Built using Wagtail CMS on top of Django Framework. All installation instructions assume you already have Homebrew installed. If you are not running on MacOSX or a Linux distribution, see the hyperlinks for dependencies.
brew install postgresql
brew install python3
Verify you have Python ≥ 3.11 installed:
python --version
python3 --version
Start PostgreSQL:
brew services start postgresql
This will also make sure PostgreSQL service starts on boot.
Create a database (this is also a shell script), which is named as oscms_prodcms
. However, it can be renamed as long as the change is reflected on the appropriate field in openstax/settings/base.py
:
createdb oscms_prodcms
Now we can install the repository. Run the following commands line by line:
git clone https://github.com/openstax/openstax-cms
cd openstax-cms/
pip3 install -r requirements/dev.txt
After all the modules in requirements are installed, run the migration script:
python3 manage.py migrate
Now, create a superuser. Run the following command and then proceed with the instructions:
python3 manage.py createsuperuser
Finally, start the server:
python3 manage.py runserver
To test OpenStax CMS on a local device, you need to overwrite some settings. This can be streamlined by introducing local.py
in openstax/settings/
. Any changes on or additions to local.py
will overwrite settings. Make copy of local.py.example
and rename it to local.py
:
Alternatively, and maybe more conveniently, use a .env
file in the project root to set environmental variables.
cd openstax/settings/
cp local.py.example local.py
Run the tests:
python3 manage.py test --settings=openstax.settings.test
To test the API, use can request access to the OpenStax Postman account.
The collection is available here.
SQLite is supported as an alternative to PostgreSQL. In order to switch to SQLite, change the DATABASES
setting
in openstax/settings/base.py
to use 'django.db.backends.sqlite3'
, and set NAME
to be the full path of your database file, as you would with a regular Django project.
To run the CMS in Docker containers:
docker-compose up
The CMS code directory from your host machine is mounted in the app
container at /code
. To drop into a bash terminal in the app
container:
docker-compose exec -e DJANGO_SETTINGS_MODULE=openstax.settings.docker app bash
This command has been wrapped in a tiny script:
./docker/bash
From within the bash shell, you can run the tests:
python3 manage.py test --keepdb
or pound on a specific test:
python3 manage.py test --keepdb books.tests.BookTests.test_can_create_book
The --keepdb
option reuses the test database from run to run so you don't have to wait for it to recreate the database and run the migrations every time.
To debug tests, you can insert the normal import pdb; pdb.set_trace()
lines in your code and test runs from the bash environment will show you the debugger.
View the Wiki Page for the list of all available API endpoints and their descriptions.