Welcome to Django-uWSGI’s documentation!¶
You can view the code of this project or fork it (please, send pull requests), at Github.
Features¶
- Admin page with uWSGI stats (options to reload/stop uWSGI, clear uWSGI cache)
- uWSGI Cache Backend for Django
- uWSGI Email Backend for Django(send emails via uWSGI’s spooler)
- Debug Panel for django-debug-toolbar (offers same functions as admin page)
- Django template loader for embedded into uWSGI files
- Django Management Command
runuwsgi
(with live autoreload when DEBUG is True) - uWSGI config generator
- Django CBV Mixins based on uWSGI decorators
- Forms to send log messages and signals to uWSGI via admin interface
Some features are not added into repo or not yet implemented(See Todo)
Installation¶
django-uwsgi is easy installable via pip:
pip install django-uwsgi
or clone it from github:
git clone https://github.com/unbit/django-uwsgi.git
cd django-uwsgi
pip install .
# or for development
pip install -e .
By default django-uwsgi
doesn’t installed with uWSGI as requirement.
And here are a few known reasons why:
- Django project installed into virtualenv and running in Emperor mode. In this case uWSGI is installed system-wide or into some other virtualenv.
- Some devs love to use system package managers like apt and prefer to install uwsgi other way.
- you need to build uWSGI with custom profile ex:
UWSGI_PROFILE=gevent pip install uwsgi
You can install django-uwsgi with uWSGI by appending [uwsgi] to the install command:
pip install django-uwsgi[uwsgi]
Configuration¶
Adding django-uwsgi to your project¶
Add 'django_uwsgi',
to your INSTALLED_APPS
in settings.py
:
INSTALLED_APPS += ['django_uwsgi',]
Add django_uwsgi into urls.py
:
urlpatterns += [url(r'^admin/uwsgi/', include('django_uwsgi.urls')),]
Decorators¶
The uWSGI API is very low-level, as it must be language-independent.
That said, being too low-level is not a Good Thing for many languages, such as Python.
Decorators are, in our humble opinion, one of the more kick-ass features of Python, so in the uWSGI source tree you will find a module exporting a bunch of decorators that cover a good part of the uWSGI API.
Notes¶
Signal-based decorators execute the signal handler in the first available worker.
If you have enabled the spooler you can execute the signal handlers in it, leaving workers free to manage normal requests. Simply pass target='spooler'
to the decorator.
@timer(3, target='spooler')
def hello(signum):
print("hello")
Example: a Django session cleaner and video encoder¶
Let’s define a tasks.py
module and put it in the Django project directory.
import os
from django.contrib.sessions.models import Session
from django_uwsgi.decorators import cron, spool
@cron(40, 2, -1, -1, -1)
def clear_django_session(num):
print("it's 2:40 in the morning: clearing django sessions")
Session.objects.all().delete()
@spool
def encode_video(arguments):
os.system("ffmpeg -i \"%s\" image%%d.jpg" % arguments['filename'])
The session cleaner will be executed every day at 2:40, to enqueue a video encoding we simply need to spool it from somewhere else.
from tasks import encode_video
def index(request):
# launching video encoding
encode_video.spool(filename=request.POST['video_filename'])
return render_to_response('enqueued.html')
Now run uWSGI with the spooler enabled:
[uwsgi]
; a couple of placeholder
django_projects_dir = /var/www/apps
my_project = foobar
; chdir to app project dir and set pythonpath
chdir = %(django_projects_dir)/%(my_project)
pythonpath = %(django_projects_dir)
; load django
module = django.core.handlers:WSGIHandler()
env = DJANGO_SETTINGS_MODULE=%(my_project).settings
; enable master
master = true
; 4 processes should be enough
processes = 4
; enable the spooler (the mytasks dir must exist!)
spooler = %(chdir)/mytasks
; load the task.py module
import = task
; bind on a tcp socket
socket = 127.0.0.1:3031
The only especially relevant option is the import
one. It works in the same way as module
but skips the WSGI callable search.
