We, the community and staff, have been building a custom Django application to handle out many parts of our organization.
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Fork and clone this repository locally.
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Download and install OrbStack for Mac/Linux or Docker for Windows.
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Copy the
.env.samplefile to.env.cp .env.sample .env
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Run the following to get a random Django secret key.
python -c "import secrets; print(secrets.token_urlsafe())" -
Enter the output inside the
.envfile forSECRET_KEY. Be sure to include the double quotes (") around the key. It'll look like the followingSECRET_KEY="<unique-key-here>". -
Navigate into the project directory via terminal and run
docker compose up --build -
Load up your browser and go to http://127.0.0.1:8000.
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When you are done, you can stop the project via
ctrl+c
username: admin@sink.sendgrid.net
password: adminusername: mentor@sink.sendgrid.net
password: mentorusername: guardian@sink.sendgrid.net
password: guardianAfter the initial project setup, you will only need to run docker compose up --build.
To setup the main respository as upstream, you can add a new remote called upstream.
git remote add upstream https://github.com/WeAllCode/website.gitTo grab the latest code from the main repo (named upstream), run the following.
git fetch upstream --prune
git checkout main
git merge upstream/main mainCreate a new branch based off of upstream's main branch.
git fetch upstream --prune
git checkout -b feature/a-good-name upstream/main
git push -u origin feature/a-good-namePull requests are always welcome. Make sure your pull request does one task only. That is, if it's fixing a bug, the pull request fixes only that bug. If you're adding a feature, make sure the pull request adds that one feature, not multiple at once.
Follow the "Creating a new branch" step above. Be sure to always push to your origin remote, not upstream.
- Running a command on a Docker app in a new container.
docker compose run --rm app <command>Examples:
docker compose run --rm app /bin/bash
docker compose run --rm app uv lock
docker compose run --rm app python manage.py makemigrations
docker compose run --rm app python manage.py migrate- Cleaning up the docker containers:
docker kill $(docker ps -q); docker compose rm -f; docker volume rm $(docker volume ls -qf dangling=true);- Rebuild docker containers after major changes:
docker compose build