Skip to content

Latest commit

 

History

History
 
 

django

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

parent directory

..
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Django

Tags

Tag Django Python Download Size Image Size
django:python3 1.10.3 3.5 116.8MB
django:python3-onbuild 1.10.3 onbuild 3.5 84.6MB
django:python3-lts 1.8.16 LTS 3.5 114.4MB
django:python2 1.10.3 2.7 104.5MB
django:python2-onbuild 1.10.3 onbuild 2.7 72.5MB
django:python2-lts 1.8.16 LTS 2.7 102.1MB

What is Django?

Django is a free and open source web application framework, written in Python, which follows the model-view-controller architectural pattern. Django's primary goal is to ease the creation of complex, database-driven websites with an emphasis on reusability and "pluggability" of components.

wikipedia.org/wiki/Django_(web_framework)

Django logo

How to use this image

Create a Dockerfile in your Django app project

FROM rvernica/django:onbuild

Put this file in the root of your app, next to the requirements.txt.

This image includes multiple ONBUILD triggers which should cover most applications. The build will COPY . /usr/src/app, RUN pip install, EXPOSE 8000, and set the default command to python manage.py runserver.

You can then build and run the Docker image:

$ docker build --tag my-django-app .
$ docker run --name some-django-app --detach my-django-app

You can test it by visiting http://container-ip:8000 in a browser or, if you need access outside the host, on http://localhost:8000 with the following command:

$ docker run --name some-django-app --publish 8000:8000 --detach my-django-app

Without a Dockerfile

Of course, if you don't want to take advantage of magical and convenient ONBUILD triggers, you can always just use docker run directly to avoid having to add a Dockerfile to your project.

$ docker run --name some-django-app --volume "$PWD":/usr/src/app --workdir /usr/src/app --publish 8000:8000 --detach rvernica/django bash -c "pip install -r requirements.txt && python manage.py runserver 0.0.0.0:8000"

Bootstrap a new Django Application

If you want to generate the scaffolding for a new Django project, you can do the following:

$ docker run --interactive --tty --rm --user "$(id -u):$(id -g)" --volume "$PWD":/usr/src/app --workdir /usr/src/app rvernica/django django-admin.py startproject mysite

This will create a sub-directory named mysite inside your current directory.

About this image

This Docker library is a fork of the Docker Official Image packaging for Django. The official image is currently deprecated and will receive no further updates starting 2017.