Update org bulk accept script.
The script now:
1) leaves correctly control to the browser to update the GUI of the progress bar during ajax communication.
2) Displays an error if something went wrong (I've tried in my box stopping the server while doing the requests), and show a retry button to fetch again the list of the applications that are still not accepted and iterate over them again (seems to recover correctly restarting the server after the error in my box)
3) doesn't display any text at the beginning, and the button has the correct CSS class assigned
4) Check if there are applications to accept, if not displays a message stating that there are no orgs to accept.
Patch by: Mario Ferraro
Reviewed by: Lennard de Rijk
==================================
Integrating with a legacy database
==================================
While Django is best suited for developing new applications, it's quite
possible to integrate it into legacy databases. Django includes a couple of
utilities to automate as much of this process as possible.
This document assumes you know the Django basics, as covered in the
`official tutorial`_.
.. _official tutorial: ../tutorial1/
Give Django your database parameters
====================================
You'll need to tell Django what your database connection parameters are, and
what the name of the database is. Do that by editing these settings in your
`settings file`_:
* `DATABASE_NAME`
* `DATABASE_ENGINE`_
* `DATABASE_USER`_
* `DATABASE_PASSWORD`_
* `DATABASE_HOST`_
* `DATABASE_PORT`_
.. _settings file: ../settings/
.. _DATABASE_NAME: ../settings/#database-name
.. _DATABASE_ENGINE: ../settings/#database-engine
.. _DATABASE_USER: ../settings/#database-user
.. _DATABASE_PASSWORD: ../settings/#database-password
.. _DATABASE_HOST: ../settings/#database-host
.. _DATABASE_PORT: ../settings/#database-port
Auto-generate the models
========================
Django comes with a utility that can create models by introspecting an existing
database. You can view the output by running this command::
django-admin.py inspectdb --settings=path.to.settings
Save this as a file by using standard Unix output redirection::
django-admin.py inspectdb --settings=path.to.settings > models.py
This feature is meant as a shortcut, not as definitive model generation. See
the `django-admin.py documentation`_ for more information.
Once you've cleaned up your models, name the file ``models.py`` and put it in
the Python package that holds your app. Then add the app to your
``INSTALLED_APPS`` setting.
.. _django-admin.py documentation: ../django_admin/
Install the core Django tables
==============================
Next, run the ``manage.py syncdb`` command to install any extra needed database
records such as admin permissions and content types::
django-admin.py init --settings=path.to.settings
See whether it worked
=====================
That's it. Try accessing your data via the Django database API, and try editing
objects via Django's admin site.