This repository contains the server component of the CIViC. It is a Ruby on Rails application that serves JSON data to power the frontend website and API.
Developing for CIViC involves setting up a development environment.
To get started quickly, we recommend launching an AWS EC2 instance from our pre-configured and maintained AMI (getting started wiki page). Alternatively, you may set up your own local development environment using the following setup instructions.
Before attempting to install the CIViC server and client software, you should obtain the following applications and libraries:
- A relatively modern Ruby (>= 2.1)
- If your OS doesn't ship with a modern Ruby, you can use rbenv and ruby-build to obtain it.
- Postgres
- NodeJS
- npm
- libxml2
- libxslt
- libpq-dev
- openssl
On OSX with homebrew, this should install the needed library dependencies:
brew install libxml2 libxslt openssl postgres node
The following will set up the server side application and load the database schema.
git clone https://github.com/griffithlab/civic-server.git
cd civic-server
gem install bundler
rbenv rehash
bundle install
rbenv rehash
rake db:create
rake db:migrate
For convenience, a sanitized version of a recent database backup is provided for your local development environment. You can load it with the following command:
rake civic:load[force]
Finally, start the CIViC rails server
rails s
If you only intend to do server development, you can stop here. The server repository already contains the most recent production build of the frontend javascript. You can load CIViC in your browser at http://127.0.0.1:3000
.
If you intend to develop front end features however, you'll need to set up the client side application using the following:
git clone https://github.com/griffithlab/civic-client.git
cd civic-client
npm install -g bower gulp
npm install
bower install
gulp serve
You should now be able to access the backend server at http://127.0.0.1:3000
and the frontend application at http://127.0.0.1:3001
Note that certain tasks needed by a running instance of CIViC are accomplished by 'background workers'. This includes data release generation as well as notification delivery.
You can start the workers in the background with the following command:
bin/delayed_job start
If you would prefer the workers to run in the foreground you can start them in a console (rails c
) with this command instead:
Delayed::Worker.new.start
Note to make yourself an admin in a local install you can do the following from your civic-server repo.
First log into the front end http://127.0.0.1:3001
and sign in with your user.
Log into a rails console, run a command that makes you an admin in the db, and exit.
rails c
User.find_by(email: 'your_email@example.com').make_admin!
exit
Now log into the backend admin interface as follows: http://127.0.0.1:3000/admin
The CIViC source code and application are organized in a client-server model. The backend code is available in the civic-server repository and frontend code is available in the civic-client repository. Issues relating to curation are tracked in the civic-curation repository. An example of a Python client is available in the civic-api-client repository. Issues relating to public CIViC meetings are tracked in the civic-meeting repository.