
Creating and including local settings
Configuration doesn't necessarily need to be complex. If you want to keep things simple, you can work with two settings files: settings.py
for common configuration and local_settings.py
for sensitive settings that shouldn't be under version control.
Getting ready
Most of the settings for different environments will be shared and saved in version control. However, there will be some settings that are specific to the environment of the project instance, for example, database or e-mail settings. We will put them in the local_settings.py
file.
How to do it…
To use local settings in your project, perform the following steps:
- At the end of
settings.py
, add a version oflocal_settings.py
that claims to be in the same directory, as follows:# settings.py # … put this at the end of the file … try: execfile(os.path.join( os.path.dirname(__file__), "local_settings.py" )) except IOError: pass
- Create
local_settings.py
and put your environment-specific settings there, as shown in the following:# local_settings.py DATABASES = { "default": { "ENGINE": "django.db.backends.mysql", "NAME": "myproject", "USER": "root", "PASSWORD": "root", } } EMAIL_BACKEND = \ "django.core.mail.backends.console.EmailBackend" INSTALLED_APPS += ( "debug_toolbar", )
How it works…
As you can see, the local settings are not normally imported, they are rather included and executed in the settings.py
file itself. This allows you to not only create or overwrite the existing settings, but also adjust the tuples or lists from the settings.py
file. For example, we add debug_toolbar
to INSTALLED_APPS
here in order to be able to debug the SQL queries, template context variables, and so on.
See also
- The Creating a project file structure recipe
- The Toggling the Debug Toolbar recipe in Chapter 10, Bells and Whistles