LMS originating from Timberline Secondary School's Digital Hackerspace
Although bytedeck uses several tools, you only need to set up two of them thanks to docker!
The instructions below will help you get bytedeck running using docker, and then help you set up a development environment with VS Code.
The instructions assume you are using Ubuntu (or another Debian based linux distro), although it is possible to get it working anywhere you can install docker.
Follow the instructions the for installing Docker Engine. https://docs.docker.com/engine/install/, if using Ubuntu and you don't want Docker Desktop, you can install just the enginge from their repository: https://docs.docker.com/engine/install/ubuntu/#install-using-the-repository
By the end, you should be able to run docker's test image:
$ sudo docker run hello-world
As a sanity check, make sure docker compose works too:
$ docker compose --version
If you can't run docker without sudo, you can try adding yourself to the docker group (is this still needed? I don't think so)
sudo usermod -aG docker $USER
Using a different version of Python will probably give you errors when installing the dependencies due to slight changes between versions:
sudo apt install python3.10
- Create a Github account.
- Go to https://github.com/bytedeck/bytedeck
- The main branch of this repo is the
developbranch, make sure you are on that branch. - Click the "Fork" button on the top right corner.
- This will allow you to have your own copy of the project on your GitHub account.
- Open the directory where you want to put the code. I like to create a new directory for my code projects called Developer:
mkdir ~/Developer - Move into the parent directory of the project:
cd ~/Developer - Go to your forked repository in GitHub
- Click "Clone or download" and copy the url, then paste it into the command:
git clone yoururlhere - This will download the project into ~/Developer/bytedeck/
This will create your docker containers and initialize the database by running migrations and creating some initial data that is required:
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Open a terminal
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Move into the project directory:
cd ~/Developer/bytedeck -
Copy the example environment file to the one you'll be using. Docker-compose and django will both be looking for a .env files with various settings that you can customize. If you are not running the app locally (e.g. production), then be sure to set DOMAIN_ROOT to the FQDN.
cp .env.example .env -
Build the containers (db, redis, celery, and celery-beat):
docker compose build -
Start the postgres database container (db) in the background/daemonized (-d)
docker compose up -d db -
OPTIONAL: For development, we can run the django app in a local virtual environment (venv) instead of using the web container, however if this gives you any issues, just run everything in a container with docker compose (explained below)
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Create a python virtual environment (we'll put ours in a venv directory):
python -m venv venv --prompt bytedeck -
Enter the virtual environment:
Linux / macOS
source venv/bin/activateWindows (bash)
source venv/Scripts/activateWindows
venv/Scripts/activate -
Install wheel to prevent errors (why isn't this included in the new venv module?)
python -m pip install wheel -
Install our requirements:
python -m pip install -r requirements.txt
-
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Initialize pre-commit:
- Using venv:
pre-commit install - Using docker:
docker compose run web bash -c "pre-commit install"
- Using venv:
-
Run a management command to run initial migrations, create the public tenant, superuser, and some other stuff:
- using venv:
python src/manage.py initdb - using docker:
docker compose run web bash -c "python src/manage.py initdb"
- using venv:
-
Now run the django development server:
- using venv:
python src/manage.py runserver - using docker:
docker compose up web
- using venv:
-
You should now get the page at http://localhost:8000. Note that the ip/url output by the django server,
0.0.0.0will not work in this project, because our multitenant architecture requires a domain name, so you need to uselocalhostinstead. -
And you should be able to log in to the admin site at http://localhost:8000/admin/
- user: admin
- password: password (this is defined in the .env file under DEFAULT_SUPERUSER_PASSWORD)
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Run redis, celery and celery-beat containers (you can run in the background too if you want with
-d, but you won't see any errors if they come up). the db container should already be running:docker compose up -d redis celery celery-beat -
To view errors in the containers when they are running in the background, you can use:
docker compose logs -f
If everything has worked so far, you should now be able to create your own Bytedeck website (aka a new "deck") as a new tenant:
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If the server isn't already running, start it with:
python src/manage.py runserverordocker compose up web(Ignore the link it outputs; it won’t take you to the right place.)
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Go to http://localhost:8000/decks/new/ to create a new deck.
Note: You may be prompted to log in to the Django admin interface before accessing the page.
