Check out: http://ant.apache.org/
These types of deployment & initialization tasks should be handled by
the surrounding environment, not Django itself. I suggest you use ant
or something similar to set up some scripts for yourself that
coordinate everything.
On Sun, 2007-09-30 at 20:37 -0500, James Bennett wrote:
> On 9/30/07, Mark Green <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > I'm not sure what drove me to call it "fragment caching".
> > What I really meant to point at are the little things (such as
> > form_for_model()) that would likely benefit from some
On Sun, 2007-09-30 at 20:29 -0500, James Bennett wrote:
> On 9/30/07, Mark Green <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > My question was really only about the former, a much simpler problem:
> > How to keep a tcp connection persistent and re-use it across requests?
>
> By using a pooling connection
On 9/30/07, Mark Green <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I'm not sure what drove me to call it "fragment caching".
> What I really meant to point at are the little things (such as
> form_for_model()) that would likely benefit from some object
> caching instead of burning cycles for each request.
You
On 9/30/07, Mark Green <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> My question was really only about the former, a much simpler problem:
> How to keep a tcp connection persistent and re-use it across requests?
By using a pooling connection manager external to Django. Again,
complicating the application layer
On Sun, 2007-09-30 at 16:16 -0500, James Bennett wrote:
> On 9/30/07, Mark Green <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > Hm, this raises some serious scalabity questions for me.
> > >From your description it sounds like there is no template
> > fragment caching, not even db connection pooling possible
> >
On 9/30/07, Mark Green <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hm, this raises some serious scalabity questions for me.
> >From your description it sounds like there is no template
> fragment caching, not even db connection pooling possible
> with django?
You can cache anything you want to cache; read the
On Fri, 2007-09-28 at 22:29 -0500, James Bennett wrote:
> On 9/28/07, Mark Green <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > i'm looking for a way to perform a bunch of initialization tasks
> > right after django startup.
>
> There really is no such thing as "Django startup"; remember that
> Django is hosted
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