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  • how to get apache mod_cache work with mod_wsgi (django)?

    - by harmv
    I thought i'd speed up my django projects, by letting apache doing some caching for me. Unfortunately I see that apache never caches my dynamic pages. Has mod_cache problems with mod_wsgi served code ? My apache config: <VirtualHost *:80 ServerName myserver.com CacheEnable mem / # for testing only CacheIgnoreQueryString On CacheIgnoreCacheControl On WSGIDaemonProcess aname processes=1 threads=25 WSGIProcessGroup aname Alias /media/ /home/harm/projects/test/media/ WSGIScriptAlias / /home/harm/projects/test/wsgi.py The response does have the correct caching headers: Content-Length 2647 Content-Encoding gzip Vary Accept-Encoding Cache-Control public, max-age=3600 Keep-Alive timeout=15, max=100 Connection Keep-Alive Content-Type application/x-javascript Am I missing something ?

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  • Django + dbxml + Apache = problems. Any solutions?

    - by Jason
    I'm trying to set up a Django application using WSGI. That works fine. However, I am having some issues with part of my Django app that uses BDB XML. My Apache config is as follows: Listen 8000 WSGISocketPrefix /tmp/wsgi <VirtualHost *:8000> ServerName <server name> DocumentRoot <path to doc root> LogLevel info WSGIScriptAlias / <path to wsgi> WSGIApplicationGroup %{GLOBAL} WSGIDaemonProcess debug threads=1 WSGIProcessGroup debug </VirtualHost> However, I'm still getting the following error: DB_ENV->repmgr_stat interface requires an environment configured for the replication subsystem [error] child died with signal 11 My environment is opened as: environment = DBEnv() environment.open( <absolute db env path>, DB_CREATE|DB_INIT_LOCK|DB_INIT_LOG|DB_INIT_MPOOL, 0 ) I am using: python 2.6.2 apache 2.2 ubuntu 9.04 dbxml 2.5.13 compiled from source (so libdb-4.8, bsddb3, all that jazz) I see Apache seems to link to libdb-4.6. Is this a problem? ldd /usr/sbin/apache2 | grep libdb libdb-4.6.so => /usr/lib/libdb-4.6.so (0xb7c01000) Updated Program received signal SIGSEGV, Segmentation fault. [Switching to Thread 0xb5a48b90 (LWP 12700)] 0x00000000 in ?? () (gdb) thread apply all bt Thread 4 (Thread 0xb6a67b90 (LWP 12698)): #0 0xb7f11422 in __kernel_vsyscall () #1 0xb7de07b1 in select () from /lib/tls/i686/cmov/libc.so.6 #2 0xb7ea5bcf in apr_sleep () from /usr/lib/libapr-1.so.0 #3 0xb6d7afee in ?? () from /usr/lib/apache2/modules/mod_wsgi.so #4 0xb7ea38ec in ?? () from /usr/lib/libapr-1.so.0 #5 0xb7e6d4ff in start_thread () from /lib/tls/i686/cmov/libpthread.so.0 #6 0xb7de849e in clone () from /lib/tls/i686/cmov/libc.so.6 Thread 3 (Thread 0xb6249b90 (LWP 12699)): #0 0xb7f11422 in __kernel_vsyscall () #1 0xb7de07b1 in select () from /lib/tls/i686/cmov/libc.so.6 #2 0xb7ea5bcf in apr_sleep () from /usr/lib/libapr-1.so.0 #3 0xb6d7ab39 in ?? () from /usr/lib/apache2/modules/mod_wsgi.so #4 0xb7ea38ec in ?? () from /usr/lib/libapr-1.so.0 #5 0xb7e6d4ff in start_thread () from /lib/tls/i686/cmov/libpthread.so.0 #6 0xb7de849e in clone () from /lib/tls/i686/cmov/libc.so.6 Thread 2 (Thread 0xb5a48b90 (LWP 12700)): #0 0x00000000 in ?? () #1 0xb4f03b5e in DbXml::XmlManager::XmlManager () from /home/jason/dbxml-2.5.13/install/lib/libdbxml-2.5.so #2 0xb501b29b in _wrap_new_XmlManager (self=0x0, args=0xac66fcc) at dbxml_python_wrap.cpp:5183 #3 0xb6b77aed in PyCFunction_Call () from /usr/lib/libpython2.6.so.1.0 #4 0xb6b3198c in PyObject_Call () from /usr/lib/libpython2.6.so.1.0 #5 0xb6bd70b5 in PyEval_EvalFrameEx () from /usr/lib/libpython2.6.so.1.0 #6 0xb6bdb910 in PyEval_EvalCodeEx () from /usr/lib/libpython2.6.so.1.0 #7 