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Djangonaut Space logo

Djangonaut Space Website

A Wagtail CMS clone of contributing today »

Visit site · Report Bug · Request Feature

Table of Contents
  1. About The Project
  2. Getting Started
  3. Usage
  4. Contributing
  5. License
  6. Contact
  7. Acknowledgments

About The Project

We want to run a light weight virtual meetup/video series.

Here's why:

  • Sometimes you want to connect with a community in real time.
  • The culture of Twitch first streaming alienates as many audiences as it invites.
  • Having a list of events easily shown as well as resources about speakers in the series.

We thought contributing.today did it well, but it's build on ASP.NET so we're building it in Python!

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Built With

This section should list any major frameworks/libraries used to bootstrap your project. Leave any add-ons/plugins for the acknowledgements section. Here are a few examples.

  • [![Wagtail][Wagtail]][wagtail.org]
  • [![Tailwind][tailwindcss.com]][tailwindcss.com]
  • [![Alpine.Js][alpinejs.dev]][alpinejs.dev]
  • [![Django][Djangoproject.com]][Djangoproject.com]

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Getting Started

Prerequisites

This is an example of how to list things you need to use the software and how to install them.

  • Python version 3.11

Installation

  1. Clone the repo
    git clone https://github.com/dawnwages/wagtail-indymeet.git
  2. create your virtual environment
    python -m venv venv
    activate in Linux:
    source venv/bin/activate
    activate in Windows:
    venv\Scripts\activate
  3. Create a posgresql database
    psql -U postgres
    postgres=# CREATE DATABASE "djangonaut-space";
    postgres=# CREATE USER djangonaut WITH SUPERUSER PASSWORD 'djangonaut';
    postgres=# GRANT ALL PRIVILEGES ON DATABASE 'djangonaut-space' TO djangonaut;
    postgres=# exit
  4. install requirements:
    pip install -r requirements/requirements-dev.txt
    set up the git hook scripts
    pre-commit install
  5. Copy .env.template.local file, rename to .env and use variables for your local postgres database. Copy in Linux:
    cp .env.template.local .env
    activate in Windows:
    copy .env.template.local .env
  6. Run migrations and create superuser
    python manage.py migrate
    # Potentially load data first
    # python manage.py loaddata fixtures/data.json
    python manage.py createsuperuser
  7. Install tailwind. You also need npm installed.
    python manage.py tailwind install
  8. Run server locally
    python manage.py runserver
  9. Run tailwind in another terminal locally
    python manage.py tailwind start

Alternatively, if you're not using Windows you can run the following instead of steps 8 and 9:

./scripts/local.sh

This will run both the Django server and the Tailwind watcher in the same terminal.

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Docker

If you have docker installed, alternatively

  1. Have docker running and then run:

    docker-compose up
  2. In a new terminal, run any setup commands you need such as

    docker-compose exec web python manage.py createsuperuser
  3. Go to: http://127.0.0.1:8000/ and enjoy!

You will also want to createsuperuser, load/create data in order to use the blog, etc.

Creating fixtures for local testing

Backing up To create a fixture to share content with another person you should do the following:

python manage.py dumpdata --natural-foreign --indent 2 \
   -e contenttypes -e auth.permission \
   -e wagtailcore.groupcollectionpermission \
   -e wagtailcore.grouppagepermission \
   -e wagtailimages.rendition \
   -e sessions \
   -e admin \
   -e wagtailsearch.indexentry \
   -e accounts.userprofile \
   -o fixtures/data.json

Then make an archive/zip of your media/ and fixtures/ directories. This is because the image files need to be copied alongside the data. If needed, you may want to delete some images first before sharing.

Restoring

  1. Make a backup of your current media directory. This is so you can revert later on.
  2. Unpack the archived file, and place the media/ and fixtures/ directories at the top level of the project.
  3. Create a new database such as createdb -U djangonaut -W -O djangonaut djangonaut-space2
  4. Change your settings or environment variables to point to the new database
  5. python manage.py migrate
  6. python manage.py loaddata fixtures/data.json

Contributing

Contributions are what make the open source community such an amazing place to learn, inspire, and create. Any contributions you make are greatly appreciated.

If you have a suggestion that would make this better, please fork the repo and create a pull request. You can also simply open an issue with the tag "enhancement". Don't forget to give the project a star! Thanks again!

  1. Fork the Project
  2. Install pre-commit pre-commit install
  3. Create your Feature Branch (git checkout -b feature/AmazingFeature)
  4. Commit your Changes (git commit -m 'Add some AmazingFeature')
  5. Push to the Branch (git push origin feature/AmazingFeature)
  6. Open a Pull Request

Testing

Tests can be written using Django's TestCase syntax or using pytest.

To run the tests:

pytest

There are also Playwright tests that can be run explicitly. These require the application to be running in another terminal. To run the tests:

# Be sure playwright is properly installed and has a test user for accessing /admin
playwright install --with-deps
python manage.py create_playwright_user
# This is the actual test command
pytest -m playwright
# Run the tests in headed mode (so you can see the browser)
pytest -m playwright --headed
# Run the test generator to help create new tests
playwright codegen http://localhost:8000
# Run the tests against a different base url
# You will need to change the username and password environment variables as well)
PYTEST_BASE_URL="https://djangonaut.space" pytest -m playwright --headed

Merging changes

Before merging your changes from your branch you should rebase on the latest version of develop. For example:

# Switch to develop and pull latest
git switch develop
git pull origin develop

# Rebase your feature branch on develop
git switch feature/AmazingFeature
git rebase develop
# Force push since the commit history will have changed
git push origin feature/AmazingFeature -f

#
# Wait for CI tests to pass!
#

# Merge to develop and push to GitHub
git switch develop
git merge feature/AmazingFeature
git push origin develop

# Clean up local branch
git branch -d feature/AmazingFeature

Deployments

To start a production deployment create a PR from develop to main (bookmark this link for quick creation of PRs). The PR should follow this format:

Title: "Production release - <summary>"

Description:
PRs:
- #1
- #2

This should be merged with a merge commit. Merging to main branch deploys to https://djangonaut.space.

Merging feature/AmazingFeature to develop deploys to https://staging-djangonaut-space.azurewebsites.net/

main requires a linear commit history. This means if you make a change directly to main, the develop branch must be rebased on main. Committing directly to main should only occur in rare cases where a change must be pushed out to production immediately.

Running production or staging locally

Running production or staging locally

  • Set .env variables USER, PASSWORD and HOST for either staging or production in order to access staging db. Credentials are in the password manager
  • python manage.py runserver --settings=indymeet.settings.production

Migrate production or staging db

  • Set terminal variables for USER, PASSWORD and HOST for either staging or production db. Credentials are in the password manager.
  • python manage.py migrate --settings=indymeet.settings.production

Updating dependencies

This project uses pip-tools to manage dependencies. Most dependencies should be updated via Dependabot, but if they need to be updated manually you would need to run pip-compile --upgrade .... The rest of the command can be found in the particular requirements/*.txt file you'd like to update.

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License

Distributed under the MIT License. See LICENSE.txt for more information.

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Contact

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