A site dedicated to sharing and composing patterns for the Roland TB-303 and its various clones and emulations. Still under development, but soon be live at acidpattern.com
Graphically inspired by early rave music forums, chunky VST design and old LCD panels.
If you're working a fork of this project or looking to contribute, the following guide will help you get acidpattern running locally.
This guide assumes you have python 3.12 or greater installed on your system. Compatibility with older version of Python has not been determined at this time.
In the root directory run python -m venv .venv
to establish a virtual environment. Activate the environment with source .venv/Scripts/activate
on Windows or source .venv/bin/activate
on MacOS/Linux.
Install the dependencies with python -m pip install
, if using poetry: poetry install
.
Navigate into the /frontend
folder and run npm install
to install the frontend dependencies.
Create a .env file in the root project directory and add the following code.
DJANGO_SERVER = 'http://localhost:8000'
FRONTEND_SERVER = 'http://localhost:5173'
DJANGO_SECRET_KEY = ''
In the /frontend folder, create .env containing the following:
VITE_BACKEND='http://localhost:8000'
If you're planning to run on different ports or a server, adjust accordingly.
You will also need to create a secret key for django.
Activate a python shell in the terminal python
and run the following.
from django.core.management.utils import get_random_secret_key
print(get_random_secret_key())
Take the secret key and use it as the DJANGO_SECRET_KEY
exit()
to close the Python shell.
In the acidpattern_api/
directory, run python manage.py migrate
to create the database.
Run python manage.py createsuperuser
to establish a superuser for the database.
npm run dev
in the frontend/
directory.
python manage.py runserver
in the acidpattern_api/
directory/
npm run django-dev
in the frontend/
directory.
npm run vite-dev
in the frontend/
directory.
Tests can be run for the backend by navigating to acidpattern_api
and running coverage run manage.py test
within the venv shell.
Copyright 2024 Henry Oberholtzer
Original code licensed under a GNU GPLv3