0xb6b6187a in ?? () from /usr/lib/libpython2.6.so.1.0 #8 0xb6b3198c in PyObject_Call () from /usr/lib/libpython2.6.so.1.0 #9 0xb6b427a8 in ?? () from /usr/lib/libpython2.6.so.1.0 #10 0xb6b3198c in PyObject_Call () from /usr/lib/libpython2.6.so.1.0 #11 0xb6b9ae03 in ?? () from /usr/lib/libpython2.6.so.1.0 #12 0xb6b90f55 in ?? () from /usr/lib/libpython2.6.so.1.0 #13 0xb6b3198c in PyObject_Call () from /usr/lib/libpython2.6.so.1.0 #14 0xb6bd7618 in PyEval_EvalFrameEx () from /usr/lib/libpython2.6.so.1.0 #15 0xb6bdb910 in PyEval_EvalCodeEx () from /usr/lib/libpython2.6.so.1.0 #16 0xb6b6187a in ?? () from /usr/lib/libpython2.6.so.1.0 #17 0xb6b3198c in PyObject_Call () from /usr/lib/libpython2.6.so.1.0 #18 0xb6b427a8 in ?? () from /usr/lib/libpython2.6.so.1.0 #19 0xb6b3198c in PyObject_Call () from /usr/lib/libpython2.6.so.1.0 #20 0xb6bd3a34 in PyEval_CallObjectWithKeywords () from /usr/lib/libpython2.6.so.1.0 #21 0xb6b44a7d in PyInstance_New () from /usr/lib/libpython2.6.so.1.0 #22 0xb6b3198c in PyObject_Call () from /usr/lib/libpython2.6.so.1.0 #23 0xb6bd7618 in PyEval_EvalFrameEx () from /usr/lib/libpython2.6.so.1.0 #24 0xb6bdb910 in PyEval_EvalCodeEx () from /usr/lib/libpython2.6.so.1.0 #25 0xb6b61969 in ?? () from /usr/lib/libpython2.6.so.1.0 #26 0xb6b3198c in PyObject_Call () from /usr/lib/libpython2.6.so.1.0 #27 0xb6bd70b5 in PyEval_EvalFrameEx () from /usr/lib/libpython2.6.so.1.0 #28 0xb6bdb910 in PyEval_EvalCodeEx () from /usr/lib/libpython2.6.so.1.0 #29 0xb6b61969 in ?? () from /usr/lib/libpython2.6.so.1.0 #30 0xb6b3198c in PyObject_Call () from /usr/lib/libpython2.6.so.1.0 #31 0xb6b427a8 in ?? () from /usr/lib/libpython2.6.so.1.0 #32 0xb6b3198c in PyObject_Call () from /usr/lib/libpython2.6.so.1.0 #33 0xb6b9b483 in ?? () from /usr/lib/libpython2.6.so.1.0 #34 0xb6b3198c in PyObject_Call () from /usr/lib/libpython2.6.so.1.0 #35 0xb6bd70b5 in PyEval_EvalFrameEx () from /usr/lib/libpython2.6.so.1.0 #36 0xb6bdab4f in PyEval_EvalFrameEx () from /usr/lib/libpython2.6.so.1.0 #37 0xb6bdb910 in PyEval_EvalCodeEx () from /usr/lib/libpython2.6.so.1.0 #38 0xb6b6187a in ?? () from /usr/lib/libpython2.6.so.1.0 #39 0xb6b3198c in PyObject_Call () from /usr/lib/libpython2.6.so.1.0 #40 0xb6b427a8 in ?? () from /usr/lib/libpython2.6.so.1.0 #41 0xb6b3198c in PyObject_Call () from /usr/lib/libpython2.6.so.1.0 #42 0xb6b9b483 in ?? () from /usr/lib/libpython2.6.so.1.0 #43 0xb6b3198c in PyObject_Call () from /usr/lib/libpython2.6.so.1.0 #44 0xb6bd3a34 in PyEval_CallObjectWithKeywords () from /usr/lib/libpython2.6.so.1.0 #45 0xb6d7172d in ?? () from /usr/lib/apache2/modules/mod_wsgi.so #46 0xb6d7539f in ?? () from /usr/lib/apache2/modules/mod_wsgi.so #47 0xb6d7e1d8 in ?? () from /usr/lib/apache2/modules/mod_wsgi.so #48 0xb6d7a42c in ?? () from /usr/lib/apache2/modules/mod_wsgi.so #49 0xb6d7a8bd in ?? () from /usr/lib/apache2/modules/mod_wsgi.so #50 0xb6d7a9c5 in ?? () from /usr/lib/apache2/modules/mod_wsgi.so #51 0xb7ea38ec in ?? () from /usr/lib/libapr-1.so.0 #52 0xb7e6d4ff in start_thread () from /lib/tls/i686/cmov/libpthread.so.0 #53 0xb7de849e in clone () from /lib/tls/i686/cmov/libc.so.6 Thread 1 (Thread 0xb7460b00 (LWP 12697)): #0 0xb7f11422 in __kernel_vsyscall () #1 0xb7e75300 in sigwait () from /lib/tls/i686/cmov/libpthread.so.0 #2 0xb7ea3f3b in apr_signal_thread () from /usr/lib/libapr-1.so.0 #3 0xb6d7b48d in ?? () from /usr/lib/apache2/modules/mod_wsgi.so #4 0xb6d7bc98 in ?? () from /usr/lib/apache2/modules/mod_wsgi.so #5 0xb6d79632 in ?? () from /usr/lib/apache2/modules/mod_wsgi.so #6 0xb7e9a2c9 in apr_proc_other_child_alert () from /usr/lib/libapr-1.so.0 #7 0x08092202 in ap_mpm_run () #8 0x080673c8 in main () #0 0x00000000 in ?? ()

