Welcome to FootWear. This app will allow you to register an account and add your favorite Jordan sneakers to your collection list. The app also lets users upload Jordan Sneakers to the app that they do not see in the main page. You will also be able to view different shoe store locations in New York City.
This project is scaffolded so that you can build a React frontend and Rails backend together, and easily deploy them to Heroku.
- Ruby 2.7.4
- NodeJS (v16), and npm
- Heroku CLI
- Postgresql
See Environment Setup below for instructions on installing these tools if you don't already have them.
Start by cloning (not forking) the project template repository and removing the remote:
$ git clone git@github.com:learn-co-curriculum/project-template-react-rails-api.git your-project-name
$ cd your-project-name
$ git remote rm origin
Then, create a new remote repository on GitHub. Head to github.com and click the + icon in the top-right corner and follow the steps to create a new repository. Important: don't check any of the options such as 'Add a README file', 'Add a .gitignore file', etc — since you're importing an existing repository, creating any of those files on GitHub will cause issues.
If you're working with a partner, add them as a collaborator on GitHub. From your repo on GitHub, go to Settings > Manage Access > Invite a collaborator and enter your partner's username. Once your partner has access, they should git clone (not fork) the repository.
Finally, connect the GitHub remote repository to your local repository and push up your code:
$ git remote add origin git@github.com:your-username/your-project-name.git
$ git push -u origin main
When you're ready to start building your project, run:
bundle install
rails db:create
npm install --prefix client
You can use the following commands to run the application:
rails s
: run the backend on http://localhost:3000npm start --prefix client
: run the frontend on http://localhost:4000
Make sure to also update this README to include documentation about your project. Here's a list of some awesome readmes for inspiration.
This application has all the starter code needed to help you deploy your application to Heroku. It's recommended to deploy your project early and push up changes often to ensure that your code works equally well in production and development environments.
If you've already set up your environment to deploy to Heroku, you can run the commands below to deploy your application. If not, make sure to check out the Environment Setup section below.
To deploy, first log in to your Heroku account using the Heroku CLI:
heroku login
Create the new Heroku app:
heroku create my-app-name
Add the buildpacks for Heroku to build the React app on Node and run the Rails app on Ruby:
heroku buildpacks:add heroku/nodejs --index 1
heroku buildpacks:add heroku/ruby --index 2
To deploy, commit your code and push the changes to Heroku:
git add .
git commit -m 'Commit message'
git push heroku main
Note: depending on your Git configuration, your default branch might be named
master
ormain
. You can verify which by runninggit branch --show-current
. If it'smaster
, you'll need to rungit push heroku master
instead.
Any time you have changes to deploy, just make sure your changes are committed on the main branch of your repo, and push those changes to Heroku to deploy them.
You can view your deployed app with:
heroku open
Verify which version of Ruby you're running by entering this in the terminal:
ruby -v
Make sure that the Ruby version you're running is listed in the supported runtimes by Heroku. At the time of writing, supported versions are 2.6.8, 2.7.4, or 3.0.2. Our recommendation is 2.7.4, but make sure to check the site for the latest supported versions.
If it's not, you can use rvm
to install a newer version of Ruby:
rvm install 2.7.4 --default
You should also install the latest versions of bundler
and rails
:
gem install bundler
gem install rails
Verify you are running a recent version of Node with:
node -v
If your Node version is not 16.x.x, install it and set it as the current and default version with:
nvm install 16
nvm use 16
nvm alias default 16
You can also update your npm version with:
npm i -g npm
Sign Up for a Heroku Account
You can sign up at for a free account at https://signup.heroku.com/devcenter.
Download the Heroku CLI Application
Download the Heroku CLI. For OSX users, you can use Homebrew:
brew tap heroku/brew && brew install heroku
For WSL users, run this command in the Ubuntu terminal:
curl https://cli-assets.heroku.com/install.sh | sh
If you run into issues installing, check out the Heroku CLI downloads page for more options.
After downloading, you can login via the CLI in the terminal:
heroku login
This will open a browser window to log you into your Heroku account. After
logging in, close the browser window and return to the terminal. You can run
heroku whoami
in the terminal to verify that you have logged in successfully.
Heroku requires that you use PostgreSQL for your database instead of SQLite. PostgreSQL (or just Postgres for short) is an advanced database management system with more features than SQLite. If you don't already have it installed, you'll need to set it up.
To install Postgres for WSL, run the following commands from your Ubuntu terminal:
sudo apt update
sudo apt install postgresql postgresql-contrib libpq-dev
Then confirm that Postgres was installed successfully:
psql --version
Run this command to start the Postgres service:
sudo service postgresql start
Finally, you'll also need to create a database user so that you are able to connect to the database from Rails. First, check what your operating system username is:
whoami
If your username is "ian", for example, you'd need to create a Postgres user with that same name. To do so, run this command to open the Postgres CLI:
sudo -u postgres -i
From the Postgres CLI, run this command (replacing "ian" with your username):
createuser -sr ian
Then enter control + d
or type logout
to exit.
This guide has more info on setting up Postgres on WSL if you get stuck.
To install Postgres for OSX, you can use Homebrew:
brew install postgresql
Once Postgres has been installed, run this command to start the Postgres service:
brew services start postgresql
If you ran into any errors along the way, here are some things you can try to troubleshoot:
-
If you're on a Mac and got a server connection error when you tried to run
rails db:create
, one option for solving this problem for Mac users is to install the Postgres app. To do this, first uninstallpostgresql
by runningbrew remove postgresql
. Next, download the app from the Postgres downloads page and install it. Launch the app and click "Initialize" to create a new server. You should now be able to runrails db:create
. -
If you're using WSL and got the following error running
rails db:create
:PG::ConnectionBad: FATAL: role "yourusername" does not exist
The issue is that you did not create a role in Postgres for the default user account. Check this video for one possible fix.
-
If your app failed to deploy at the build stage, make sure your local environment is set up correctly by following the steps at the beginning of this lesson. Check that you have the latest versions of Ruby and Bundler, and ensure that Postgresql was installed successfully.
-
If you deployed successfully, but you ran into issues when you visited the site, make sure you migrated and seeded the database. Also, make sure that your application works locally and try to debug any issues on your local machine before re-deploying. You can also check the logs on the server by running
heroku logs
.
For additional support, check out these guides on Heroku: