This is a simple Django 2.0+ project template with my preferred setup. Most Django project templates make way too many assumptions or are just way too complicated. I try to make the least amount of assumptions possible while still trying provide a useful setup. Most of my projects are deployed to Heroku, so this is optimized for that but is not necessary.
- Latest Django (hopefully).
- Uses Poetry - the best packaging tool.
- django-extensions for the various useful commands and things.
- Django-dotenv, so you can easily set environment variables and access them in your settings file.
- ShortUUID, because I end up using it most of the time.
- Secure by default (various things won't work on production without TLS).
- Runs under docker-compose by default, with a PostgreSQL and Redis instance (configured as a cache and session backend).
- Can also run outside of docker-compose using SQLite, for when you aren't using Postgres-specific features yet.
- Other things I'm forgetting now.
Installing the template is easy, you don't really have to do much:
django-admin.py startproject \
--template=https://github.com/skorokithakis/django-project-template/archive/master.zip \
--extension py,cfg,yml,ini,toml \
<project_name>
After installation, you need to change the following:
- Run
poetry lock
to pin the packages to the latest versions. - Change this README.
- Delete/change the
LICENSE
file. - Add your domain in
settings.py
'sALLOWED_HOSTS
. - Customize the
.env
file. - If you're using Dokku, add your domain name to
misc/dokku/CHECKS
.
You're ready to run the project with docker-compose
and add that "container expert" bullet point to your CV:
$ docker-compose up
You should be able to access your project under https://localhost/. I like it running on port 80,
and you can assign a different hostname in your /etc/hosts
if you want it to look a bit better.
If you don't want to bother with docker-compose
yet, you can run it locally:
$ poetry install
$ ./manage.py migrate
$ ./manage.py runserver_plus
Then you can access your project at https://localhost:8080/, like a plebe.
The template comes with most of the things you need to deploy it on Dokku. You will need to set up a Postgres database, a Redis instance and a TLS certificate first, though. For instructions, see my post on deploying Django projects on Dokku.
You're going to need to add some secrets for production. That's fine, as long as you don't commit them in any repo. The project is structured such that all secrets can be passed as environment variables (see the settings file for the variable names).
You can also specify any secret keys or settings in a local_settings.py
, which will override your settings.py
variables. I usually use that for local development.
Copyright © Stavros Korokithakis. Licensed under the MIT license.