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Response: #!/usr/local/bin/python3 import sys import time def index(req): s = " " return s
You really need to read the docs: http://code.google.com/p/modwsgi/w/list
~Carl
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Carl J. Nobile (Software Engineer)
carl....@gmail.com
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I've been reading the Quick Configuration Guide and now I'm a bit worried. My plan is to have javascript do the html and talk to the python3 and have python3 do the Oracle DB access. My read of the guide tells me that mod_wsgi doesn't allow this type of architecture. Or am I still misunderstanding? This is my first web project and I still don't get all the concepts involved.
Thanks,
Joe
I use the Django framework for almost all my web projects now. Django
is written in python, but uses Python v2 not V3. There are few if any
packages that use Python 3 yet, Guido expected at least five years for
people to make the switch and we're only 1.5 years into his plan.
Stick with Python 2.6 for now. With this said you should have no
problem using JS/AJAX to update your site's pages, mod_wsgi won't
stand in your way with this at all.
This is a short and not very robust example of a mod_wsgi hook file:
def application(environ, start_response):
status = '200 OK'
output = "Hello World! (Oh Shit it works.)"
response_headers = [('Content-Type', 'text/plain'),
('Content-Length', str(len(output)))]
start_response(status, response_headers)
return [output]
This can be made into a class using the __call__ method.
~Carl
mod_wsgi is 100% compatible with Python 3. We're using it on production systems. That being said, it's harder to get. If you are using RHEL/CENTOS, I can provide RPMs.Of course you can use mod_wsgi to power an ajax project. You may want to look into using Bottle (http://bottle.paws.de/)
As the OP seems a web novice and confused suggesting custom installs just make things much worse. I think he should use whatever Python version is standard in his OS.
There is no reason why mod_wsgi couldn't be used in this way, but
since this is your very first web project I would very much suggest
you not try and work at such a low level from the outset. I would
instead suggest you look at a complete Python web framework stack such
as Django, TurboGears or web2py. Start out with their templating
systems to generate the HTML and only then start looking at support
they provide for doing AJAX type systems. As you learn you can start
to pull back some of the HTML generation out of the templates into the
JavaScript, but frankly you would only want to do that if it was
really necessary. Also perhaps look at toolkits for Python such as
Pyjamas. This provides a way of using Python coding to produce
JavaScript for generation of AJAX based GUIs in same style as Google
Widget Toolkit.
In respect of your original problem. As pointed out by someone else,
you were trying to use code written for mod_python with mod_wsgi,
which will not work. Secondly, you haven't configured Apache for
mod_wsgi properly because your requests were returning the code,
treating it as a static file instead of executing it.
Finally, as others pointed out, you want to avoid Python 3 at this
point. Stay with Python 2.X for now as still a way to go with the
larger Python web frameworks I suggested you look at, being available
for Python 3.
Graham