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Food Bank Wish List

This is a project for Oregon State University's CS 361: Software Engineering I. The contributors are Emiliano Colon, Andrew Elmas, Jason Goldfine-Middleton, Allister Laurel, and Kyle Schlatter.

This web application uses the Symfony framework.

You can build this project locally by meeting a few preconditions. You must have the following software installed:

  • PHP 5.5 (with certain extensions)
  • VirtualBox 5
  • Vagrant
  • Composer

Note: Symfony will be installed and handled by Composer. You will need to properly set the values of parameters used by Symfony as parameters.yml is not included in the repository.

Installation Instructions for macOS/Mac OS X

There are many ways to install PHP 5.5 on your system, but perhaps the most convenient is to use Homebrew. To use Homebrew, you will want to have Xcode/Command Line Tools.

Run the following command in the terminal:

xcode-select --install

Follow the instructions here to install Homebrew, then at the terminal run the following:

brew update
brew tap homebrew/homebrew-php
brew install php55
brew install composer

Use Homebrew to install any PHP extensions you may need. Run

brew search php55

to see which extensions are available.

In the terminal, run:

php --ini

This will show you the location of your php.ini file.
Set your timezone in the php.ini configuration file.

date.timezone = "America/Los_Angeles"

Use the correct valid timezone for you of course.

Lastly, you will want to install VirtualBox and Vagrant.

Installation Instructions for Windows

Warning: I'm more familiar with macOS and Linux, so you might find a better way to obtain these prerequisites.

I highly recommend installing GitHub Desktop. This will give you the Git Shell, which makes doing Git work a lot easier in Windows.

Next, clone the repository as normal, and then move on to installing PHP 5.5.

You can download it here. In order for it to work, you should also install Visual C++ Redistributable for Visual Studio 2012.

Unzip the PHP archive into C:\php or some directory of your choosing. Once you've done this, navigate to that folder and make a copy of the file php.ini-development called php.ini and store it there as well. You're going to want to open it up and set these lines:

extension_dir:"C:\YOUR\DIRECTORY\HERE\ext"
date.timezone = "America/Los_Angeles"

Use the correct valid timezone for you of course.

Also uncomment the lines for any extensions that might be relevant. We'll figure these out as well go, so this step isn't as important. The purpose of this file is to set PHP's configuration and as you can see, it's very flexible and modular.

The last thing you'll need to do is add this PHP directory to your Path environment variable. Please look online for how to add a new directory to your Path for your particular version of Windows.

Do not worry about installing Apache. We're going to let the VM host the local web server instead of Windows. We simply want to install PHP so we can develop in Windows IDEs.

Next, install VirtualBox and Vagrant.

Install Composer. As with your PHP directory, you may need to add another folder to your Path environment variable so that you can run composer inside the Git Shell.

Restart Windows to ensure that all your changes are loaded.

Setup for the Development Environment

Great, now you have installed the prerequisites! Let's get started.

Before you run the next command, contact Jason for the parameters.yml file. This will give you the correct parameter values to enter when prompted.

In the root directory of the cloned repository, run the following command.

composer install

This will install the Symfony and other component files not under version control. It uses the composer.json file to figure out which components and versions to install. Technically, composer install looks at the composer.lock file as well to figure out exactly which versions to install, but if you get errors stating that there is a mismatch between the two files, you can run

composer update

to update your composer.lock file or even just delete it and re-run composer install. I won't get into the details, but you can find out more here. Now Symfony is completely installed.

Note: There is currently a bug in Vagrant for macOS/Mac OS X that prevents vagrant up from working correctly. Please run sudo rm /opt/vagrant/embedded/bin/curl if you are running into an error on the next command.

You'll want to cd bin && vagrant up. This will build you an Ubuntu Server 14.04 VM and configure the server.

The very last step will be to add an entry to your hosts file:

macOS/Mac OS X:

sudo vi /private/etc/hosts

Add the following entry:

192.168.10.10 hunger.vagrant

Windows:

Run Notepad as an administrator and open the file C:\Windows\System32\Drivers\etc\hosts and add the following line:

192.168.10.10 hunger.vagrant

Clear your local DNS cache.

Wanna see something cool? In your browser, navigate to http://hunger.vagrant.

TODO: Set up SSL/HTTPS.

Awesome, you're good to go! Might want to install PhpStorm or some other IDE to do your development, but you are also welcome to use a CLI editor.

Symfony Configuration

The dev environment does not allow remote access to the web server by default. What this means in practice is that you will not be able to access your routes from your host OS using the VM's web server unless you make a change to the web/app_dev.php file. A workaround (probably not the best) we have used is to comment out the following lines in that file:

if (isset($_SERVER['HTTP_CLIENT_IP'])
    || isset($_SERVER['HTTP_X_FORWARDED_FOR'])
    || !(in_array(@$_SERVER['REMOTE_ADDR'], ['127.0.0.1', '::1']) || php_sapi_name() === 'cli-server')
) {
    header('HTTP/1.0 403 Forbidden');
    exit('You are not allowed to access this file. Check '.basename(__FILE__).' for more information.');
}

Now you should be able to access your routes like so: http://hunger.vagrant/app_dev.php/list where list is a route.

If you want to access your routes without app_dev.php in the URL, you should first understand that you'll be viewing production pages. Run php bin/console cache:clear --env=prod --no-debug in the terminal to clear your production cache. Now you should be able to access http://hunger.vagrant/list in your browser.

You can also get around all of this by simply starting your local PHP built-in web server and navigating to http://localhost:8000/list instead.

To start the PHP web server: php bin/console server:start To stop the PHP web server: php bin/console server:stop

Don't forget to reload any code changes with php bin/console cache:clear.

MySQL Server Configuration

Execute the following commands: cd bin && vagrant ssh

Now you're inside the VM. We need to tell MySQL server to allow access from outside the VM. In the /etc/mysql/my.cnf file we need to update a few lines. You'll need to use sudo to edit this file.

Find the line with bind-address in it. This should be under the [mysqld] section. Uncomment it and update it to:

bind-address = 0.0.0.0

Add the following two lines to the same [mysqld] section:

collation-server     = utf8mb4_general_ci # Replaces utf8_general_ci
character-set-server = utf8mb4            # Replaces utf8

Then from the command line, restart the MySQL server.

sudo service mysql restart

You can now log out of the VM the same way you'd log out of a remote Linux server.

How to Update the Database Schema

Whenever you add a new entity or pull commits, you should update your local database schema.

php bin/console doctrine:schema:update --dump-sql
php bin/console doctrine:schema:update --force

The first command will show you the SQL commands that will be run with the --force option.

Any fixtures (pre-defined table rows) can be loaded using the php bin/console doctrine:fixtures:load command. Note that you will want to use the --append flag if you want to preserve the data currently in your tables.

Unit Testing

For this project, we have used PHPUnit to write our unit tests. Composer installs the binary to vendor/bin/phpunit. You will run this command, generally with arguments, to execute your unit tests. Please read the documentation and especially note the various assertions you can use.

To create mock objects for testing, we use Mockery.