Hey Andy, that's great, glad to hear it's working well. Good note about the
Projects folder too. It is a small detail, but could trip someone up for a
minute if they are looking for an exact replica of the installation
instructions.

Adam

On Wed, Nov 8, 2017 at 10:53 AM, Andy Graham <[email protected]> wrote:

> Thanks much Adam, very helpful.
>
> The AMI worked great and didn't have any issues once I updated.  Only
> thing I would point out is that the AMI doesn't nest the arches and ENV
> folder in a Projects folder as recommended in the installation
> instructions.  Not that big of a deal, just thought I would point it out.
> Once again, thanks for the help.
>
> Andy
>
> On Tuesday, November 7, 2017 at 4:26:38 PM UTC-8, Adam Cox wrote:
>>
>> Hey Andy, great question. ALLOWED_HOSTS is actually a variable that you
>> can define in your settings.py or settings_local.py file. It should be a
>> list, so something like
>>
>> ALLOWED_HOSTS = ["12.34.56.78","arches4.andygraham.com"]
>>
>> would be a valid entry. You can also use ["*"] to allow all hosts. Not
>> recommended for production of course, but could get past a the problem in a
>> pinch if you ip or domain is changing a lot...
>>
>> I am glad to hear you were able to use that AMI. I made it a while ago,
>> so it could probably stand some updates. Let me know if you find any
>> problems with dependencies and such.
>>
>> Adam
>>
>> On Nov 7, 2017 4:53 PM, "Andy Graham" <[email protected]> wrote:
>>
>>> Attempted to install Arch V4 to test out some of the features.  Set up
>>> an instance on AWS, downloaded the Arches 4 community instance that I think
>>> Adam put up there a while ago.  Once that was set up I went through and and
>>> followed the Developer Installation instruction to make sure everything was
>>> up to date and set up correctly.  I then ran the runsever command, went to
>>> the website (public IP:8000) and got an error page that said
>>> "DisallowedHost at /    Invalid HTTP_HOST header: 'xx.xx.xx.xx.:8000'. You
>>> may need to add u'xx.xx.xx.xx' to ALLOWED_HOSTS.", with the xx as my public
>>> IP.  Based on additional information I went to the request.py file in
>>> ENV/lib/python2.7/site-packages/django/http and edited the
>>> "allowed_hosts" on line 102 to include my IP.  Everything worked fine after
>>> that but I am guessing that this isn't standard protocol.  Any suggestions
>>> on what I did wrong and how to fix it so I don't have to add that info when
>>> spin up another instance?  Thanks.
>>>
>>> Andy
>>>
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