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  • Django: How do I go about changing my simple app to use Ajax?

    - by swisstony
    I currently have a web page where the user enters some data and then clicks a submit button. I process the data in views.py and then use the same Django template to return and display the original data and the results. What I would like to do is try to give it a bit more of a modern look and feel. You know the sort of thing, the page doesn't refresh but displays a spinning disk until the results are displayed. I assume this means using Ajax? How difficult is it to modify a simple app like this to use Ajax? What is involved? What are the best tools to use? JQuery?

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  • How to read back and print text with newlines from a Python (Django) string with HTML?

    - by user1801486
    If someone types in a phrase, such as: I see you driving round town with the girl I love, and I’m like: haiku. (no blank lines between each line, but the text is written on three separate lines) into a text box on a web page, and then presses a button which is then stored in a database via Django, and that string is read back and printed on a page, how can I get it to print on an HTML page with the newlines still in the text? So instead of it being printed back as: I see you driving round town with the girl I love, and I’m like: haiku. It would print as: I see you driving round town with the girl I love, and I’m like: haiku. I know that if I use: (textarea)soAndSo.body(/textarea), this preserves the newlines that were in the file when the user typed it up originally. How can I get this same effect, but without having to use textarea boxes?

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  • how to find out how much application memory django process is (or will be) taking?

    - by photographer
    There are different "Application memory" options (like 80MB...200MB) in django-friendly hosting called webfaction and I'm confused deciding which one I should buy. Could someone please walk me through the ideas on how to figure out how much memory my project might require (excluding operating system, the main apache server and the database servers memory requirements)? I understand in theory I'll need to perform some kind of load testing, but thought there might be ways to calculate that in advance with some simple/relatively easy understandable approach. I don't know how hard they enforce application memory usage limit, and another question is: what will happen if more users came to the site and more threads started than what I expected? Will the application crash? Or will delays just become uncomfortable? And - no, application is not ready yet (I can't measure anything right now). Development environment if it matters is Winodows 7, 64-bit. Hosting itself is some kind of Linux I think. (Sorry if it's not a stackoverflow question.)

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  • Installing Djnajo/Python on IIS6

    - by Sohrab Hejazi
    We are currently installing the latest version of Django and Python on IIS6. We have followed the instructions on the following site: http://code.djangoproject.com/wiki/DjangoOnWindowsWithIISAndSQLServer We are receiving a 403 error when trying to access our Django application via the IIS server. We have verified the python installation on IIS6 and it is working property. We have also verified the Django installation. Our application runs fine under the built-in Django server, but we are having difficulties getting it to run under IIS. We presume we could be getting errors from "Linking Django to PyISAPIe" section of the instructions provided on the link above. Thank.

