Tornado is an open source version of the scalable, non-blocking web server and tools that power FriendFeed.
This article describes how to deploy a Tornado web application on OpenShift. It has been updated to leverage the DIY cartridge introduced in late March. We will deploy Tornado in a custom tailored virtualenv.
To create our new app on OpenShift:
rhc app create hellotornado -t diy-0.1 --from-code=https://github.com/giulivo/openshift-hellotornado cd hellotornado
Code from the remote repository will be automatically cloned to your current directory.
Go at http://hellotornado-$YOURDOMAIN.rhcloud.com and enjoy!
You can achieve the same by doing the following steps manually. Create a virtualenv in `misc/` (and don't forget to create this on a python2.6 system, as that is the version of python hosted on OpenShift):
virtualenv --no-site-packages misc/virtenv
Activate your virtualenv and install the needed modules:
source misc/virtenv/bin/activate pip install tornado pip install futures pip install pycurl
Now, assuming your app is in app.py, create your start file (diy/hellotornado.py):
#!/usr/bin/env python import os cwd = os.path.dirname(os.path.abspath(__file__)) os.environ['PYTHON_EGG_CACHE'] = os.path.join(cwd, '..', 'misc/virtenv/lib/python2.6/site-packages') virtualenv = os.path.join(cwd, '..', 'misc/virtenv/bin/activate_this.py') execfile(virtualenv, dict(__file__=virtualenv)) import app app.main(os.environ['OPENSHIFT_DIY_IP'])
Make sure your binary file is executable:
chmod a+x diy/hellotornado.py
Delete the `diy/index.html` file or you'll always get only the standard welcome page after pushing the code:
rm diy/index.html
Create the start/stop scripts (these are examples to start with):
$ more .openshift/action_hooks/start #!/bin/bash # The logic to start up your application should be put in this # script. The application will work only if it binds to # $OPENSHIFT_DIY_IP:8080 nohup ${OPENSHIFT_REPO_DIR}/diy/hellotornado.py > ${OPENSHIFT_DIY_LOG_DIR}/hellotornado.log 2>&1 &
$ more .openshift/action_hooks/stop #!/bin/bash # The logic to stop your application should be put in this script. kill `ps -ef | grep hellotornado | grep -v grep | awk '{ print $2 }'` > /dev/null 2>&1 exit 0
Finally, commit and push your project:
git add . git commit -a -m "Initial commit" git push
To run and test you application locally before committing, just source the virtualenv activate file and start with the custom made start/stop scripts.
Have fun!