To obtain logs and information about crashes in a production setup, make sure that you have access to an external Sentry instance (e.g. by creating an account with `sentry.io`_), and set the `DJANGO_SENTRY_DSN` variable. This should be enough to report crashes to Sentry.
You will probably also need to setup the Mail backend, for example by adding a `Mailgun`_ API key and a `Mailgun`_ sender domain, otherwise, the account creation view will crash and result in a 500 error when the backend attempts to send an email to the account owner.
SSL (Secure Sockets Layer) is a standard security technology for establishing an encrypted link between a server and a client, typically in this case, a web server (website) and a browser. Not having HTTPS means that malicious network users can sniff authentication credentials between your website and end users' browser.
It is always better to deploy a site behind HTTPS and will become crucial as the web services extend to the IoT (Internet of Things). For this reason, we have set up a number of security defaults to help make your website secure:
* In the `.env.example`, we have made it simpler for you to change the default `Django Admin` into a custom name through an environmental variable. This should make it harder to guess the access to the admin panel.
* If you are not using a subdomain of the domain name set in the project, then remember to put the your staging/production IP address in the ``ALLOWED_HOSTS``_ environment variable before you deploy your website. Failure to do this will mean you will not have access to your website through the HTTP protocol.
* Access to the Django admin is set up by default to require HTTPS in production or once *live*. We recommend that you look into setting up the *Certbot and Let's Encrypt Setup* mentioned below or another HTTPS certification service.
`docker-compose.yml` file and replace `0.0.0.0` with your own ip.
If you are using `nginx-proxy`_ to run multiple application stacks on one host, remove the port setting entirely and add `VIRTUAL_HOST=example.com` to your env file. Here, replace example.com with the value you entered for `domain_name`.
Postgres is saving its database files to the `postgres_data` volume by default. Change that if you want something else and make sure to make backups since this is not done automatically.
If you chose `use_letsencrypt` and will be using certbot for https, you must do the following before running anything with docker-compose:
Replace dhparam.pem.example with a generated dhparams.pem file before running anything with docker-compose. You can generate this on ubuntu or OS X by running the following in the project root:
If you would like to add additional subdomains to your certificate, you must add additional parameters to the certbot command in the `docker-compose.yml` file:
Please be cognizant of Certbot/Letsencrypt certificate requests limits when getting this set up. The provide a test server that does not count against the limit while you are getting set up.
The certbot certificates expire after 3 months.
If you would like to set up autorenewal of your certificates, the following commands can be put into a bash script: