From 3908ec5a2fc50eb3937ad52335c422d538befa53 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Javed Khan Date: Mon, 14 Oct 2013 13:45:05 +0530 Subject: [PATCH] added example wsgi --- example/wsgi.py | 32 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 32 insertions(+) create mode 100644 example/wsgi.py diff --git a/example/wsgi.py b/example/wsgi.py new file mode 100644 index 00000000..58045fe7 --- /dev/null +++ b/example/wsgi.py @@ -0,0 +1,32 @@ +""" +WSGI config for demo_project project. + +This module contains the WSGI application used by Django's development server +and any production WSGI deployments. It should expose a module-level variable +named ``application``. Django's ``runserver`` and ``runfcgi`` commands discover +this application via the ``WSGI_APPLICATION`` setting. + +Usually you will have the standard Django WSGI application here, but it also +might make sense to replace the whole Django WSGI application with a custom one +that later delegates to the Django one. For example, you could introduce WSGI +middleware here, or combine a Django application with an application of another +framework. + +""" +import os + +# We defer to a DJANGO_SETTINGS_MODULE already in the environment. This breaks +# if running multiple sites in the same mod_wsgi process. To fix this, use +# mod_wsgi daemon mode with each site in its own daemon process, or use +# os.environ["DJANGO_SETTINGS_MODULE"] = "demo_project.settings" +os.environ.setdefault("DJANGO_SETTINGS_MODULE", "settings.local") + +# This application object is used by any WSGI server configured to use this +# file. This includes Django's development server, if the WSGI_APPLICATION +# setting points here. +from django.core.wsgi import get_wsgi_application +application = get_wsgi_application() + +# Apply WSGI middleware here. +# from helloworld.wsgi import HelloWorldApplication +# application = HelloWorldApplication(application)