Update deployment instructions

This commit is contained in:
Rodolfo Carvalho 2015-06-01 12:48:01 +02:00
parent 57468d13fe
commit 027e1bd8c1

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@ -41,6 +41,24 @@ To run this project in your development machine, follow these steps:
5. Open your browser and go to http://127.0.0.1:8000, you will be greeted with a welcome page.
## Deploying to OpenShift
The directory `openshift/` contains OpenShift application template files that you can add you your OpenShift project with:
osc create -f openshift/<TEMPLATE_NAME>.json
Now you can go to your OpenShift web console and create a new app from one of the templates that you have just added.
After adjusting your preferences (or accepting the defaults), your application will be built and deployed.
You will probably want to set the `GIT_REPOSITORY` parameter to point to your fork.
Alternatively, you can use the command line to create your new app:
osc new-app --template=<TEMPLATE_NAME> --param=GIT_REPOSITORY=...,...
In the web console, the overview tab shows you a service, by default called "web", that encapsulates all pods running your Django application. You can access your application by browsing to the service's IP address and port.
## Special files in this repository
Apart from the regular files created by Django (`project/*`, `welcome/*`, `manage.py`), this repository contains:
@ -60,17 +78,6 @@ gunicorn_conf.py - configuration for the gunicorn HTTP server
requirements.txt - list of dependencies
```
## Deploying to OpenShift
The file `application-template.json` contains an OpenShift application template that you can add you your OpenShift project with:
* `osc create -f application-template.json`
Now you can browse to your OpenShift web console and create a new app from the 'django-quickstart' template.
After adjusting your preferences (or accepting the defaults), your application will be built and deployed.
You will probably want to set the `GIT_REPOSITORY` parameter to point to your fork.
## Data persistence