zulip/zproject/wsgi.py

48 lines
1.9 KiB
Python

"""
WSGI config for zulip project.
This module contains the WSGI application used by Django's development server
and any production WSGI deployments. It should expose a module-level variable
named ``application``. Django's ``runserver`` and ``runfcgi`` commands discover
this application via the ``WSGI_APPLICATION`` setting.
Usually you will have the standard Django WSGI application here, but it also
might make sense to replace the whole Django WSGI application with a custom one
that later delegates to the Django one. For example, you could introduce WSGI
middleware here, or combine a Django application with an application of another
framework.
"""
import os
import sys
BASE_DIR = os.path.dirname(os.path.dirname(os.path.abspath(__file__)))
sys.path.append(BASE_DIR)
from scripts.lib.setup_path import setup_path
setup_path()
os.environ.setdefault("DJANGO_SETTINGS_MODULE", "zproject.settings")
from django.core.wsgi import get_wsgi_application
try:
# 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.
application = get_wsgi_application()
except Exception:
# If /etc/zulip/settings.py contains invalid syntax, Django
# initialization will fail in django.setup(). In this case, our
# normal configuration to logs errors to /var/log/zulip/errors.log
# won't have been initialized. Since it's really valuable for the
# debugging process for a Zulip 500 error to always be "check
# /var/log/zulip/errors.log", we log to that file directly here.
import logging
logging.basicConfig(filename='/var/log/zulip/errors.log', level=logging.INFO,
format='%(asctime)s %(levelname)s %(name)s %(message)s')
logger = logging.getLogger(__name__)
logger.exception("get_wsgi_application() failed:")
raise