This software creates an object store and user interface for the collection of mappings between human diseases and genetic variation as input by the ClinGen curation staff.
You will need a system with at least 2GB of available memory - npm install
will need
about 1GB to succeed, while elasticsearch will need at least 2GB for the JVM.
If you do not have homebrew installed, you can get it at brew.sh You may also want to have it globally available; if you run
bash, you can append export PATH=/usr/local/opt/[email protected]/bin:$PATH
to your ~/.bash_profile
file.
Verify that homebrew is working properly:
$ brew doctor
Install or update dependencies
$ brew install libevent libmagic libxml2 libxslt openssl graphviz $ brew install freetype libjpeg libtiff littlecms webp $ brew tap homebrew/cask $ brew cask install chromedriver # required for pillow
Note: For Mac < 10.9, the system python doesn't work. You should install Python 3.4.x; the preferred method is to use pyEnv, covered further down the list
Install postgres
$ brew install [email protected]
Install elasticsearch
- First, download v1.7.4.
- Next, unpack the tarball into a directory of your choice; suggested location is
/opt/elasticsearch
. - Finally, create symbolic links to the install location
$ ln -s [install location]/bin/elasticsearch /usr/local/bin/elasticsearch $ ln -s [install location]/bin/elasticsearch.in.sh /usr/local/bin/elasticsearch.in.sh
Install pyEnv and python 3.4
$ brew install pyenv $ pyenv install 3.4.3
If pyEnv fails on installation, this may help: https://github.com/pyenv/pyenv/wiki/Common-build-problems
To make the newly-installed version of python the system default
$ pyenv global 3.4.3
And to confirm the results
$ python —version
Install Node v6 (v6 is the current LTS version https://github.com/nodejs/LTS#lts-schedule ):
check node version:
$ node --versioninstall via homebrew (homebrew will indicate if you need to unlink a prior version of node):
$ brew install node@6or install via nvm:
$ npm install -g nvm $ nvm install 6 $ nvm use 6
Insure you are using npm 3 (check version: npm --version), if necessary update npm to npm 3:
$ npm install npm -g
If you need to update dependencies:
$ brew update $ brew upgrade $ make clean
You can also use the Makefile to set up for a clean buildout:
$ make clean
Then proceed to the section on installing python, node, and ruby depdendencies.
See cloud-config.yml in this repository. Use apt-get or yum or other package manager to install everything under packages. The rest of the install instructions assume you have python3.4 in your path.
Note: These will all be installed locally for the application and should never conflict with other system packages
Step 1b: Run buildout:
$ python3.4 bootstrap.py -v 2.9.5 --setuptools-version 15.2 $ bin/buildout -c buildout-dev.cfg
If you see a clang error like this:
clang: error: unknown argument: '-mno-fused-madd' [-Wunused-command-line-argument-hard-error-in-future]
You can try:
$ ARCHFLAGS=-Wno-error=unused-command-line-argument-hard-error-in-future bin/buildout
If it does not exist, set a session key:
$ cat /dev/urandom | head -c 256 | base64 > session-secret.b64
In one terminal startup the database servers with:
$ bin/dev-servers development.ini --app-name app --clear --init --load
This will first clear any existing data in /tmp/clincoded. Then postgres and elasticsearch servers will be initiated within /tmp/clincoded. The servers are started, and finally the test set will be loaded.
In a second terminal, run the app in with:
$ bin/pserve development.ini
Indexing will then proceed in a background thread similar to the production setup.
Browse to the interface at http://localhost:6543/.
To run specific tests locally:
$ bin/test -k test_name
To run with a debugger:
$ bin/test --pdb
Specific tests to run locally for schema changes:
$ bin/test -k test_load_workbook
Run the Pyramid tests with:
$ bin/test -m "not bdd"
Run the Browser tests with:
$ bin/test -m bdd -v -v
Run the Javascript tests with:
$ npm test
Or if you need to supply command line arguments:
$ ./node_modules/.bin/jest
Note: The below is generally superceeded by the dev-servers command which creates a temporary PG db, then throws it away. But this might be useful for some deep debugging.
If you wish a clean db wipe for DEVELOPMENT:
$ dropdb clincoded ... $ createdb clincoded $ pg_ctl -D /usr/local/var/postgres -l pg.log start
Database setup on VMs:
# service postgresql-9.4 initdb # service postgresql-9.4 start # sudo -u postgres createuser --createdb clincoded
Then as the clincoded user:
$ createdb clincoded
- To dump a postgres database:
- pg_dump -Fc clincoded > FILE_NAME (as user clincoded on demo vm) (FILE_NAME for production is ~/clincoded/archive/clincoded-YYYYMMDD.dump)
- To restore a postgres database:
- pg_restore -d clincoded FILE_NAME (as user clincoded on demo vm)
$ bin/create-mapping production.ini
SASS and Compass are being used. Before running to app, you need to builld the css files by starting 'compass watch' or doing a 'compass compile' (see below).
Both can be installed via Ruby gems:
$ gem install sass $ gem install compass
Compass can watch for any changes made to .scss files and instantly compile them to .css. To start this, from the root of the project (where config.rb is) do:
$ compass watch
You can specify whether the compiled CSS is minified or not in config.rb. (Currently, it is set to minify.)
$ compass compile
Again, you can specify whether the compiled CSS is minified or not in config.rb.
Also see the Compass Command Line Documentation and the Configuration Reference.
And of course:
$ compass help
To setup SublimeLinter with Sublime Text 3, first install the linters:
$ easy_install-2.7 flake8 $ npm install -g eslint $ npm install -g eslint-plugin-react
After first setting up Package Control (follow install and usage instructions on site), use it to install the following packages in Sublime Text 3:
- sublimelinter
- sublimelinter-flake8
- SublimeLinter-contrib-eslint (eslint instructions)
- babel (babel instructions)
The
[parts, bin]
directories are generated by the bootstrapping process. It's safe to delete this directory and re-run the bootstrapper if you run into errors during the buildout stepOSX: nvm may fail with xcode related issues. If so, this may help: nodejs/node-gyp#569
Postgres server not responding? Start the Postgres server if it hasn't yet started. You can check by running:
$ psql --username=postgres --host=/tmp/clincoded/pgdata/
This should put you into the Potgres CLI. If it's not running, you can start it by running:
$ pg_ctl -D /tmp/clincoded/pgdata -l psql_log.log start
Note that the
-l
option indicates a log file - suggested location is/var/log/postgres