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Iron Blogger 2 is a reimplementation of the original iron_blogger. The consensus among those of the original's users who are also developers is that it is unmaintainable, and a rewrite is needed.

Setting Up a Development Environment

###Prerequisites

For Debian/Ubuntu users, you may need to run sudo apt-get install libxml2-dev libxslt1-dev

###virtualenv

Use of virtualenv is recommended for development. In this directory, execute:

virtualenv .venv
source .venv/bin/activate
pip install -e .
pip install -r test-requirements.txt

Any directory can be used for the virtual environment, but .venv is preferred, and there's a rule in .gitignore which will keep you from accidentally committing it to the repository. The first pip command installs ironblogger in "editable" mode, so that changes you make to the source tree will be picked up automatically. The second installs dependencies for running the test suite.

Copy example.wsgi.py to wsgi.py and edit the configuration therein. The ironblogger command described below must be run from within the same directory as wsgi.py.

To initialize the database, make sure wsgi.py specifies the right url for the database, and run ironblogger init-db

Static assets

Static assets have been submoduled and are kept in ironblogger/static/bower_components, which used to be managed by Bower, which is why it has that name.

To pull these in, run git submodule init to set up the submodules

Then run git submodule update --depth=1 to dowload all the required media repositories.

The depth option is important to limit the amount of downloaded data since we don't need to have the history of these projects.

Starting the server

Iron Blogger 2 is a Flask app. A stand-alone development server can be started with:

ironblogger serve

At which point, the application will be available at http://localhost:5000.

The bloggers.yml file used by the old iron blogger software can be imported via:

ironblogger import < bloggers.yml

paultag's repository has a version of bloggers.yml that roughly reflects the roster of Boston-area participants the last time the original software was being used.

Once the database is populated with bloggers/blogs, posts can be downloaded and accounted for by running:

ironblogger sync

Unit Tests

We use pytest for unit testing. Running the tests is simply a matter of executing:

py.test

It's configured to display code coverage statistics as well.

New tests should be placed in a file matching tests/test_*; This allows pytest to pick them up automatically.

We use [pytest-quickcheck][8] to test iron blogger with random data. By default we run each randomized test 10 times. This can be change via the environment variable NUM_RANDOM_CALLS, e.g:

NUM_RANDOM_CALLS=50 py.test

Useful tips

  • The command ironblogger shell will open a python interpreter prompt that has already loaded the settings in wsgi.py, and is running inside of a Flask request context, with an active database connection. This allows you to make calls to various parts of the code that don't otherwise work without a bit of setup.

  • The commands ironblogger fetch-posts and ironblogger assign-rounds perform the downloading and bookkeeping steps of ironblogger sync, respectively. Invoking them individually may be useful in some cases.

  • As of right now, while there's an admin panel available at <main page url>/admin, no users will exist by default. You can add one manually by dropping into the python shell using ironblogger shell, and running:

    from ironblogger.model import * u = User(name='my_user', is_admin=True) u.set_password('secret') db.session.add(u) db.session.commit()

Setting Up In Production

Web Server

Iron Blogger is a standard wsgi application; the wsgi.py that supplies the configuration also provides the application variable required by wsgi; it should work with any web server which supports the standard.

Database

Iron Blogger 2 has only been tested with SQLite and PostgreSQL. The latter should be used for production deployments; SQLite does not allow concurrent processes to safely access the database, and Iron Blogger requires this to fetch new posts and do bookkeeping. SQLite is fine during development however, where the update tasks are typically run manually and so there is a low risk of data corruption. To use postgres, you'll need the additional python package psycopg2; read the comments in setup.py to learn how to set that up.

Background Jobs

There are a few periodic tasks that Iron Blogger needs to be done. In particular:

  • New posts need to be downloaded and assigned to rounds (ironblogger sync).
  • If weekly notification emails are desired, they must be sent (ironblogger send-reminders).

All of these commands must be executed from the directory containing wsgi.py.

The recommended approach is to put each of these in a cron job to execute at the proper time.

Openshift

Iron Blogger comes ready to run on Openshift. Have a look at example-openshift.wsgi.py for instructions. You'll need the postgres and cron cartridges installed. The scripts in the .openshift directory will take care of keeping the database up to date. New posts will be downloaded once per hour, and reminders will be sent out on Fridays.

License

Iron Blogger 2 is Free Software, released under the GPL3 (or later). A list of its authors can be found in the file AUTHORS.

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