django-health-check
whitenoise
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django-health-check | whitenoise | |
---|---|---|
2 | 8 | |
1,139 | 2,426 | |
1.1% | - | |
6.8 | 8.3 | |
about 7 hours ago | 3 days ago | |
Python | Python | |
MIT License | MIT License |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
django-health-check
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what are 3 django packages everyone should know about?
django-health-check - Gives you a "health check" page you can visit to make sure various parts of your system are working. You can use this page to have something like UptimeRobot alert you if there is a problem.
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Monitoring Django apps
The hard job has already been done by Kristian Oellegaard who built a health checking app for Django.
whitenoise
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How to load static files while deploying using nginx
You can use whitenoise. https://github.com/evansd/whitenoise
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Deploy a REST API using Serverless, Django and Python
We’ll use this library to serve our static admin files. I’m not going to go over all the configuration details here, but you can feel free follow them on your own. Make sure the static files are part of the Lambda package.
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'collectstatic' command fails when WhiteNoise is enabled
I'm trying to serve static files through WhiteNoise as per Heroku's recommendation. When I run collectstatic in my development environment, this happens:
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what are 3 django packages everyone should know about?
Waitress - for serving your application easily (pairs very well with Whitenoise).
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How to Scale Django
3) Caching static assets - both of static assets. So maybe try deploying a Django app in a production environment and cache the static assets. You could put them behind a service like Cloudflare which will take care of that for you, or have a look at something like [Whitenoise](https://github.com/evansd/whitenoise) which will add the correct HTTP headers for you. You can spend some time reading about HTTP Caching headers and even try writing a simple middleware which caches certain requests to your Django app (just for learning purposes).
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Serving Static files from AWS S3 Issue
FWIW, I always use Whitenoise to serve Static files when I use Heroku, and only keep Media files on AWS. It works well.
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Deployment Django on Heroku With a Different Branch
In the beginning of the project, I chose Google Cloud Platform as the "Cloud Provider". But for simplicity and easy to use I switched to WhiteNoise to serve staticfiles.
What are some alternatives?
django-prometheus - Export Django monitoring metrics for Prometheus.io
django-webpack-loader - Transparently use webpack with django
django-rest-framework - Web APIs for Django. 🎸
django-components - Create simple reusable template components in Django.
celery-exporter - A Prometheus exporter for Celery metrics
Wagtail - A Django content management system focused on flexibility and user experience
django-elasticsearch-dsl - This is a package that allows indexing of django models in elasticsearch with elasticsearch-dsl-py.
django-ninja - 💨 Fast, Async-ready, Openapi, type hints based framework for building APIs
django-q - A multiprocessing distributed task queue for Django
django-guardian - Per object permissions for Django
django-jazzmin - Jazzy theme for Django