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  • How to create custom CSS "on the fly" based on account settings in a Django site?

    - by sdolan
    So I'm writing a Django based website that allows users select a color scheme through an administration interface. I already have middleware/context processors that links the current request (based on domain) to the account. My question is how to dynamically serve the CSS with the account's custom color scheme. I see two options: Add a CSS block to the base template that overrides the styles w/variables passed in through a context processors. Use a custom URL (e.g. "/static/dynamic/css//styles.css") that gets routed to a view that grabs all the necessary values and creates the css file. I'm content with either option, but was wondering if anyone else out there has dealt with similar problems and could give some insight as to "Best Practices".

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  • How to get the app a Django model is from?

    - by e-satis
    I have a model with a generic relation: TrackedItem --- genericrelation ---> any model I would like to be able to generically get, from the initial model, the tracked item. I should be able to do it on any model without modifying it. To do that I need to get the content type and the object id. Getting the object id is easy since I have the model instance, but getting the content type is not: ContentType.object.filter requires the model (which is just content_object.__class__.__name__) and the app_label. I have no idea of how to get in a reliable way the app in which a model is. For now I do app = content_object.__module__.split(".")[0], but it doesn't work with django contrib apps.

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  • How can I receive percent encoded slashes with Django on App Engine?

    - by J. Frankenstein
    I'm using Django with Google's App Engine. I want to send information to the server with percent encoded slashes. A request like http:/localhost/turtle/waxy%2Fsmooth that would match against a URL like r'^/turtle/(?P<type>([A-Za-z]|%2F)+)$'. The request gets to the server intact, but sometime before it is compared against the regex the %2F is converted into a forward slash. What can I do to stop the %2Fs from being converted into forward slashes? Thanks!

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  • How to setup custom CSS based on account settings in a Django site?

    - by sdolan
    So I'm writing a Django based website that allows users select a color scheme through an administration interface. I already have middleware/context processors that links the current request (based on domain) to the account. My question is how to dynamically serve the CSS with the account's custom color scheme. I see two options: Add a CSS block to the base template that overrides the styles w/variables passed in through a context processors. Use a custom URL (e.g. "/static/dynamic/css//styles.css") that gets routed to a view that grabs all the necessary values and creates the css file. I'm content with either option, but was wondering if anyone else out there has dealt with similar problems and could give some insight as to "Best Practices".

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  • how to create english language dictionary application with python (django)?

    - by sintaloo
    Hi All, I would like to create an online dictionary application by using python (or with django). It will be similar to http://dictionary.reference.com/. My question is (1) Are there any existing open source python package or modules or application which implements this functionality that I can use or study from? (2) If the answer to the first question is NO. which algorithm should I follow to create such web application? Can I simply use the python built-in dictionary object for this job? so that the dictionary object's key will be the english word and the value will be the explanation. is this OK in term of performance? OR Do I have to create my own Tree Object to speed up the search? or any existing package which handles this job properly? Thank you very much.

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  • django - where to clean extra whitespace from form field inputs?

    - by Westerley
    I've just discovered that Django doesn't automatically strip out extra whitespace from form field inputs, and I think I understand the rationale ('frameworks shouldn't be altering user input'). I think I know how to remove the excess whitespace using python's re: #data = re.sub('\A\s+|\s+\Z', '', data) data = data.strip() data = re.sub('\s+', ' ', data) The question is where should I do this? Presumably this should happen in one of the form's clean stages, but which one? Ideally, I would like to clean all my fields of extra whitespace. If it should be done in the clean_field() method, that would mean I would have to have a lot of clean_field() methods that basically do the same thing, which seems like a lot of repetition. If not the form's cleaning stages, then perhaps in the model that the form is based on? Thanks for your help! W.

