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NCSS CoffeeRun by Maddy

Running Locally

  • Create a virtual environment: virtualenv --python="$(which python3)" env
  • Activate the virtual enviroment: source env/bin/activate
  • install requirements: pip install -r requirements/dev.txt
  • Create the database and tables and a default user with create_db.py python3 create_db.py
  • Run on command line:
    • python3 run.py (for the web ui)
    • python3 coffeebot.py (for the slack bot)
  • Open the browser at http://localhost:5000 (note: Use localhost, not 127.0.0.1)

Running tests locally

  • Activate the virtual enviroment: source env/bin/activate
  • Run the coffeespec tests: python test_coffeespecs.py

Running On The Website

  • Push changes to the site using git push heroku master
  • The program is started by this
  • There's no DB migration, manually do any changes before you push the dependent changes

Making a new instance

Prereqs

  1. Heroku CLI - https://devcenter.heroku.com/articles/heroku-cli
  2. psql - idono, search your package manager (should come with postgres)
  3. git clone git@github.com:ncss/ncss-coffeerun.git
  4. python -m venv .venv
  5. source .venv/bin/activate (Every time you want to run/use this code)
  6. pip install -r requirements/prod.txt (You need postgres, and you might have to mess with versions because of changes in Python - remove the version requirement and see what happens!)

Heroku

  1. Create a new app: https://dashboard.heroku.com/new-app
  2. heroku heroku git:remote -a <heroku-app-name> (add --remote=<blah> if you want to have a different name)
  3. git push heroku master (replace heroku with custom remote name if you did that)

Slack

  1. Create a new Slack app: https://api.slack.com/apps?new\_app=1
  2. Add a bot user (and always show as online - but it probably doesn't matter)
  3. Install app to workspace (under OAuth & Permissions menu)
  4. Add redirect urls (under OAuth & Permissions)
    • https://<heroku-app-name>.herokuapp.com/login/authorized
    • https://<heroku-app-name>.herokuapp.com/team-auth-done/

Auth things

  1. On Slack app settings page under Basic Information get the Client ID and Client Secret
  2. On Heroku, go to the Settings tab and Reveal Config Vars
    • Add KEY=SLACK_OAUTH_CLIENT_ID, VALUE=<client_id>
    • Add KEY=SLACK_OAUTH_CLIENT_SECRET, VALUE=<client_secret>

Database things

  1. export SLACK_OAUTH_CLIENT_ID='<client_id>'
  2. export SLACK_OAUTH_CLIENT_SECRET='<client_secret>'
  3. export DATABASE_URL=$(heroku config:get DATABASE_URL -a <heroku-app-name>
  4. (In virtualenv) python create_db.py

More auth and database things

  1. Go to https://.herokuapp.com/ and login with Slack
  2. Go to https://.herokuapp.com/team-auth/ and add it to the right workspace and channel
    • "Access token stored in db" is Good!
  3. Get the bot user details
    • Slack user id (This is probably terrible and totally wrong): New direct message to the bot user, pick out the part after /team/ in the URL you get when you hover over the @name.
    • Bot OAuth access token: In Slack app settings, OAuth & Permissions, copy the Bot token
  4. Hack the database
    1. psql psql $(heroku config:get DATABASE_URL -a <heroku-app-name>
    2. update slack_team_access_token set coffee_bot_slack_user_id = '<user_id>', coffee_bot_slack_access_token = '<bot_token>', wants_slack_notifications=true;

Last steps

  1. On Heroku, go to the Resources tab
  2. Enable the worker python coffeebot.py
  3. Add the bot user to the right channel somehow (I like to @ it)

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