This code is used to power the snippet sharing site, djangosnippets.org
Download the latest version of PostgreSQL. Click on the executable to start the installation setup wizard.
Click Next
, keeping all the defaults as you work through the wizard. Make a note
of the password you choose for the database superuser (postgres). Select the default port 5432 and the default
locale. After it’s finished installing, you do not need to launch Stack Builder. Un-tick that box if you are asked,
and click Finish
.
Open SQL Shell (psql). In the shell, select the default values for Server, Database, Port and Username (basically, press Enter four times).
Type in the password you noted earlier and press enter. Run the command below, taking care to include the semi-colon.
$ CREATE DATABASE djangosnippets;
Close SQL Shell (psql).
You need to copy .env.example to env.bat and configure to your needs. Use the template below, taking care to
include set
at the start of each line, and to substitute the password you noted earlier into DATABASE_URL.
For development, DEBUG is set to True.
set REDISTOGO_URL=redis://redis:6379/0 set SECRET_KEY=p_o3vp1rg5)t^lxm9-43%0)s-=1qpeq%o7gfq+e4#*!t+_ev82 set DEBUG=True set ALLOWED_HOSTS=0.0.0.0,127.0.0.1 set DATABASE_URL=postgres://postgres:your_password@:5432/djangosnippets set DJANGO_SETTINGS_MODULE=djangosnippets.settings.development set SEARCHBOX_SSL_URL=http://elasticsearch:9200/ set SESSION_COOKIE_SECURE=False
Go back to your terminal. You will need to run the command below whenever you open a new terminal.
$ env.bat
Your environment variables are now set and you can proceed with the instructions below.
In a Python 3.7 virtual environment:
$ cd requirements $ pip install -r development.txt $ cd .. $ python manage.py migrate
Now you can start the development server:
$ python manage.py runserver
Before you can actually use the site, you have to define at least one language. If you just want to use the ones from djangosnippets.org, they are included in the fixtures folder. Also included are five snippets to get you started:
$ python manage.py createsuperuser $ python manage.py loaddata fixtures/cab.json
You will need to build the site.css with tailwindcss:
$ npm run build
Now you should be able to use the development version of djangosnippets on port 8000.
To run tests:
$ python manage.py test --settings=djangosnippets.settings.testing
You need to copy .env.example to .env and configure to your needs. The example is fine to start with development.
You may wish to use docker locally for production dependency testing and development; here are the setup instructions:
$ docker-compose -f docker-compose.yml build $ docker-compose -f docker-compose.yml up -d
-d denotes running docker in a detached state:
$ docker-compose -f docker-compose.yml run web python manage.py migrate $ docker-compose -f docker-compose.yml run web python manage.py createsuperuser $ docker-compose -f docker-compose.yml run web python manage.py loaddata fixtures/cab.json $ npm run build $ docker-compose -f docker-compose.yml run web python manage.py collectstatic
The docker setup is running as close as possible to the production setup in Heroku:
Postgres 12.3 Gunicorn Redis
To run our tests with docker:
$ docker-compose -f docker-compose.yml run web python manage.py test --settings=djangosnippets.settings.testing
DjangoSnippets uses the Foundation framework as the core of its visual style. To get this working on your local machine you need compass and bower to compile your stylesheets. Please never modify the generated .css files directly. Use the .scss ones instead.
To keep the setup path as short as possible, run the following commands in your terminal:
$ cd djangosnippets/static $ bower install && compass watch
If you don't have either of these two installed, you can find detailed instructions on their respective websites.
Please make sure that you commit only a compressed version of the CSS file as this is what will be deployed. (In order to do that the default configuration inside djangosnippets/static/config.rb is output_style = :compressed)
The production setup is currently tailored to Heroku and, therefore, mostly automatic. The difference between these two setups is configured in the djangosnippets.settings.production module and the requirements.txt file.