From bf4be3711acfbfc765fb17dc238b1b9bbad5b7be Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Nick Frazier Date: Tue, 5 Oct 2021 08:42:45 -0400 Subject: Improved docs regarding UTF-8 support with Apache and mod_wsgi. --- docs/ref/unicode.txt | 6 +++--- 1 file changed, 3 insertions(+), 3 deletions(-) (limited to 'docs/ref') diff --git a/docs/ref/unicode.txt b/docs/ref/unicode.txt index 209cd68060..d35476ada7 100644 --- a/docs/ref/unicode.txt +++ b/docs/ref/unicode.txt @@ -291,8 +291,8 @@ Files If you intend to allow users to upload files, you must ensure that the environment used to run Django is configured to work with non-ASCII file names. If your environment isn't configured correctly, you'll encounter -``UnicodeEncodeError`` exceptions when saving files with file names that -contain non-ASCII characters. +``UnicodeEncodeError`` exceptions when saving files with file names or content +that contains non-ASCII characters. Filesystem support for UTF-8 file names varies and might depend on the environment. Check your current configuration in an interactive Python shell by @@ -306,7 +306,7 @@ This should output "UTF-8". The ``LANG`` environment variable is responsible for setting the expected encoding on Unix platforms. Consult the documentation for your operating system and application server for the appropriate syntax and location to set this -variable. +variable. See the :doc:`/howto/deployment/wsgi/modwsgi` for examples. In your development environment, you might need to add a setting to your ``~.bashrc`` analogous to::: -- cgit v1.3