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  • In Django, using __init__() method of non-abstract parent model to record class name of child model

    - by k-g-f
    In my Django project, I have a non-abstract parent model defined as follows: class Parent(models.Model): classType = models.CharField(editable=False,max_length=50) and, say, two children models defined as follows: class ChildA(Parent): parent = models.OneToOneField(Parent,parent_link=True) class ChildB(Parent): parent = models.OneToOneField(Parent,parent_link=True) Each time I create an instance of ChildA or of ChildB, I'd like the classType attribute to be set to the strings "ChildA" or "ChildB" respectively. What I have done is added an _ _ init_ _() method to Parent as follows: class Parent(models.Model): classType = models.CharField(editable=False,max_length=50) def __init__(self,*args,**kwargs): super(Parent,self).__init__(*args,**kwargs) self.classType = self.__class__.__name__ Is there a better way to implement and achieve my desired result? One downside of this implementation is that when I have an instance of the Parent, say "parent", and I want to get the type of the child object linked with "parent", calling "parent.classType" gives me "Parent". In order to get the appropriate "ChildA" or "ChildB" value, I need to write a "_getClassType()" method to wrap a custom sql query.

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  • Google App Engine & Django Sandbox: Shell and Web seem to be using different datastores?

    - by tones
    I'm new to both Django and Google App Engine, and am using a sandbox in OSX10.6 with the GoogleAppEngineLauncher. I've got a basic "bookstore" application running from the tutorial in the OReilly "Programming Google App Engine" book. Here's the bug: If I add a new object to the datastore through the web interface, then it's readable through the web interface, but does not appear to exist if I query the datastore through the shell. Vice versa: If I add an object in the shell, then I can read it from the shell, but it doesn't appear in the web interface. Any thoughts or theories would be welcome. Thanks! =T=

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  • Django Project Done and Working. Now What?

    - by Rodrogo
    Hi, I just finished what I would call a small django project and pretty soon it's going live. It's only 6 models but a fairly complex view layer and a lot of records saving and retrieving. Of course, forgetting the obvious huge amount of bugs that will, probably, fill my inbox to the top, what would it be the next step towards a website with best performance. What could be tweaked? I'm using jmeter a lot recently and feel confident that I have a good baseline for future performance comparisons, but the thing is: I'm not sure what is the best start, since I'm a greedy bastard that wants to work the least possible and gather the best results. For instance, should I try an approach towards infrastructure, like a distributed database, or should I go with the code itself and in that case, is there something that specifically results in better performance? In your experience, whats pays off more? Personal anecdotes are welcome, but some fact based opinions are even more. :) Thanks very much.

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  • How to structure a Kohana MVC application with dynamically added fields and provide validation and f

    - by Matt H
    I've got a bit of a problem. I have a Kohana application that has dynamically added fields. The fields that are added are called DISA numbers. In the model I look these up and the result is returned as an array. I encode the array into a JSON string and use JQuery to populate them The View knows the length of the array and so creates as many DISA elements as required before display. See the code below for a summary of how that works. What I'm finding is that this is starting to get difficult to manage. The code is becoming messy. Error handling of this type of dynamic content is ending up being spread all over the place. Not only that, it doesn't work how I want. What you see here is just a small snippet of code. For error handling I am using the validation library. I started by using add_rules on all the fields that come back in the post. As they are always phone numbers I set a required rule (when it's there) and a digit rule on the validation-as_array() keys. That works. The difficulty is actually giving it back to the view. i.e. dynamically added javascript field. Submits back to form. Save contents into a session. View has to load up fields from database + those from the previous post and signal the fields that have problems. It's all quite messy and I'm getting this code spread through both the view the controller and the model. So my question is. Have you done this before in Kohana and how have you handled it? There must be an easier way right? Code snippet. -- edit.php -- public function phone($id){ ... $this->template->content->disa_numbers = $phones->fetch_disa_numbers($this->account, $id); ... } -- phones.php -- public function fetch_disa_numbers($account, $id) { $query = $this->db->query("SELECT id, cid_in FROM disa WHERE owner_ext=?", array($id)); if (!$query){ return ''; } return $query; } -- edit_phones.php --- <script type="text/javascript"> var disaId = 1; function delDisaNumber(element){ /* Put 'X_' on the front of the element name to mark this for deletion */ $(element).prev().attr('name', 'X_'+$(element).prev().attr('name')); $(element).parent().hide(); } function addDisaNumber(){ /* input name is prepended with 'N_' which means new */ $("#disa_numbers").append("<li><input name='N_disa"+disaId+"' id='disa'"+ "type='text'/><a class='hide' onClick='delDisaNumber(this)'></a></li>"); disaId++; } </script> ... <php echo form::open("edit/saveDisaNumbers/".$phone, array("class"=>"section", "id"=>"disa_form")); echo form::open_fieldset(array("class"=>"balanced-grid")); ?> <ul class="fields" id="disa_numbers"> <?php $disaId = 1; foreach ( $disa_numbers as $disa_number ){ echo '<li>'; echo form::input('disa'.$disaId, $disa_number->cid_in); echo'<a class="hide" onclick="delDisaNumber(this)"></a>'; echo "</li>"; $disaId++; } ?> </ul> <button type="button"onclick="addDisaNumber()"><a class="add"></a>Add number</button> <?php echo form::submit('submit', 'Save'); echo form::close(); ?>

