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JustFix.nyc is a tool to document, organize, and take action in getting repairs made on your apartment.

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This is the codebase for the JustFix.nyc platform, including the Tenant Webapp, Advocate Dashboard, and the back-end API for managing data. For more information about our organization, please visit www.justfix.nyc.

Getting Started

This guide assumes that you are using a UNIX system (most likely macOS), but everything is available on Windows if you follow the appropriate guides thru the links below.

There are two ways to get started. Both require a bit of common setup.

Common setup

  1. Get a copy of the code!
git clone https://github.com/JustFixNYC/tenants.git
  1. You should have a development.js copy from me. (If not, email me at dan@justfix.nyc). Place that file in config/env.

Now you have the option to set up and run everything locally, or use Docker.

Option 1: Run everything locally

Build tools and languages

  1. Open terminal. Some of these steps may require sudo in order to install.

  2. Install Node.js (v4.4.x is ideal) and make sure everything works:

node -v
  1. Update npm and make sure everything works:
npm install -g npm@latest
npm -v
  1. Download and install MongoDB. Make sure that it runs on the default port (27017)

  2. Use npm to install bower and grunt. You'll probably need sudo for this (using -g affects your machine globally).

sudo npm install -g bower grunt-cli
  1. Set up git if you don't already have it.

  2. Set up Ruby and Sass to compile CSS. See here for instructions.

Download and install libraries

Use npm to install the needed back-end and buildtool libraries. It should trigger a bower install for front-end dependencies automatically. Make sure you're in the root directory for the project - i.e. the same level as the package.json file.

npm install

Start everything up

  1. To start, you'll need an active mongodb instance running. I like to do this in a folder within app - e.g. app/mongodb but it can be run globally or anywhere else.
mongod --dbpath . &

Open a new terminal window and make sure it's running:

ps aux | grep mongo

You should see the process running, as well as the grep mongo command process you just ran. Ex:

dan@Dans-MacBook tenants (master) $ ps aux | grep mongo
dan               4072   0.3  0.0  2583596   6272   ??  S    16Feb17  48:14.37 mongod --dbpath .
dan              24473   0.0  0.0  2444056    796 s001  S+    4:26PM   0:00.01 grep mongo
  1. After that, it should be quite simple to start the app (again, make sure this is from the root directory):
grunt

Set environment variables

Set the MONGODB_TEST_URI environment variable to point to a test database that will be wiped every time the test suite is run, e.g.:

export MONGODB_TEST_URI=mongodb://localhost:27017/unittests

Option 2: Use Docker

  1. Download Docker Community Edition.

  2. Run bash docker-update.sh.

    Note that in the future, you'll want to run this whenever you update the repository or switch branches, too, to make sure you have all the latest dependencies.

  3. Run docker-compose up.

Visit your local server

Now that you've got everything up and running, go to http://localhost:3000 to see your development version! Grunt will watch for any changes you make to the code and automatically restart the server for live development.

Tips on using Docker

If you decided to go the Docker route but aren't very familiar with Docker, here are some tips.

Running command-line tools

If you ever want to run an individual command-line tool on the project, such as a specific grunt task or linter, you can dive into your Docker's main web container by running:

docker-compose run web bash

You will be in the container's /tenants directory, which maps to the root of your repository on your local machine.

Alternatively, you can run individual commands just by running docker-compose run web <command name>. Some people do this so often that they create a shell alias called dcr that's short for docker-compose run.

Uninstalling or starting from scratch

If you ever get your Docker setup into a weird state where nothing works, or if you're done with the project and want to free all resources used by Docker, run docker-compose down -v.

You'll then need to re-run bash docker-update.sh set everything up again.

Running the test suite

To run the test suite, run:

npm test

More Questions

Check out MEAN.JS - will have more tutorials on the architecture setup and things for troubleshooting.

License

JustFix.nyc uses the GNU General Public License v3.0 Open-Source License. See LICENSE.md file for the full text.

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