Download and install Node.js >= 7.7.1 then run
yarn install
Set up and run migrations directly from the terminal using Sequelize CLI. Here is how to do:
yarn exec -- sequelize db:migrate --url 'mysql://username:password@hostname:port/database'
If your local db server does not support SSL, change the ssl
option to false
in db/config/config.json
.
To seed the database with seed users:
yarn exec -- sequelize db:seed:all --url 'mysql://username:password@hostname:port/database'
Seed data can be added at: db/seeders
To start a-fresh:
yarn exec -- sequelize db:migrate:undo:all --url 'mysql://username:password@hostname:port/database'
yarn exec -- sequelize db:migrate:undo:all --url 'mysql://root@localhost:3306/faucet' && yarn exec -- sequelize db:migrate --url 'mysql://root@localhost:3306/faucet' && yarn exec -- sequelize db:seed:all --url 'mysql://root@localhost:3306/faucet'
Copy .env.example
to .env
and edit as needed. (.env-admin.example
for faucet-admin)
env $(tr "\\n" " " < .env) yarn start-dev # or just start, if you don't want nodemon
See the readme in /admin
A Dockerfile is supplied. You will need to configure the app with environment variables. See the file .env.example for a full list of what you will need.
When running the Docker image locally, you will probably need to bind your mysqld to not only localhost
but also the IP used in Docker's network. You can then specify this IP in DATABASE_URL
.
You can build and start the Docker image like this:
BRANCH="$(git rev-parse --abbrev-ref HEAD)"
docker build -t="$USER/faucet:$BRANCH" .
docker run -it -p 3000:3000 --env-file=.env "$USER/faucet:$BRANCH"
Add the following to .vscode/launch.json
configurations array:
{
"type": "node",
"request": "launch",
"name": "nodemon",
"runtimeExecutable": "${workspaceRoot}/node_modules/nodemon/bin/nodemon.js",
"program": "${workspaceFolder}/bin/www",
"restart": true,
"sourceMaps": true,
"outFiles": [],
"console": "integratedTerminal",
"internalConsoleOptions": "neverOpen",
"args": [
"--ignore src",
"| bunyan -o short"
],
"envFile": "${workspaceFolder}/.env",
}
The test
command will run three other scripts in sequence: static analysis (eslint
), unit and integration tests (jest
), and dependency security check (nsp
).
You do need to supply dummy values for some required environment variables. Do so like this:
env $(tr "\\n" " " < .env.example) yarn test