I'm using uwsgi for my Django(version =1.4) project, but there's an error if I run
uwsgi --ini django.ini
from django.core.wsgi import get_wsgi_application ImportError: No module named django.core.wsgi
but I could import django.core.wsgi as follows:
>>> import django.core.wsgi
the django.ini file:
[uwsgi] chdir=/path/to/my/app module=app.wsgi:application master=True vacuum=True max-requests=5000 socket=127.0.0.1:9000
wsgi.py
import os
os.environ.setdefault("DJANGO_SETTINGS_MODULE", "app.settings")
# This application object is used by any WSGI server configured to use this
# file. This includes Django's development server, if the WSGI_APPLICATION
# setting points here.
from django.core.wsgi import get_wsgi_application
application = get_wsgi_application()
In my case, I installed the Django application and everything else for Python3, but the uwsgi was using Python2. Just check the log while running uwsgi whether it is using Python2 or Python3, and reinstall uwsgi if it is not consistent. Look for the line similar to below line in uwsgi startup log.
Python version: 3.4.3 (default, Oct 14 2015, 20:31:36) [GCC 4.8.4]
VSPython version: 2.7.6 (default, Jun 22 2015, 18:01:27) [GCC 4.8.2]
I received this error because I created the virtual environment in a shared folder of virtualbox which didn't allow symbolic links. I recieved some errors but everything seemed to work so I continued until I got this error. The problem was solved when I recreated my virtual environment, made sure there were no errors and pointed uwsgi to the folder.
If you installed gunicorn on both
sudo apt-get install gunicorn
and(venv) pip install gunicorn
, usesudo apt-get remove gunicorn
and restart your virtual environment. This way, it worked for me.If you use virtualenv try to add
home
to django.ini:To test it through web browser:
Since you accepted the answer which mentions
virtualenv
, it seems that you use it. In this case make sure thatdjango
is installed in yourvirtualenv
directory (sayvenv
).You can separately install it from
pip
undervirtualenv
or manually create a symbolic link (if you are on Unix-like system) tovenv
's site-packagesThe error
ImportError: No module named django.core.wsgi
generally arises when uwsgi tries reading the wsgi.py file, and comes to the line:It can't find this these modules because Django is not installed, or if it is installed, it is not in PYTHONPATH.
If your project is in a virtualenv and Django is only installed in this virtualenv, somehow the path to the Django modules are not in the PYTHONPATH, and thus Python can't find it.
If you are curious, you can insert the following code into the
wsgi.py
file, and see the PYTHONPATH:If you run a local version of uwsgi, installed in the virtualenv, then the path will be set correct, but if you run a global version of uwsgi it will normally not have the PYTHONPATH set correctly.
You can tell uWSGI the path to the virtualenv, and it will figure out the correct PYTHONPATH. Just use the
--virtualenv
command line argument, eg:(The following arguments does exactly the same as --virtualenv: --venv, --home, -H)
Surprisingly, setting $VIRTUAL_ENV has no effect on PYTHONPATH
Strangely enough, if you don't use the --virtualenv argument, the environment variable
$VIRTUAL_ENV
will be set correctly. Test this by inserting into wsgi.py:This will print:
But the PYTHONPATH is not set correctly, and does not include anything from the virtualenv.
I can't explain why this is.