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Joinup website

This is the source code for https://joinup.ec.europa.eu/

Build Status

Joinup is a collaborative platform created by the European Commission and funded by the European Union via the Interoperability Solutions for European Public Administrations (ISA) Programme.

It offers several services that aim to help e-Government professionals share their experience with each other. We also hope to support them to find, choose, re-use, develop and implement interoperability solutions.

The Joinup platform is developed as a Drupal 8 distribution, and therefore tries to follow the 'drupal-way' as much as possible.

You are free to fork this project to host your own collaborative platform. Joinup is licensed under the EUPL, which is compatible with the GPL.

Contributing

See our contributors guide.

Running your own instance of Joinup

There are two ways to run Joinup. With docker and docker-compose and building a local installation.

Docker

To start with docker, please, check the separated README file.

Local installation

To run Joinup locally, below is a list of requirements and instructions.

On macOS without Docker installation

To start on macOS without Docker, please, check the separated README file.

Requirements

  • A regular LAMP stack running PHP 7.1.0 or higher
  • Virtuoso 7 (Triplestore database)
  • Apache Solr

Dependency management and builds

We use Drupal composer as a template for the project. For the most up-to-date information on how to use Composer, build the project using the Task Runner, or on how to run the Behat test, please refer directly to the documentation of each used tool.

Initial setup

  • Clone the repository.

    $ git clone https://github.com/ec-europa/joinup-dev.git
    
  • Use composer to install the dependencies.

    $ cd joinup-dev
    $ composer install
    
  • Install Solr. If you already have Solr installed you can configure it manually by following the installation instructions from the Search API Solr module. Or you can execute the following commands to download and configure a local instance of Solr. It will be installed in the folder ./vendor/apache/solr.

    $ ./vendor/bin/run solr:download-bin
    $ ./vendor/bin/run solr:config
    
  • Install Virtuoso. For basic instructions, see setting up Virtuoso. Due to a bug in Virtuoso 6 it is recommended to use Virtuoso 7. During installation some RDF based taxonomies will be imported from the resources/fixtures folder. Make sure Virtuoso can read from this folder by adding it to the DirsAllowed setting in your virtuoso.ini. For example:

    DirsAllowed = /var/www/joinup/resources/fixtures, /usr/share/virtuoso-opensource-7/vad
    
  • Install Selenium. The simplest way of doing this is using Docker to install and run it with a single command. This will download all necessary files and start the browser in the background in headless mode:

    $ docker run -d -p 4444:4444 --network=host selenium/standalone-chrome
    
  • Point the document root of your webserver to the 'web/' directory.

Create a local build properties file

Create a new file in the root of the project named `build.properties.local using your favourite text editor:

$ vim build.properties.local

This file will contain the configuration which is unique to your development machine. This is mainly useful for specifying your database credentials and the username and password of the Drupal admin user, so they can be used during the installation.

Because these settings are personal they should not be shared with the rest of the team. Make sure you never commit this file!

All options you can use can be found in the build.properties file. Just copy the lines you want to override and change their values. Do not copy the entire build.properties file, since this would override all options.

Create a local task runner configuration file

In order to override any configuration of the task runner (./vendor/bin/run), create a runner.yml file in the project's top directory. You can override there any default runner configuration, or any other declared in ./resources/runner files or in runner.yml.dist. Note that the runner.yml file is not under VCS control.

Setup environment variables

Sensitive data will be stored in environment variables. See .env.dist for details. To adapt these values to your own environment, create a .env file that contains only the overridden values. For a local development environment this could look like the following:

DRUPAL_BASE_URL=http://my-base-url.local
DRUPAL_DATABASE_USERNAME=my-database-username
DRUPAL_DATABASE_PASSWORD=my-database-password
DRUPAL_DATABASE_HOST=localhost
DRUPAL_HASH_SALT=some-unique-random-string-like-37h+2BQEQx83YLa/uFdsfG55

SOLR_CORE_PUBLISHED_URL=http://localhost:8983/solr
SOLR_CORE_UNPUBLISHED_URL=http://localhost:8983/solr

DRUPAL_SPARQL_HOSTNAME=localhost
REDIS_HOST=localhost

SIMPLETEST_BASE_URL=http://my-base-url.local
SIMPLETEST_DB=mysql://root@localhost:3306/joinup
SIMPLETEST_SPARQL_DB=sparql://localhost:8890
MINK_DRIVER_ARGS_WEBDRIVER=""
DTT_BASE_URL=http://my-base-url.local
DTT_API_URL=http://localhost:4444/wd/hub
DTT_MINK_DRIVER_ARGS="['chrome', null, 'http://localhost:4444/wd/hub']"

Build the project

Run Composer install to get all dependencies and prepare the code base, then install the site with toolkit:install-clean:

$ composer install
$ ./vendor/bin/run toolkit:install-clean

Run the tests

Run the Behat test suite to validate your installation.

$ cd tests
$ ./behat

During development you can enable Behat test screen-shots by uncomment this line in tests/features/bootstrap/FeatureContext.php:

  // use \Drupal\joinup\Traits\ScreenShotTrait;

and use the pretty formatter instead of progress, in tests/behat.yml:

  formatters:
    pretty: ~

Also run the PHPUnit tests, from the web root.

$ cd web
$ ../vendor/bin/phpunit

Frontend development

See the readme in the theme folder.

Upgrade process

Joinup offers only contiguous upgrades. For instance, if you project is currently on Joinup v1.39.2, and the latest stable version is v1.42.0, then you cannot upgrade directly to the latest version. Instead, you should upgrade first to v1.40.0, second to v1.40.1 (if exists) and, finally, to v1.42.0.

The Joinup update and post-update scripts naming is following this pattern:

function mymodule_update_0106100() {...}

or

function mymodule_post_update_0207503() {...}

The (post)updated identifier (the numeric part consists in seven digits with the following meaning:

  • The first two digits are the Joinup major version.
  • The following three digits are the Joinup minor version.
  • The last two digits are an integer that sets the weight within updates or post updates from the same extension (module or profile). 00 is the first (post)update that applies.

For the above example:

  • function mymodule_update_0106100() {...}: Was applied in Joinup v1.61.x as the first update of the mymodule module (01 major version, 061 minor version, 00 update weight within the module).
  • function mymodule_post_update_0207503() {...}: Was applied in Joinup v2.75.x as the fourth post update of the mymodule module (02 major version, 075 minor version, 03 update weight within the module).

Technical details