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microsrebelles | 5 months ago | |
requirements | 1 year ago | |
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CHANGELOG.md | 2 years ago | |
CONTRIBUTORS.txt | 2 years ago | |
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Makefile | 4 months ago | |
README.md | 2 years ago | |
config.env.example | 2 years ago | |
manage.py | 2 years ago | |
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README.md
microsrebelles
Une courte description du projet.
Table of content
Give a try
On a Debian-based host - running at least Debian Stretch:
$ sudo apt install python3 virtualenv git make
$ git clone https://forge.cliss21.org/cliss21/microsrebelles-site
$ cd microsrebelles/
$ make init
# A configuration file will be created interactively; you can uncomment:
# ENV=development
$ make serve
Then visit http://127.0.0.1:8000/ in your web browser.
Installation
Requirements
On a Debian-based host - running at least Debian Stretch, you will need the following packages:
python3
virtualenv
make
git
(recommended for getting the source)python3-mysqldb
(optional, in case of a MySQL / MariaDB database)python3-psycopg2
(optional, in case of a PostgreSQL database)
Quick start
It assumes that you already have the application source code locally - the best way is by cloning this repository - and that you are in this folder.
-
Define your local configuration in a file named
config.env
, which can be copied fromconfig.env.example
and edited to suits your needs.Depending on your environment, you will have to create your database and the user at first.
-
Run
make init
.Note that if there is no
config.env
file, it will be created interactively.
That's it! Your environment is now initialized with the application installed.
To update it, once the source code is checked out, simply run make update
.
You can also check that your application is well configured by running
make check
.
Deployment
Web application
Here is an example deployment using NGINX - as the Web server - and uWSGI - as the application server.
uWSGI
The uWSGI configuration doesn't require a special configuration, except that we
are using Python 3 and a virtual environment. Note that if you serve the
application on a sub-location, you will have to add route-run = fixpathinfo:
to your uWSGI configuration (available since v2.0.11).
NGINX
In the server
block of your NGINX configuration, add the following blocks and
set the path to your application instance and to the uWSGI socket:
location / {
include uwsgi_params;
uwsgi_pass unix:<uwsgi_socket_path>;
}
location /media {
alias <app_instance_path>/var/media;
}
location /static {
alias <app_instance_path>/var/static;
# Optional: don't log access to assets
access_log off;
}
location = /favicon.ico {
alias <app_instance_path>/var/static/favicon/favicon.ico;
# Optional: don't log access to the favicon
access_log off;
}
Structure
Overview
All the application files - e.g. Django code including settings, templates and
statics - are located into microsrebelles/
.
Two environments are defined - either for requirements and settings:
development
: for local application development and testing. It uses a SQLite3 database and enable debugging by default, add some useful settings and applications for development purpose - i.e. thedjango-debug-toolbar
.production
: for production. It checks that configuration is set and correct, try to optimize performances and enforce some settings - i.e. HTTPS related ones.
Local changes
You can override and extend statics and templates locally. This can be useful
if you have to change the logo for a specific instance for example. For that,
just put your files under the local/static/
and local/templates/
folders.
Regarding the statics, do not forget to collect them after that. Note also that
the local/
folder is ignored by git.
Variable content
All the variable content - e.g. user-uploaded media, collected statics - are
stored inside the var/
folder. It is also ignored by git as it's specific
to each application installation.
So, you will have to configure your Web server to serve the var/media/
and
var/static/
folders, which should point to /media/
and /static/
,
respectively.
Development
The easiest way to deploy a development environment is by using the Makefile
.
Before running make init
, ensure that you have either set ENV=development
in the config.env
file or have this environment variable. Note that you can
still change this variable later and run make init
again.
There is some additional rules when developing, which are mainly wrappers for
manage.py
. You can list all of them by running make help
. Here are the main ones:
make serve
: run a development servermake test
: test the whole applicationmake lint
: check the Python code syntax
Assets
The assets - e.g. CSS, JavaScript, images, fonts - are generated using a Webpack-powered build system with these features:
- SCSS compilation and prefixing
- JavaScript module bundling and code splitting
- Built-in development server
- Compression for production builds
You will need to have Node.js >= 12.13.0 and npm installed. Note that this is
included in Debian since Bullseye through nodejs
and npm
packages.
Start by installing the application dependencies - which are defined in
package.json
- by running: npm install
.
The following tasks are then available:
npm run build
: build all the assets for development and production use, and put them in the static folder - e.gmicrosrebelles/static
.npm run dev
: run a proxy server to the app - which must already be served onlocalhost:8000
- with the styleguide on/styleguide
and watch for file changes.npm run lint
: lint the JavaScript and the SCSS code.
In production, only the static files will be used. It is recommended to commit the compiled assets just before a new release only. This will prevent to have a growing repository due to the minified files.
License
microsrebelles is developed by Cliss XXI and licensed under the AGPLv3+.