This project is deprecated and will not receive new features or fixes. Use it at your own risks.
The application that powers Gandi's Status website (status.gandi.net).
Baobab is a Python and web application divided into 3 parts:
- a Django-powered back-end (
./baobab/backoffice
and./baobab/translate
) - a REST API (
./baobab/apirest
) - a web client that uses the REST API (
./baobab.front
)
It has 5 app namespaces that allow you to work (test, migrate, etc.) on specific parts: backoffice
, apirest
, rss
, translate
and socialnetwork
.
Baobab requires a database and supports SQLite, PostgreSQL or MySQL.
Node.js and npm are required to build the web client app.
Cron jobs are used to publish Tweets and close events on a schedule.
Clone the repository and enter the local directory that was just created.
We recommend using virtualenv to manage local python environments.
$ virtualenv /some/directory/virtual
$ source /some/directory/virtual/bin/activate
$ python setup.py install
A $ baobab
command should be available after install. Otherwise, please try to use it from the installation directory:
$ cd /some/directory/virtual/lib/python2.7/dist-packages/baobab/bin
$ ./cmd_baobab.py <...>
This can be caused by an error in django-tastypie
's setup.py
distributed in the Debian package.
Note for Gnome users: A "baobab" command can already exist in your system (Disk Usage Analyzer), so make sure you use virtualenv as recommended.
The settings file is located in ./baobab/settings.py
. Make sure you edit this file to setup your installation.
In it, you can define some default data such user and admin accounts, as well as important options such as the SECRET_KEY
, default time zones or to change DEBUG=False
when not in development.
For production (actually, whenever DEBUG is not True
) you need to authorize your hosts by editing ALLOWED_HOSTS = []
.
More information on Django settings can be found in the docs.
For example, create a Python package at /etc/baobab/__init__.py
and your settings module file at /etc/baobab/settings.py
.
You can make sure your package will be in your Python's path by exporting it
$ export PYTHONPATH=/etc
Then you can use the --settings
flag, like so:
$ baobab <command> --settings baobab.settings
Alternatively, you can set Django's buit-in environment variable
$ export DJANGO_SETTINGS_MODULE=baobab.settings
$ baobab <command>
Install the web client's dependencies and build the app
$ npm install
$ npm run dev
Load the schema and create the default data
$ baobab setup-dev
By default, a SQLite database file will be created at ./baobab/default.db
if it doesn't exist.
To launch the web server with the admin interface and REST API :
$ baobab runserver
Or $ ./baobab/bin/cmd_baobab.py runserver
if you've built the debian package.
Open your browser at http://localhost:8000/
to see the website. The admin page is accessible at http://localhost:8000/admin
.
In addition to the web client, Baobab is also usable via a REST API that delivers content in JSON format.
The API is self-described, so you can start exploring it by making a simple request to the main endpoint.
Example:
$ curl http://localhost:8000/api | python -m json.tools
{
"events": {
"list_endpoint": "/api/events",
"schema": "/api/events/schema"
},
"services": {
"list_endpoint": "/api/services",
"schema": "/api/services/schema"
},
"status": {
"list_endpoint": "/api/status",
"schema": "/api/status/schema"
}
}
Follow this simple process to modify the database structure. Migrations are managed with South.
- Modify the application's models
- Create schema migration files
- Create data migration files if necessary
- Apply the migrations
Update models.py
in the appropriate app folder to add / remove fields and/or tables (for example ./baobab/backoffice/models.py
).
$ baobab schemamigration <namespace> --auto
Tip: Remember to use db.rename_column
in a migration script to rename a field.
$ baobab datamigration <namespace> <data_migration_name>
$ baobab migrate
Tip: when switching branches, you might forget to rollback or apply relevant migrations. You can avoid that by adding a git hook. See some examples in./misc/hooks/*
.
You can override the default user login credentials by setting the DEFAULT_USER_LOGIN
and DEFAULT_USER_PASSWORD
variables.
If these variables are not set when the setup scripts are run, you will be prompted to create a default user.
At the moment baobab can publish status updates to Twitter and IRC, but you can easily add your own integrations.
You only need to create a new class in the socialnetwork
app and inherit from the SocialNetworkBase
class.
Each social network has its own configuration. Please take a look at the settings.py
file for more information.
Upon the creation of an Event
, a status update will be immediately published to each configured integration.
When the event is of the Maintenance
type, baobab can publish a status update automatically at the estimated start date.
Simply create a cron task to execute $ baobad social_network
to achieve this.
You can easily translate content published with Baobab and retrieve translated content via the API.
Special user permissions can be granted for translators (add them into the "translate" group), and the translation interface is available in the backoffice at http://localhost:8000/admin/translate.`
Note: The "translate" group might be missing the real permissions: just add all the permissions about the "translate" app.
You can then retrieve translated content by adding the "Accept-Language" header to your API requests. If you don't, Baobab automatically falls back to English (the default language).
For example:
curl -H "Accept-Language: fr" http://localhost:8000/api/events
Please note that while the web client can consume translated content (browsers will automatically send the Accept-Language
header according to the user's language), the web interface itself is not localised (nor localisable in the current state of the implementation).
You can run unit tests on specific namespaces or the whole app. No configuration is necessary for this.
$ baobab test <namespace>
Note the translate
namespace has no dedicated testing suite. The translation features are tested within the apirest
namespace.
In a production environment, you'll want to use different settings and technologies to better serve your app securily at scale.
We use Gunicorn as the app server, along with Nginx to proxy HTTP requests, instead of just running Django's webserver.
An example Gunicorn config for Baobab could look like this:
CONFIG = {
'working_dir': '/srv/baobab',
'environment': {
'DJANGO_SETTINGS_MODULE': 'myown.settings',
'PYTHONPATH': '/etc/'
},
'args': (
'--bind=127.0.0.1:8008',
'--workers=4',
'--timeout=10',
'baobab.wsgi:application',
),
}
Your production-ready settings file would then reside in /etc/myown/settings.py
, along with the Python package file /etc/myown/__init__.py
.
Also check the nginx/sites-available/
folder for our sample Nginx configuration files.
You could also use MySQL or PostgreSQL as database backends instead of SQLite, for example.
After copying the application files to the server, install the web client's dependencies and build it for release (repeat whenever these assets change)
$ npm install
$ NODE_ENV=production npm run release
Then, setup the database and run migrations (repeat whenever the model changes)
$ baobab syncdb
Now you can start or restart your chosen webserver solution.
Baobab can also be built into a Debian package, which is useful for production deployments on compatible systems. Gandi's own packaging details can be found in the debian/
folder.
To build the package:
$ debuild -us -uc -b || dpkg-buildpackage -us -uc -b
You can then place it on a Production server and install it. All scripts will be automatically launched. You can then start or restart the app and web servers.
Any major changes should be documented as a GitHub issue before you start working on it.
Don't hesitate -- we appreciate every contribution, no matter how small.
Create a git branch with your new feature or bugfix and either (in order of preference):
- open a Pull Request on GitHub
- mail the patch to [email protected],
- send the URL for your branch and we will review/merge it if correct
We'll check your pull requests in the timeliest manner possible. If we can't accept your PR for some reason, we'll give you feedback and you're encouraged to try again!
Fork the repository and make changes on your fork in a feature branch:
- If it's a bug fix branch, name it XXXX-something where XXXX is the number of the issue.
- If it's a feature branch, create an enhancement issue to announce your intentions, and name it XXXX-something where XXXX is the number of the issue.
Submit unit tests for your changes. Run the full test suite on your branch before submitting a pull request.
Update the documentation when creating or modifying features.
Please see the LICENSE
file.