Easy Django Deployments with Ansible

Get your Django project up and running in production in seconds.

There are multiple ways to get a python web application running in production, including Docker, push-to-deploy PaaS services like Heroku, using one of the many configuration management tools now available (e.g. Puppet, Chef, Salt, and Ansible), or old fashioned manual configuration of a server. The last is a road that too many newcomers to Django and python web applications are led down, as when you are new to a whole language and suite of tools it is difficult and frustrating to learn a whole other category of tools on top of Django just to get your project running somewhere that other people can see it!

One thing I like to do when learning a new technology is to build, from scratch, the simplest possible thing that will work using that tech. That might be the simplest possible Django project or the minimum configuration needed to use SAML authentication with Django. So I decided to create the simplest Ansible playbook I could that would take you from a freshly created VM to a running Django site, with as little configuration as possible.

This playbook will do the following:

Step 1: Create a VM

I highly recommend Digital Ocean for both personal hobby projects and production. A hobbyist or student does not need the full power of AWS right away, and with tools like the one I’m describing here, we can also do without the expense of a hosted PaaS like Heroku. But whether you go with Digital Ocean or another provider, all you need is an Ubuntu VM.

Our ansible playbook assumes that SSH public key authentication is already set up for our server, so to do that just run this command:

ssh-copy-id root@xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx

(replacing the xxx’s with the actual public IP address or hostname of your server).

Step 2: Install Ansible

You will need to have Ansible installed on your computer, which unfortunately does not work on Windows (yet). But if you are on a Mac or Linux, just sudo pip install ansible to get the latest version.

Step 3: Clone the playbook repository

You can view the playbook on the web here: https://github.com/technivore/ansible-django. Clone it to your machine with this command:

git clone git@github.com:technivore/ansible-django.git

Step 4: Edit the vars.yml file

The repository contains an ansible directory that has a file called vars.yml. Edit this file to set things like your project name, the URL of your own git repository, the database username and password you want to use, etc.

Step 5: Edit the hosts file

The hosts file contains the address of the server we are installing on.

Step 6: Run the playbook!

First cd into the ansible directory, then:

ansible-playbook -i hosts provision.yml

Sit back and watch the messages scroll by! When it completes, your app will be up and running!

Next steps

Of course as you keep developing your app you’ll be pushing new versions to your git repository. To update your site you don’t want to run through the whole provisioning playbook again, so you can run just the deploy.yml playbook to update your code (as well as install any new dependencies and restart the services if necessary):

ansible-playbook -i hosts deploy.yml

Final notes

This playbook is explicitly not a “best practices” guide to follow. Its aim is simplicity and ease of use, while following common practices for Django project layout. There are many things it does not do:

If you are ready to move beyond this playbook because your project has different requirements, it should at least make a good template to work off of.