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  • Are Java's public fields just a tragic historical design flaw at this point?

    - by Avi Flax
    It seems to be Java orthodoxy at this point that one should basically never use public fields for object state. (I don't necessarily agree, but that's not relevant to my question.) Given that, would it be right to say that from where we are today, it's clear that Java's public fields were a mistake/flaw of the language design? Or is there a rational argument that they're a useful and important part of the language, even today? Thanks! Update: I know about the more elegant approaches, such as in C#, Python, Groovy, etc. I'm not directly looking for those examples. I'm really just wondering if there's still someone deep in a bunker, muttering about how wonderful public fields really are, and how the masses are all just sheep, etc. Update 2: Clearly static final public fields are the standard way to create public constants. I was referring more to using public fields for object state (even immutable state). I'm thinking that it does seem like a design flaw that one should use public fields for constants, but not for state… a language's rules should be enforced naturally, by syntax, not by guidelines.

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  • How do I pass a lot of parameters to views in Django?

    - by Mark
    I'm very new to Django and I'm trying to build an application to present my data in tables and charts. Till now my learning process went very smooth, but now I'm a bit stuck. My pageview retrieves large amounts of data from a database and puts it in the context. The template then generates different html-tables. So far so good. Now I want to add different charts to the template. I manage to do this by defining <img src=".../> tags. The Matplotlib chart is generate in my chartview an returned via: response=HttpResponse(content_type='image/png') canvas.print_png(response) return response Now I have different questions: the data is retrieved twice from the database. Once in the pageview to render the tables, and again in the chartview for making the charts. What is the best way to pass the data, already in the context of the page to the chartview? I need a lot of charts, each with different datasets. I could make a chartview for each chart, but probably there is a better way. How do I pass the different dataset names to the chartview? Some charts have 20 datasets, so I don't think that passing these dataset parameters via the url (like: <imgm src="chart/dataset1/dataset2/.../dataset20/chart.png />) is the right way. Any advice?

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  • Problem with authentication from different domains using Django sessions.

    - by Greg
    Hi all, I am developing a bookmarklet which essentially adds a toolbar to a web page user is currently looking at. To use it, user needs to be logged in. To login user clicks on 'Singin' which displays a standard form containing Username, Password etc fields. When user successfully logs in they may chose to navigate to a different web-site. When on another page, they (a) re-load the bookmarklet (b) their session is retrieved from the server (c) user doesn't need to login again. Pretty standard I've would have thought. Using Django sessions and JQuery. I'm having troubles implementing the above usecase. Here are some problems I've encountered: Cross domain POST AJAX requests are disallowed. That was solved with JSONp. I doubt it is a very secure approach but for now it works. My server returns the session id in a cookie, however when the user navigates to a different page I don't really know how to retrieve that session id to send back to my server. Can I even read third party cookies from my JavaScript? I'm looking for some guidelines on implementing the above usecase. Ideally I don't want to redirect user to another page for them to sign in. Any suggestion would be greatly appreciated. Thanks.

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  • With Apache/mod_wsgi how can I redirect to ssl and require Auth?

