> I have been through several variations on what you are doing.  The
solution which has worked best for me is to use SaltStack to control the
update.

If you are interested in learning SaltStack, I just recently wrote a
step-by-step
tutorial
<http://t.sidekickopen35.com/e1t/c/5/f18dQhb0S7lC8dDMPbW2n0x6l2B9nMJW7t5XZs4WYzsgVQJWsT3MqpKTW643TLH56dMMBdmfKC002?t=https%3A%2F%2Famfarrell.com%2Fsaltstack-from-scratch%2Fstep-0-prerequisites%2F&si=5121084446998528&pi=8167d41d-391e-4bdb-f8ad-c89e50007854>
on
it, targeted for django developers. It walks you through writing a
configuration to deploy a django site (with postgres, gunicorn, and nginx)
on a local virtual machine and then VPS as well as one way of writing
automated tests for the configuration.

If you have feedback on the tutorial or suggestions on how to improve the
learner experience, please let me know.

cheers,
Andrew

On Wed, Feb 10, 2016 at 2:10 PM, Vernon D. Cole <vernondc...@gmail.com>
wrote:

> I have been through several variations on what you are doing.  The
> solution which has worked best for me is to use SaltStack to control the
> update.  It will pull your updates using git, apply as needed, and restart
> your servers. If you are building a new server (for testing or prototype
> usually) it will install everything. The last time I needed to test a new
> version of django it took about two hours to build a whole new prototype
> server on a virtual machine on my laptop.  Version updates on a running
> server take an eyeblink.
>
> I put an example up on github/salt_demo.
> <https://github.com/eHealthAfrica/salt_demo> It needs some work since two
> years ago, but should give you the idea. It will run standalone, but I
> really recommend setting up a Salt master, even if you only have a few
> machines.  It can can really save you -- for example, I have had times when
> an ssh daemon quit working, and I was able to regain control using Salt.
> The demo uses PostgreSQL -- I will send you my mariadb state if you wish.
> --
> Vernon Cole
>
>
> On Wednesday, February 10, 2016 at 1:50:22 AM UTC-7, Tobias Dacoir wrote:
>>
>> We've build a small web application using Django 1.8 over the past couple
>> of months and we are going live with version 1.0 soon (one last closed beta
>> test is coming up).
>> So far we have deployed it on an Ubuntu VM (in Azure) using Apache /
>> Nginx and a local MySQL Server.
>>
>> I've already found some good tutorials on how to properly set it up (
>> http://rogueleaderr.com/post/65157477648/the-idiomatic-guide-to-deploying-django-in#disqus_thread
>> ) however what I am mising now is how to handle updates to our code.
>>
>> For our development server we have a git hook that automatically deploys
>> new commits to the server. However that often requires manual interaction -
>> running manage.py makemigrations etc. Sometimes Django also does not pick
>> up our changed models and we have to manually fiddle with the Database in
>> order to get it back running. We even had times where we lost all our data
>> since it was easier to just start with a new database.
>>
>> Obviously this can't happen once we are live and obviously we want
>> downtime to be as small as possible. So is there any guide on how to update
>> code of a live, deployed Django application?
>>
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