django_manage - Manages a Django application.
Synopsis
- Manages a Django application using the manage.py application frontend to django-admin. With the virtualenv parameter, all management commands will be executed by the given virtualenv installation.
Requirements
The below requirements are needed on the host that executes this module.
- virtualenv
- django
Parameters
Parameter | Choices/Defaults | Comments |
---|---|---|
app_path required | The path to the root of the Django application where manage.py lives. | |
apps | A list of space-delimited apps to target. Used by the 'test' command. | |
cache_table | The name of the table used for database-backed caching. Used by the 'createcachetable' command. | |
command required |
| The name of the Django management command to run. Built in commands are cleanup, collectstatic, flush, loaddata, migrate, runfcgi, syncdb, test, and validate. Other commands can be entered, but will fail if they're unknown to Django. Other commands that may prompt for user input should be run with the --noinput flag. |
database | The database to target. Used by the 'createcachetable', 'flush', 'loaddata', and 'syncdb' commands. | |
failfast |
| Fail the command immediately if a test fails. Used by the 'test' command. |
fixtures | A space-delimited list of fixture file names to load in the database. Required by the 'loaddata' command. | |
link (added in 1.3) | Will create links to the files instead of copying them, you can only use this parameter with 'collectstatic' command | |
merge (added in 1.3) | Will run out-of-order or missing migrations as they are not rollback migrations, you can only use this parameter with 'migrate' command | |
pythonpath | A directory to add to the Python path. Typically used to include the settings module if it is located external to the application directory. | |
settings | The Python path to the application's settings module, such as 'myapp.settings'. | |
skip (added in 1.3) | Will skip over out-of-order missing migrations, you can only use this parameter with migrate
| |
virtualenv | An optional path to a virtualenv installation to use while running the manage application. aliases: virtualenv |
Notes
Note
- virtualenv (http://www.virtualenv.org) must be installed on the remote host if the virtualenv parameter is specified.
- This module will create a virtualenv if the virtualenv parameter is specified and a virtualenv does not already exist at the given location.
- This module assumes English error messages for the ‘createcachetable’ command to detect table existence, unfortunately.
- To be able to use the migrate command with django versions < 1.7, you must have south installed and added as an app in your settings.
- To be able to use the collectstatic command, you must have enabled staticfiles in your settings.
- As of ansible 2.x, your manage.py application must be executable (rwxr-xr-x), and must have a valid shebang, i.e. “#!/usr/bin/env python”, for invoking the appropriate Python interpreter.
Examples
# Run cleanup on the application installed in 'django_dir'. - django_manage: command: cleanup app_path: "{{ django_dir }}" # Load the initial_data fixture into the application - django_manage: command: loaddata app_path: "{{ django_dir }}" fixtures: "{{ initial_data }}" # Run syncdb on the application - django_manage: command: syncdb app_path: "{{ django_dir }}" settings: "{{ settings_app_name }}" pythonpath: "{{ settings_dir }}" virtualenv: "{{ virtualenv_dir }}" # Run the SmokeTest test case from the main app. Useful for testing deploys. - django_manage: command: test app_path: "{{ django_dir }}" apps: main.SmokeTest # Create an initial superuser. - django_manage: command: "createsuperuser --noinput --username=admin [email protected]" app_path: "{{ django_dir }}"
Status
This module is flagged as preview which means that it is not guaranteed to have a backwards compatible interface.
Author
- Scott Anderson (@tastychutney)
Hint
If you notice any issues in this documentation you can edit this document to improve it.
© 2012–2018 Michael DeHaan
© 2018–2019 Red Hat, Inc.
Licensed under the GNU General Public License version 3.
https://docs.ansible.com/ansible/2.5/modules/django_manage_module.html