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Click here to lend your support to: Snipe IT - Free Open Source Asset Management System and make a donation at pledgie.com !

Snipe-IT - Asset Management For the Rest of Us

This is a FOSS project for asset management in IT Operations. Knowing who has which laptop, when it was purchased in order to depreciate it correctly, handling software licenses, etc.

It is built on Laravel 4 and uses the Sentry 2 package.

Many thanks to the Laravel 4 starter site for a quick start.

This project is being actively developed (at what seems like breakneck speed sometimes!) We're still in alpha release, so this is NOT recommended for production use yet, as many more things will likely change before v1.0-stable is ready - but we're releasing quite frequently.

Bug Reports and Feature Requests

Feel free to check out the GitHub Issues for this project to check on progress, open a bug report, request a feature, or see what open issues you can help with.


Requirements

  • PHP 5.4 or later
  • MCrypt PHP Extension

Important Note on Updating

Whenever you pull down a new version from master or develop, when you grab the latest official release, make sure to run the following commands via command line:

php composer.phar dump-autoload
php artisan migrate

Forgetting to do this can mean your DB might end up out of sync with the new files you just pulled, or you may have some funky cached autoloader values. It's a good idea to get into the habit of running these every time you pull anything new down. If there are no database changes to migrate, it won't hurt anything to run migrations anyway.


How to Install

1) Downloading

1.1) Clone the Repository

git clone http://github.com/snipe/snipe-it your-folder

1.2) Download the Repository

https://github.com/snipe/snipe-it/archive/master.zip

2) Setup Database and Mail Settings

2.1) Setup Your Database

Copy the example database config app/config/local/database.example.php to database.php. Update the file app/config/local/database.php with your database name and credentials.

vi app/config/local/database.php

2.2) Setup Mail Settings

Copy the example mail config app/config/local/mail.example.php to mail.php. Update the file app/config/local/mail.php with your mail settings.

vi app/config/local/mail.php

This will be used to send emails to your users, when they register and they request a password reset.

2.3) Adjust the application settings.

Copy the example app config app/config/local/app.example.php to app.php.

Update the file app/config/local/app.php with your setting URL settings.

vi app/config/local/app.php

You should also change your secret key here -- if you prefer to have your key randomly generated, run the artisan key:generate command from the application root.

php artisan key:generate --env=local

2.4) Adjust Environments

Update the file boostrap/start.php' under the section Detect The Application Environment`.

vi bootstrap/start.php

2.5) Additional Adjustments

The app is configured to automatically detect if you're in a local, staging, or production environment. Before deploying to a staging or production environment, follow sets 2.1, 2.2, and 2.3 above to tweak each environment as nescessary. Configuration files for each environment can be found in app/config/{environment} (local, staging, and production).


3) Install the Dependencies via Composer

3.1) If you don't have composer installed globally
cd your-folder
curl -s http://getcomposer.org/installer | php
php composer.phar install
3.2) For global composer installations
cd your-folder
composer install

4) Use custom CLI Installer Command

Now, you need to create yourself a user and finish the installation.

Use the following command to create your default user, user groups and run all the necessary migrations automatically.

php artisan app:install

6) Fix permissions

You'll need to make sure that the app/storage directory is writable by your webserver, since caches and log files get written there. You should use the minimum permissions available for writing, based on how you've got your webserver configured.

chmod -R 755 app/storage

If you still run into a permissions error, you may need to increase the permissions to 775, or twiddle your user/group permissions on your server.

chmod -R 775 app/storage

7) Set the correct document root for your server

The document root for the app should be set to the public directory. In a standard Apache virtualhost setup, that might look something like this on a standard linux LAMP stack:

<VirtualHost *:80>
DocumentRoot /var/www/html/public
ServerName www.example.org

# Other directives here
</VirtualHost>

An OS X virtualhost setup could look more like:

Directory "/Users/flashingcursor/Sites/snipe-it/public/">
Allow From All
AllowOverride All
Options +Indexes
</Directory>
<VirtualHost *:80>
        ServerName "snipe-it.dev"
        DocumentRoot "/Users/flashingcursor/Sites/snipe-it/public"
SetEnv LARAVEL_ENV development
</VirtualHost>

8) Seed the Database

Loading up the sample data will give you an idea of how this should look, how your info should be structured, etc. It only pre-loads a handful of items, so you won't have to spend an hour deleting sample data.

php artisan db:seed

Optional Development Stuff

Set up the debugbar

In dev mode, I use the fabulous Laravel Debugbar by @barryvdh. After you've installed/updated composer, you'll need to publish the assets for the debugbar:

php artisan debugbar:publish

The profiler is enabled by default if you have debug set to true in your app.php. You certainly don't have to use it, but it's pretty handy for troubleshooting queries, seeing how much memory your pages are using, etc.


Purging the autoloader

If you're doing any development on this, make sure you purge the auto-loader if you see any errors stating the new model you created can't be found, etc, otherwise your new models won't be grokked.

php composer.phar dump-autoload

Running this on an EC2 Micro Instance

Depending on your needs, you could probably run this system in an EC2 micro instance. It doesn't take up very much memory and typically won't be a super-high-traffic application. EC2 micros fall into the free/dirt-cheap tier, which might make this a nice option. One thing to note though - composer can be a little memory-intensive while you're running updates, and you may have trouble with it failing on a micro. You can crank the memory_limit up in php.ini, but EC2 micros have swap disabled by default, so even that may not cut it. If you run into totally unhelpful error messages while running composer updates (like simply 'Killed') or fatal memory issues mentioning phar, your best bet will be to enable swap:

sudo /bin/dd if=/dev/zero of=/var/swap.1 bs=1M count=1024
sudo /sbin/mkswap /var/swap.1
sudo /sbin/swapon /var/swap.1

If you need more than 1024 then change that to something higher.

To enable it by default after reboot, add this line to /etc/fstab:

/var/swap.1 swap swap defaults 0 0

License

Copyright (C) 2013 Alison Gianotto - snipe@snipe.net

This program is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify
it under the terms of the GNU Affero General Public License as published by
the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or
(at your option) any later version.

This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.  See the
GNU Affero General Public License for more details.

You should have received a copy of the GNU Affero General Public License
along with this program.  If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.

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