szurubooru/INSTALL.md
rr- 7fa8593b0a client/general: improve URL escaping
Specifically, cater for /, + and % in URL components.
2016-09-04 02:07:22 +02:00

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This guide assumes Arch Linux. Although exact instructions for other
distributions are different, the steps stay roughly the same.
### Installing hard dependencies
```console
user@host:~$ sudo pacman -S postgresql
user@host:~$ sudo pacman -S python
user@host:~$ sudo pacman -S python-pip
user@host:~$ sudo pacman -S ffmpeg
user@host:~$ sudo pacman -S npm
user@host:~$ sudo pip install virtualenv
user@host:~$ python --version
Python 3.5.1
```
The reason `ffmpeg` is used over, say, `ImageMagick` or even `PIL` is because of
Flash and video posts.
### Setting up a database
First, basic `postgres` configuration:
```console
user@host:~$ sudo -i -u postgres initdb --locale en_US.UTF-8 -E UTF8 -D /var/lib/postgres/data
user@host:~$ sudo systemctl start postgresql
user@host:~$ sudo systemctl enable postgresql
```
Then creating a database:
```console
user@host:~$ sudo -i -u postgres createuser --interactive
Enter name of role to add: szuru
Shall the new role be a superuser? (y/n) n
Shall the new role be allowed to create databases? (y/n) n
Shall the new role be allowed to create more new roles? (y/n) n
user@host:~$ sudo -i -u postgres createdb szuru
user@host:~$ sudo -i -u postgres psql -c "ALTER USER szuru PASSWORD 'dog';"
```
### Preparing environment
Getting `szurubooru`:
```console
user@host:~$ git clone https://github.com/rr-/szurubooru.git szuru
user@host:~$ cd szuru
```
Installing frontend dependencies:
```console
user@host:szuru$ cd client
user@host:szuru/client$ npm install
```
`npm` sandboxes dependencies by default, i.e. installs them to
`./node_modules`. This is good, because it avoids polluting the system with the
project's dependencies. To make Python work the same way, we'll use
`virtualenv`. Installing backend dependencies with `virtualenv` looks like
this:
```console
user@host:szuru/client$ cd ../server
user@host:szuru/server$ virtualenv python_modules # consistent with node_modules
user@host:szuru/server$ source python_modules/bin/activate # enters the sandbox
(python_modules) user@host:szuru/server$ pip install -r requirements.txt # installs the dependencies
```
### Preparing `szurubooru` for first run
1. Configure things:
```console
user@host:szuru$ cp config.yaml.dist config.yaml
user@host:szuru$ vim config.yaml
```
Pay extra attention to these fields:
- base URL,
- API URL,
- data directory,
- data URL,
- database,
- the `smtp` section.
2. Compile the frontend:
```console
user@host:szuru$ cd client
user@host:szuru/client$ npm run build
```
3. Upgrade the database:
```console
user@host:szuru/client$ cd ../server
user@host:szuru/server$ source python_modules/bin/activate
(python_modules) user@host:szuru/server$ alembic upgrade head
```
`alembic` should have been installed during installation of `szurubooru`'s
dependencies.
4. Run the tests:
```console
(python_modules) user@host:szuru/server$ ./test
```
It is recommended to rebuild the frontend after each change to configuration.
### Wiring `szurubooru` to the web server
`szurubooru` is divided into two parts: public static files, and the API. It
tries not to impose any networking configurations on the user, so it is the
user's responsibility to wire these to their web server.
Below are described the methods to integrate the API into a web server:
1. Run API locally with `waitress`, and bind it with a reverse proxy. In this
approach, the user needs to (from within `virtualenv`) install `waitress`
with `pip install waitress` and then start `szurubooru` with `./host-waitress`
from within the `server/` directory (see `--help` for details). Then the
user needs to add a virtual host that delegates the API requests to the
local API server, and the browser requests to the `client/public/`
directory.
2. Alternatively, Apache users can use `mod_wsgi`.
3. Alternatively, users can use other WSGI frontends such as `gunicorn` or
`uwsgi`, but they'll need to write wrapper scripts themselves.
Note that the API URL in the virtual host configuration needs to be the same as
the one in the `config.yaml`, so that client knows how to access the backend!
#### Example
**nginx configuration** - wiring API `http://great.dude/api/` to
`localhost:6666` to avoid fiddling with CORS:
```nginx
server {
listen 80;
server_name great.dude;
merge_slashes off; # to support post tags such as ///
location ~ ^/api$ {
return 302 /api/;
}
location ~ ^/api/(.*)$ {
proxy_pass http://127.0.0.1:6666/$1$is_args$args;
}
location / {
root /home/rr-/src/maintained/szurubooru/client/public;
try_files $uri /index.htm;
}
}
```
**`config.yaml`**:
```yaml
api_url: 'http://big.dude/api/'
base_url: 'http://big.dude/'
data_url: 'http://big.dude/data/'
data_dir: '/home/rr-/src/maintained/szurubooru/client/public/data'
```
Then the backend is started with `host-waitress` from within `virtualenv` and
`./server/` directory.