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Tasket Boilerplate

Tasket Boilerplate is a simple, wrapped version of Tasket, the open-source micro-task web app. The boilerplate has the Tasket core repository installed as a Git submodule. This allows you to: fork the Tasket Boilerplate repo, add your own custom HTML, JavaScript, CSS, or images for your project and still keep the core Tasket submodule up-to-date.

Managing the Git Repository

The submodule will need to be activated the first time you checkout the repository:

git submodule init
git submodule update 

This will checkout the latest version of Tasket but the repository itself will not be set to a particular branch. This is fine for running the application but if you intend to develop Tasket within the submodule you'll want to set a branch.

cd tasket
git checkout master
cd ../

Configuring the server

Tasket has a few dependencies (see Tasket README for details). It's recommended to run Tasket in a virtualenv with pip:

virtualenv --no-site-packages .
source bin/activate

Then install Tasket's requirements. Issuing the following from within a virtualenv will set up all the 3rd party packages needed for Tasket to run:

pip install -r tasket/requirements.txt

Configuring the Client

The /client/media folder contains a folder called custom, which is for any of the target website's own static assets.

Tasket's own static assets should already be present (as symlinks from /tasket/client/media) - e.g. in the /client/media/lib and /client/media/tank folders. If not, then they should be manually symlinked into the target client:

cd client/media

# core libraries
ln -s ../../tasket/client/media/lib .

# specific apps (omit those not required)
ln -s ../../tasket/client/media/tank .
ln -s ../../tasket/client/media/notepad .

# back to the root
cd ../../

Configuring the Web directory

  1. It may be sufficient to symlink the /web folder of Tasket into the root folder:

    ln -s tasket/web .

OR...

  1. On some platforms, Django's web server will not respond to a symlinked web folder. You may see the app running with the default Tasket theme, not the extended custom theme. In such a case, the folder should be copied into the root folder:

    first delete the symlinked /web folder, then:

    cp -rf tasket/web .

Then amend the /web/settings.py file to point to the appropriate server folder. Change this:

sys.path.append('../server')

to this:

sys.path.append('../tasket/server')

/web/local_settings.py

Any install-specific changes should be made in local_settings.py, following the example settings in local_settings.py.example:

cd web
cp local_settings.py.example local_settings.py

Setting up the database

As with a plain Tasket installation:

python manage.py syncdb

then proceed to set up a superuser, then:

python manage.py migrate

Running the app locally

Make sure that virtualenv has been activated from the root folder:

source bin/activate

Run the server:

cd web
python manage.py runserver

Build the JavaScript

The client-side app requires the compressed versions of the Tasket JavaScript to have been compiled. To do this ensure you have the most recent version of Tasket in the submodule:

cd tasket
git pull

Then run Smoosh in the root directory. You'll need smoosh installed on your path. Check the Tasket README for more details.

cd ../
smoosh -c ./config.json

NOTE: this is a different config.json file than that in the Tasket directory.

If the JavaScript or CSS has updated, then update the query-string version numbers in the HTML file, e.g. in /client/tank.html :

<script src="/media/tasket/js/tasket.min.js?v0.8"></script>

If the files have changed, be sure to commit them into to the repository:

git add .
git commit -m "Merging Tasket changes"
git push

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