It's possible to run the entire stack locally with docker-compose by running docker-compose up
To start your Phoenix server:
- Install dependencies with
mix deps.get
- Create and migrate your database with
mix ecto.setup
- Install Node.js dependencies with
cd assets && npm install
- Start Phoenix endpoint with
mix phx.server
Now you can visit localhost:4000
from your browser.
Ready to run in production? Please check our deployment guides.
- Official website: https://www.phoenixframework.org/
- Guides: https://hexdocs.pm/phoenix/overview.html
- Docs: https://hexdocs.pm/phoenix
- Forum: https://elixirforum.com/c/phoenix-forum
- Source: https://github.com/phoenixframework/phoenix
cockroach start-single-node --insecure --background
export MIX_ENV=dev
mix deps.get
mix ecto.drop
mix ecto.setup
mix run priv/repo/test_seeds.exs
iex -S mix phx.server
Note that bcrypt_elixir
will require a working compiler in the PATH. On a Windows system with Visual Studio, you will want to run mix deps.compile --force
from within a "x64 Native Tools Command Prompt" or cmd with vcvarsall.bat (may fail to build the rest of uro) then return to a bash shell for the rest of the build.
./cockroach sql --database="uro_dev" --insecure
You may approve all pending email verifications using:
update users set email_confirmation_token=null, email_confirmed_at=NOW() where true;
And you can grant upload privileges for all users using
update user_privilege_rulesets set can_upload_avatars=true, can_upload_maps=true, can_upload_props=true where true;
Finally, to enable admin access for a specific user id:
update user_privilege_rulesets set is_admin=true where user_id = '12345678-abcd-...';
By default, the dev
environment will store assets in priv/waffle/private
directory, and the client expects this to be available on port 80. To serve the CDN content on port 80:
cd priv/waffle/private
python -m http.server 80
Windows allows any user to serve port 80 by default, but on other operating systems the above should be run with sudo.