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The 2077-CMS project is a custom-built content management system (CMS) designed to manage and publish articles with advanced features such as scheduling, filtering by status, and integration with external services like Redis, Celery, and Django-Mail. The project is structured with a Django backend and uses Django REST Framework (DRF) for API development. The Django backend is consumed on the frontend built with Astro.
- Articles have two statuses: Draft and Ready.
- Only articles with the Ready status are rendered on the client-side.
- Ability to schedule status changes from Draft to Ready.
- Articles are associated with authors, with the first author automatically populated as the logged-in user.
- The system uses UUIDs for article IDs to ensure uniqueness and security.
- Users can subscribe to a newsletter where article threads are automatically sent to their email addresses.
- Django-Mail is used for handling newsletters, including subscription management and email delivery.
- Users have the ability to unsubscribe from the newsletter.
- The project utilizes Celery and Celery Beat to manage background tasks such as publishing scheduled articles.
- Tasks are scheduled using crontab, intervals, or solar events through the Django admin interface.
- Redis is configured as the broker for Celery tasks.
- The project uses separate settings for development and production environments.
- Environment variables are managed using a
.env
file, withDJANGO_SETTINGS_MODULE
switched betweencore.config.local
for development andcore.config.production
for production. - A Redis server runs on port 6378 on the VPS, while another instance runs on the default port 6379 for local development.
- The project is deployed on a VPS using Gunicorn as the WSGI server and Supervisor to manage processes.
- Nginx serves as the reverse proxy for Gunicorn.
- Redis is used for caching and as the broker for Celery tasks.
- Models are defined using UUIDs and slugs.
- Custom admin configurations are used to handle complex relationships like many-to-many associations between articles and categories.
- The
celery.py
configuration dynamically switches between local and production settings based on the environment. - Celery Beat is used for scheduling tasks, with periodic tasks defined directly in the code.
- Two instances of Redis are running, with one configured on port 6378 to avoid conflicts with the default Redis instance on port 6379.
- Background saving and snapshotting are carefully managed to avoid performance issues and data loss.
- Django-Mail Library is used to manage email lists and send newsletters.
- Users can subscribe and unsubscribe from newsletters through the CMS interface.
- The Django admin interface allows for management of periodic tasks, clocked tasks, crontabs, intervals, and solar events.
- Administrators can configure task schedules without directly modifying code.
- Non-essential models related to periodic tasks, such as Clocked, Crontabs, Intervals, and Solar events, are hidden from the admin dashboard to simplify the interface.
- Always ensure that
DJANGO_SETTINGS_MODULE
is correctly set in the environment variables to prevent configuration issues. - Use
systemctl daemon-reload
after making changes to systemd service files, and always monitor the impact of these changes.
- Monitor Celery and Celery Beat using Supervisor, ensuring that logs are properly configured and accessible.
- Running multiple Redis instances can increase server resource usage. Monitor the performance impact and ensure that the system is not overburdened by unnecessary processes.
- Consider integrating a feature that allows Django-Mail to generate email content from articles across multiple projects.
- Explore further optimizations for Redis and Celery to improve performance, especially under high load conditions.
This wiki serves as the primary documentation for the 2077-CMS project. It should be updated as new features are added or existing ones are modified.
- Chijindu Julian - Tech Lead
- Happy Felix Chukwuma - Project Lead Developer
- Ian K. Guimarães - [Core Contributor]
- Ayomide Alonge - [Contributor]
This project is licensed under the MIT License - see the LICENSE file for details.
For any questions, issues, or suggestions, please open an issue on GitHub.
© 2024 2077-CMS Project. All rights reserved.