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Air Mozilla

Build Status Coverage Status

Live: https://air.mozilla.org Stage: https://air.allizom.org Dev: https://air-dev.allizom.org

Air Mozilla is the Internet multimedia presence of Mozilla, with live and pre-recorded shows, interviews, news snippets, tutorial videos, and features about the Mozilla community.

Wiki page: https://wiki.mozilla.org/Air_Mozilla

Most of this information is also available on

https://air.mozilla.org/contribute.json

How to get it running locally from scratch

This section assumes you know about and are using a virtualenv. If you're not familiar with virtualenv, that's fine. You can use your "system python" but a virtualenv is advantageous because you get a self-contained python system that doesn't affect and isn't affected by any other python projects on your computer.

Also, these instructions are geared towards developers working on the code. Not system people deploying the code for production.

Step 1 - The stuff you need

You're going to need Git, Python 2.6 or Python 2.7, a PostgreSQL database (partially works with MySQL and SQLite too) and the necessary python dev libraries so you can install binary python packages. On a mac, that means you need to install XCode and on Linux you'll need to install python-dev.

This article on pyladies.com has a lot of useful information.

Step 2 - Get the code

Note: We're assuming you have already activated a virtualenv which will have its own pip.

Note 2: Windows users, before you start cloning you need to make sure you're not going to use the git protocol to clone any submodule, otherwise you will get fatal: read error: Invalid argument errors.

git config --global url."https://".insteadOf git://
git clone --recursive https://github.com/mozilla/airmozilla.git
cd airmozilla
pip install -r requirements/compiled.txt

If you intend to use this for also running tests, you need to install one more file:

pip install -r requirements/dev.txt

Step 3 - Create a database

To create a database in PostgreSQL there are different approaches. The simplest is the createdb command. How you handle credentials, roles and permissions is generally out of scope for this tutorial.

createdb -E UTF8 airmozilla

You might at that point need to supply a specific username and/or password. Whichever it is, take a note of it because you'll need it to set up your settings.

Step 4 - Set up the settings

The first thing to do is to copy the settings "template".

cp airmozilla/settings/local.py-dist airmozilla/settings/local.py

Now open that airmozilla/settings/local.py in your editor and we'll go through some essential bits.

DATABASES = {
    'default': {
        'ENGINE': 'django.db.backends.postgresql_psycopg2',
        'NAME': 'airmozilla',
        'USER': 'username',
        'PASSWORD': 'password',
        'HOST': '',
        'PORT': '',
    },
    # 'slave': {
    #     ...
    # },
}

Here, replace username and password accordingly. If you want to use MySQL, which should work except the Search, you replace the ENGINE setting with django.db.backends.mysql.

If you're a developer and intend to run tests make sure you have this line uncommented:

INSTALLED_APPS = base.INSTALLED_APPS + ['django_nose']

For local development, make sure the following lines are uncommented:

DEBUG = TEMPLATE_DEBUG = True

Since Air Mozilla uses a lot of AJAX calls, it may not be useful for errors to show up in the browser when they happen. It may be more useful to have all the errors appear in the terminal console. This is a matter of personal taste, but if you want all the errors to appear in the terminal add this line:

DEBUG_PROPAGATE_EXCEPTIONS = True

And, since you're probably going to run the local server NOT on HTTPS you uncomment this line:

SESSION_COOKIE_SECURE = False

For security, you need to enter something into the SECRET_KEY.

SECRET_KEY = 'somethingnotempty'

By default, you need a Memcache server up and running. The connection settings for that is not entered by default. So if you have a Memcache running on the default port you need to enter it for the LOCATION setting like this:

CACHES = {
    'default': {
        'BACKEND': 'django.core.cache.backends.memcached.MemcachedCache',
        'KEY_PREFIX': 'airmoz',
        'TIMEOUT': 6 * 60 * 60,
        'LOCATION': 'localhost:11211'
    }
}

If you want to use a local in-memory cache instead, use the following CACHES setting:

CACHES = {
    'default': {
        'BACKEND': 'django.core.cache.backends.locmem.LocMemCache',
        'LOCATION': 'unique-snowflake'
    }
}

By default, all the default settings are geared towards production deployment. Not local development. For example, the default way of handling emails is to actually send them with SMTP. For local development we don't want this. So uncomment the line EMAIL_BACKEND to:

EMAIL_BACKEND = 'django.core.mail.backends.console.EmailBackend'

The majority of the remaining settings are important security details for third-party services like AWS, Vid.ly, Mozillians, Twitter, Bit.ly and Sentry.

