To rephrase: I need a sample routes.py with router between two domains (subdomains) getting two seperate applications with admin access enabled.
I urgently need help, thanks. W dniu poniedziałek, 10 września 2012 11:17:57 UTC+2 użytkownik Marek Mollin napisał: > > Apparently, > I have two domains and there is no way for me to access admin. > I get gateway timeouts. > > on logging I get permission denied > > W dniu poniedziałek, 10 września 2012 01:27:02 UTC+2 użytkownik Marek > Mollin napisał: >> >> So if I skip the admin.app.com line domain I will get: >> test.app.com/admin >> app.com/admin >> >> all working fine? >> >> W dniu niedziela, 9 września 2012 22:01:12 UTC+2 użytkownik Jonathan >> Lundell napisał: >>> >>> On 9 Sep 2012, at 12:42 PM, Marek Mollin <[email protected]> wrote: >>> >>> Hello, >>> I ran into small problem. >>> I have web2py 2.08 running nginx + postgres. >>> >>> I configured routes using parametric system. >>> In routes.py I defined domains and assigned admin to seperate domain. >>> By domain i mean actually subdomains... >>> >>> test.app.com -> testing environment using seperate db >>> app.com -> official thing >>> admin.app.com -> admin for both apps and any other that may comeby.... >>> >>> Problem is: >>> Now I cannot access appadmin. (I have no uwsgi_log... just gateway timed >>> out and have to restart server). >>> >>> >>> There's a problem with having admin in a different domain from an >>> associated app, in that the URLs that cross the domains aren't specified as >>> absolute URLs (that is, they don't have a domain attached to them). >>> >>> It might be possible to fix that in the parametric router, but noticing >>> a) that the app specified in a URL() call is different from the calling >>> app, and b) that the app in question is associated with a domain and/or >>> port. But at present I don't think it'll work. >>> >>> I'm not entirely certain of all this without reviewing the code. Another >>> workaround would be to treat the domain as a hint, but allow the URL to >>> override it by explicitly specifying the app. And maybe that happens, but >>> there's a more subtle issue... >>> >>> Turning on router logging might help explain what's going on. >>> >>> >>> My routes.py >>> >>> routers = dict( >>> BASE = dict( >>> domains = { >>> 'myapp.com' : 'myapp', >>> 'admin.myapp.com' : 'admin', >>> 'test.myapp.com' : 'testm', >>> >>> >>> }, >>> default_application = 'myapp', >>> applications = ['myapp','admin','testm'], >>> controllers = 'DEFAULT', >>> map_static = True >>> ), >>> myapp = dict( >>> functions = dict( >>> produkty = ['index'], >>> rozmiary = ['index'], >>> polityka = ['index'], >>> ), >>> ), >>> ) >>> >>> >>> >>> >>> -- >>> >>> >>> >>> >>> >>> >>> --

