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I am trying to generate a static blog through Pelican and then host it on GitHub.
I have no problem generating a blog locally, but I struggle when I try to push it to GitHub. I have scoured the web looking for instruction, but it seems like the authors skip steps that would be trivial to someone with experience, but not to a beginner.
Could anyone provide a step-by-step guide on how to host a static blog generated with Pelican on GitHub?
Considering you want to push it on your user repository:
To publish a Pelican site in the form of User Pages, you need to push the content of the output dir generated by Pelican to the master branch of your .github.io repository on GitHub.
You can take advantage of ghp-import:
$ pelican content -o output -s pelicanconf.py
$ ghp-import output
$ git push git#github.com:elemoine/elemoine.github.io.git gh-pages:master
The git push command pushes the local gh-pages branch (freshly updated by the ghp-import command) to the elemoine.github.io repository’s master branch on GitHub.
Myself I use a one liner doing the same:
$pelican && ghp-import output && git push git#github.com:maggick/maggick.github.io.git gh-pages:master
(source: http://docs.getpelican.com/en/latest/tips.html)
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I am new to GitHub: I have uploaded a django project without a .gitignore file and GitHub Community banned my account.
That is why I need to know how to use a .gitignore file as well as adding a license.
Recreate your django project locally, initialize a new local git repository in init (git init .), and, before doing any git add/git commit, add:
your .gitignore (you can copy the Django one)
your LICENSE file (chose one of those)
Add and commit locally.
Then create a new GitHub account, a new empty GitHub repository.
Go back to your local repository and:
cd /path/to/local/repo
git remote add origin https://github.com/<NewAccount>/<newRepo>
git push -u origin master
You can then see "Where to store secret keys DJANGO" for managing your secret key.
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I want to write a small Python dummy project:
print('Hello world.')
... in a file called hello.py.
Next: I want to make this a small dummy project at github.
After creating a virtual-env (via PyCharm) I have these directories:
./foo
./foo/venv
./foo/venv/lib
./foo/venv/lib/python3.6
./foo/venv/lib/python3.6/site-packages
./foo/venv/include
./foo/venv/bin
I want to store my small project in git and upload it to github later.
Are there (official) docs how to start a new project after creating the virtualenv?
If I understand your question correctly, I believe this is what you are looking for:
How to create a repository in github:
In the upper-right corner of any page, click , and then click New
repository.
In the Owner drop-down, select the account you wish to create the
repository on.
Type a name for your repository, and an optional description.
Choose to make the repository either public or private. Public
repositories are visible to the public, while private repositories
are only accessible to you, and people you share them with. For more
information, see "Setting repository visibility."
When you're finished, click Create repository.
Creating a repo
Adding an existing project to a repo:
Open Terminal.
Change the current working directory to your local project.
Initialize the local directory as a Git repository.
$ git init
Add the files in your new local repository. This stages them for the
first commit.
$ git add .
Adds the files in the local repository and stages them for commit.
Commit the files that you've staged in your local repository.
$ git commit -m "First commit"
Commits the tracked changes and prepares them to be pushed to a remote repository.
In Terminal, add the URL for the remote repository where your local
repository will be pushed.
$ git remote add origin remote "repositoryURLgoesHere"
Sets the new remote
$ git remote -v
Verifies the new remote URL
Adding a project to the repo
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I have working simple blog. Code here - https://github.com/4doge/askMe
I already have account on pythonanywhere and Flask app. What i need now?
Specifically, what steps should I follow to get the code off github, onto pythonanywhere, and then make the blog site live on the Internet using pythonanywhere's service?
I think these would be the next steps to deploy the app:
open a console: go to pythonanywhere.com, click on Consoles and then on Bash
clone your app
git clone git#github.com:4doge/askMe.git
You go to pythonanywhere.com and click on Web
click on add a new web app. (delete the old one if you have a free plan and do not need the old one)
click through and in the last dialog step you can choose the path to your run.py
Now the app should be running. You can restart it and browse it.
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I need an idea how to implement following
1. Want to build python application which will update itself when the new patch is available
2. It will run the unit test to check if the patch deployed successfully
3. If there are any failure during installation it will rollback automatically
What I don't know
A. Not sure how to build a patch from the source code
B. Algorithm / standard process to check about the new updates are available
C. Auto deployment/Rollback process
Any suggestions/ links?
I implementeed a server that recognizes the changed source code and pulls the new code. It is hosted at pythonanywhere.com at this url and the code is on github. This answer bases on my experiences when implementing the update functionality.
When you version your code with git you usually
have a master or deploy branch that works
have a develop branch that is merged into the master-->deploy branch when all the tests run through.
This way you only need to know when the deploy branch changes in order to figure out when to restart. Tests should be run before in order to have no downtime. If you run the tests on the deploy system it may take them too much time or the invalid code destroys the system.
So the deploy branch works because it was tested before.
For automated testing you can use a continous integration server like travis that downloads the code and tests it. It can be asked about whether the test run of a specific commit.
When you host your code on github then you can specify a push http address. I used http://server/update Whenever the repository is changed github notifies your server then.
You can then update the source code by pulling it from git and if the deploy branch really changed then you can restart the application. I can not do this in the server ut maybe you can.
Scenario:
I push code to github
github sends a POST to http://server/update
#post('/update') # bottle code
def pull_own_source_code_and_restart():
with inDirectory(server_repository):
previous_commit = last_commit()
text = git.pull()
current_commit = last_commit()
if previous_commit != current_commit:
restart()
return "Git says: {}".format(text)
have a look at these two files:
command_line.py for the git commands
bottle_app.py for a derivating implementation if the server can not restart itself.
A version control system usually does the 'patching' for every version. I use git. If git is unknown to you now, learn it! Here is workshop material for Pythons Django and git: http://www.opentechschool.org/material.html
Let me now if this information is sufficient to implement such a functionality in Django. Please post your code here when you got it to work.
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I'm absolutely "brand new" to Paas and django/python.
I would install django on heroku.
Before, I need to install on it Python. But I'm unable to do that. I looked a while for doc about it, but unfortunately I'm not able.
I've created a heroku account. I log in and the try to follow the guide.
please, help me. give me some starting point...
TIA
Renato
Setting up your project
You'll need to add a couple of files to the root of your project:
The first file, named requirements.txt, should contain the dependencies for your project (this is not really Heroku specific). At the minimum, this should include:
Django
Then, you'll need to add a file named Profile (this is more Heroku-specific) that tells Heroku how you run your project:
web: gunicorn YOUR_PROJECT_NAME.wsgi:application
YOUR_PROJECT_NAME should be whatever argument you gave manage.py startproject. This should also be the name of the folder that contains your wsgi.py file (settings.py will be there too).
Deploying to Heroku
Next, you should initialize a git repository for your projec:t
git init
Then, commit your project:
git add .
git commit -m "Initial commit for my project"
Then, provided you installed the Heroku toolbelt, you should be able to add your application to Heroku:
heroku create
And finally, deploy to Heroku using git:
git push heroku master
You app isn't running yet, so you'll want to launch it:
heroku ps:scale web=1
Then, you can access it via your browser:
heroku open
You might want to have a look at Heroku's django guide.