Opened 14 years ago

Last modified 11 years ago

#137 reopened enhancement

Django's manage.py should mention ssh'ing to scripts on failure

Reported by: geofft Owned by:
Priority: minor Milestone:
Component: autoinstallers Keywords: starter
Cc:

Description

If it's not too painful, it would be neat if we modified Django apps post-install such that ./manage.py would detect if it's running on scripts and, if not, ssh to scripts and re-execute itself there.

Change History (6)

comment:1 Changed 14 years ago by ezyang

Similar functionality would be useful for Wizard.

comment:2 in reply to: ↑ description Changed 14 years ago by afarrell

Replying to geofft:

If it's not too painful, it would be neat if we modified Django apps post-install such that ./manage.py would detect if it's running on scripts and, if not, ssh to scripts and re-execute itself there.

However, what if I explicitly wish to run it locally? consider the following workflow: 1) I start a django project on scripts 2) I make a git repo out of it 3) I pull the repo locally 4) I go somewhere with a poor connection (or none at all) to 18net 5) I work on the site and wish to view it locally

Clearly in this case I do not expect it to have to ssh to scripts.

comment:3 Changed 14 years ago by geofft

Hm, good call. One way to address that might be to conditionalize this on (DATABASE_ENGINE == 'mysql' and DATABASE_HOST == 'sql.mit.edu'); I think you could argue that if you haven't overridden that, you want to be making changes to the database from a scripts.mit.edu server. If you're working on your app locally, you've probably pointed it to a local mysql server, or a SQLite file, or somesuch.

comment:4 Changed 12 years ago by geofft

  • Resolution set to wontfix
  • Status changed from new to closed

I'm no longer convinced this is a great idea (per Andrew's objection, and it's also very DWIM), so I'm withdrawing this request. If someone else thinks this is worth doing, feel free to reopen.

comment:5 Changed 11 years ago by adehnert

  • Resolution wontfix deleted
  • Status changed from closed to reopened

Does it make sense to wrap "from django.core.management import execute_manager" (or whatever it is now) in a try/except ImportError? block, and give a "Warning: try ssh'ing to scripts first" message when the import fails? (See also https://help.mit.edu/Ticket/Display.html?id=2381935.)

comment:6 Changed 11 years ago by adehnert

  • Keywords starter added
  • Summary changed from Django's manage.py should ssh to scripts if necessary to Django's manage.py should mention ssh'ing to scripts on failure

And also https://help.mit.edu/Ticket/Display.html?id=2429947...

If anybody objects to implementing comment 5 above, please say so. Otherwise, I'll do it / shove it at a prospective / etc..

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