This project has moved to https://gitlab.com/yale-sdmp/reservations. Please visit that repo for the latest releases and to report issues. This repository will no longer be monitored.
Reservations makes it easy to manage the checking in and out of equipment, much like a library! Here are some of the things Reservations can do:
There are two mains steps to setting up Reservations: setting up a deployment server, and installing the Reservations application.
You'll need the following to run Reservations:
For troubleshooting, see our wiki.
First, checkout a copy of Reservations using git:
cd /your/code/directory
git clone https://github.com/YaleSTC/reservations.git
cd reservations
Reservations uses Bundler to manage dependencies, so if you don't have it, get it, then install dependencies:
gem install bundler
bundle install
You'll need to edit config/database.yml to point to your database, including the correct username and password. See Rails Guides for common database examples. We package a few example files in the config/
folder for Ubuntu, Fedora, and OS X.
Then, create the database and load the database structure:
rake db:create
rake db:schema:load
Finally, start the app locally:
rails server
Just point your browser to localhost:3000
to use Reservations.
Reservations is built using Ruby on Rails, and can be set up (deployed) like most Rails apps. You'll need a server running with the following software:
For a general guide to setting up your web and application servers, including hosting providers, see the Rails Deployment Guide. For a guide to using our Capistrano deployment script, see the wiki. For a guide to deploying Reservations to Heroku, see the wiki as well.
Reservations uses environment variables for configuration (following the principles of the Twelve-Factor App). The gems dotenv
and dotenv-deployment
can be used to simulate system environment variables at runtime.
In the development
and test
Rails environments, most of the configuration is set in the config/secrets.yml
file. IMPORTANT You should copy the config/secrets.yml
file and regenerate all of the secret keys / tokens using rake secret
. You should also copy over the config/database.yml.example.*
file relevant to your platform and follow the instructions linked to above to set up your database.
In production
, the config/database.yml.example.production
should be used as it will refer to the relevant environment variables. Additionally, you must define most of the configuration environment variables listed here in order for Reservations to work.
To develop this app locally with Docker,
.env.dev.template
to .env
. See .env.example
for a full list of available environment variables.config/database.development.yml
to config/database.yml
.docker-compose up -d
.docker-compose run web bin/setup
.To develop locally without Docker:
.env.example
to .env
.config/database.local.yml
to config/database.yml
.By default, Reservations uses e-mail addresses and passwords to authenticate users with the devise
gem. It also supports the CAS authentication system, using the gem devise_cas_authenticatable
. If you want to use CAS authentication you must set the CAS_AUTH
and CAS_BASE_URL
environment variables to the appropriate values (see here for more details). Switching between authentication methods after initial setup is possible with some caveats (see our wiki for more details).
To point the gem to the correct CAS server in the development and test Rails environments, modify the following setting in your app's config/secrets.yml
file (see above):
cas_base_url: https://secure.its.yale.edu/cas/
Change the cas_base_url
parameter to your CAS server's base URL; also note that many CAS servers are configured with a base URL that looks more like “cas.example.com/cas”.
Reservations ships with the default config time set to Eastern Time (US and Canada). To change the time, edit config/application.rb
config.time_zone = 'Eastern Time (US & Canada)'
.
If you have any suggestions, or would like to report an issue, please either: