Fixed #4296 -- Added more explanation around the PythonPath directory setting. Based on contributions from a cast of thousands (Simon Greenhill, Paul Bissex, Graham Dumpleton, ...). Thanks, all.

git-svn-id: http://code.djangoproject.com/svn/django/trunk@5896 bcc190cf-cafb-0310-a4f2-bffc1f526a37
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Malcolm Tredinnick 2007-08-15 12:25:21 +00:00
parent ce151bb8e4
commit 3835d8afec
1 changed files with 24 additions and 0 deletions

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@ -63,6 +63,30 @@ computer, you'll have to tell mod_python where your project can be found:
**PythonPath "['/path/to/project'] + sys.path"**
</Location>
The value you use for ``PythonPath`` should include the parent directories of
all the modules you are going to import in your application. It should also
include the parent directory of the ``DJANGO_SETTINGS_MODULE`` location. This
is exactly the same situation as setting the Python path for interactive
usage. Whenever you try to import something, Python will run through all the
directories in ``sys.path`` in turn, from first to last, and try to import
from each directory until one succeeds.
An example might make this clearer. Suppose
you have some applications under ``/usr/local/django-apps/`` (for example,
``/usr/local/django-apps/weblog/`` and so forth), your settings file is at
``/var/www/mysite/settings.py`` and you have specified
``DJANGO_SETTINGS_MODULE`` as in the above example. In this case, you would
need to write your ``PythonPath`` directive as::
PythonPath "['/var/production/django-apps/', '/var/www'] + sys.path"
With this path, ``import weblog`` and ``import mysite.settings`` will all
work. If you had ``import blogroll`` in your code somewhere and ``blogroll``
lived under the ``weblog/`` directory, you would *also* need to add
``/var/production/django-apps/weblog/`` to your ``PythonPath``. Remember: the
**parent directories** of anything you import directly must be on the Python
path.
.. caution::
If you're using Windows, remember that the path will contain backslashes.