1. mod_wsgi (Apache)¶
If you are using the Apache webserver, consider using mod_wsgi.
Watch Out
Please make sure in advance that any app.run()
calls you might
have in your application file are inside an if __name__ ==
'__main__':
block or moved to a separate file. Just make sure it’s
not called because this will always start a local WSGI server which
we do not want if we deploy that application to mod_wsgi.
1.1. Installing mod_wsgi¶
If you don’t have mod_wsgi installed yet you have to either install it using a package manager or compile it yourself. The mod_wsgi installation instructions cover source installations on UNIX systems.
If you are using Ubuntu/Debian you can apt-get it and activate it as follows:
# apt-get install libapache2-mod-wsgi
If you are using a yum based distribution (Fedora, OpenSUSE, etc..) you can install it as follows:
# yum install mod_wsgi
On FreeBSD install mod_wsgi by compiling the www/mod_wsgi port or by using pkg_add:
# pkg install ap22-mod_wsgi2
If you are using pkgsrc you can install mod_wsgi by compiling the www/ap2-wsgi package.
If you encounter segfaulting child processes after the first apache reload you can safely ignore them. Just restart the server.
1.2. Creating a .wsgi file¶
To run your application you need a yourapplication.wsgi
file. This file
contains the code mod_wsgi is executing on startup to get the application
object. The object called application in that file is then used as
application.
For most applications the following file should be sufficient:
from yourapplication import app as application
If you don’t have a factory function for application creation but a singleton instance you can directly import that one as application.
Store that file somewhere that you will find it again (e.g.:
/var/www/yourapplication
) and make sure that yourapplication and all
the libraries that are in use are on the python load path. If you don’t
want to install it system wide consider using a virtual python
instance. Keep in mind that you will have to actually install your
application into the virtualenv as well. Alternatively there is the
option to just patch the path in the .wsgi
file before the import:
import sys
sys.path.insert(0, '/path/to/the/application')
1.3. Configuring Apache¶
The last thing you have to do is to create an Apache configuration file for your application. In this example we are telling mod_wsgi to execute the application under a different user for security reasons:
<VirtualHost *>
ServerName example.com
WSGIDaemonProcess yourapplication user=user1 group=group1 threads=5
WSGIScriptAlias / /var/www/yourapplication/yourapplication.wsgi
<Directory /var/www/yourapplication>
WSGIProcessGroup yourapplication
WSGIApplicationGroup %{GLOBAL}
Order deny,allow
Allow from all
</Directory>
</VirtualHost>
Note: WSGIDaemonProcess isn’t implemented in Windows and Apache will refuse to run with the above configuration. On a Windows system, eliminate those lines:
<VirtualHost *>
ServerName example.com
WSGIScriptAlias / C:\yourdir\yourapp.wsgi
<Directory C:\yourdir>
Order deny,allow
Allow from all
</Directory>
</VirtualHost>
Note: There have been some changes in access control configuration for Apache 2.4.
Most notably, the syntax for directory permissions has changed from httpd 2.2
Order allow,deny
Allow from all
to httpd 2.4 syntax
Require all granted
For more information consult the mod_wsgi wiki.
1.4. Troubleshooting¶
If your application does not run, follow this guide to troubleshoot:
- Problem: application does not run, errorlog shows SystemExit ignored
- You have an
app.run()
call in your application file that is not guarded by anif __name__ == '__main__':
condition. Either remove thatrun()
call from the file and move it into a separaterun.py
file or put it into such an if block. - Problem: application gives permission errors
- Probably caused by your application running as the wrong user. Make
sure the folders the application needs access to have the proper
privileges set and the application runs as the correct user
(
user
andgroup
parameter to the WSGIDaemonProcess directive) - Problem: application dies with an error on print
Keep in mind that mod_wsgi disallows doing anything with
sys.stdout
andsys.stderr
. You can disable this protection from the config by setting the WSGIRestrictStdout tooff
:WSGIRestrictStdout Off
Alternatively you can also replace the standard out in the .wsgi file with a different stream:
import sys sys.stdout = sys.stderr
- Problem: accessing resources gives IO errors
Your application probably is a single .py file you symlinked into the site-packages folder. Please be aware that this does not work, instead you either have to put the folder into the pythonpath the file is stored in, or convert your application into a package.
The reason for this is that for non-installed packages, the module filename is used to locate the resources and for symlinks the wrong filename is picked up.
1.5. Support for Automatic Reloading¶
To help deployment tools you can activate support for automatic
reloading. Whenever something changes the .wsgi
file, mod_wsgi will
reload all the daemon processes for us.
For that, just add the following directive to your Directory section:
WSGIScriptReloading On
1.6. Working with Virtual Environments¶
Virtual environments have the advantage that they never install the
required dependencies system wide so you have a better control over what
is used where. If you want to use a virtual environment with mod_wsgi
you have to modify your .wsgi
file slightly.
Add the following lines to the top of your .wsgi
file:
activate_this = '/path/to/env/bin/activate_this.py'
execfile(activate_this, dict(__file__=activate_this))
For Python 3 add the following lines to the top of your .wsgi
file:
activate_this = '/path/to/env/bin/activate_this.py'
with open(activate_this) as file_:
exec(file_.read(), dict(__file__=activate_this))
This sets up the load paths according to the settings of the virtual environment. Keep in mind that the path has to be absolute.