Deploying a Python app on a Linux/Unix production server
with Passenger Enterprise in Nginx mode on Red Hat 6 / CentOS 6 (with RPM)
On this page you will learn how you can deploy your app to a server that is running Passenger. You can either follow these instructions with your own app, or you can use the sample Flask app we prepared.
Table of contents
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1 Transferring the app code to the server
1.1 Push your code to a Git repository
We want to transfer our application's code to the server. The easiest way to do that is via Git.
If you have already setup a Git repository, push your application's code to that repository by running this on your local computer:
$ git push
If you have not already setup a Git repository, go to Github, create a repository and push your application's code there.
1.2 Login to your server, create a user for the app
Login to your server with SSH:
$ ssh adminuser@yourserver.com
Replace adminuser
with the name of an account with administrator privileges or sudo privileges.
Now that you have logged in, you should create an operating system user account for your app. For security reasons, it is a good idea to run each app under its own user account, in order to limit the damage that security vulnerabilities in the app can do. Passenger will automatically run your app under this user account as part of its user account sandboxing feature.
You should give the user account the same name as your app. But for demonstration purposes, this tutorial names the user account myappuser
.
$ sudo adduser myappuser
We also ensure that that user has your SSH key installed:
$ sudo mkdir -p ~myappuser/.ssh $ touch $HOME/.ssh/authorized_keys $ sudo sh -c "cat $HOME/.ssh/authorized_keys >> ~myappuser/.ssh/authorized_keys" $ sudo chown -R myappuser: ~myappuser/.ssh $ sudo chmod 700 ~myappuser/.ssh $ sudo sh -c "chmod 600 ~myappuser/.ssh/*"
1.3 Install Git on the server
$ sudo yum install -y git
1.4 Pull code
You need to pick a location in which to permanently store your application's code. A good location is /var/www/APP_NAME
. Let us create that directory.
$ sudo mkdir -p /var/www/myapp $ sudo chown myappuser: /var/www/myapp
Replace myapp
and myappuser
with your app's name and your app user account's name.
Now let us pull the code from Git:
$ cd /var/www/myapp $ sudo -u myappuser -H git clone git://github.com/username/myapp.git code
If you are using our sample app, use this Git clone command instead:
$ cd /var/www/myapp $ sudo -u myappuser -H git clone --branch=end_result https://github.com/phusion/passenger-python-flask-demo.git code
Your app's code now lives on the server at /var/www/myapp/code
.
2 Preparing the app's environment
2.1 Install app dependencies
Your application has various dependencies.
They must be installed. Most of these dependencies are Python libraries. A common way to install Python libraries is through pip
. For example, if your application depends on Flask:
$ sudo pip install flask
Your app may also depend on services, such as PostgreSQL, Redis, etc. Installing services that your app depends on is outside of this tutorial's scope.
3 Configuring Nginx and Passenger
Now that you are done with transferring your app's code to the server and setting up an environment for your app, it is time to configure Nginx so that Passenger knows how to serve your app.
3.1 Edit Nginx configuration file
We need to create an Nginx configuration file and setup a virtual host entry that points to your app. This virtual host entry tells Nginx (and Passenger) where your app is located.
$ sudo nano /etc/nginx/conf.d/myapp.conf
Replace myapp
with your app's name.
Put this inside the file:
server { listen 80; server_name yourserver.com; # Tell Nginx and Passenger where your app's 'public' directory is root /var/www/myapp/code/public; # Turn on Passenger passenger_enabled on; }
Replace yourserver.com
with your server's host name, and replace /var/www/myapp/code
with your application's code directory path. However, make sure that Nginx is configured to point to the public
subdirectory inside it!
When you are done, restart Nginx:
$ sudo service nginx restart
3.2 Test drive
You should now be able to access your app through the server's host name! Try running this from your local computer. Replace yourserver.com
with your server's hostname, exactly as it appears in the Nginx config file's server_name
directive.
$ curl http://yourserver.com/ ...your app's front page HTML...
If you do not see your app's front page HTML, then these are the most likely causes:
- You did not correctly configure your
server_name
directive. Theserver_name
must exactly match the host name in the URL. For example, if you use the commandcurl http://45.55.91.235/
to access your app, then theserver_name
must be45.55.91.235
. - You did not setup DNS records. Setting up DNS is outside the scope of this tutorial. In the mean time, we recommend that you use your server's IP address as the server name.
Next step
Congratulations, you have successfully deployed your app!
Continue: Deploying updates »