How to get Gunicorn to use Python 3 instead of Pyt

2020-05-17 00:21发布

问题:

I'm trying to get Gunicorn to use Python3 for a Django app I want to make. I'm using Digital Ocean's Django image to get started. It comes with Django, Gunicorn, and Nginx installed and configured. The default Django project that comes with this image seems to work fine for Python 2.

I've apt-get'ed these packages.

  • python3
  • python3-psycopg2
  • python3-dev
  • python3-pip

In order to try to avoid any problems, I've also done this.

  • pip uninstall django
  • pip3 install django

I rm -rf'ed the stock project and created a new one with django-admin.py startproject django_project. django-admin.py uses Python 3 (according to the shebang). Later, I use python3 manage.py startapp django_app to create a new app.

At this point, everything works fine. Just like the default app. Then, in django_app/views.py I do this and it breaks.

from django.shortcuts import render
from django.http import HttpResponse

def index(request):
    # Python 2 and 3 - works fine
    # print('PRINTING')

    # Python 3 only - crashes
    print(1, 2, end=' ')

    return HttpResponse("Hello, world! This is my first view.")

The error page says I'm using Python 2.7.6.

Okay, so then I thought I could install Gunicorn through pip for Python 3, so I do this.

  • pip uninstall gunicorn
  • pip3 install gunicorn

But then I just end up with 502 Bad Gateway. When I do service gunicorn status, I get gunicorn stop/waiting. I tried service gunicorn restart, but it still says gunicorn stop/waiting.

I did a which gunicorn and it's installed at /usr/local/bin/gunicorn. Uhh... I'm not really sure what else I could try. Any help would be greatly appreciated. Thanks.

回答1:

It's probably easier to start afresh. Tutorial at https://www.digitalocean.com/community/articles/how-to-install-and-configure-django-with-postgres-nginx-and-gunicorn.

I got it running on a fresh ubuntu 14.04 droplet. Install python3 and django and then simply follow the tutorial. Didn't do the postgres or virtualenv bits though.



回答2:

It seems that there's a package for this called gunicorn3 (this was tested on ubuntu)

sudo apt-get install gunicorn3

then running the following command should work and run gunicorn with python3:

gunicorn3 --log-level debug --bind 0.0.0.0:30443 server:app



回答3:

In case the two links break one day, here's how I got it working.

Starting after executing these instructions.

  • pip uninstall gunicorn
  • pip3 install gunicorn

Install supervisor, sudo apt-get install supervisor.

Next, I needed to make gunicorn_config.py in the root of my project directory, which contains this.

command = '/usr/local/bin/gunicorn'
pythonpath = '/home/django/django_project'
bind = '127.0.0.1:9000'
workers = 3
user = 'nobody'

Then, I created a configuration file for supervisor. vim /etc/supervisor/conf.d/gunicorn.conf, with these contents.

[program:gunicorn]
command=/usr/local/bin/gunicorn -c /home/django/django_project/gunicorn_config.py django_project.wsgi
user=nobody
autostart=true
autorestart=true
stderr_logfile=/var/log/gunicorn3.err.log
stdout_logfile=/var/log/gunicorn3.out.log

After that, I did a supervisorctl reread and supervisorctl update and then it all started working.

You can use supervisorctl status gunicorn to check if gunicorn is running or not. You can use supervisorctl restart gunicorn to restart.



回答4:

my way:

virtualenv -p /usr/bin/python3 /home/py3env
source /home/py3env/bin/activate
pip3 install gunicorn
/home/py3env/bin/gunicorn -w4 -b0.0.0.0:8000 [projectname].wsgi


回答5:

Wrote the following script to switch to Python 3.4 with DigitalOcean's 14.04 Django image, as I wanted it to be a nice one-step setup... It will be maintained at https://gist.github.com/tr00st/190ab4de62f9b23bea69

The main issue with the setup for me was with gevent, switching to tornado for workers worked fine.

#!/bin/bash
# Python 3 Upgrade for Django Droplet
# Will update the "Django on 14.04" Digital Ocean image.
# Run as root.

