I haven't attempted with a recent release. I'll pull down trunk and see if
I can get the admin working.

Keep in mind that when an OpenShift gear is started, your configuration is
copied from the git area to a runtime area and executed from there. So,
while I haven't tested this and can't confirm for certain, I don't think
code changes you'd make from the web IDE would persist between restarts
unless you exported and re-imported the application.

I think the ability to import / pull and push to git repo's will solve this
issue and I'm working to evolve that functionality and add hg support as
well.

Keep in mind there's also the OpenShift deployer in trunk that you can use
to develop locally and deploy your changes as long as your openshift
template is on the same system.

Regards,
Andrew

On Wed, Jul 25, 2012 at 2:15 PM, Alec Taylor <[email protected]> wrote:

> Looking good, but I was wondering, is it possible to get this working with
> latest trunk?
>
> I tried, but ended up with "Internal error"s before I was even presented
> with the enter admin password view. The welcome app worked fine though >.<
>
> Thanks
>
>
> On Saturday, June 9, 2012 1:07:39 AM UTC+10, Andrew wrote:
>>
>> Just FYI to anyone interested, I've put together a web2py template for
>> OpenShift <https://openshift.redhat.com/app/> (Red Hat's Opensource
>> PaaS).
>>
>> You can find it here: - https://github.com/**prelegalwonder/openshift_**
>> web2py <https://github.com/prelegalwonder/openshift_web2py>
>>
>> I've also put together a basic openshift deployer from the admin page,
>> and you can grab the changes from my fork of web2py - https://github.com/
>> **prelegalwonder/web2py <https://github.com/prelegalwonder/web2py>
>> It's just 3 files in the admin app:
>>  controllers/openshift.py
>>  views/openshift/deploy.html
>> and a modification to views/default/site.html
>>
>> It's only requirement to work beyond having a local working openshift
>> project is GitPython installed and accessible from the runtime that web2py
>> is running in.
>>
>> So you can either run the admin app in the cloud and access it directly
>> or run a local web2py instance and execute the deployer when you want to
>> test out your changes.
>>
>> I'm working on a detailed blog that I intent to submit to the OpenShift
>> team so they can put it on their site for getting started.
>>
>> Enjoy
>>
>  --
>
>
>
>

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