Dependency bump, move volumes under static file server See merge request sahkoinsinoorikilta/vtmk/web2.0-backend!17
SIKWEB 2.0
A modern web app using a Django backend and an Angular frontend.
Components
Infoscreen
Angular-based slideshow app for the guild room's screens.
Member register
Data table app for viewing and modifying the member register, member applications and membership payments.
Web app
Mostly static website with an event calendar and news feed.
Coffee scale
Shows the current coffee scale status.
Accessing the source
Clone this repository and enter it
Set up your SSH key authentication in GitLab Profile Settings. Then clone the repository and checkout the development branch:
git clone git@gitlab.com:sahkoinsinoorikilta/vtmk/web2.0-backend.git
cd web2.0-backend
git checkout develop
cp scripts/git/pre-push .git/hooks/pre-push # install a script to test code before committing
Windows install instructions
See Windows install instructions
Linux/Mac install instructions
See Linux/Mac install instructions
Initializing data
Run the following manage.py commands. Do not run these in production without thinking!
python manage.py createdefaultadmin # creates an admin user
python manage.py initialize # creates user groups
python manage.py createdummydata # creates dummy members to the member register
Running
Use runserver command
python manage.py runserver 0.0.0.0:8000
Using address 0.0.0.0 will bind to all IP addresses. Using localhost will only bind to your machine.
Visit the page
Visit https://localhost:8000 in your browser!
Running in production
Run the project in production with gunicorn. Refer to this page for instructions.
Install production dependencies.
pip install -r requirements.production.txt
Development workflow
Do not use rebase when pulling or merging changes. Rebasing transforms the commit history and makes it appear more linear. This is a plus e.g. when working with a few people, but in this project traditional merging is recommended for clarity.
When you start working on a feature, create a feature branch for your changes. These feature branches should be prefixed with feature.
Example of creating a feature branch:
git checkout -b feature-error-page
When your changes are ready and the code works without errors, submit a merge request to develop in GitLab. Another developer reviews your changes and runs the merge. Feature branches should be closed on merge.
Bugfixes do not need their own feature branches and can be pushed straight to develop, but if the fix needs a notable amount of work, it should be done in a bugfix branch instead.
Merge requests to master should be reviewed by multiple developers. Only a moderator can accept merge requests to master.
Linting
Lint python files using pycodestyle with
pycodestyle --config=setup.cfg --count .
Lint javascript and markdown using eslint and remark with
npm test
Use an editor with linting capabilities to write pretty code that passes linting. Examples include VSCode, Atom and Pycharm.
Unit tests
Run unit tests with
python manage.py test -v 2
Due to the mostly static nature of the project, most elements are difficult to properly unit test. If you write code with actual logic, make sure to write at least one unit or integration test that tests your code's core functionality.
Tests are located in tests.py under every subproject.
GitLab CI
All pushed changes go through the GitLab Continuous Integration, which consists of automated unit testing and linting. Make sure your changes pass both before merging to develop or master.