# Grab psycopg2 and pip
apt-get install python3-pip python3-psycopg2

# Remove the Python 2.7 version of gunicorn, so we can...
pip uninstall gunicorn

# Install the Python 3 version of gunicorn, and a couple of dependencies.
pip3 install gunicorn tornado django
# Sadly, at time of writing, gevent isn't Python 3 compatible... But tornado is!
# So, switch them out with a little sed magic
sed 's/worker_class = '\''gevent'\''/worker_class='\''tornado'\''/' /etc/gunicorn.d/gunicorn.py -i.orig

# Restart gunicorn to make the changes take effect...
service gunicorn restart

# And we're good!


回答6:

The way I make it happen was to uninstall gunicorn from everywhere:

sudo apt-get remove gunicorn
pip uninstall gunicorn
pip3 uninstall gunicorn

And then Installing gunicorn from source.

pip3 install git+https://github.com/benoitc/gunicorn.git

Now everything's running with no problem.



回答7:

If you look at the gunicorn executable, it's just a small python script:

$ cat gunicorn
#!/usr/bin/env python

# -*- coding: utf-8 -*-
import re
import sys

from gunicorn.app.wsgiapp import run

if __name__ == '__main__':
    sys.argv[0] = re.sub(r'(-script\.pyw?|\.exe)?$', '', sys.argv[0])
    sys.exit(run())

The important bit is the from gunicorn.app.wsgiapp import run line, which tells you the location of the module responsibe for running your app. If gunicorn is quality code (which it is), you should be able to import that module directly from the command line and run your app.

"Importing the module directly from the command line" means using the -m command line switch.

When called with -m module-name, the given module is located on the Python module path and executed as a script.

Using the python of your choice:

$ /path/to/your/python -m gunicorn.app.wsgiapp {{ gunicorn command line args go here }} server:app

And sure enough it runs!

[2017-12-04 02:05:27 +0000] [24] [INFO] Starting gunicorn 19.7.1
[2017-12-04 02:05:27 +0000] [24] [INFO] Listening at: http://127.0.0.1:5000 (24)
[2017-12-04 02:05:27 +0000] [24] [INFO] Using worker: sync
[2017-12-04 02:05:27 +0000] [28] [INFO] Booting worker with pid: 28
[2017-12-04 02:05:27 +0000] [29] [INFO] Booting worker with pid: 29

This behavior is very useful, for example when running gunicorn from somewhere like a Dockerfile.



回答8:

Install a python3 virtual environment in your project folder

$ pipenv --three

Then run gunicorn in the activated environment

$ gunicorn [PROJECT].wgsi


回答9:

I think the best way to do this is go to /usr/local/bin/gunicorn and change first line which is shebang line to #!/usr/bin/python-version

for ex: my gunicorn runs with python3.5 interpretor

#!/usr/bin/python3.5

# -*- coding: utf-8 -*-
import re
import sys

from gunicorn.app.wsgiapp import run

if __name__ == '__main__':
    sys.argv[0] = re.sub(r'(-script\.pyw|\.exe)?$', '', sys.argv[0])
    sys.exit(run())


回答10:

I had the same issue on Digital Ocean using the droplet "Ubuntu Django on 14.04".

I realized that the 'gevent' worker type was the problem for me when using Python 3. Even though I checked with python3 -m pip freeze that 'gevent' was installed, it did not work. I changed it to 'sync' in /etc/gunicorn.d/gunicorn.py:

...
worker_class = 'sync'
...

I restarted gunicorn:

sudo service gunicorn restart

I checked the gunicorn service was running by using service gunicorn status, and was able to see the welcome to django page by reaching my droplet's ip address.

I hope that works for other people.



回答11:

Here is how i made it to work for me. I have installed gunicorn both with pip2 and pip3. I need both versions. The default one is gunicorn with pip2.

What I did was I installed gunicorn with virtualenv using pip3 and looked at content of the file gunicorn under bin in the virtualenv folder, that says

#!/********/virtualenv/gunicorn3/corto/bin/python3

# -*- coding: utf-8 -*-
import re
import sys

from gunicorn.app.wsgiapp import run

if __name__ == '__main__':
    sys.argv[0] = re.sub(r'(-script\.pyw?|\.exe)?$', '', sys.argv[0])
    sys.exit(run())

I copied this file and put it elsewhere, then i changed

#!/********/virtualenv/gunicorn3/corto/bin/python3

to

#!/usr/bin/python3

Now you can run gunicorn easily like this after getting into the directory that you copied the file gunicorn in

python3 gunicorn -c /your_config_file.py class_app:app

Note: doing pip3 uninstall gunicorn, followed by pip3 install gunicorn will install gunicron with python3 version (overriding the python2 version) in the dir 'usr/local/bin' (ubuntu) and then you can get the file contents of gunicron there. This will help you avoid using virtualenv.

If this doesnt work first time, do pip3 unistall gunicorn, followed by pip3 install gunicorn.

Happy unicorning ;)