Thanks for your replies everyone.  I'm looking into it more now and
will let you know if I have any other questions.

On Nov 10, 8:44 am, Brandon Martin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I would just like to note here that when I first installed django with
> apache and mod_python most of the problem I had was on the apache side
> with vhosts not django. Each operating system handles apache configs a
> little different. The guide on django's web site is great for the base
> information. You just might need to adjust slightly for you OS.
>
> Steve Holden wrote:
> > If you read your httpd.conf file you will find at some point there is a
> > line that includes the configuration data from the sites-enabled
> > directory. This idea is to be able to switch sites on and off by adding
> > and removing symbolic links from sites-enabled.
>
> > Make sure you *always* edit the files in sites-available! If you edit in
> > site-enabled, some editors will replace the original symbolic link in
> > sites-enabled with an updated copy of the file itself, and then you will
> > lose you configuration data if you decide to switch the site off
> > temporarily ...
>
> > The configuration commands are exactly the same for a configuration
> > sub-file: it's exactly as though they had appeared in the main
> > configuration file at the point of inclusion, so once you understand the
> > relationship between the sites-available and sites-enabled directories
> > and your main configuration file you should be good to go.
>
> > You *could* put the configuration commands in http.conf itself, but this
> > goes against the Debian/Ubuntu organization scheme, and so probably
> > wouldn't be helpful long-term.
>
> > The Django setup instructions aren't bad, but there are so many
> > different ways that Apache is organized that the authors couldn't hope
> > to cover them all.
>
> > regards
> >  Steve
>
> >> On Nov 9, 10:33 pm, "DULMANDAKH Sukhbaatar" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> >> wrote:
>
> >>> Please follow instructions 
> >>> onhttp://docs.djangoproject.com/en/dev/howto/deployment/modpython/to
> >>> setup django and mod_python.
>
> >>> And it's interesting that how do you know that mod_python is working?
>
> >>> --
> >>> Regards
> >>> Dulmandakh
>
>
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