Getting actual details there is a matter of trust and your relationship to the project. Some things will obviously not work without these secrets, the file upload for example won't work without AWS credentials. But things aren't necessary should be something you can just go around. If something doesn't work at all without having certain security settings, it's considered a bug.

Step 5 - Running for the first time

The very first thing to run are these commands:

./manage.py syncdb
./manage.py migrate

The syncdb command will ask you to set up a first default superuser. Make sure you use an email address that you can log in to Persona with.

And last but not least:

./manage.py runserver

Now you should be able to open http://localhost:8000.

Getting help

The best place to get help on development is to go the the #airmozilla-dev IRC channel on irc.mozilla.org.

Tests and test coverage

Included is a set of comprehensive tests, which you can run by: ./manage.py test

To see the tests' code coverage, use: ./manage.py test --with-coverage --cover-erase --cover-html --cover-package=airmozilla

Then, when it completes, open the file ./cover/index.html.

You can run tests with any level of granularity: To run a specific file, use: ./manage.py test -s -x airmozilla/manage/tests/test_forms.py

To run a specific test case class in a file: ./manage.py test -s -x airmozilla/manage/tests/test_forms.py:SomeTestCaseClass

To run a specific test in a class in a specific file: ./manage.py test -s -x airmozilla/manage/tests/test_forms.py:SomeTestCaseClass.test_some_function

The -s makes it so that any print statements aren't swallowed if tests pass. The -x means it bails as soon as 1 test fails.

Troubleshooting

ImportErrors

If you get import errors, make sure the directory ./vendor/src/ is not empty or contains only directories that are empty. If they are empty, run the following command:

git submodule update --init --recursive

Unable to sign in

There are several reasons why sign in might not work. A common problem is that you have problems with CSRF and those are usually because of caching not working. Or a security setting.

If you see this in the runserver logs:

15/Oct/201X 14:53:37] "POST /browserid/login/ HTTP/1.1" 403 2294

It means that the server gave you a cookie which couldn't be matched and checked when sent back to the server later.

To check that caching works run these blocks:

./manage.py shell
>>> from django.core.cache import cache
>>> cache.set('some', 'thing', 60)
>>> ^D

(^D means Ctrl-D which means to exit the shell) then

./manage.py shell
>>> from django.core.cache import cache
>>> cache.get('some')
'thing'

If it doesn't say 'thing' it means it wasn't able to cache things. This is most likely because you have configured django.core.cache.backends.memcached.MemcachedCache as your preferred cache backend but that server isn't up and running.

Consider then to either figure out how to start your memcache server or switch to django.core.cache.backends.locmem.LocMemCache.

Another common mistake is to not have SESSION_COOKIE_SECURE = False in your airmozilla/settings/local.py but using http://localhost:8000 to reach the site.

Migrations

We're using [South][south] to handle database migrations. To generate a schema migration, make changes to models.py, then run:

./manage.py schemamigration airmozilla.main --auto

or

./manage.py schemamigration airmozilla.comments --auto

To generate a blank data migration, use:

./manage.py datamigration airmozilla.main data_migration_name

Then fill in the generated file with logic, fixtures, etc.

To apply migrations:

./manage.py migrate airmozilla.main
./manage.py migrate airmozilla.comments
./manage.py migrate airmozilla.uploads
./manage.py migrate airmozilla.subtitles
./manage.py migrate airmozilla.surveys
./manage.py migrate airmozilla.cronlogger

In each command, replace airmozilla.main with the appropriate app.

Requirements

See the requirements/ directory for installation dependencies. This app requires a working install of PIL with libjpeg and libpng.

First run

./manage.py syncdb
./manage.py migrate

If you'd like to create a default set of example groups with useful permissions (Event Organizers, Experienced Event Organizers, PR, Producer):

./manage.py create_mozilla_groups

Logging in

We use Persona to handle all log in. If you haven't used it before, it's fine. It's free and easy and works with any email address.

Because the code is built to only allow people with certain email address domains, (e.g. mozilla.com) you might need to fake this if you don't have a mozilla.com email address. To do that, open the file airmozilla/settings/local.py and add to the bottom this:

ALLOWED_BID = base.ALLOWED_BID + (
    'gmail.com',
)

...assuming your preferred email address is a gmail.com one. But note, only enter the domain of your email address. Not the whole email address.

Becoming a Superuser

Superusers have full unbound permissions to do anything and everything.

On a blank database with no content, the only way to become a Superuser is to sign in once, then go to the command line and manually change the data so that you're now a superuser.

