If you could provide give a copy of the run-local.sh, that'd be great.

On Friday, 10 July 2020 07:13:12 UTC+5:30, Mike Dewhirst wrote:
>
> On 10/07/2020 12:11 am, Kshitij Kotasthane wrote: 
> > Doing this every time I run the server is really inconveninent as I 
> > said above. 
> > 
> > On Thursday, 9 July 2020 00:40:54 UTC+5:30, Luciano Martins wrote: 
> > 
> >     python manage.py runserver localhost:5000 
> > 
> >     Em quarta-feira, 8 de julho de 2020 12:56:58 UTC-3, Kshitij 
> >     Kotasthane escreveu: 
> > 
> >         I recently started using django and because port 8000 on my PC 
> >         was already occupied, I had to modify the runserver.py file 
> >         directly to start on another port. By default, shouldn't there 
> >         be an option in manage.py or settings.py to modify the port to 
> >         start the test server on? Or am I missing something? 
> > 
> >         Because this is very inconvenient as well, 
> > 
> >         | 
> >         python manage.py runserver 5000 
> >         | 
> > 
>
> Because I develop on Windows and also hate typing I wrote a batch file 
> to launch manage.py with the correct settings. 
>
> I call it run-local.bat 
>
> It has a whole mess of vars at the top and I can edit those to make it 
> work for different projects. I also use it for most of the manage.py 
> commands like ... 
>
> run-local test 
> run-local coverage 
> run-local makemigrations 
>
> Depending on what I'm doing it uses different settings files. For 
> example, tests with SQLite versus PostgreSQL. 
>
> I even used it recently to run a series of psql commands to adjust the 
> database when retrofitting one project with a custom user. That was 
> delightful because I could repeatedly reload the production database 
> locally and eventually got the migration perfect prior to saving 
> run-local.bat as run-prd.bat changing the database setting vars and 
> migrating the production database. I was very pleased with that. 
>
> I also run Ubuntu machines and if I was developing on Linux or Mac I'm 
> sure I could build a run-local.sh script there. 
>
> If you (or anyone) would like a copy of my run-local.bat just ask 
>
> Cheers 
>
> Mike 
>
>
>
>
>
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