Pieces of the pygame website (https://www.pygame.org/) will be open sourced here.
Strategy is to bring in code one piece at a time, and clean it up as I go.
It's a community website where people can post projects, comment on them, but also write things in there themselves on wiki pages.
Set up the required packages:
python3.6 -m venv anenv . ./anenv/bin/activate pip install --upgrade pip pip install -r requirements.dev.txt pip install -e .
For now yuicompressor is needed for css compression, and imagamagick and optipng are needed for creating and optimizing image thumbnails, additionally postgresql is the database of choice:
brew install yuicompressor node optipng imagemagick postgresql sudo apt-get install yui-compressor nodejs optipng imagemagick postgresql postgresql-client libpq-dev
Define a .env file based on the example.env file.
cp example.env .env
Define the APP_SECRET_KEY variable in the .env file or the tests won't work. You can define any value, like "a" or "s3cret-stuff-blah".
See setup.cfg for all tool config (pytest, coverage, etc).
postgresql 9.6
One database for testing, and another one for running the app.
We use alembic for db migrations. http://alembic.readthedocs.org/en/latest/
Set up the postgresql database:
sudo -u postgres createdb pygame sudo -u postgres psql pygame -c "CREATE USER pygame WITH PASSWORD 'password';" sudo -u postgres psql pygame -c "GRANT ALL PRIVILEGES ON DATABASE pygame to pygame;"
We also create a database for running tests:
sudo -u postgres createdb pygame_test sudo -u postgres psql pygame -c "CREATE USER pygame_test WITH PASSWORD 'password';" sudo -u postgres psql pygame_test -c "GRANT ALL PRIVILEGES ON DATABASE pygame_test to pygame_test;"
To upgrade to latest model changes do:
alembic upgrade head
When you change a model make an alembic revision:
alembic revision --autogenerate -m "Added a field for these reasons."
Then you will need to apply the change to your db (and commit the version file):
alembic upgrade head
http://docs.pytest.org/en/latest/
To run all unit tests and functional tests use:
pytest
To watch for changes and rerun tests:
ptw
Maybe you just want to test the wiki parts:
pytest -k wiki
tests/unit/ are for unit tests. tests/functional/ are for tests which would use flask and db. tests/conftest.py is for test configuration. tests/sqlpytestflask.py are some fixtures for db testing.
Unit tests and functional tests are kept separate, because functional tests can take a while longer to run.
We use various fixtures to make writing the tests easier and faster.
Use an environment variable to configure the database connection (see the database setup steps above):
export APP_DATABASE_URL="postgresql://pygame:password@localhost/pygame"
Configure a directory containing static files:
export APP_WWW="static/"
The application may need a secure key, but for debugging it's not important that it's properly random:
export APP_SECRET_KEY="s3cret-stuff-blah"
Finally, you can enable some Flask debugging machinery (which should be off for the site in production):
export APP_DEBUG=1
Now add the database fixtures to populate it with sample users. After that, you should be able to
login as admin with email admin@example.com
and password password
:
pygameweb_fixtures
Then run:
pygameweb_front
pygameweb/templates/
We use:
* `Jinja2 <http://jinja.pocoo.org/>`_ * `Flask-Bootstrap <https://pythonhosted.org/Flask-Bootstrap/basic-usage.html>`_ * `Bootstrap <http://getbootstrap.com/>`_
We use click and setuptools entry points (in setup.py) for command line tools:
* `click <http://click.pocoo.org/5/>`_ * `entry points <https://packaging.python.org/distributing/#entry-points>`_
Note, when you add or change a command line tool, you need to pip install -e . again.
If you can, try not to use command line options at all. Have one command do one thing, and make the defaults good, or use the pygameweb.config.
pygameweb.user pygameweb/templates/security
Using:
* `flask-security-fork <https://flask-security-fork.readthedocs.io/en/latest/quickstart.html>`_
pygameweb.nav pygameweb.page.models
Using:
* `flask-nav <http://pythonhosted.org/flask-nav/>`_ * `flask-bootstrap <https://pythonhosted.org/Flask-Bootstrap/nav.html>`_
of all sorts of things happening in the pygame worlds around the interwebs.
It's a 7000px wide webpage offering a summary of what's happening.
Projects people are working on, videos folks are making, tweets twits are... tweeting, questions asked and answered.
use Flask-Caching
pygameweb.cache pygameweb.news.views
With with a @cache decorator, and/or markup in a template.
Step by step release instructions below.
- Commits to main branch do a dev deploy to pypi.
- Commits to maintest branch do a dev deploy to pypi.
- Commits to a tag do a real deploy to pypi.
https://packaging.python.org/tutorials/distributing-packages/#pre-release-versioning
Pre releases should be named like this:
`
# pygameweb/__init__.py
__version__ = '0.0.2'
`
Which is one version ahead of of the last tagged release.
Release tags should be like '0.0.2', and match the pygameweb/__init__.py __version__.
It's a good idea to start a branch first, and make any necessary changes for the release.
`
git checkout -b v0.0.2
vi pygameweb/__init__.py __version__ = '0.0.2'
git commit -m "Version 0.0.2"
`
Github 'releases' are done as well. You can start drafting the release notes in there before the tag. https://help.github.com/articles/creating-releases/
You can make the release notes with the help of the changes since last release. https://github.com/pygame/pygameweb/compare/0.0.1...main
git log 0.0.1...main
When the release is tagged, pushing it starts the deploy to pypi off.
`
git tag -a 0.0.2
git push origin 0.0.2
`
Note: do not tag pre releases
(these are made on commits to main/maintest).
After the tag is pushed, then you can do the release in github from your draft release.
If we were at 0.0.2 before, now we want to be at 0.0.3.dev
`
vi pygameweb/__init__.py __version__ = '0.0.3.dev'
`
Merge the release branch into main, and push that up.
Please discuss contributions first to avoid disappointment and rework.
Please see contribution-guide.org and Python Code of Conduct for details on what we expect from contributors. Thanks!
The stack? python 3.6, postgresql 9.6, Flask, py.test, sqlalchemy, alembic, gulp, ansible, node.