Installing Richie on your machine
This document aims to list all needed steps to have a working Richie
installation on your laptop.
A better approach is to use Docker
as explained in
our guide for container-native instructions.
Installing a fresh server
Version
You need a Ubuntu 18.04 Bionic Beaver
(the latest LTS version) fresh
installation.
If you are using another operating system or distribution, you can use
Vagrant
to get a
running Ubuntu 18.04 server in seconds.
System update
Be sure to have fresh packages on the server (kernel, libc, ssl patches...): post
sudo apt-get -y update
sudo apt-get -y dist-upgrade
Database part
You must first install postgresql
.
// On Linux
sudo apt-get -y install postgresql
// On OS X
brew install postgresql@10
brew services start postgresql@10
// don't forget to add your new postgres install to the $PATH
Postgresql
is now running.
Then you can create the database owner and the database itself, using the
postgres
user:
sudo -u postgres -i // skip this on OS X as the default install will use your local user
createuser fun -sP
Note: we created the user as a superuser. This should only be done in dev/test environments.
Now, create the database with this user:
createdb richie -O fun -W
exit
Elasticsearch
Ubuntu
Download and install the Public Signing Key
$ wget -qO - https://artifacts.elastic.co/GPG-KEY-elasticsearch | sudo apt-key add -
You may need to install the apt-transport-https package on Debian before proceeding:
$ sudo apt-get install apt-transport-https
Save the repository definition to /etc/apt/sources.list.d/elastic-6.3.1.list:
$ echo "deb https://artifacts.elastic.co/packages/6.3.1/apt stable main" | sudo tee -a /etc/apt/sources.list.d/elastic-6.3.1.list
Update repository and install
$ sudo apt-get update $ sudo apt-get install elasticsearch $ sudo /etc/init.d/elasticsearch start
OS X
$ brew install elasticsearch
Application part
Python and other requirements
We use Python 3.6
which is the one installed by default in Ubuntu 18.04
.
You can install it on OS X using the following commands. Make sure to always run
python3
instead of python
and pip3
instead of pip
to ensure the correct
version of Python (your homebrew install of 3) is used.
brew install python3
brew postinstall python3
The virtualenv
Place yourself in the application directory app
:
cd app
We choose to run our application in a virtual environment.
For this, we'll install virtualenvwrapper
and add an environment:
pip install virtualenvwrapper
You can open a new shell to activate the virtualenvwrapper commands, or simply do:
source $(which virtualenvwrapper.sh)
Then create the virtual environment for richie
:
mkvirtualenv richie --no-site-packages --python=python3
The virtualenv should now be activated and you can install the Python dependencies for development:
pip install -e .[dev]
The "dev.txt" requirement file installs packages specific to a dev environment and should not be used in production.
Frontend build
This project is a hybrid that uses both Django generated pages and frontend JS code. As such, it includes a frontend build process that comes in two parts: JS & CSS.
We need NPM to install the dependencies and run the build, which depends on a
version of Nodejs specified in .nvmrc
. See the
repo for instructions on how to install NVM.
To take advantage of .nvmrc
, run this in the context of the repository:
nvm install nvm use
As a prerequisite to running the frontend build for either JS or CSS, you'll need to install yarn and download dependencies via:
yarn install
- JS build
npm run build
- CSS build
This will compile all our SCSS files into one bundle and put it in the static folder we're serving.
npm run sass
Run server
Make sure your database is up-to-date before running the application the first time and after each modification to your models:
python sandbox/manage.py migrate
You can create a superuser account:
python sandbox/manage.py createsuperuser
Run the tests
python sandbox/manage.py test
You should now be able to start Django and view the site at localhost:8000
python sandbox/manage.py runserver