Use the following credentials:
- Username:
admin - Password:
password(Defined inTENANT_DEFAULT_SUPERUSER_PASSWORDin your.envfile)
- Username:
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Fill in all required fields and click the Create button at the bottom.
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You’ll now be at the login page. To log in as the default admin:
- Username:
admin - Password:
password(Defined inTENANT_DEFAULT_SUPERUSER_PASSWORDin your.envfile)
- Username:
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To log in as the owner of the deck:
- Go to the
_sent_maildirectory. - Open the most recent file—it contains a confirmation link.
- Click the link and press the Confirm button; you'll be taken to the login page.
- Return to the
_sent_maildirectory. - Open the latest file—this will contain the owner’s login credentials.
- On the login page, log in using:
- Username: as shown in the email (e.g.
firstname.lastname) - Password: as shown in the email
- Username: as shown in the email (e.g.
- Go to the
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You should now be inside your own Bytedeck site!
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To stop the project:
- Press
Ctrl + Cin the terminal windows - Wait for all containers to shut down completely
- Press
New tenants will come with some basic initial data already installed, but if you want masses of data to simulate a more realistic site in production:
- Using venv:
python src/manage.py generate_content hackerspace - Using docker:
docker compose exec web bash -c "python src/manage.py generate_content hackerspace"
This will create 100 fake students, and 5 campaigns of 10 quests each, and maybe some other stuff we've added since writing this! You should see the output of the objects being created. Go to your map page and regenerate the map to see them.
Some examples of the command in use:
$ python src/manage.py generate_content --help
# lists positional arguments and optional flags
$ python src/manage.py generate_content --quiet
# Generates fake students, campaigns, and quests without printing anything to the console
$ python src/manage.py generate_content hackerspace --num_quests_per_campaign 7 --num_campaigns 3
# Creates 3 campaigns of 7 quest each. Additionally creates 100 students because `--num_students` were unspecified
$ python src/manage.py generate_content hackerspace --num_students 50
# Creates 50 fake students. Additionally creates 5 campaigns of 10 quests each because both `--num_quests_per_campaign` and `--num_campaigns` were unspecified
$ python src/manage.py generate_content hackerspace --num_quests_per_campaign 7 --num_campaigns 3 --num_students 50
# create 50 fake students, and 3 campaigns of 7 quests each.
Here are the steps, assuming that you now have a functional tenant:
- Obtain Google credentials: https://developers.google.com/workspace/guides/create-credentials#oauth-client-id
- In the OAuth Client ID's Authorized Redirect URIs, add
http://hackerspace.localhost.net:8000/accounts/google/login/callback/. We will explain why we are usinglocalhost.netlater. - Go to Social Applications in the public tenant admin: http://localhost:8000/admin/socialaccount/socialapp/
- Click Add Social Application
- Fill in
Client IdandSecret Keyfrom the Google OAuth Client ID, then add theAvailable SitestoChosen Sites - Click Save
- Go to Tenants on the public tenant admin: http://localhost:8000/admin/tenant/tenant/
- There should be a checkbox beside the tenant's schema name. Check the checkbox and choose
Enable google signin for tenant(s)from the admin actions at the bottom, and clickGo. - Done
When you are developing locally, Google won't allow you to add http://hackerspace.localhost:8000/accounts/google/login/callback/ in the Authorized URIs. So we need a way to bypass this in our local machine by mapping our localhost to localhost.net so we can access our tenant via http://hackerspace.localhost.net:8000.
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You need to modify your hosts file by adding this to the bottom of
/etc/hosts:127.0.0.1 localhost.net hackerspace.localhost.net -
Update the
ALLOWED_HOSTSin the project's.envfile:ALLOWED_HOSTS=.localhost,.localhost.net
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Let
django-tenantsknow thathackerspace.localhost.netis also a valid domain. Run$ ./src/manage.py shelland type in the following commands
from tenant.models import Tenant
tenant = Tenant.objects.get(schema_name='hackerspace')
tenant.domains.create(domain='hackerspace.localhost.net', is_primary=False)- Done! You should now be able to access your site via
http://hackerspace.localhost.net:8000/and use the Google Sign In. Note that Google Sign In will only work using the.neturl.
See CONTRIBUTING.md if you plan to contribute code to this project. It contains critical information for your pull request to be accepted and will save you a lot of time!