An open-source, hackathon registration system. 🏫
If you have questions, we might've answered them already on the wiki! Check it out.
For local development, we highly encourage using Docker Compose.
After Docker Compose is installed, there are just a few steps left for first-time setup:
docker-compose up -d
docker-compose exec db su postgres # Currently on host, moving into container
psql # Currently in container, moving into PostgreSQL prompt
Now that you're in the PostgreSQL prompt, just run
CREATE DATABASE hiss;
This will create the database for you, and you're done with setup!
exit # In the PostgreSQL prompt, moving to container
exit # In the container, moving to the host
Now that you're on the host machine, just run the following:
docker-compose exec web python3 manage.py makemigrations # Only if you modified models.py or forms.py
docker-compose run web python3 manage.py migrate --run-syncdb
docker-compose exec web python3 manage.py loaddata application/fixtures/schools.json
docker-compose run web python3 manage.py createsuperuser # Enter details for an admin user to access the admin panel.
You're all set! Just run docker-compose up
and you're good to go!
To mimic a real production environment, a docker-compose.prod.yml
file has been included in the repository for you to use.
This file is set up on the assumption that you are using Mailgun as your team's email provider.
To use it, simply replace the values in docker-compose.prod.yml
with the values you need, and run
docker-compose -f docker-compose.yml -f docker-compose.prod.yml up