forked from MapComplete/MapComplete
		
	
		
			
				
	
	
		
			148 lines
		
	
	
	
		
			7.3 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			Markdown
		
	
	
	
	
	
			
		
		
	
	
			148 lines
		
	
	
	
		
			7.3 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			Markdown
		
	
	
	
	
	
| Development and deployment
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| ==========================
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| 
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| There are various scripts to help setup MapComplete for deployment and develop-deployment.
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| 
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| This documents attempts to shed some light on these scripts.
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| 
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| Note: these scripts change every now and then - if the documentation here is incorrect or you run into troubles, do
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| leave a message in [the issue tracker](https://github.com/pietervdvn/MapComplete/issues)
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| 
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| Architecture overview
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| ---------------------
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| 
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| At its core, MapComplete is a static (!) website. There are no servers to host.
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| 
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| The data is fetched from Overpass/OSM/Wikidata/Wikipedia/Mapillary/... and written there directly. This means that any
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| static file server will do to create a self-hosted version of MapComplete.
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| 
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| Development
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| -----------
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| 
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| **Windows users**: All scripts are made for linux devices. Use the Ubuntu terminal for Windows (or even better - make
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| the switch ;) ). If you are using Visual Studio Code you can use
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| a [WSL Remote](https://marketplace.visualstudio.com/items?itemName=ms-vscode-remote.remote-wsl) window, or use the
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| Devcontainer (see more details later).
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| 
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| You need at least 3Gb available to run MapComplete.
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| 
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| To develop and build MapComplete, you
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| 
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| 0. Make a fork and clone the repository. (We recommend a shallow clone with `git clone --filter=blob:none <repo>`)
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| 1. Install `python3` if you do not have it already
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|     - On linux: `sudo apt install python3`
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|     - On windows: find the latest download on the [Python Releases for Windows page](https://www.python.org/downloads/windows/)
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| 2. Install the nodejs version specified in [/.tool-versions](/.tool-versions)
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|     - On linux: install npm first `sudo apt install npm`, then install `n` using npm: ` npm install -g n`, which can
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|       then install node with `n install <node-version>`. You can [use asdf to manage your runtime versions](https://asdf-vm.com/).
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|     - Windows: install nodeJS: https://nodejs.org/en/download/
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| 3. Run `npm run init` which …
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|     - runs `npm install`
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|     - generates some additional dependencies and files
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| 4. Run `npm run start` to host a local testversion at http://localhost:1234/index.html
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| 5. By default, a landing page with available themes is served. In order to load a single theme, use `layout=themename`
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|    or `userlayout=true#<layout configuration>` as [Query parameter](URL_Parameters.md). Note that the shorter URLs (
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|    e.g. `bookcases.html`, `aed.html`, ...) _don't_ exist on the development version.
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| 
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| Development using Windows
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| ------------------------
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| 
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| For Windows you can use the devcontainer, or the WSL subsystem.
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| 
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| To use the devcontainer in Visual Studio Code:
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| 
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| 0. Make sure you have installed
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|    the [Remote - Containers](https://marketplace.visualstudio.com/items?itemName=ms-vscode-remote.remote-containers)
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|    extension and it's dependencies.
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| 1. Make a fork and clone the repository.
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| 2. After cloning, Visual Studio Code will ask you if you want to use the devcontainer.
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| 3. Then you can either clone it again in a volume (for better performance), or open the current folder in a container.
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| 4. By now, you should be able to run `npm run start` to host a local testversion at http://localhost:1234/index.html
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| 5. By default, a landing page with available themes is served. In order to load a single theme, use `layout=themename`
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|    or `userlayout=true#<layout configuration>` as [Query parameter](URL_Parameters.md). Note that the shorter URLs (
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|    e.g. `bookcases.html`, `aed.html`, ...) _don't_ exist on the development version.
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| 
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| To use the WSL in Visual Studio Code:
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| 
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| 0. Make sure you have installed the [Remote - WSL]() extension and it's dependencies.
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| 1. Open a remote WSL window using the button in the bottom left.
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| 2. Make a fork and clone the repository.
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| 3. Install `npm` using `sudo apt install npm`.
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| 4. Run `npm run init` and generate some additional dependencies and generated files. Note that it'll install the
