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wagtail/docs/getting_started/using_vagrant.rst
2015-02-16 10:28:39 +00:00

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Using Vagrant
=============
This is the easiest way to get the project running. Vagrant runs your project locally in a virtual machine so you can use PostgreSQL and Elasticsearch in development without having to install them on your host machine. If you haven't yet installed Vagrant, see: `Installing Vagrant <https://docs.vagrantup.com/v2/installation/>`_.
To setup the Vagrant box, run the following commands
.. code-block:: bash
vagrant up # This may take some time on first run
vagrant ssh
# within the ssh session
dj createsuperuser
djrun
If you now visit http://localhost:8000 you should see a very basic "Welcome to your new Wagtail site!" page.
You can browse the Wagtail admin interface at: http://localhost:8000/admin
You can read more about how Vagrant works at: https://docs.vagrantup.com/v2/
.. topic:: The ``dj`` and ``djrun`` aliases
When using Vagrant, the Wagtail template provides two aliases: ``dj`` and ``djrun`` which can be used in the ``vagrant ssh`` session.
.. glossary::
``dj``
This is short for ``python manage.py`` so you can use it to reduce typing. For example: ``python manage.py syncdb`` becomes ``dj syncdb``.
``djrun``
This is short for ``python manage.py runserver 0.0.0.0:8000``. This is used to run the testing server which is accessible from ``http://localhost:8000`` (note that the port number gets changed by Vagrant)