Azure app service with python from a visual studio project










0















We have a python application (Flask) that we develop with Visual Studio.
We push this to Azure DevOps as a git.



When I push it to our Azure App Service it only works when I only push the actual python files and not the .vs folder or the .pyproj, .pyproj.user files. This means I have a folder locally that I copy the files to and then push to app services. That is not the nicest solution as you can imagine.



My questions:



  1. Why does app service not work with the "other" files?

  2. How would this work nicely that every time I push directly to the app service as well as our Azure DevOps?









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    0















    We have a python application (Flask) that we develop with Visual Studio.
    We push this to Azure DevOps as a git.



    When I push it to our Azure App Service it only works when I only push the actual python files and not the .vs folder or the .pyproj, .pyproj.user files. This means I have a folder locally that I copy the files to and then push to app services. That is not the nicest solution as you can imagine.



    My questions:



    1. Why does app service not work with the "other" files?

    2. How would this work nicely that every time I push directly to the app service as well as our Azure DevOps?









    share|improve this question


























      0












      0








      0








      We have a python application (Flask) that we develop with Visual Studio.
      We push this to Azure DevOps as a git.



      When I push it to our Azure App Service it only works when I only push the actual python files and not the .vs folder or the .pyproj, .pyproj.user files. This means I have a folder locally that I copy the files to and then push to app services. That is not the nicest solution as you can imagine.



      My questions:



      1. Why does app service not work with the "other" files?

      2. How would this work nicely that every time I push directly to the app service as well as our Azure DevOps?









      share|improve this question
















      We have a python application (Flask) that we develop with Visual Studio.
      We push this to Azure DevOps as a git.



      When I push it to our Azure App Service it only works when I only push the actual python files and not the .vs folder or the .pyproj, .pyproj.user files. This means I have a folder locally that I copy the files to and then push to app services. That is not the nicest solution as you can imagine.



      My questions:



      1. Why does app service not work with the "other" files?

      2. How would this work nicely that every time I push directly to the app service as well as our Azure DevOps?






      azure azure-devops azure-app-service-plans






      share|improve this question















      share|improve this question













      share|improve this question




      share|improve this question








      edited Nov 15 '18 at 14:07









      Shayki Abramczyk

      3,9483928




      3,9483928










      asked Nov 15 '18 at 13:22









      WealotWealot

      1518




      1518






















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          1. not sure I understand the question properly. but you dont need to push those to the webapp for it to work. you can use gitignore file to exclude those not needed files from commits.

          2. you can configure you webapp to use local git deployment method and do a push "directly", but that is probably not what you want to do. you probably want to build on commit to gitvstswhatever repo and push artifacts to the webapp





          share|improve this answer


















          • 1





            Thanks for the .gitignore remark. I was taking it entirely wrong, had to just make good .gitignores and keep the "bullshit VS" files locally never putting them in any git repo. (And I think a .pyc might have killed the app service as wel....)

            – Wealot
            Nov 15 '18 at 15:16










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          1 Answer
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          active

          oldest

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          1 Answer
          1






          active

          oldest

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          active

          oldest

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          active

          oldest

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          1














          1. not sure I understand the question properly. but you dont need to push those to the webapp for it to work. you can use gitignore file to exclude those not needed files from commits.

          2. you can configure you webapp to use local git deployment method and do a push "directly", but that is probably not what you want to do. you probably want to build on commit to gitvstswhatever repo and push artifacts to the webapp





          share|improve this answer


















          • 1





            Thanks for the .gitignore remark. I was taking it entirely wrong, had to just make good .gitignores and keep the "bullshit VS" files locally never putting them in any git repo. (And I think a .pyc might have killed the app service as wel....)

            – Wealot
            Nov 15 '18 at 15:16















          1














          1. not sure I understand the question properly. but you dont need to push those to the webapp for it to work. you can use gitignore file to exclude those not needed files from commits.

          2. you can configure you webapp to use local git deployment method and do a push "directly", but that is probably not what you want to do. you probably want to build on commit to gitvstswhatever repo and push artifacts to the webapp





          share|improve this answer


















          • 1





            Thanks for the .gitignore remark. I was taking it entirely wrong, had to just make good .gitignores and keep the "bullshit VS" files locally never putting them in any git repo. (And I think a .pyc might have killed the app service as wel....)

            – Wealot
            Nov 15 '18 at 15:16













          1












          1








          1







          1. not sure I understand the question properly. but you dont need to push those to the webapp for it to work. you can use gitignore file to exclude those not needed files from commits.

          2. you can configure you webapp to use local git deployment method and do a push "directly", but that is probably not what you want to do. you probably want to build on commit to gitvstswhatever repo and push artifacts to the webapp





          share|improve this answer













          1. not sure I understand the question properly. but you dont need to push those to the webapp for it to work. you can use gitignore file to exclude those not needed files from commits.

          2. you can configure you webapp to use local git deployment method and do a push "directly", but that is probably not what you want to do. you probably want to build on commit to gitvstswhatever repo and push artifacts to the webapp






          share|improve this answer












          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer










          answered Nov 15 '18 at 14:08









          4c74356b414c74356b41

          29.7k42154




          29.7k42154







          • 1





            Thanks for the .gitignore remark. I was taking it entirely wrong, had to just make good .gitignores and keep the "bullshit VS" files locally never putting them in any git repo. (And I think a .pyc might have killed the app service as wel....)

            – Wealot
            Nov 15 '18 at 15:16












          • 1





            Thanks for the .gitignore remark. I was taking it entirely wrong, had to just make good .gitignores and keep the "bullshit VS" files locally never putting them in any git repo. (And I think a .pyc might have killed the app service as wel....)

            – Wealot
            Nov 15 '18 at 15:16







          1




          1





          Thanks for the .gitignore remark. I was taking it entirely wrong, had to just make good .gitignores and keep the "bullshit VS" files locally never putting them in any git repo. (And I think a .pyc might have killed the app service as wel....)

          – Wealot
          Nov 15 '18 at 15:16





          Thanks for the .gitignore remark. I was taking it entirely wrong, had to just make good .gitignores and keep the "bullshit VS" files locally never putting them in any git repo. (And I think a .pyc might have killed the app service as wel....)

          – Wealot
          Nov 15 '18 at 15:16



















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