- Make sure you have the development dependencies installed
- Place GTFS .zip files, OSM files, and elevation .tif files (optional) in the root of the otp_data folder
- (Optional) Generate a graph file with (takes approx 3 hours)
docker-compose run --rm otp otp --build /var/otp
in the deployment/graph directory. - Copy
deployment/ansible/group_vars/development_template
todeployment/ansible/group_vars/development
- Change into the
src/
folder and runnpm install
to install the node modules on the host machine - Run
vagrant up
. You can choose to change the Virtualbox shared folder type for theapp
VM from its default VirtualBox by:
CAC_APP_SHARED_FOLDER_TYPE=nfs vagrant up
- See the app at http://localhost:8024! See OpenTripPlanner at http://localhost:9090.
- Running
./scripts/serve-js-dev.sh
on the host will rebuild the front-end app on file change (the browser must be reloaded manually to pick up the change). Alternatively,cd /opt/app/src && npm run gulp-development
can be run manually in the VM to pick up changes to the static files.
Note that if there is an existing build Graph.obj in otp_data
, vagrant provisioning in development mode will not attempt to rebuild the graph, but will use the one already present.
Django migrations are run as part of app provisioning, here, but there may be instances where you need to manually run migrations outside of provisioning, in which case use the command:
vagrant ssh app -c 'cd /opt/app/python/cac_tripplanner && python3 manage.py migrate'
- Configure an AWS profile with
aws configure --profile gophillygo
if you haven't already - Make a production group_vars file (similarly to how is described above with development). Make sure production is set to true, and also specify an app_username, which should be set to: ubuntu
- If building the
otp
machine, make sure the latest GTFS are inotp_data
, then build a graph when them in the development environment provisioning. This will result in a newGraph.obj
file being written tootp_data
. - Install the deployment dependencies, ideally in a virtualenv:
python3 -m venv .venv && source .venv/bin/activate && pip install -r python/cac_tripplanner/deployment_requirements.txt
- Build AMIs by running (within the virtualenv):
AWS_PROFILE=gophillygo deployment/cac-stack.py create-ami
- The previous command builds all AMIs. To only build a single AMI, run the same command, but also specify the
--machine-type
parameter, which may be set to one of:bastion
,otp
, orapp
.
- Copy
deployment/default_template.yaml
todeployment/default.yaml
and edit variables - Configure an AWS profile with
aws configure --profile gophillygo
if you haven't already - Create a virtualenv with the deployment dependencies if you haven't already (see Building AMIs, above).
- In the project directory, for a set of
Blue
stacks in theProduction
environment, run:AWS_PROFILE=gophillygo deployment/cac-stack.py launch-stacks --stack-color blue --stack-type prod
- The previous command will do the following:
- Ensure the
VPC
stack is up in Production -- it will be launched if it isn't already running - Ensure the
DataPlane
stack is up in Production -- it will be launched if it isn't already running - Ensure the
OtpServer
Blue stack is up in Production -- it will be launched if it isn't already running - Ensure the
WebServer
Blue stack is up in Production -- it will be launched if it isn't already running
- Note that database migrations are not automatically run. When the DataPlane is first brought up, it is necessary to manually create the app user/db and run migrations.
- Launching a set of Production stacks with the other color (
Green
), will use the sameVPC
andDataPlane
stacks, but will create differentOtpServer
andWebServer
stacks (if they don't already exist).
- Note which color is currently running in production. Use the opposite color in the following steps.
- Set
otp_host
in production group_vars to the CloudFront distribution with the desired color. - Run
create_ami
command to build new AMIs. - Update
default.yaml
with new AMI ids. - Run
launch_stacks
command to launch stacks with the desired color. - Test new stacks thoroughly.
- Switch the public DNS record of the site to point to the new
WebServer
ELB DNS. - The stacks of the previous color may be deleted when ready.