1
0
mirror of https://git.FreeBSD.org/ports.git synced 2024-12-26 05:02:18 +00:00
freebsd-ports/www/py-django-cms/pkg-message
2019-08-14 12:25:09 +00:00

181 lines
4.4 KiB
Plaintext

[
{ type: install
message: <<EOM
IMPORTANT /
If you're upgrading from a older version of py-django-cms please read the
upgrade instructions at:
http://docs.django-cms.org/en/latest/upgrade/index.html
The described steps further down are a distilled version of "How to install
django CMS by hand" which is available at:
http://docs.django-cms.org/en/latest/how_to/install.html
The manual gives enough information how to setup py-django-cms for
development use. For production environments please consider to read the
full documentation available at:
http://docs.django-cms.org/en/latest/index.html
1. Create a new Django project
$ django-admin.py startproject myproject
2. Edit settings.py
--- Set a SITE_ID by adding the following line:
SITE_ID = 1 # 1 will suffice in most cases
--- Add the next lines to INSTALLED_APPS:
'djangocms_admin_style' # must come BEFORE django.contrib.admin
'django.contrib.sites'
'cms'
'menus'
'sekizai'
'treebeard'
--- Configure the LANGUAGES and LANGUAGE_CODE, e.g.:
LANGUAGES = [
('en', 'English'),
('de', 'German'),
]
LANGUAGE_CODE = 'en' # For simplicity's sake at this stage it is worth
# changing the default en-us in that you'll find in
# the LANGUAGE_CODE setting to en.
--- Add the following lines to MIDDLEWARE_CLASSES:
'cms.middleware.utils.ApphookReloadMiddleware' # Optional, but useful
'cms.middleware.user.CurrentUserMiddleware'
'cms.middleware.page.CurrentPageMiddleware'
'cms.middleware.toolbar.ToolbarMiddleware'
'cms.middleware.language.LanguageCookieMiddleware'
'django.middleware.locale.LocaleMiddleware'
--- Add MEDIA_URL (where media files will be served) and MEDIA_ROOT (where they
--- will be stored):
MEDIA_URL = "/media/"
MEDIA_ROOT = os.path.join(BASE_DIR, "media")
--- See the Django documentation for guidance on serving media files in
--- production.
--- Add a CMS_TEMPLATES section that will be the project's default template:
CMS_TEMPLATES = [
('home.html', 'Home page template'),
]
--- Add the next lines to TEMPLATES['OPTIONS']['context_processors']:
'sekizai.context_processors.sekizai'
'cms.context_processors.cms_settings'
--- Django needs to be know where to look for its templates, so add following
--- line (the appropriate directory will be created in the next step) to the
----TEMPLATES['DIRS'] list:
['templates']
--- In the root of the project, create a templates directory, and in that,
--- home.html, a minimal django CMS template:
{% load cms_tags sekizai_tags %}
<html>
<head>
<title>{% page_attribute "page_title" %}</title>
{% render_block "css" %}
</head>
<body>
{% cms_toolbar %}
{% placeholder "content" %}
{% render_block "js" %}
</body>
</html>
--- Note: See Django's template language documentation for more on how template
--- inheritance works.
3. Edit urls.py
--- Edit urls.py and add url(r'^', include('cms.urls')) to the urlpatterns
--- list. It should come after other patterns, so that specific URLs for other
--- applications can be detected first.
--- You'll also need to have an import for django.conf.urls.include and
--- configure a media file serving for development purposes:
from django.conf import settings
from django.conf.urls import url, include
from django.conf.urls.static import static
urlpatterns = [
url(r'^admin/', admin.site.urls),
url(r'^', include('cms.urls')),
] + static(settings.MEDIA_URL, document_root=settings.MEDIA_ROOT)
4. Setup the relational database backend
--- For testing purpose SQLite can be used and it is configured by default
--- in a new Django project's DATABASES.
--- Refer to Django's DATABASES setting documentation for the appropriate
--- configuration when PostgreSQL or MySQL are used as database backends.
5. Run migrations to create database tables
--- When a database backend has been choosen and set up properly, run the
--- following command:
$ python manage.py migrate
6. Create an admin superuser
--- For maintenance purposes it is necessary to create a admin user:
$ python manage.py createsuperuser
7. Check CMS installation
--- This will check your configuration, your applications, your database and
--- report on any problems:
$ python manage.py cms check
--- When there are no errors continue with the last step.
8. Start the CMS
--- The django CMS project will now run by issuing:
$ python manage.py runserver
--- The CMS can now be reached http://localhost:8000/ and the admin interface
--- at http://localhost:8000/admin/
EOM
}
]