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New Interfaces for Jewish Texts

Sefaria is creating interfaces, apps (like a source sheet builder) and infrastructure (like an API and a structured dataset) for Jewish texts and textual learning.

You can find outputs of our entire database in Sefaria-Export.

Interested developers should join the sefaria-dev mailing list.

For general discussion questions about the project, please email [email protected].

If you find textual problems in our library please email [email protected].

You can post bugs or request/discuss features on GitHub Issues. Tackling an issue marked as a "Starter Project" is a good way to sink your teeth into Sefaria.

If you're interested in working on a project you see listed here, please email the sefaria-dev mailing list.


Getting Started

First clone the Sefaria-Project repository to a directory on your computer, then follow the instructions:

Note: if you are a developer that might want to contribute code to Sefaria, we suggest first making a fork of this respository by clicking the "Fork" button above when logged in to GitHub.

Note for macOS users - Install Homebrew:

/bin/bash -c "$(curl -fsSL https://raw.githubusercontent.com/Homebrew/install/master/install.sh)"

1) Install Python 3

Linux and macOS

Most UNIX systems come with a python interpreter pre-installed. However, this is generally still Python 2. The recommended way to get Python 3, and not mess up any software the OS is dependant on, is by using Pyenv. You can use the instructions here and also here.

In a later step we can configure virtual environments to work with Pyenv so you can completely isolate your Sefaria stack.

Windows:

The Pyenv repository above also has recommendations for Windows.

In order to just plain install Python:

2) Install virtualenv (Recommended, but optional):

If you work on many Python projects, you may want to keep Sefaria's python installation separate using Virtualenv. If you're happy having Sefaria requirements in your main Python installation, skip this step.

Use With Pyenv (Recommended)

You can use virtualenv functionality while also using Pyenv, this allows you to further isolate you code and requirements from other projects.

Unix & Windows

Instructions here.

macOS:

Instructions here.

Create a pyenv virtualenv.

In your Sefaria directory, run pyenv local [venv-name]. This will create a .python-version and write the version name provided to the file (e.g. 3.7.5/envs/sefaria-venv). This should serve to activate the virtualenv whenever you are in the Sefaria directory.

Note: If after following the installation and configuration instructions, running python -V still displays the system version, you may have to manually add the shims directory to your path.

Note: If you are using an IDE like PyCharm, you can (and should) configure the interpreter options on your Sefaria-Project to point to the python executable of this virtualenv (e.g. ~/.pyenv/versions/3.7.5/envs/sefaria-venv/bin/python3.7)

Classic virtualenv

Install virtualenv then enter these commands:

Note: You may need to install Pip (see below) first in order to install virtualenv

Note: You can perform this step from anywhere in your command line, but it might be easier and tidier to run this step from the root of your project directory that you just cloned. e.g ~/web-projecs/Sefaria-Project $

virtualenv venv --distribute
source venv/bin/activate

Now you should see (venv) in front of your command prompt. The second command sets your shell to use the Python virtual environment that you've just created. This is something that you have to run everytime you open a new shell and want to run the Sefaria demo. You can always tell if you're in the virtual environment by checking if (venv) is at the beginning of your command prompt.

3) Pip:

Unix

If you don't already have it in your Python installation, install pip. Then use it to install the required Python packages.

Windows

Use instructions here and then make sure that the scripts sub folder of the python installation directory is also in PATH.

Note: this step (and most of the following command line instructions) must be run from the Sefaria-Project root directory

pip install -r requirements.txt

If you are not using virtualenv, you may have to run it with sudo: sudo pip install -r requirements.txt

Note: If you see an error about a missing 'python.h' file, you'll need to install the Python development libraries.

On Debian systems:
sudo apt-get install python-dev libpq-dev
On Fedora systems:
sudo dnf install python2-devel libpq-devel

Note: If you see an error that pg_config executable not found, you need to install PostgreSQL. If on MacOS you see an error while Building wheel for psycopg2 about linker command failed with exit code 1, you may need to add the path to OpenSSL

export LDFLAGS="-L/usr/local/opt/openssl/lib"
export CPPFLAGS="-I/usr/local/opt/openssl/include"

After installing the Python development libraries or other dependencies, run pip install -r requirements.txt again.

4) Install gettext

gettext is a GNU utility that Django uses to manage localizations.

On macOS:
brew install gettext

On some macOS systems gettext will still not run after installation and django manage.py makemessages will fail. In such a case, one easy solution is to add (replace x's with your gettext version number) to your .bashrc(or its equivalent on your system):

export TEMP_PATH=$PATH
export PATH=$PATH:/usr/local/Cellar/gettext/0.xx.x/bin
On Debian systems
sudo apt-get install gettext

5) Create a local settings file:

Note: this step must be run from the Sefaria-Project root directory

cd sefaria
cp local_settings_example.py local_settings.py
vim local_settings.py

Replace the placeholder values with those matching your environment. For the most part, you should only have to specify values in the top part of the file where it directs you to change the given values.

You can name your local database (sefaria will be the default created by mongorestore below). You can leave SEFARIA_DB_USER ad SEFARIA_DB_PASSWORD blank if you don't need to run authentication on Mongo.