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|    dependencies too
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| 5. Run `npm run start` to host a local testversion at http://localhost:1234/index.html
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| 6. By default, a landing page with available themes is served. In order to load a single theme, use `layout=themename`
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|    or `userlayout=true#<layout configuration>` as [Query parameter](URL_Parameters.md). Note that the shorter URLs (
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|    e.g. `bookcases.html`, `aed.html`, ...) _don't_ exist on the development version.
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| 
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| Dependencies
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| ------------
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| 
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| `make` , `python3` `g++`
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| 
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| (Nix users may run `nix-env -iA nixos.gnumake nixos.gdc nixos.python3`)
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| 
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| Automatic deployment
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| --------------------
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| 
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| Currently, the master branch is automatically deployed to 'mapcomplete.osm.be' by a github action.
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| 
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| Every branch is automatically built (upon push) to 'pietervdvn.github.io/mc/<branchname>' by a github action.
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| 
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| 
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| Deploying a fork
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| ----------------
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| 
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| A script creates a webpage for every theme automatically, with some customizations in order to:
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| 
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| - to have shorter urls
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| - have individual social images
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| - have individual web manifests
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| 
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| This script can be invoked with `npm run prepare-deploy`
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| 
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| If you want to deploy your fork:
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| 
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| 0. `npm run prepare-deploy`
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| 1. `npm run build`
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| 2. Copy the entire `dist` folder to where you host your website. Visiting `index.html` gives you the landing page,
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|    visiting `yourwebsite/<theme>` should bring you to the appropriate theme.
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| 
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| Weird errors
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| ------------
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| 
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| Try removing `node_modules`, `package-lock.json` and `.cache`
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| 
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| Misc setup
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| ----------
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| 
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| ~~The json-git-merger is used to quickly merge translation
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| files, [documentation here](https://github.com/jonatanpedersen/git-json-merge#single-project--directory).~~
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| This merge driver is broken and would sometimes drop new questions or duplicate them... Not a good idea!
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| 
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| Overview of package.json-scripts
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| --------------------------------
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| 
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| - `increase-memory`: this is a big (and memory-intensive) project to build and run, so we give nodejs some more RAM.
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| - `start`: start a development server.
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| - `test`: run the unit tests
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| - `init`: Generates and downloads various assets which are needed to compile
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| - `generate:editor-layer-index`: downloads the editor-layer-index-json from osmlab.github.io
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| - `generate:images`: compiles the SVG's into an asset
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| - `generate:translations`: compiles the translation file into a javascript file
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| - `generate:layouts`: uses `index.html` as template to create all the theme index pages. You'll want to run `clean` when
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|   done
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| - `generate:docs`: generates various documents, such as information about available metatags, information to put on
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|   the [OSM-wiki](https://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/MapComplete),...
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| - `generate:report`: downloads statistics from OsmCha, compiles neat graphs
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| - `generate:cache:speelplekken`: creates an offline copy of all the data required for one specific (paid for) theme
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| - `generate:layeroverview`: reads all the theme- and layerconfigurations, compiles them into a single JSON.
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| - `reset:layeroverview`: if something is wrong with the layeroverview, creates an empty one
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| - `generate:licenses`: compiles all the license info of images into a single json
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| - `optimize:images`: attempts to make smaller pngs - optional to run before a deployment
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| - `generate`: run all the necesary generate-scripts
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| - `build`: actually bundle all the files into a single `dist/`-folder
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| - `prepare-deploy`: create the layouts
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| - `deploy:staging`,`deploy:pietervdvn`, `deploy:production`: deploy the latest code on various locations
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| - `lint`: get depressed by the amount of warnings
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| - `clean`: remove some generated files which are annoying in the repo
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