./manage.py shell
>>> from django.contrib.auth.models import User
>>> my_user = User.objects.get(email='my@email.com')
>>> my_user.is_superuser = True
>>> my_user.is_staff = True
>>> my_user.save()

Adding a sample video

Once you're a superuser, the simplest way to add sample content is to use existing media from Air Mozilla. We're first going to create a template, then create content based on this template.

Let's create the Video template:

  • Go to the management page at http://localhost:8000/manage

  • Click on Video templates in the left menu, and initiate a template with New template

  • Fill the Name with "Vid.ly"

  • Fill the Content with

    <iframe frameborder="0" allowfullscreen width="640" height="360" name="vidly-frame"
     src="https://vid.ly/embeded.html?link={{ tag }}&amp;new=1&amp;autoplay={{autoplay}}&amp;hd=yes"></iframe>
  • Save changes

We're now going to initiate an event with this template:

  • Click on Initiate event in the left menu of the management page
  • Choose the Vid.ly template
  • Replace the Template environment with tag=7u9u1i
  • Change status to Scheduled
  • Choose a title, a description, a start time, a channel (Main) and a placeholder image
  • Save and submit

You should now see your video in the Event manager (http://localhost:8000/manage/events/) and on the main page (http://localhost:8000/)!

Contributing

See CONTRIBUTING.md

IRC

irc://irc.mozilla.org/airmozilla-dev

Cron jobs

All cron jobs are managed by two files: First airmozilla/manage/crons.py where you kick things off. Then, later the crontab file is compiled and installed by bin/crontab/crontab.tpl. These are the two files you need to edit to change, add or remove a cron execution.

Twitter

To test tweeting locally, what you need to do is set up some fake authentication credentials and lastly enable a debugging backend. So, add this to your settings/local.py:

TWITTER_USERNAME = 'airmozilla_dev'
TWITTER_CONSUMER_KEY = 'something'
TWITTER_CONSUMER_SECRET = 'something'
TWITTER_ACCESS_TOKEN = 'something'
TWITTER_ACCESS_TOKEN_SECRET = 'something'

Now, to avoid actually using HTTP to post this message to api.twitter.com instead add this to your settings/local.py:

TWEETER_BACKEND = 'airmozilla.manage.tweeter.ConsoleTweeter'

That means that all tweets will be sent to stdout instead of actually being attempted.

To send unsent tweets, you need to call:

./manage.py cron send_unsent_tweets

This can be called again and again and internally it will take care of not sending the same tweet twice.

If errors occur when trying to send, the tweet will be re-attempted till the error finally goes away.

Deployment

Deployment of dev, stage and prod is all done using Chief. More will be written about it soon.

Bit.ly URL Shortener

To generate a Bit.ly access token you need the right email address and password. If you have access you can go to https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=870385#c2

To generate it use this command:

curl -u "EMAIL:PASSWORD" -X POST "https://api-ssl.bitly.com/oauth/access_token"

That will spit out a 40 character code which you set in settings/local.py for the BITLY_ACCESS_TOKEN setting.

About the database

Even though we use the Django ORM which is database engine agnostic, we have to have PostgreSQL because we rely on its ability to do fulltext index searches.

PEP8 and pyflakes

All (with some few exceptions) code needs to be fully pep8 and pyflakes compliant. And line length for Python is expected to be under 80 characters wide.

The help yourself enforce this automatically, you need to set up the following git hooks. First, in your virtualenv, install this:

pip install flake8

Next you need to create (or amend) the file:

.git/hooks/pre-commit

...to contain the folllowing...:

#!/bin/sh

exit_code=0

for file in `git diff --cached --name-only --diff-filter=ACM | sort | uniq`
    do
        if [ ${file: -3} == ".py" ]; then
            flake8 $file
            if [ "$?" -ne "0" ]; then
                exit_code=1
            fi
        fi
        if [ ${file: -3} == ".js" ]; then
            jshint $file
            if [ "$?" -ne "0" ]; then
                exit_code=1
            fi
        fi
    done

if [ "$exit_code" -ne "0" ]; then
    echo "Aborting commit.  Fix above errors or do 'git commit --no-verify'."
    exit 1
fi

And make sure it's executable by running:

chmod +x .git/hooks/pre-commit

Next time you type git commit -a -m "fixes bug" it might block you and spit out a message like this instead:

airmozilla/main/views.py:17:1: F401 'Sum' imported but unused
airmozilla/main/views.py:378:80: E501 line too long (81 > 79 characters)
Aborting commit.  Fix above errors or do 'git commit --no-verify'.

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AirMozilla is a the video broadcasting site for the Mozilla project

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