/crowdsource-platform

The main repository for Crowdsource Platform

Primary LanguagePythonMIT LicenseMIT

Crowdsource Platform - Crowdresearch HCI Stanford

Build Status

This is a Django 1.9 app using a Postgres database 9.4 that can be deployed to Heroku.

Setup

Please follow the GitHub tutorial to setup the repository.

If you are on Windows or want a simpler (automatic) setup process, please try the instructions in the Setup with Vagrant section. Solutions to common errors can found on the FAQ page

Install Postgres and create a new database:

bash> psql
psql> CREATE DATABASE crowdsource_dev ENCODING 'UTF8';

Create a local_settings.py file in the project root folder and configure it to connect to the Postgres database:

DATABASES = {
    "default": {
        "ENGINE": "django.db.backends.postgresql_psycopg2",
        "NAME": "crowdsource_dev"
    }
}

DEBUG = True
COMPRESS_OFFLINE = False
COMPRESS_ENABLED = False
REGISTRATION_ALLOWED = True

Make sure you have Python installed. Test this by opening a command line terminal and typing `python'.

Install virtualenv to manage a local setup of your python packages. Go into the directory with the checkout of the code and create the Python virtual environment:

bash> virtualenv venv

Source the virtual environment, install dependencies, and migrate the database:

bash> source venv/bin/activate
bash> pip install -r local_requirements.txt
bash> python manage.py migrate

If this is your first time setting it up, you need to initialize your migrations and database:

bash> python manage.py makemigrations
bash> python manage.py migrate

Install node.js. If you have a Mac, we recommend using Homebrew. Then:

bash> brew install node

For Ubuntu or Debian:

bash> sudo apt-get update
bash> sudo apt-get install nodejs nodejs-legacy npm

Now, you can install the dependencies, which are managed by a utility called Bower:

bash> npm install -g bower
bash> npm install
bash> bower install

If there are no errors, you are ready to run the app from your local server:

bash> python manage.py runserver

As an alternative, using grunt toolchain, you can start the server as below. This will auto-compile SCSS using LibSass and reload when changes happen for frontend. For LiveReload, please visit how do I install Live Reload and use the browser extensions for your browser. Pep8 styling issues will be identified for any python script modifications and notified in console. Port 8000 is used by default. If it is already in use, please modify it in Gruntfile.js

bash> grunt serve

To serve the local site over https, a sample certificate and key are provided in the repo. To start it, use this command instead of the runserver command above:

gunicorn -b 127.0.0.1:8000 -b [::1]:8000 csp.wsgi --workers 2 --keyfile private_key.pem --certfile cacert.pem

This uses the gunicorn server, which is used in production as well. Here, --workers determines the number of instances of the server that will be created. In most cases, 1 will work just fine.

And you can visit the website by going to https://127.0.0.1:8000 in your web browser.

You will see a untrusted certificate message in most modern browsers. For this site (and this site only), you may ignore this warning and proceed to the site.

Setup with Vagrant

This approach might be useful if you're on Windows or have trouble setting up postgres, python, nodejs, git, etc. It will run the server in a virtual machine.

First install Virtualbox and Vagrant.

If you are on Windows, you should also install Git. During the setup process, select "Use Git and optional Unix tools from the Windows Command Prompt" (on the "Adjusting your PATH environment" page), and "Checkout as-is, commit Unix-style line endings" (on the "Configuring the line ending conversions" page).

Clone this repo to get the code:

git clone https://github.com/crowdresearch/crowdsource-platform.git
cd crowdsource-platform

Then run the command:

vagrant up

This will set up an Ubuntu VM, install prerequisites, create databases, and start the machine. Then run:

vagrant ssh

This will now give you a shell in your virtual machine. It will automatically cd to /home/vagrant/crowdsource-platform where the code is (this is a shared folder with the host machine)

Now you can run the server:

python manage.py runserver [::]:8000

And you can visit the website by going to http://localhost:8000 in your web browser.

To serve the local site over https, a sample certificate and key are provided in the repo. To start it, use this command instead of the runserver command above:

gunicorn -b 127.0.0.1:8000 -b [::1]:8000 csp.wsgi --workers 2 --keyfile private_key.pem --certfile cacert.pem

This uses the gunicorn server, which is used in production as well. Here, --workers determines the number of instances of the server that will be created. In most cases, 1 will work just fine.

And you can visit the website by going to https://127.0.0.1:8000 in your web browser.

You will see a untrusted certificate message in most modern browsers. For this site (and this site only), you may ignore this warning and proceed to the site.

On subsequent runs, you only need to run:

vagrant up
vagrant ssh
python manage.py runserver [::]:8000

Setup with Heroku

Every PR should be that does something substantial (i.e. not a README change) must be accompanied with a live demo of the platform. To spin up your own heroku instance, you can sign up for an account for free and follow instructions found here.

After setting up your own heroku instance, setup the build-packs for the instance by executing below commands in same order:

heroku buildpacks:add --index 1 https://github.com/heroku/heroku-buildpack-python.git
heroku buildpacks:add --index 1 https://github.com/heroku/heroku-buildpack-nodejs.git

To verify build-packs are setup correctly, execute below replacing :

heroku buildpacks --app <app-name>

This should output build-pack URLs as below in same order (nodejs should appear first compared to python):

=== Buildpack URLs
1. https://github.com/heroku/heroku-buildpack-nodejs.git
2. https://github.com/heroku/heroku-buildpack-python.git

Use this command to deploy your branch to that instance.

git push heroku yourbranch:master

For setting environ variables, use below

heroku config:set <variable>=<value>

For instance, to enable Registration,

heroku config:set REGISTRATION_ALLOWED=True

and to disable Registration,

heroku config:unset REGISTRATION_ALLOWED