Grouper is an application to allow users to create and manage memberships to their own groups.
Warning: This project is still very much in flux and likely to have schema changes that will need to be manually applied.
Standard Python package installation instructions apply. You will need development headers for MySQL and Python 2 available.
On Debian-based systems:
apt-get install libmysqlclient-dev libpython2.7-dev
pip install -e git+https://github.com/dropbox/grouper#egg=grouper
Next you need to configure grouper to find a SQL-style backing database
and stand up processes to serve the read-write web UI and read-only
programmatic API. There's an sample configuration file, suitable for
local development and testing, in config/dev.yaml
.
Grouper runs behind a reverse proxy that handles authentication and so expects a valid, authenticated, user account. I've included a test proxy for running on development instances.
Creating a development instance:
export PYTHONPATH=$(pwd)
export GROUPER_SETTINGS=$(pwd)/config/dev.yaml
# Setup the database.
bin/grouper-ctl sync_db
## You can either run all the various servers and the reverse-proxy
## via a helper script:
tools/run-dev --user $USER@example.com
## Or separately:
# Run the development reverse proxy
bin/grouper-ctl -vv user_proxy $USER@example.com
# Run the frontend server
bin/grouper-fe -vv
# Run the graph/api server
bin/grouper-api -vv
In order to bootstrap your new Grouper environment, you will want to
create a user for yourself and add it to the grouper-administrators
group.
export PYTHONPATH=$(pwd)
export GROUPER_SETTINGS=$(pwd)/config/dev.yaml
bin/grouper-ctl -vv\
user create $USER@example.com
# Give the user administrative access to the Grouper instance
bin/grouper-ctl -vv \
group add_member --owner grouper-administrators $USER@example.com