This Django app routes requests for specific hosts to different URL schemes defined in modules called "hostconfs".
For example, if you own example.com
but want to serve specific content
at api.example.com
and beta.example.com
, add the following to a
hosts.py
file:
from django_hosts import patterns, host host_patterns = patterns('path.to', host(r'api', 'api.urls', name='api'), host(r'beta', 'beta.urls', name='beta'), )
This causes requests to {api,beta}.example.com
to be routed to their
corresponding URLconf. You can use your urls.py
as a template for these
hostconfs.
Patterns are evaluated in order. If no pattern matches, the request is
processed in the usual way, ie. using the standard ROOT_URLCONF
.
The patterns on the left-hand side are regular expressions. For example,
the following ROOT_HOSTCONF
setting will route foo.example.com
and bar.example.com
to the same URLconf.
from django_hosts import patterns, host host_patterns = patterns('', host(r'(foo|bar)', 'path.to.urls', name='foo-or-bar'), )
First, install the app with your favorite package manager, e.g.:
pip install django-hosts
Alternatively, use the repository on Github.
You can find the full docs here: django-hosts.rtfd.org
Then configure your Django site to use the app:
Add
'django_hosts'
to yourINSTALLED_APPS
setting.Add
'django_hosts.middleware.HostsRequestMiddleware'
to the beginning of yourMIDDLEWARE
setting.Add
'django_hosts.middleware.HostsResponseMiddleware'
to the end of yourMIDDLEWARE
setting.Create a new module containing your default host patterns, e.g. in the
hosts.py
file next to yoururls.py
.Set the
ROOT_HOSTCONF
setting to the dotted Python import path of the module containing your host patterns, e.g.:ROOT_HOSTCONF = 'mysite.hosts'
Set the
DEFAULT_HOST
setting to the name of the host pattern you want to refer to as the default pattern. It'll be used if no other pattern matches or you don't give a name to thehost_url
template tag.