Find out and have your say about development applications in your area.
This is the code for the web application side of things written using Ruby on Rails.
If you're interested in contributing a scraper read our step-by-step guide to writing scrapers on our scraping platform, morph.io.
PlanningAlerts is brought to you by the OpenAustralia Foundation. It was created by Matthew Landauer and Katherine Szuminska.
Install Dependencies
Checkout The Project
$ git clone https://github.com/openaustralia/planningalerts.git
$ cd planningalerts
Setup The Database
- Set up the databases -
docker compose run web bin/rake db:setup
Start the application
docker compose up
- Point your browser at http://localhost:3000
Run The Tests
- In a separate window -
docker compose run web bin/guard
- Press enter to run all the tests
In development all emails are sent locally to mailcatcher. The emails can be viewed at http://localhost:1080.
Email templates are developed using Maizzle. The development workflow goes as follows:
cd maizzle
npm run dev production
Then point your browser at http://localhost:3000/rails/mailers/. As you edit the templates in maizzle/src/templates
, the templates will
get automatically compiled to the erb template in the main rails app tree and will also refresh the browser.
We're using Sorbet to add type checking to Ruby which otherwise is a dynamic language. To run the type checker:
docker compose run web bin/srb
We use Shopify's tapioca gem to manage all our rbi files. We don't use bundle exec srb rbi ...
.
The code is deployed using Capistrano. To deploy to production run:
bundle exec cap production deploy
This command is defined in config/deploy.rb
.
Sometimes you want to deploy an alternate branch, for instance when deploying to the test
stage.
In this case you'll need to set the branch
variable after recipies are loaded by using the --set
argument instead of --set-before
, e.g.
bundle exec cap staging --set branch=a-branch-i-want-to-test deploy
View more available Capistrano commands with:
bundle exec cap --tasks
Upgrading Ruby in production is an unbelievably painful process right now. I'm sorry. Let's make it simpler but in the meantime:
TODO: This section is now out of date as we now have a blue/green deploy setup that allows us to build a new image with a new ruby version and deploy it side by side with the old version and switch over between them
Note for new deploy on new servers: Make sure you run "bundle exec cap production puma:install" first. Otherwise the "puma:reload" capistrano task will fail
- Change
.ruby-version
. Run tests to make sure nothing has broken.
- In the
oaf/infrastructure
repo updateroles/internal/planningalerts/meta/main.yml
to add the new ruby version before the current one. The last listed one is the default. We don't yet want to change the default - Install the new ruby on the server by running
ansible-playbook site.yml -l planningalerts
. Remember to set your python virtual environment if you're using that. - Deploy new version of the application with upgraded
.ruby-version
to staging by runningbundle exec cap staging deploy
- Login to each webserver in turn (as root user). Then,
cd /srv/www/staging/current; gem install bundler:1.17.3
- Login to each webserver in turn (as deploy user). Then
cd /srv/www/staging/current; bundle install --gemfile Gemfile --path /srv/www/staging/shared/bundle --deployment --without development test
. This step is necessary if you're upgrading a ruby major version. You might be able to skip it if not. - Edit
roles/internal/planningalerts/templates/default
to change the ruby version used by passenger for staging in staging to the new version - Run ansible again with
ansible-playbook site.yml -l planningalerts
- Check deployed staging is still working by going https://www.test.planningalerts.org.au
- Deploy new version of the application with upgraded
.ruby-version
to production by runningbundle exec cap production deploy
- Check deployed production is still working by going https://www.planningalerts.org.au
- Login to each webserver in turn (as deploy user). Then
cd /srv/www/production/current; bundle install --gemfile Gemfile --path /srv/www/production/shared/bundle --deployment --without development test
. This step is necessary if you're upgrading a ruby major version. You might be able to skip it if not. - Edit
roles/internal/planningalerts/templates/default
to change the ruby version used by passenger for production in staging to the new version - Run ansible again with
ansible-playbook site.yml -l planningalerts
- Check deployed production is still working by going https://www.planningalerts.org.au
During this keep a close eye on disk space on the root partition as this might get close to full
- Remove old ruby version from
roles/internal/planningalerts/meta/main.yml
in theoaf/infrastructure
repo - Rerun ansible with
ansible-playbook site.yml -l planningalerts
- If you did a ruby major version upgrade (e.g. ruby 2.6.6 to 2.7.4) then you should also clean up an old unused bundler directory that is taking up a lot of space. Login to each webserver in turn (as deploy user). Then
cd /srv/www/staging/shared/bundle/ruby
and remove the unused directory (e.g.2.6.0
). Do the same for productioncd /srv/www/production/shared/bundle/ruby
.
Someone has just written a new scraper for PlanningAlerts, woohoo! 🎉 Now we need to add it to the site.
The first step is to fork their repository into the @planningalerts-scrapers organisation. This gives us control over the repository. If we didn't do that then the person could potentially inject bad data without us noticing. A more likely problem is that they go off and do something else and we have no control of the repository to fix things.
Once you've done that add it to morph and do an initial scrape to get some data. It's always a good idea to check that the scraper is getting the data we expect. Just like you'd do if someone had fixed a scraper and opened a pull request.
Speaking of pull requests, because we've forked the scraper GitHub turns off issues on forked repositories. It's a good idea to switch it back on for ours so that other people can open issues and pull requests against the @planningalerts-scrapers repository.
Now that we have a working scraper and some data we can add the new authority to PlanningAlerts. First, log into the admin backend and browse to the authorities section:
https://www.planningalerts.org.au/admin/authorities
Click New Authority in the top-right of the page. Now fill out all the details, here's what needs to go in each field:
- Full name: The full name of the authority that's displayed throughout the site, e.g. Bellingen Shire Council
- Short name: Used in the URL (must be unique), e.g. bellingen
- Email: email address that comments get sent to. Try and find a specific DA comment address or failing that use the main contact email address for the council, e.g. [email protected]
- Scraping, morph name: The morph name of the scraper you just forked, e.g. planningalerts-scrapers/bellingen
Click Create Authority. Now scrape some applications so you can see them on the new authority page - click Scrape.
Visit the new authority page, e.g. https://www.planningalerts.org.au/authorities/bellingen/
You should see that some applications have already been collected. If not wait a few seconds and refresh the page. Once you've got some do a quick check on a few by clicking Brownse all recent applications and selecting a few. Make sure the comment form is visible (that means you set an email address).
If all looks good then thank the contributor for helping tens of thousands of people get PlanningAlerts by tweeting about it from @PlanningAlerts. It's always fun to @mention the council too, sometimes we get a RT 😀
We've just added @BellingenShire thanks to @LoveMyData. Another 12,886 people can now get PlanningAlerts! e.g. https://www.planningalerts.org.au/applications/898071
- Fork the project on GitHub.
- Make a topic branch from the master branch.
- Make your changes and write tests.
- Commit the changes without making changes to any files that aren't related to your enhancement or fix.
- Send a pull request against the master branch.
Our awesome contributors can be found on the PlanningAlerts site.
This project is tested with BrowserStack.
GPLv2, see the LICENSE file for full details.