How to Deploy to Production with Django
To deploy to production with Django, connect your repository and configure build settings. Django handles the build pipeline, CDN distribution, and provides instant rollbacks if something goes wrong in production.
Why Use Django for This?
Django provides a structured approach to deploy to production with built-in conventions, middleware support, and an active ecosystem of plugins and extensions. Developers choose Django for this task because it reduces setup time and provides reliable, well-documented APIs.
Step-by-Step: How to Deploy to Production with Django
Prepare your build configuration
Ensure your project has the correct build command, output directory, and environment variables configured for Django. Set production environment variables separately from development.
Connect your repository to Django
Link your Git repository (GitHub, GitLab, or Bitbucket) to your Django project. This enables automatic deployments on every push to your main branch.
Configure deployment settings
Set the framework preset, Node.js version, and build output directory in your Django project settings. Add any required environment variables for production.
Deploy and verify
Push to your main branch or trigger a manual deploy. Monitor the build logs for errors, then verify the production URL loads correctly with all features working.
Common Pitfalls When Deploying with Django
Committing secrets to your repository — use environment variables for API keys and credentials instead of hardcoding them.
Not setting up error monitoring before launch — production bugs without monitoring tools are nearly impossible to diagnose.
Skipping the staging environment — deploying untested changes directly to production risks downtime for real users.
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