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Overview

The purpose of the Shift/Pedalpalooza Calendar is to empower citizens to create and view bike events and to spread bike fun.

You can see the production site here: https://www.shift2bikes.org

Software

The calendar is split into two main parts: a frontend, and a backend. The frontend is what most people think of the as the Shift website: it includes all of the webpages and static content. The backend holds all of the user submitted rides, and sends emails to users when they create new rides.

The frontend uses:

The backend uses:

Contributing

Frontend development with Netlify

While creating a pull request does automatically deploy a preview of the frontend to Netlify, you can also create previews manually: this could help you do things like theme development in your own repository before submitting your pr.

  1. fork repo
  2. read the comments in the netlify.toml file around changing the build command in the [context.production] section and make changes if needed.
  3. deploy on Netlify by linking your forked repo. Included configuration file netlify.toml should mean 0 additional configuration required to get the site running. If you get a build failure around access denied for ssh, you probably need the advice in step 2 just above this!

If you have trouble with it please file an issue to let us know what you tried and what happened when you did.

Local development with Docker

The production backend is run in several docker containers; including nginx, mysql, and the node server.

The docker configuration also supports running your own frontend and backend server locally. The following steps assume a Linux, or MacOs development environment. On Windows, you'll need something like the Windows Subsystem for Linux.

  1. Install Docker: https://docs.docker.com/get-docker/
  2. Download source code: git clone https://github.com/shift-org/shift-docs.git
  3. Start shift site: cd shift-docs ; ./shift up
    a. If you are running windows, you may need to use a WSL extension in order to execute code in a unix (bash) terminal.
    b. You may recieve an error in the nginx container: ...bash\r: command not found. This is because the docker container is trying to execute the script using dos formatting, instead of unix formatting. To fix this, you will need to reformat services/nginx/entrypoint.sh using the dos2unix tool:
    $ dos2unix services/nginx/entrypoint.sh
    
    (you may need to download the dos2unix tool if it is not already on your local machine)
  4. If you're standing up the site for the first time, add database tables with the setup script: ./shift mysql-pipe < services/db/seed/setup.sql.
  5. Visit https://localhost:4443/ . If this leads to an SSL error in chrome, you may try flipping this flag: chrome://flags/#allow-insecure-localhost

Note that no changes to the filesystems inside the container should ever be needed; they read from your local filesystem so updating the local FS will show up in the container (perhaps after a restart). Updating, changing branches, etc can be done with git commands outside of the container (git checkout otherbranch or git pull).

So - now you can hopefully access the site. But a real end-toend test of yoursetup, would be creating an event:

  1. visit https://localhost:4443/addevent/
  2. fill out all required fields (ones marked with an asterisk), for a date a day or two in the future.
  3. save the event (fix any validation errors around missing fields to ensure it saves)
  4. In production, we send you an email with a link to confirm the ride listing; we also write a copy of that email to the file services/node/shift-mail.log. For local development, we don't actually send the email, so get the confirmation link from that mail log, visit it, and hit publish event
  5. hopefully see your event on the https://localhost:4443/calendar page!

Important Project Files

  • docker-compose.yml

    • docker container settings
    • The defined containers (db, nginx, etc) become pingable host names from the other running containers. For example, attached to the nginx container, you can "ping db"
    • Contains the container specific mappings between host and docker container persistent volumes.
  • shift

    • This is the convenience wrapper that sets up the environment and has various convenience sub-commands to connect to the environment and manipulate it as well. This is how you'll start the project, connect to the database, etc!
    • contains environment variables that get loaded and are then available for docker to import. Docker environment variables that will be important are defined separately for each container (see: docker-compose.yml). Run env inside an attached docker container to see the variables that made it into the running container.
  • secrets and secrets.override

    • these are the credentials to connect to your local instance. You should change them if you host your site allowing public connections!
  • shift.overrides and shift.overrides.production

    • these are the local (potential) configuration overrides, that aren't secret

Shift subcommands of interest

  • ./shift attach node
    • node is a reference to the named docker container. Note that you want just nginx, db or node not the full image name (shift_nginx_1)
    • Attaches to the running docker container in the shift stack
  • ./shift up
    • If necessary, first builds, and then starts up the docker containers (will also restart if run while the environment is already running.)
  • ./shift logs nginx
    • Will start tailing the logs for the specified container (nginx in this case)
    • multiple container names can be mentioned
  • ./shift down
    • stops the docker containers

Docker Daemon commands of interest

  • docker ps
    • lists all of the running process and port information from docker (ex: you can see the postgres service port)
  • docker volume ls
    • This will show the persistent volumes that docker knows about. The shift project volumes are prefixed with shift_
    • The "shift_" docker namespace comes from the shift file: export COMPOSE_PROJECT_NAME="shift"

Local development with Node.js

You can also do local development with node. These steps will setup a local node server which, by default, acts as both frontend and backend.

After cloning the repo, install node (currently Node.js v20). Then, open a command prompt or terminal window, change to some useful directory for development, and do the following:

  1. cd shift-docs
  2. npm install
  3. optionally, create some placeholder events with: npm run -w tools make-fake-events
  4. npm run dev
  5. browse to http://localhost:3080, and you should see the site running locally.

When you new create events, the link for activating those events will be written to the terminal. ( In this mode, Sqlite is used instead of MySQL. )

Node tests

If you are writing javascript code in the node backend, you can test everything is working as expected using npm test.

Local previews using production data

As an alternative to npm run dev, you can preview a local frontend with the actual production backend by using: npm run -w tools preview.

NOTE: any events you create while previewing this way will be seen by the world!

Ethereal email

Before executing npm run dev, you can configure email debugging using npm run -w tools new-ethereal-cfg. It will generate a shift-email.cfg file in your bin directory which will be used when adding new events. Use the username and password listed in that file to check for emails here: https://ethereal.email/login.

No actual emails are sent when running this way.

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