6) Create a log directory:

Create a directory called log under the project folder. To do this, run mkdir log from the project's root directory. Make sure that the server user has write access to it by using a command such as chmod 777 log.

7) Get Mongo running:

If you don't already have it, install MongoDB. Our current data dump requires MongoDB version 2.6 or later. After installing Mongo, run the mongo daemon with:

sudo mongod

or user your os service manager to have it start on startup.

Note, you need to make sure the default data directory is created or sudo mongod will fail. See here for instructions on running sudo mongod for the first time.

8) Put some texts in your database:

MongoDB dumps of our database are available to download.

The recommended dump (which is of a manageable size) is available here.

A complete dump is also available here. The complete dump includes the history collections which contains a complete revision history of every text our library. For many applications this data is not relevant. We recommend using the smaller dump unless you're specifically interested in texts revision history within Sefaria.

From MongoDB version 4.4, mongorestore comes separately from the MongoDB server, you'll also need to download the Database Tools

Once you've download and unzipped this content, from the parent directory which contains dump run:

mongorestore --drop

This will create (or overwrite) a mongo database called sefaria.

If you have used dump_small.tar.gz, use the mongo client shell, or a GUI you have installed to create an empty collection inside the sefaria database called history.

9) Set up Django's local server

Sefaria is using Google's reCAPTCHA to verify the user is not a bot. For a deployment you should register and use your own reCAPTCHA keys (https://pypi.org/project/django-recaptcha/#installation). For local development the default test keys would suffice. The warning can be suprassed by uncommenting the following in the local_settings.py file:

SILENCED_SYSTEM_CHECKS = ['captcha.recaptcha_test_key_error']

manage.py is used to run and to manage the local server. It is located in the root directory of the Sefaria-Project code base.

Django auth features run on a separate database. To init this database and set up Django's auth system, switch to the root directory of the Sefaria-Project code base, and run (from the project root):

python manage.py migrate

10) Install Node:

Note: Older versions of Node and npm ran into a file name length limit on Windows OS. This problem should be mitigated in newer versions on Windows 10.

Node is now required to run the site. Even if you choose to have js run only on the client, we are also using Webpack to bundle our javascript.

Instaling Node and npm from the main installers on Node's homepage may cause permission issues. For that reason it is recommended to use one of the alternative methods (with a preference to a version manager like nvm) listed here:

Debian, Ubuntu and Linux Mint

You are better off using apt-get nodejs or following the instructions here. They will install both Node and npm.

macOS

use brew install node or nvm

Now download the required Javascript libraries and install some global tools for development with the setup script (from the project root).

npm install
npm run setup

If the second command fails, you may have to install using sudo npm run setup

Run Webpack

To get the site running, you need to bundle the javascript with Webpack. Run:

npm run build-client

to bundle once. To watch the javascript for changes and automatically rebuild, run:

npm run watch-client

Server-side rendering with Node:

Sefaria uses React.js. To render HTML server-side, we use a Node.js server. For development, the site is fully functional without server-side rendering. For deploying in a production environemnet however server side HTML is very important for bots and SEO.

Install Redis

To use server side rendering, you must also install Redis Cache. brew install redis or sudo apt-get install redis.

To run redis: redis-server. On MacOS: brew services start redis

Configure Django and Node to use Redis as a shared data store

Django

Update your local_settings.py file and replace the CACHES variable with the CACHES variable meant for server side rendering, commented out in local_settings_example.py.

Also make sure the following are set:

SESSION_CACHE_ALIAS = "default" #declares where Django's session engine will store data
USER_AGENTS_CACHE = 'default' #declares where the Django user agent middleware will store data (cannot be JSON encoded!)
SHARED_DATA_CACHE_ALIAS = 'shared' #Tells the application where to store data placed in cache by `sefaria.system.cache` shared-cache functions

USE_NODE = True
NODE_HOST = "http://localhost:3000" #Or whatever host and port you set node up to listen on

Node

The following environment variables, defined in ./node/local_settings.js, can be set to configure the node instance:

Env Var Default Description
NODEJS_PORT 3000 The port to be used by the NodeJs service
DEBUG false Determines whether the NodeJs service should run in debug mode
REDIS_HOST 127.0.0.1 The Redis instance to point Node to when running
REDIS_PORT 6379 The Default port Redis listens on

These variables can be set via command line explicitly, or set up to be defined when your machine's shell runs or set up in your IDE settings for running the node server.

For development, you can run the Node server using nodemon with:

npm start

To run webpack with server-side rendering, use:

npm run build

or

npm run watch

11) Run the development server:

python manage.py runserver

You can also make it publicly available by specifying 0.0.0.0 for the host:

python manage.py runserver 0.0.0.0:8000    

Command Line Interface

The shell script cli will invoke a python interpreter with the core models loaded, and can be used as a standalone interface to texts or for testing.

$ ./cli
>>> p = LinkSet(Ref("Genesis 13"))
>>> p.count()
226

Thanks

We're grateful to the following orgazations for providing us with donated services:

License

GPL

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