | |
$ sudo service mysqld start ---> starts the MySQL service on AWS EC2 | |
$ sudo service mysqld status | |
mysqld (pid 19959) is running... | |
$ mysql_secure_installation | |
Follow the prompts, to set root password and other privileges | |
$ mysql -u root -p | |
Enter password: <password> | |
> create database XYZ; | |
> create user '<user>' identified by '<password>' | |
> grant all on XYZ.* to '<user>'; | |
> quit; | |
$ workon my_env | |
$ cd /home/ec2-user/mysite/myproject | |
Edit myproject/settings.py : set user '<user>' and password associated with database XYZ (case sensitive!) | |
$ python manage.py syncdb | |
Prompts to setup admin superuser and password | |
Connects Django applications of this project to MySQL database staffyoutrust. | |
Connecting browser to http://<ip address>:80 and navigating to application page now shows that there is no | |
data loaded in the application. | |
V Import data into database | |
=========================== | |
On Windows: | |
Export data that has been entered into local database into a json file. | |
C:\<path\to\myproject> python manage.py dumpdata --natural-foreign --natural-primary > database.json | |
Transfer it to AWS EC2 | |
C:\<path\to\myproject> pscp -i <keypair.ppk> database.json ec2-user@<public ip addr>:/home/ec2-user/myrepo/myproject | |
On AWS EC2: | |
$ python manage.py loaddata database.json ---> imports the data into XYZ database | |
Connecting via browser and navigating to the application page now shows all the earlier data that was present in my Windows environment. | |
VI Serving static files | |
========================= | |
Refer: | |
https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/1.7/howto/static-files/ | |
https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/1.7/howto/static-files/deployment/ | |
https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/1.7/howto/deployment/wsgi/modwsgi/#serving-files | |
On AWS EC2: | |
There are specific static files (.css, .js ) and media (images) for the Django admin pages as well as for the project and its apps. | |
The Django admin static and media files live under django.contrib.admin installed in site-packages for this virtualenv. | |
Tho project/app based ones live under the project directory structure. | |
To tell Apache to serve them, add these lines to /etc/httpd/conf/httpd.conf: | |
Alias /static/admin/ /home/ec2-user/.virtualenvs/my_env/lib/python2.7/site-packages/django/contrib/admin/static/admin/ | |
Alias /media/admin/ /home/ec2-user/.virtualenvs/my_env/lib/python2.7/site-packages/django/contrib/admin/media/media/ | |
Alias /media/ /home/ec2-user/mysite/myproject/myapp/media/ | |
Alias /static/ /home/ec2-user/mysite/myproject/myapp/static/ | |
<Directory /home/ec2-user/mysite/myproject/myproject/myapp/media> | |
Order deny,allow | |
Allow from all | |
</Directory> | |
<Directory /home/ec2-user/mysite/myproject/myproject/myapp/static> | |
Order deny,allow | |
Allow from all | |
</Directory> | |
<Directory /home/ec2-user/.virtualenvs/my_env/lib/python2.7/site-packages/django/contrib/admin/> | |
Order deny,allow | |
Allow from all | |
</Directory> | |
The best way to serve static files during deployment is by collecting them all into a single directory from where they are served. | |
$ cd /home/ec2-user/mysite/myproject | |
$ vim myproject/settings.py | |
Set STATIC_ROOT = '/var/www/mysite/static/' ---> Directory where static files that are collected from each installed app's static sub-directory will be stored. | |
Set permissions so that collectstatic can write into this directory | |
$ python manage.py collectstatic --> copies all static files into it /var/www/mysite/static | |
$ sudo service httpd restart | |
Pointing the browser to home page as well as admin page shows that corresponding stylesheets are being used. | |
VII Push back changed files in local repository to GitHub | |
========================================================= | |
Refer: http://www.djangobook.com/en/2.0/chapter12.html | |
Before pushing back the altered settings.py file (as it will not work on a Windows environment now), edit it to specify conditional settings of specific parameters that are different for Windows and on AWS. | |
if socket.gethostname == 'my-pc': | |
<PARAMETER> = <Windows environment setting> | |
else: | |
<PARAMETER> = <AWS Linux environment setting> | |
Such parameters are DEBUG (True on Windows, False on AWS), INSTALLED_APPS (include mod_wsgi only on Linux), MEDIA_ROOT, STATIC_ROOT, TEMPLATE_DIRS. | |
Refer: | |
http://git-scm.com/book/en/v2/Git-Basics-Recording-Changes-to-the-Repository | |
http://git-scm.com/docs/git-push | |
$ cd /home/ec2-user/mysite | |
$ git status | |
On branch dev1 | |
Your branch is up-to-date with 'origin/dev1'. | |
Changes not staged for commit: | |
(use "git add <file>..." to update what will be committed) | |
(use "git checkout -- <file>..." to discard changes in working directory) | |
modified: myproject/myproject/settings.py | |
modified: myproject/myproject/wsgi.py | |
no changes added to commit (use "git add" and/or "git commit -a") | |
$ git commit -a -m "Comment" ---> Commits changes to local repository | |
$ git status | |
On branch dev1 | |
Your branch is ahead of 'origin/dev1' by 1 commit. | |
(use "git push" to publish your local commits) | |
nothing to commit, working directory clean | |
$ git push origin ---> Pushes changes in current branch to corresponding remote branch that 'git pull' uses to update current branch. | |
Username for 'https://github.com': <username> | |
Password for 'https://[email protected]':<password> | |
Counting objects: x, done. | |
Compressing objects: 100% (x/x), done. | |
Writing objects: 100% (x/x), y KiB | 0 bytes/s, done. | |
Total x (delta x), reused 0 (delta 0) | |
To https://github.com/username/mysite.git | |
bb62814..b9fbfe0 dev1 -> dev1 | |
Can you please tell me what is that "sudo make install" in line 92. Why it is used and where it is used in which folder. I am getting error - "no targets specified"
This process is useful, however, be sure to add a WSGIPythonPath which directs to the test_env location in the httpd.conf file, otherwise you will get a 500 error saying that wsgi.py is not a python module.
helpful process otherwise, Thanks!
small edit for those who use Apache 2.4
2.2 configuration:
Order allow,deny
Allow from all
2.4 configuration:
Require all granted
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Thanks for posting this!