/KerbalStuff

Mod site for KSP

Primary LanguageJavaScriptMIT LicenseMIT

KerbalStuff

Website for Kerbal Space Program mods.

http://www.kerbalstuff.com

Installation

Quick overview:

  1. Install Python 3, node.js, virtualenv, PostgreSQL
  2. Set up aforementioned things
  3. Clone KerbalStuff repository
  4. Activate the virtualenv
  5. Install pip requirements
  6. Install coffeescript
  7. Configure KerbalStuff
  8. SQL
  9. Site configuration

Install the dependencies

You'll need these things:

  • Python 3
  • Node.js
  • virtualenv
  • PostgreSQL

Use the packages your OS provides, or build them from source.

Set up services

Do a quick sanity check on all of those things.

$ python3 --version
  Python 3.4.1
$ node --version
  v0.10.29
$ npm --version
  1.4.14
$ pip --version
  pip 1.5.6 from /usr/lib/python3.4/site-packages (python 3.4)
$ virtualenv --version
  1.11.6
$ psql --version
  psql (PostgreSQL) 9.3.4

YMMV if you use versions that differ from these.

I'll leave you to set up PostgreSQL however you please. Prepare a connection string that looks like this when you're done:

postgresql://username:password@hostname:port/database

The connection string I use on localhost is this:

postgresql://postgres@localhost/kerbalstuff

KerbalStuff needs to be able to create/alter/insert/update/delete in the database you give it.

Clone KerbalStuff

Find a place you want the code to live.

$ git clone git://github.com/SirCmpwn/KerbalStuff.git
$ cd KerbalStuff

Activate virtualenv

$ virtualenv --no-site-packages .
$ source bin/activate

If you're like me and are on a system where python3 is not the name of your Python executable, add --python=/path/to/python3 to the virtualenv command to fix that.

pip requirements

$ pip install -r requirements.txt

CoffeeScript

# npm install coffee-script
$ coffee # Sanity check, press ^D to exit

Configure KerbalStuff

$ cp alembic.ini.example alembic.ini
$ cp config.ini.example config.ini

Edit config.ini and alembic.ini to your liking.

Postgres Configuration

Depending on your environment, you may need to tell postgres to trust localhost connections. This setting is in the pg_hba.conf file, usually located in /etc/postgresql/[version]/main/. An example of what the config should look like:

local   all    all                    trust
host    all    all    127.0.0.1/32    trust
host    all    all    ::1/128         trust    #may or may not be needed for IPv6 aware installs

Site Configuration

What you do from here depends on your site-specific configuration. If you just want to run the site for development, you can source the virtualenv and run

python app.py

To run it in production, you probably want to use gunicorn behind an nginx proxy. There's a sample nginx config in the configs/ directory here, but you'll probably want to tweak it to suit your needs. Here's how you can run gunicorn, put this in your init scripts:

/path/to/KerbalStuff/bin/gunicorn app:app -b 127.0.0.1:8000

The -b parameter specifies an endpoint to use. You probably want to bind this to localhost and proxy through from nginx. I'd also suggest blocking the port you choose from external access. It's not that gunicorn is bad, it's just that nginx is better.

To get an admin user you have to register a user first and then run this (replace <username> with your username):

source bin/activiate
python

from KerbalStuff.objects import *
from KerbalStuff.database import db
u = User.query.filter(User.username == "<username>").first()
u.admin = True
u.confirmation = None
db.commit()

When running in a production enviornment, run python app.py at least once and then read the SQL stuff below before you let it go for good.

SQL Stuff

We use alembic for schema migrations between versions. The first time you run the application, the schema will be created. However, you need to tell alembic about it. Run the application at least once, then:

$ cd /path/to/KerbalStuff/
$ source bin/activate
$ python
>>> from alembic.config import Config
>>> from alembic import command
>>> alembic_cfg = Config("alembic.ini")
>>> command.stamp(alembic_cfg, "head")
>>> exit()

Congrats, you've got a schema in place. Run alembic upgrade head after pulling the code to update your schema to the latest version. Do this before you restart the site.