Getting started
GitHub
Clowder uses OAuth for authentication, with the current provider being GitHub.
At your local site, you need to create a
GitHub OAuth application
with your own Client ID and Client Secret.
Set up environment variables containing these values, or put them in a .env
file in your source directory:
Rust
For the moment, we depend on crates that depend on Rust nightly (see SergioBenitez/Rocket#19 for our main blocker). You will likely want to use Rustup to install the nightly version of Rust.
Database
Clowder requires a database to be created that is accessible to the user running the service. Using Postgres (at least on FreeBSD), this looks like:
# service postgresql initdb
# service postgresql start
# su - postgres
postgres=# ;
postgres=# ;
You should set the database URL in an environment variable, or in a
.env
file within your source directory:
Once the database has been created, we use the Diesel ORM to initialize it:
Clowder
Once Rust and the Clowder database have been set up, you can build and run Clowder!
Development environment
Fake user account
You can set CLOWDER_FAKE_GITHUB_USERNAME
in your environment (or .env
file)
to provide a username to be treated as if it were obtained from the normal
GitHub OAuth workflow.
Reloading
For development purposes, I like to use cargo-watch to rebuild whenever I change a source file:
This goes quite nicely with LiveReload.