You can use it to preload modules before the loading of WSGI apps. You can specify an unlimited number of ‘’‘import’‘’ directives.
django_uwsgi.decorators API reference¶
-
django_uwsgi.decorators.
postfork
(func)¶ uWSGI is a preforking (or “fork-abusing”) server, so you might need to execute a fixup task after each
fork()
. Thepostfork
decorator is just the ticket. You can declare multiplepostfork
tasks. Each decorated function will be executed in sequence after eachfork()
.@postfork def reconnect_to_db(): myfoodb.connect() @postfork def hello_world(): print("Hello World")
-
django_uwsgi.decorators.
spool
(func)¶ The uWSGI spooler can be very useful. Compared to Celery or other queues it is very “raw”. The
spool
decorator will help!@spool def a_long_long_task(arguments): print(arguments) for i in xrange(0, 10000000): time.sleep(0.1) @spool def a_longer_task(args): print(args) for i in xrange(0, 10000000): time.sleep(0.5) # enqueue the tasks a_long_long_task.spool(foo='bar',hello='world') a_longer_task.spool({'pippo':'pluto'})
The functions will automatically return
uwsgi.SPOOL_OK
so they will be executed one time independently by their return status.
-
django_uwsgi.decorators.
spoolforever
(func)¶ Use
spoolforever
when you want to continuously execute a spool task. A@spoolforever
task will always returnuwsgi.SPOOL_RETRY
.@spoolforever def a_longer_task(args): print(args) for i in xrange(0, 10000000): time.sleep(0.5) # enqueue the task a_longer_task.spool({'pippo':'pluto'})
-
django_uwsgi.decorators.
spoolraw
(func)¶ Advanced users may want to control the return value of a task.
@spoolraw def a_controlled_task(args): if args['foo'] == 'bar': return uwsgi.SPOOL_OK return uwsgi.SPOOL_RETRY a_controlled_task.spool(foo='bar')
-
django_uwsgi.decorators.
rpc
("name", func)¶ uWSGI RPC is the fastest way to remotely call functions in applications hosted in uWSGI instances. You can easily define exported functions with the @rpc decorator.
@rpc('helloworld') def ciao_mondo_function(): return "Hello World"
-
django_uwsgi.decorators.
signal
(num)(func)¶ You can register signals for the signal framework in one shot.
@signal(17) def my_signal(num): print("i am signal %d" % num)
-
django_uwsgi.decorators.
timer
(interval, func)¶ Execute a function at regular intervals.
@timer(3) def three_seconds(num): print("3 seconds elapsed")
-
django_uwsgi.decorators.
rbtimer
(interval, func)¶ Works like @timer but using red black timers.
-
django_uwsgi.decorators.
cron
(min, hour, day, mon, wday, func)¶ Easily register functions for the CronInterface.
@cron(59, 3, -1, -1, -1) def execute_me_at_three_and_fiftynine(num): print("it's 3:59 in the morning")
Since 1.2, a new syntax is supported to simulate
crontab
-like intervals (every Nth minute, etc.).*/5 * * * *
can be specified in uWSGI like thus:@cron(-5, -1, -1, -1, -1) def execute_me_every_five_min(num): print("5 minutes, what a long time!")
-
django_uwsgi.decorators.
filemon
(path, func)¶ Execute a function every time a file/directory is modified.
@filemon("/tmp") def tmp_has_been_modified(num): print("/tmp directory has been modified. Great magic is afoot")
-
django_uwsgi.decorators.
erlang
(process_name, func)¶ Map a function as an Erlang <http://uwsgi-docs.readthedocs.org/en/latest/Erlang.html> process.
@erlang('foobar') def hello(): return "Hello"
-
django_uwsgi.decorators.
thread
(func)¶ Mark function to be executed in a separate thread.
Important
Threading must be enabled in uWSGI with the
enable-threads
orthreads <n>
option.@thread def a_running_thread(): while True: time.sleep(2) print("i am a no-args thread") @thread def a_running_thread_with_args(who): while True: time.sleep(2) print("Hello %s (from arged-thread)" % who) a_running_thread() a_running_thread_with_args("uWSGI")
You may also combine
@thread
with@postfork
to spawn the postfork handler in a new thread in the freshly spawned worker.@postfork @thread def a_post_fork_thread(): while True: time.sleep(3) print("Hello from a thread in worker %d" % uwsgi.worker_id())
-
django_uwsgi.decorators.
lock
(func)¶ This decorator will execute a function in fully locked environment, making it impossible for other workers or threads (or the master, if you’re foolish or brave enough) to run it simultaneously. Obviously this may be combined with @postfork.
