[Django]-Differences between STATICFILES_DIR, STATIC_ROOT and MEDIA_ROOT

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You can find these settings in the Django documentation. Here are my own definitions and quotations from the documentation:

  • MEDIA_ROOT is the folder where files uploaded using FileField will go.

    Absolute filesystem path to the directory that will hold user-uploaded files.

  • STATIC_ROOT is the folder where static files will be stored after using manage.py collectstatic

    The absolute path to the directory where collectstatic will collect static files for deployment.

    If the staticfiles contrib app is enabled (default) the collectstatic management command will collect static files into this directory. See the howto on managing static files for more details about usage.

  • STATICFILES_DIRS is the list of folders where Django will search for additional static files aside from the static folder of each app installed.

    This setting defines the additional locations the staticfiles app will traverse if the FileSystemFinder finder is enabled, e.g. if you use the collectstatic or findstatic management command or use the static file serving view.

In your settings, you should have:

MEDIA_ROOT = os.path.join(BASE_DIR, "media/")
STATIC_ROOT = os.path.join(BASE_DIR, "static/")

# Make a tuple of strings instead of a string
STATICFILES_DIRS = ("/home/user/project/django1/top/listing/static", )

…where:

BASE_DIR = os.path.dirname(os.path.dirname(os.path.abspath(__file__)))

as defined in the default Django settings.py now.

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Development

STATIC_ROOT is useless during development, it’s only required for deployment.

While in development, STATIC_ROOT does nothing. You don’t even need to set it. Django looks for static files inside each app’s directory (myProject/appName/static) and serves them automatically.

This is the magic done by manage.py runserver when DEBUG=True.

Deployment

When your project goes live, things differ. Most likely you will serve dynamic content using Django and static files will be served by Nginx. Why? Because Nginx is incredibly efficient and will reduce the workload off Django.

This is where STATIC_ROOT becomes handy, as Nginx doesn’t know anything about your Django project and doesn’t know where to find static files.

So you set STATIC_ROOT = '/some/folder/' and tell Nginx to look for static files in /some/folder/. Then you run manage.py collectstatic and Django will copy static files from all the apps you have to /some/folder/.

Extra directories for static files

STATICFILES_DIRS is used to include additional directories for collectstatic to look for. For example, by default, Django doesn’t recognize /myProject/static/. So you can include it yourself.

Example

STATIC_URL = '/static/'

if not DEBUG:
    STATIC_ROOT = '/home/django/www-data/example.com/static/'

STATICFILES_DIRS = [
    os.path.join(BASE_DIR, 'static/'),
]

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Difference between STATICFILES_DIRS and STATIC_ROOT

The STATICFILES_DIRS can contain other directories (not necessarily app directories) with static files and these static files will be collected into your STATIC_ROOT when you run collectstatic. These static files will then be served by your web server and they will be served from your STATIC_ROOT.

If you have files currently in your STATIC_ROOT that you wish to serve then you need to move these to a different directory and put that other directory in STATICFILES_DIRS. Your STATIC_ROOT directory should be empty and all static files should be collected into that directory.

MEDIA_ROOT where media files ,all uploaded files goes.
Example : Images, Files

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class Media:
      js = ('/admin/custom.js', )

but it is not working. Throwing 404 not found error.

The 404 error is in part because of the leading slash in the file path.

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