Get in touch in our Slack Channel - join #on_ruby
Source for the Sites of the Ruby Communities:
The operation, development and maintenance of OnRuby can be supported via Patreon at patreon.com/on_ruby.
You can install OnRuby using Docker or a local installation.
Install Docker and Docker Compose if you haven't already. Then:
docker-compose up --build
sudo
might be required fordocker-compose
if you run Docker locally on Linux.
This creates three Docker containers:
web
for the applicationbox
for storing rubygems installationsdb
for the PostgreSQL database
In another terminal, run the Rake task to set up the database structure.
script/in_docker bundle exec rake db:setup
The script/in_docker
allows you to run commands inside the Docker
container.
Example: Running a spec inside the Docker container
script/in_docker bundle exec rspec spec/requests/labels_spec.rb
Note: This step is currently only necessary for Safari, all other browsers thread localhost as wildcard domain.
Add all supported subdomains to your /etc/hosts
file:
127.0.0.1 www.onruby.test hamburg.onruby.localhost cologne.onruby.localhost berlin.onruby.localhost madridrb.onruby.localhost andalucia.onruby.localhost
Navigate to the start page for the OnRuby platform at https://www.onruby.test:3000.
This will list links and logos to all the usergroups.
docker-compose up postgres -d
./bin/setup
./bin/rails server
# Install PostgreSQL on macOS
brew install postgresql
# or on Ubuntu
sudo apt-get install postgresql postgresql-contrib
# Check if it's running
psql postgres # exit with \q
# Create user and database
createuser -Ps postgres
rake db:setup
Use script/server
to run Rails locally, otherwise you need to export the
environment options yourself:
bundle --without=production
script/server
For working with the whitelabel functionality, you need to add all supported
subdomains to your /etc/hosts
:
127.0.0.1 www.onruby.test hamburg.onruby.test cologne.onruby.test berlin.onruby.test madridrb.onruby.test andalucia.onruby.test
Access via https://www.onruby.test:3000
You don't need any test data to set up a new project!
If you want to have some kind of seed, use this Rake task, to generate some test data:
rake data:create
If you are a Heroku project admin, you can dump Data from Heroku via Taps Gem:
heroku pg:pull HEROKU_POSTGRESQL_MAROON_URL onruby_development
These are the steps to get your Ruby Usergroup Site:
- Fork this repo
- Run
bundle && bundle exec rake fork:usergroup[MyUsergroup]
- Create a GitHub Pull Request
- Lean back and wait :)
If you have a custom domain, you need to configure the DNS.
On the admin site we need to:
heroku domains:add xyz.onruby.de [custom.de]
- pull the custom domain into cloudflare
- create a new GitHub app for that domain and add keys via
heroku config:add
- merge the Pull Request
- deploy to Heroku
- add admin privileges to someone for the new RUG
In order to register for events, users need to log in first.
The app uses OAuth for that. At this point, it accepts Twitter 1, GitHub and Google as valid OAuth providers.
When a user is not currently logged in, selecting one of the login providers creates an account for him/her, attaching this provider as a valid auth mechanism.
When a user is already logged in, selecting another provider will add that auth mechanism to the existing user.
As a consequence of X deprecating API v1.1, Twitter authentication is not working anymore and registered users that only had defined Twitter as their auth method are left out in the cold.
In order to provide an easy way for these users to access their existing account using another auth provider, the app includes additional logic:
- If a new session successfully authenticates using a provider that includes email as part of their info.
- If a user (and only one user) already exists with that same email
- If that user was using Twitter (and only Twitter) as OAuth provider
If all of these conditions are met, then the new provider is added to the existing user and the login proceeds with that.
If the existing user had other providers already registered, then this logic doesn't kick in, as they can still use one of the others to log in.
As this behaviour could lead to potential account takeovers (if another user had access to an OAuth account with the same email of the original user) there's a deadline after which it will stop working.
The default deadline is the end of year 2024. If needed it can be ajusted by setting the environment variable TWITTER_USER_FALLBACK_DEADLINE
to a valid date address string (like '2025-06-30').
The app comes with a Administrate interface to manage the model data.
In order to access the admin stuff, you need to be a registered user with the "admin role".
Typus is mounted under /admin
of your label, so it's
https://hamburg.onruby.de/admin
for Hamburg.
- Users
- Events
- Materials
- Locations and Companies (Companies are just special Locations)
- Topics (Subjects for activities that users can request or propose)
- Jobs (These are displayed at top of the page)
- Highlights (Special information that you want to display for a short period of time)
"THE (extended) BEER-WARE LICENSE" (Revision 42.0815): phoet contributed to this project.
As long as you retain this notice you can do whatever you want with this stuff. If we meet some day, and you think this stuff is worth it, you can buy me some beers in return.
Footnotes
-
As of 2024 Twitter/X has deprecated API v1.1 and Twitter login is not working anymore ↩