===================== How to install Django ===================== This document will get you up and running with Django. Install Python ============== Being a Python Web framework, Django requires Python. It works with any Python version 2.3 and higher. Get Python at http://www.python.org. If you're running Linux or Mac OS X, you probably already have it installed. Install Apache and mod_python ============================= If you just want to experiment with Django, skip ahead to the next section; Django includes a lightweight web server you can use for testing, so you won't need to set up Apache until you're ready to deploy Django in production. If you want to use Django on a production site, use Apache with `mod_python`_. mod_python is similar to mod_perl -- it embeds Python within Apache and loads Python code into memory when the server starts. Code stays in memory throughout the life of an Apache process, which leads to significant performance gains over other server arrangements. Make sure you have Apache installed, with the mod_python module activated. Django requires Apache 2.x and mod_python 3.x. See `How to use Django with mod_python`_ for information on how to configure mod_python once you have it installed. If you can't use mod_python for some reason, fear not: Django follows the WSGI_ spec, which allows it to run on a variety of server platforms. See the `server-arrangements wiki page`_ for specific installation instructions for each platform. .. _Apache: http://httpd.apache.org/ .. _mod_python: http://www.modpython.org/ .. _WSGI: http://www.python.org/peps/pep-0333.html .. _How to use Django with mod_python: ../modpython/ .. _server-arrangements wiki page: http://code.djangoproject.com/wiki/ServerArrangements Get your database running ========================= If you plan to use Django's database API functionality, you'll need to make sure a database server is running. Django works with PostgreSQL_, MySQL_, Oracle_ and SQLite_ (although SQLite doesn't require a separate server to be running). Additionally, you'll need to make sure your Python database bindings are installed. * If you're using PostgreSQL, you'll need the psycopg_ package. Django supports both version 1 and 2. (When you configure Django's database layer, specify either ``postgresql`` [for version 1] or ``postgresql_psycopg2`` [for version 2].) If you're on Windows, check out the unofficial `compiled Windows version`_. * If you're using MySQL, you'll need MySQLdb_, version 1.2.1p2 or higher. You will also want to read the database-specific notes for the `MySQL backend`_. * If you're using SQLite and either Python 2.3 or Python 2.4, you'll need pysqlite_. Use version 2.0.3 or higher. Python 2.5 ships with an sqlite wrapper in the standard library, so you don't need to install anything extra in that case. * If you're using Oracle, you'll need cx_Oracle_, version 4.3.1 or higher. You will also want to read the database-specific notes for the `Oracle backend`_. If you plan to use Django's ``manage.py syncdb`` command to automatically create database tables for your models, you'll need to ensure that Django has permission to create and alter tables in the database you're using; if you plan to manually create the tables, you can simply grant Django ``SELECT``, ``INSERT``, ``UPDATE`` and ``DELETE`` permissions. On some databases, Django will need to have ``ALTER TABLE`` privileges during ``syncdb`` (in order to create foreign key constraints properly on databases which do not allow them to be deferred), but will not issue ``ALTER TABLE`` statements on a table once ``syncdb`` has finished setting it up. If you will be using Django's `testing framework`_ with data fixtures, Django will need permission to create a temporary test database. .. _PostgreSQL: http://www.postgresql.org/ .. _MySQL: http://www.mysql.com/ .. _Django's ticket system: http://code.djangoproject.com/report/1 .. _psycopg: http://initd.org/tracker/psycopg .. _compiled Windows version: http://stickpeople.com/projects/python/win-psycopg/ .. _MySQLdb: http://sourceforge.net/projects/mysql-python .. _SQLite: http://www.sqlite.org/ .. _pysqlite: http://initd.org/tracker/pysqlite .. _MySQL backend: ../databases/ .. _cx_Oracle: http://cx-oracle.sourceforge.net/ .. _Oracle: http://www.oracle.com/ .. _Oracle backend: ../databases/#oracle-notes .. _testing framework: ../testing/ Remove any old versions of Django ================================= If you are upgrading your installation of Django from a previous version, you will need to uninstall the old Django version before installing the new version. If you installed Django using ``setup.py install``, uninstalling is as simple as deleting the ``django`` directory from your Python ``site-packages``. If you installed Django from a Python egg, remove the Django ``.egg`` file, and remove the reference to the egg in the file named ``easy-install.pth``. This file should also be located in your ``site-packages`` directory. .. admonition:: Where are my ``site-packages`` stored? The location of the ``site-packages`` directory depends on the operating system, and the location in which Python was installed. To find out your system's ``site-packages`` location, execute the following:: python -c "from distutils.sysconfig import get_python_lib; print get_python_lib()" (Note that this should be run from a shell prompt, not a Python interactive prompt.) Install the Django code ======================= Installation instructions are slightly different depending on whether you're installing a distribution-specific package, downloading the the latest official release, or fetching the latest development version. It's easy, no matter which way you choose. Installing a distribution-specific package ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Check the `distribution specific notes`_ to see if your platform/distribution provides official Django packages/installers. Distribution-provided packages will typically allow for automatic installation of dependancies and easy upgrade paths. Installing an official release ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 1. Download the latest release from our `download page`_. 2. Untar the downloaded file (e.g. ``tar xzvf Django-NNN.tar.gz``, where ``NNN`` is the version number of the latest release). If you're using Windows, you can download the command-line tool bsdtar_ to do this, or you can use a GUI-based tool such as 7-zip_. 3. Change into the directory created in step 2 (e.g. ``cd Django-NNN``). 4. If you're using Linux, Mac OS X or some other flavor of Unix, enter the command ``sudo python setup.py install`` at the shell prompt. If you're using Windows, start up a command shell with administrator privileges and run the command ``setup.py install``. These commands will install Django in your Python installation's ``site-packages`` directory. .. _distribution specific notes: ../distributions/ .. _bsdtar: http://gnuwin32.sourceforge.net/packages/bsdtar.htm .. _7-zip: http://www.7-zip.org/ Installing the development version ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ If you'd like to be able to update your Django code occasionally with the latest bug fixes and improvements, follow these instructions: 1. Make sure that you have Subversion_ installed, and that you can run its commands from a shell. (Enter ``svn help`` at a shell prompt to test this.) 2. Check out Django's main development branch (the 'trunk') like so:: svn co http://code.djangoproject.com/svn/django/trunk/ django-trunk 3. Next, make sure that the Python interpreter can load Django's code. There are various ways of accomplishing this. One of the most convenient, on Linux, Mac OSX or other Unix-like systems, is to use a symbolic link:: ln -s `pwd`/django-trunk/django SITE-PACKAGES-DIR/django (In the above line, change ``SITE-PACKAGES-DIR`` to match the location of your system's ``site-packages`` directory, as explained in the "Where are my ``site-packages`` stored?" section above.) Alternatively, you can define your ``PYTHONPATH`` environment variable so that it includes the ``django-trunk`` directory. This is perhaps the most convenient solution on Windows systems, which don't support symbolic links. (Environment variables can be defined on Windows systems `from the Control Panel`_.) .. admonition:: What about Apache and mod_python? If you take the approach of setting ``PYTHONPATH``, you'll need to remember to do the same thing in your Apache configuration once you deploy your production site. Do this by setting ``PythonPath`` in your Apache configuration file. More information about deployment is available, of course, in our `How to use Django with mod_python`_ documentation. .. _How to use Django with mod_python: ../modpython/ 4. On Unix-like systems, create a symbolic link to the file ``django-trunk/django/bin/django-admin.py`` in a directory on your system path, such as ``/usr/local/bin``. For example:: ln -s `pwd`/django-trunk/django/bin/django-admin.py /usr/local/bin This simply lets you type ``django-admin.py`` from within any directory, rather than having to qualify the command with the full path to the file. On Windows systems, the same result can be achieved by copying the file ``django-trunk/django/bin/django-admin.py`` to somewhere on your system path, for example ``C:\Python24\Scripts``. You *don't* have to run ``python setup.py install``, because you've already carried out the equivalent actions in steps 3 and 4. When you want to update your copy of the Django source code, just run the command ``svn update`` from within the ``django-trunk`` directory. When you do this, Subversion will automatically download any changes. .. _`download page`: http://www.djangoproject.com/download/ .. _Subversion: http://subversion.tigris.org/ .. _from the Control Panel: http://www.microsoft.com/resources/documentation/windows/xp/all/proddocs/en-us/sysdm_advancd_environmnt_addchange_variable.mspx