@lock def dangerous_op(): print("Concurrency is for fools!")
-
django_uwsgi.decorators.
mulefunc
([mulespec, ]func)¶ Offload the execution of the function to a mule <http://uwsgi-docs.readthedocs.org/en/latest/Mules.html>. When the offloaded function is called, it will return immediately and execution is delegated to a mule.
@mulefunc def i_am_an_offloaded_function(argument1, argument2): print argument1,argument2
You may also specify a mule ID or mule farm to run the function on. Please remember to register your function with a uwsgi import configuration option.
@mulefunc(3) def on_three(): print "I'm running on mule 3." @mulefunc('old_mcdonalds_farm') def on_mcd(): print "I'm running on a mule on Old McDonalds' farm."
-
django_uwsgi.decorators.
harakiri
(time, func)¶ Starting from uWSGI 1.3-dev, a customizable secondary harakiri subsystem has been added. You can use this decorator to kill a worker if the given call is taking too long.
@harakiri(10) def slow_function(foo, bar): for i in range(0, 10000): for y in range(0, 10000): pass # or the alternative lower level api uwsgi.set_user_harakiri(30) # you have 30 seconds. fight! slow_func() uwsgi.set_user_harakiri(0) # clear the timer, all is well
Email Backend¶
A Django backend for e-mail delivery using uWSGI Spool to queue deliveries.
Usage¶
First, add uWSGI backend in your settings file.
EMAIL_BACKEND = 'django_uwsgi.mail.EmailBackend'
And send your e-mails normally.
from django.core.mail import send_mail
send_mail('Subject here', 'Here is the message.', 'from@example.com',
['to@example.com'], fail_silently=False)
Note¶
You must setup uwsgi spooler. Example ini:
plugin = spooler
spooler = /tmp
spooler-import = django_uwsgi.tasks
or use built in management command runuwsgi
Changing the backend¶
By default the ‘django.core.mail.backends.smtp.EmailBackend’ is used for the real e-mail delivery. You can change that using:
UWSGI_EMAIL_BACKEND = 'your.backend.EmailBackend'
django-configurations¶
If you’re using django-configurations in your project, you must setup importer as mentioned in django-configurations docs for celery
Cache Backend¶
Installation¶
change settings to:
CACHES = {
'default': {
'BACKEND': 'django_uwsgi.cache.UwsgiCache',
# and optionally, if you used a different cache name
'LOCATION': 'foobar'
}
}
Settings¶
UWSGI_CACHE_FALLBACK
False
- raises Exception ifuwsgi
cannot be imported.True
(default) - if uwsgi is not importable this cache backend will alias to LocMemCache. Note that south or other management commands might try to load the cache backend so this is why it’s the default.
Management Command¶
runuwsgi¶
python manage.py runuwsgi
runuwsgi options:¶
http¶
python manage.py runuwsgi http=8000
socket¶
python manage.py runuwsgi socket=/tmp/projectname-uwsgi.sock
Other options¶
Any other options can be passed via environment variables, prefixed with UWSGI_
Emperor¶
you can use django_uwsgi.emperor module if you want to store vassals configs in PostgreSQL database.
Simply add ‘django_uwsgi.emperor’, into INSTALLED_APPS
INSTALLED_APPS += ['django_uwsgi.emperor',]
Populate vassals via django admin interface and start uwsgi with command like:
uwsgi --plugin emperor_pg --emperor "pg://host=127.0.0.1 user=foobar dbname=emperor;SELECT name,config,ts FROM vassals WHERE enabled = True"
Each time vassal added, removed, updated, enabled or disabled - uwsgi will start/stop it or reload.
Integrations¶
Django-Debug-Toolbar¶
If you’re using django-debug-toolbar, you can add:
DEBUG_TOOLBAR_PANELS += ['django_uwsgi.panels.UwsgiPanel',]
Screenshots¶
django-debug-toolbar panel
Wagtail admin interface:
Emperor’s Vassal Admin Panel
django.contrib.admin interface
Todo¶
- Tests
- uWSGI config generator
- Improve Docs
- Translations?
- Good cache panel
- Ability to add cronjobs/filemonitors via admin interface
- Options for sendfile if uwsgi serving files
Some code is borrowed from projects I did earlier and some code is still not added yet, but does exists in my projects.