Andrew, thanks for your response. I will take a look at wsgi folder and the 
contents in it. 




On Sunday, August 19, 2012 7:39:52 PM UTC-4, Andrew wrote:
>
> A little different in order. 
>
> Do all the openshift stuff first, then download web2py and copy it into 
> the wsgi folder. 
>
> I would suggest using the application file I provide on the github repo 
> and modify:
>
> This:
> sys.path.append(os.path.join(os.environ['OPENSHIFT_REPO_DIR'], 'libs', 
> 'gluon'))
> to This:
> sys.path.append(os.path.join(os.environ['OPENSHIFT_REPO_DIR'], 'wsgi', 
> 'web2by', 'gluon')) #honestly I don't know if sys.path.append handles stuff 
> recursively so maybe this isn't necessary and you just comment out the 
> gluon line. 
>
> There are other nuances like addressing db host / port / user / pass 
> variables that should all be setup in wsgi/application file. For example if 
> you're using SQL lite, I have an example variable setup in the 
> wsgi/application handler and then in your model you'd just use something 
> like: 
>
> db = DAL('sqlite://storage.sqlite',folder=SQLITE_DIR)
>
> If you want to use the admin, you'll need to create a parameters_443.py 
> with your hashed password in it but there are caveats to using the IDE in 
> the cloud since app changes are applied via rhc / git. This is why I 
> created the openshift deployer.
>
> Andrew
>

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