django-herokuapp is a set of utilities and a project template for running Django sites on Heroku.
- Storage backend for serving optimized assets using django-require via Amazon S3.
- A growing documentation resource for best practices when hosting Django on Heroku.
start_herokuapp_project.py
command for initialising a new Heroku project with sensible basic settings.
- Checkout the latest django-herokuapp release and copy or symlink the
herokuapp
directory into yourPYTHONPATH
. - Add
'herokuapp'
to yourINSTALLED_APPS
setting. - Read the rest of this README for pointers on setting up your Heroku site.
If you're creating a new Django site for hosting on Heroku, then you can give youself a headstart by running
the start_herokuapp_project.py
script that's bundled with this package. If you installed django-herokuapp using
easy_install
or pip
then it should already be on your PATH
.
django-herokuapp ships with a recommended requirements.txt file for sites hosted on Heroku. You can use this as
the starting point for configuring your own project's dependencies. The requirements.txt file should be placed in the
root of your repository. If you've used the start_herokuapp_project.py
script to set up your project, then this
will have already been taken care of for you.
A site hosted on Heroku has to handle traffic without the benefit of a caching reverse proxy like nginx, which means that the normal approach of using a small pool of worker threads simply won't scale in production.
The solution is to use a pool of async workers instead, and the gunicorn project provides an excellent implementation of this approach.
django-herokuapp provides a Procfile and gunicorn.conf file for running gunicorn on your Heroku site. These
files should be tweaked as desired, and placed in the root of your repository. If you've used the start_herokuapp_project.py
script to set up your project, then this will have already been taken care of for you.
Heroku provides an excellent Postgres Add-on that you can use for your site. The recommended settings for using Heroku Postgres are as follows:
import dj_database_url
DATABASES = {
"default": dj_database_url.config(default='postgres://localhost'),
}
This configuration relies on the dj-database-url package, which is included in the default requirements.txt
for django-herokuapp. These settings will already be present in your django settings file if you created your project using
the start_herokuapp_project.py
script.
Because you're using async workers to power your site, it's imporant to make sure that the PostgreSQL driver plays nicely and does not block an entire worker process. This is already taken care of in the default gunicorn.conf file included with django-herokuapp, and relies on the psycogreen package, which is included in the default requirements.txt.
You can provision a starter package with Heroku Postgres using the following Heroku command:
$ heroku addons:add heroku-postgresql:dev
A pure-python webserver like gunicorn isn't best suited to serving high volumes of static files. For this, a cloud-based service like Amazon S3 is ideal.
The recommended settings for hosting your static content with Amazon S3 is as follows:
# Use Amazon S3 for storage for uploaded media files.
DEFAULT_FILE_STORAGE = "storages.backends.s3boto.S3BotoStorage"
# Use RequireJS and Amazon S3 for static files storage.
STATICFILES_STORAGE = "herokuapp.storage.OptimizedCachedS3BotoStorage"
# Amazon S3 settings.
AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID = ""
AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY = ""
AWS_STORAGE_BUCKET_NAME = ""
AWS_HEADERS = {
"Cache-Control": "public, max-age=86400",
}
AWS_QUERYSTRING_AUTH = False
AWS_S3_SECURE_URLS = False
AWS_REDUCED_REDUNDANCY = False
AWS_IS_GZIPPED = False
# Cache settings.
CACHES = {
# Long cache timeout for staticfiles, since this is used heavily by the optimizing storage.
"staticfiles": {
"BACKEND": "django.core.cache.backends.locmem.LocMemCache",
"TIMEOUT": 60 * 60 * 24 * 365,
"LOCATION": "staticfiles",
},
}
The recommended STATICFILES_STORAGE
setting uses the RequireJS optimizer to minify your codebase before
uploading to Amazon S3. For more information about using RequireJS with Django, please see the documentation
for django-require.
These settings will already be present in your django settings file if you created your project using
the start_herokuapp_project.py
script.
Heroku does not provide an SMTP server in it's default package. Instead, it's recommended that you use the SendGrid Add-on to send your site's emails.
# Email settings.
EMAIL_HOST = "smtp.sendgrid.net"
EMAIL_HOST_USER = os.environ.get("SENDGRID_USERNAME", "")
EMAIL_HOST_PASSWORD = os.environ.get("SENDGRID_PASSWORD", "")
EMAIL_PORT = 25
EMAIL_USE_TLS = False
These settings will already be present in your django settings file if you created your project using
the start_herokuapp_project.py
script.
You can provision a starter package with SendGrid using the following Heroku command:
$ heroku addons:add sendgrid:starter
The smaller the size of your compiled project, the faster it can be redeployed on Heroku servers. To this end,
django-herokuapp provides a suggested .slugignore file that should be placed in the root of your repository.
If you've used the start_herokuapp_project.py
script to set up your project, then this will have already been
taken care of for you.
This file excludes the test and static files used by your project. It is recommended that you use Amazon S3
to serve your static files in production, but if you intend to serve them directly out of your Heroku server,
then you'll need to remove the static
entry from the .slugignore file before deploying.
Downloads and bug tracking can be found at the main project website.
The django-herokuapp project was developed by Dave Hall. You can get the code from the django-herokuapp project site.
Dave Hall is a freelance web developer, based in Cambridge, UK. You can usually find him on the Internet in a number of different places: