The Internet is a hostile environment. Before deploying your Django project, you should take some time to review your settings, with security, performance, and operations in mind.
Django includes many security features. Some are built-in and always enabled. Others are optional because they aren’t always appropriate, or because they’re inconvenient for development. For example, forcing HTTPS may not be suitable for all websites, and it’s impractical for local development.
Performance optimizations are another category of trade-offs with convenience. For instance, caching is useful in production, less so for local development. Error reporting needs are also widely different.
The following checklist includes settings that:
Many of these settings are sensitive and should be treated as confidential. If you’re releasing the source code for your project, a common practice is to publish suitable settings for development, and to use a private settings module for production.
manage.py check --deploy
¶Some of the checks described below can be automated using the check
--deploy
option. Be sure to run it against your production settings file as
described in the option’s documentation.
SECRET_KEY
¶The secret key must be a large random value and it must be kept secret.
Make sure that the key used in production isn’t used anywhere else and avoid committing it to source control. This reduces the number of vectors from which an attacker may acquire the key.
Instead of hardcoding the secret key in your settings module, consider loading it from an environment variable:
import os
SECRET_KEY = os.environ['SECRET_KEY']
or from a file:
with open('/etc/secret_key.txt') as f:
SECRET_KEY = f.read().strip()
DEBUG
¶You must never enable debug in production.
You’re certainly developing your project with DEBUG = True
,
since this enables handy features like full tracebacks in your browser.
For a production environment, though, this is a really bad idea, because it leaks lots of information about your project: excerpts of your source code, local variables, settings, libraries used, etc.
ALLOWED_HOSTS
¶When DEBUG = False
, Django doesn’t work at all without a
suitable value for ALLOWED_HOSTS
.
This setting is required to protect your site against some CSRF attacks. If
you use a wildcard, you must perform your own validation of the Host
HTTP
header, or otherwise ensure that you aren’t vulnerable to this category of
attacks.
You should also configure the Web server that sits in front of Django to validate the host. It should respond with a static error page or ignore requests for incorrect hosts instead of forwarding the request to Django. This way you’ll avoid spurious errors in your Django logs (or emails if you have error reporting configured that way). For example, on nginx you might setup a default server to return “444 No Response” on an unrecognized host:
server {
listen 80 default_server;
return 444;
}
CACHES
¶If you’re using a cache, connection parameters may be different in development and in production. Django defaults to per-process local-memory caching which may not be desirable.
Cache servers often have weak authentication. Make sure they only accept connections from your application servers.
If you’re using Memcached, consider using cached sessions to improve performance.
DATABASES
¶Database connection parameters are probably different in development and in production.
Database passwords are very sensitive. You should protect them exactly like
SECRET_KEY
.
For maximum security, make sure database servers only accept connections from your application servers.
If you haven’t set up backups for your database, do it right now!
STATIC_ROOT
and STATIC_URL
¶Static files are automatically served by the development server. In
production, you must define a STATIC_ROOT
directory where
collectstatic
will copy them.
See Managing static files (e.g. images, JavaScript, CSS) for more information.
MEDIA_ROOT
and MEDIA_URL
¶Media files are uploaded by your users. They’re untrusted! Make sure your web
server never attempts to interpret them. For instance, if a user uploads a
.php
file, the web server shouldn’t execute it.
Now is a good time to check your backup strategy for these files.
Any website which allows users to log in should enforce site-wide HTTPS to avoid transmitting access tokens in clear. In Django, access tokens include the login/password, the session cookie, and password reset tokens. (You can’t do much to protect password reset tokens if you’re sending them by email.)
Protecting sensitive areas such as the user account or the admin isn’t sufficient, because the same session cookie is used for HTTP and HTTPS. Your web server must redirect all HTTP traffic to HTTPS, and only transmit HTTPS requests to Django.
Once you’ve set up HTTPS, enable the following settings.
CSRF_COOKIE_SECURE
¶Set this to True
to avoid transmitting the CSRF cookie over HTTP
accidentally.
SESSION_COOKIE_SECURE
¶Set this to True
to avoid transmitting the session cookie over HTTP
accidentally.
Setting DEBUG = False
disables several features that are
only useful in development. In addition, you can tune the following settings.
CONN_MAX_AGE
¶Enabling persistent database connections can result in a nice speed-up when connecting to the database accounts for a significant part of the request processing time.
This helps a lot on virtualized hosts with limited network performance.
TEMPLATES
¶Enabling the cached template loader often improves performance drastically, as it avoids compiling each template every time it needs to be rendered. See the template loaders docs for more information.
By the time you push your code to production, it’s hopefully robust, but you can’t rule out unexpected errors. Thankfully, Django can capture errors and notify you accordingly.
LOGGING
¶Review your logging configuration before putting your website in production, and check that it works as expected as soon as you have received some traffic.
See Logging for details on logging.
ADMINS
and MANAGERS
¶ADMINS
will be notified of 500 errors by email.
MANAGERS
will be notified of 404 errors.
IGNORABLE_404_URLS
can help filter out spurious reports.
See Error reporting for details on error reporting by email.
Error reporting by email doesn’t scale very well
Consider using an error monitoring system such as Sentry before your inbox is flooded by reports. Sentry can also aggregate logs.
Django includes default views and templates for several HTTP error codes. You
may want to override the default templates by creating the following templates
in your root template directory: 404.html
, 500.html
, 403.html
, and
400.html
. The default views should suffice for 99% of Web applications, but
if you desire to customize them, see these instructions which also contain
details about the default templates:
It’s strongly recommended that you invoke the Python process running your
Django application using the -R option or with the PYTHONHASHSEED
environment variable set to random
. This option is enabled by default
starting with Python 3.3.
These options help protect your site from denial-of-service (DoS)
attacks triggered by carefully crafted inputs. Such an attack can
drastically increase CPU usage by causing worst-case performance when
creating dict
instances. See oCERT advisory #2011-003 for more information.
Jun 14, 2020