Welcome to the Me0w00f Blogger project! This endeavor aims to create a blog site that is both feature-rich and visually appealing for our team.
git clone https://github.com/me0w00f/me0w00f_organization_blogger_backend.git me0w00f_backend
cd me0w00f_backend
Install the required Python packages:
pip install -r requirements.txt
Ensure MariaDB is installed and configured on your system. Then, proceed to set up the me0w00f
database and user:
mysql -u root -p
CREATE DATABASE me0w00f;
GRANT ALL PRIVILEGES ON me0w00f.* TO 'me0w00f'@'localhost' IDENTIFIED BY 'secure_password';
FLUSH PRIVILEGES;
Replace secure_password
with a strong, secure password of your choice.
Edit the config.py
file to set your database connection details:
......
# Database
DATABASE_URL = "mysql://me0w00f:secure_password@localhost/me0w00f"
......
Create a admin_list.json
file to define the administrators responsible for publishing content:
[
{
"user_name": "admin1",
"password": "secure_password_1",
"email": "admin1@example.com"
},
{
"user_name": "admin2",
"password": "secure_password_2",
"email": "admin2@example.com"
},
{
"user_name": "admin3",
"password": "secure_password_3",
"email": "admin3@example.com"
}
]
Make sure to replace the placeholder passwords and email addresses with actual secure credentials.
To start the application using uvicorn
on Linux, execute the provided shell script:
./run.sh
Alternatively, you can create and edit a systemd service to manage the run.sh
script as a service.
- Create a systemd service file:
Usually, systemd service files are stored in /etc/systemd/system/
. You'll need to create a new service file here.
sudo vim /etc/systemd/system/me0w00f_backend.service
- Edit the service file:
Add the following content to your service file, which defines the service and how it should be managed.
[Unit]
Description=Me0w00f Blogger Backend Service
After=network.target
[Service]
User=<username>
Group=<group>
WorkingDirectory=/path/to/me0w00f_backend
ExecStart=/path/to/me0w00f_backend/run.sh
Restart=always
[Install]
WantedBy=multi-user.target
Replace <username>
and <group>
with the user and group that should run the service, and /path/to/me0w00f_backend
with the actual path to your backend directory.
- Enable and start the service:
After saving and closing the service file, you can enable the service to start on boot and then start the service immediately.
sudo systemctl enable me0w00f_backend.service
sudo systemctl start me0w00f_backend.service
- Check the service status:
To ensure that the service is running properly, you can check its status with the following command:
sudo systemctl status me0w00f_backend.service
- Managing the service:
You can use standard systemctl
commands to start, stop, restart, and check the status of your service.
sudo systemctl start me0w00f_backend.service # To start the service
sudo systemctl stop me0w00f_backend.service # To stop the service
sudo systemctl restart me0w00f_backend.service # To restart the service
sudo systemctl status me0w00f_backend.service # To check the service