    - by justin
    I have a Media Temple DV server hosting dev.example.com with django mounted at /. There is a legacy directory in my httpdocs I need to continue to serve at /legacy. But for this directory I need to redirect anyone coming over http over to https, then prompt for http basic auth. In the virtual host conf, I'm pointing the root to a django application: WSGIScriptAlias / /var/django-projects/myproject/apache/django.wsgi <Directory /var/django-projects/myproject/apache> Order allow,deny Allow from all </Directory> Then I alias the legacy directory. Alias /legacy/ /var/www/vhosts/example.com/subdomains/dev/httpdocs/legacy/ <Directory /var/www/vhosts/example.com/subdomains/dev/httpdocs> Order deny,allow Allow from all RewriteEngine On RewriteCond %{SERVER_PORT} 80 RewriteRule ^(.*)$ https://dev.example.com/$1 [R,L] </Directory> This works. It isn't served by django, and the url redirects to https. However, it serves httpdocs/legacy instead of httpsdocs/legacy (where I have an .htaccess that prompts for auth.) Any idea of how I can manage this?

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  • Can I compare a template variable to an integer in App Engine templates?

    - by matt b
    Using Django templates in Google App Engine (on Python), is it possible to compare a template variable to an integer in an {% if %} block? views.py: class MyHandler(webapp.RequestHandler): def get(self): foo_list = db.GqlQuery(...) ... template_values['foos'] = foo_list template_values['foo_count'] = len(foo_list) handler.response.out.write(template.render(...)) My template: {% if foo_count == 1 %} There is one foo. {% endif %} This blows up with 'if' statement improperly formatted. What I was attempting to do in my template was build a simple if/elif/else tree to be grammatically correct to be able to state #foo_count == 0: There are no foos. #foo_count == 1: There is one foo. #else: There are {{ foos|length }} foos. Browsing the Django template documents (this link provided in the GAE documentation appears to be for versions of Django far newer than what is supported on GAE), it appears as if I can only actually use boolean operators (if in fact boolean operators are supported in this older version of Django) with strings or other template variables. Is it not possible to compare variables to integers or non-strings with Django templates? I'm sure there is an easy way to workaround this - built up the message string on the Python side rather than within the template - but this seems like such a simple operation you ought to be able to handle in a template. It sounds like I should be switching to a more advanced templating engine, but as I am new to Django (templates or any part of it), I'd just like some confirmation first.

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  • Django + Virtualenv: manage.py commands fail with ImportError of project name.

    - by Bartek
    This is blowing my mind because it's probably an easy solution, but I can't figure out what could be causing this. So I have a new dev box and am setting everything up. I installed virtualenv, created a new environment for my project under ~/.virtualenvs/projectname Then, I cloned my project from github into my projects directory. Nothing fancy here. There are no .pyc files sitting around so it's a clean slate of code. Then, I activated my virtualenv and installed Django via pip. All looks good so far. Then, I run python manage.py syncdb within my project dir. This is where I get confused: ImportError: No module named projectname So I figured I may have had some references of projectname within my code. So I grep (ack, actually) through my code base and I find nothing of the sorts. So now I'm at a loss, given this environment why am I getting an ImportError on a module named projectname that isn't referenced anywhere in my code? I look forward to a solution .. thanks guys!

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  • Form (or Formset?) to handle multiple table rows in Django

    - by Ben
    Hi, I'm working on my first Django application. In short, what it needs to do is to display a list of film titles, and allow users to give a rating (out of 10) to each film. I've been able to use the {{ form }} and {{ formset }} syntax in a template to produce a form which lets you rate one film at a time, which corresponds to one row in a MySQL table, but how do I produce a form that iterates over all the movie titles in the database and produces a form that lets you rate lots of them at once? At first, I thought this was what formsets were for, but I can't see any way to automatically iterate over the contents of a database table to produce items to go in the form, if you see what I mean. Currently, my views.py has this code: def survey(request): ScoreFormSet = formset_factory(ScoreForm) if request.method == 'POST': formset = ScoreFormSet(request.POST, request.FILES) if formset.is_valid(): return HttpResponseRedirect('/') else: formset = ScoreFormSet() return render_to_response('cf/survey.html', { 'formset':formset, }) And my survey.html has this: <form action="/survey/" method="POST"> <table> {{ formset }} </table> <input type = "submit" value = "Submit"> </form> Oh, and the definition of ScoreForm and Score from models.py are: class Score(models.Model): movie = models.ForeignKey(Movie) score = models.IntegerField() user = models.ForeignKey(User) class ScoreForm(ModelForm): class Meta: model = Score So, in case the above is not clear, what I'm aiming to produce is a form which has one row per movie, and each row shows a title, and has a box to allow the user to enter their score. If anyone can point me at the right sort of approach to this, I'd be most grateful. Thanks, Ben

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