Boston Python Workshop/Friday handout/Windows: Difference between revisions
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* In your browser, go to http://localhost:8000/ |
* In your browser, go to http://localhost:8000/ |
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* Back in the Terminal window where you ran <code>manage.py runserver</code>, type control-c to kill the server. |
* Back in the Terminal window where you ran <code>manage.py runserver</code>, type control-c to kill the server. |
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== Verify Heroku is set up == |
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* Run your Text Editor |
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** use file-open to select Desktop/rails/test_app/Gemfile |
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** replace the sqlite3 entry in your Gemfile with this chunk of code (the first line is what was there originally, with # space put in front to comment it out). |
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<pre> |
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# gem 'sqlite3-ruby', :require => 'sqlite3' |
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group :production, :staging do |
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gem "pg", "0.9.0" |
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end |
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group :development, :test do |
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gem "sqlite3-ruby", :require => "sqlite3" |
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end |
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</pre> |
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(Don't delete the rest of the gems, just replace the sqlite gem entry.) |
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* Open a new GitBash window and type the following commands: |
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<pre>cd ~/Desktop/rails/test_app</pre> |
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<pre>bundle update</pre> this rebuilds the Gemfile.lock file to reflect the change. |
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<pre>git add .</pre> |
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<pre>git commit -m "fixed the gemfile"</pre> |
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Also, as of now heroku requires you to specify a special stack if running rails3 so your create command needs to be like this: |
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<pre>heroku create --stack bamboo-mri-1.9.2</pre> |
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* Enter your Heroku email address and password. ([[Output of heroku create command]]) |
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* To verify that the <code>heroku create</code> completed successfully, do <code>git remote show</code> and see if the list includes <code>heroku</code>. |
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* type:<code>git push heroku master</code> |
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* It may ask: "The authenticity of host 'heroku.com (75.101.145.87)' can't be established. RSA key fingerprint is 8b:48:5e:67:0e:c9:16:47:32:f2:87:0c:1f:c8:60:ad. Are you sure you want to continue connecting (yes/no)?" Type <code>yes</code> and hit ''<enter>''. |
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* [[Output of successful first deploy]]. Be sure to find your Heroku application name in the output. ([[What to do if git seems stuck]]) |
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* In the GitBash window type: <code>heroku rake db:migrate</code> ([[Output of heroku rake db:migrate]]) |
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* Go to your application's URL. You'll need your Heroku application name. The URL for your app is <code>''application name''.heroku.com</code> - so with the example output in the previous step, it would be <code>floating-winter-18.heroku.com</code>. Verify you see the welcome page. Leave this window open. |
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* In the browser, add <code>/users</code> to the end of the URL. Verify you see the user list page. Create a new user to verify you can write to the db on Heroku. |
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* If you are having issues ("Remote end hung up unexpectedly"), you might need to run "heroku keys:add" |
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== Congratulations! == |
== Congratulations! == |
Revision as of 21:08, 3 March 2011
About Django on Windows
- These instructions should work for all versions of Windows from XP on to Windows 7.
- You may need to login as Administrator, or give the Administrator password when installing some programs, depending on your Windows version and user settings.
Open a Command Prompt
- Open a command prompt window, and keep it open along with your browser. Much of installing Python and using Django is typing commands and hitting <enter>. Your experience using Rails on Windows greatly depends on your making friends with the command prompt window.
- This is also called the command prompt, command window, command-line window, MS-DOS or DOS window.
http://www.wiki.devchix.com/index.php?title=Opening_a_command_prompt_window
- Try these recommendations:
http://www.wiki.devchix.com/index.php?title=Recommended_setup_for_command-line_windows
- Tip: clear screen
If you ever want to clear the "output history" to get a clear screen, type:
cls
- Tip: command history
The command prompt window stores a "command history." To view and re-run previous commands, use the <up arrow> and <down arrow> keys. You can also edit a previous command and run it--this is handy for long commands, or fixing mistakes. - Tip: copy and paste
In the instructions below, where it says: "In the command prompt type:", you can, much more easily, copy the command from this page, and right click in the menu bar or command prompt window, then click on "Paste", then hit the <enter> key.
Install Python
- Go to http://python.org/download/ and download the latest version of Python 2.7 (2.7.1 at the time of writing).
- Test your Python install in the command prompt using the "-v" version flag:
\python27\python.exe -v
You should see something like
Python 2.7.1 (r271:86832, ...) on win32 Type "help", "copyright", "credits" or "license" for more information. >>>
- Type
exit()
and press Enter, and you are back to the command prompt.
Install Git for Windows
- Go to http://code.google.com/p/msysgit/ (aka GitBash)
- Click on the top "Downloads" tab
- Download the top .exe file link with the Summary something like "Full installer for official Git 1.7.x.x"
- Run the install.
- In the "Select Components" dialog, make sure the checkboxes "Associate ... configuration files ..." and "Use a TrueType font ..." are checked.
- Important: In the "Adjusting your PATH environment" dialog, make sure "Run Git from the Windows Command Prompt" is selected.
- In the "Configuring the line ending conversions" dialog, make sure "Checkout Windows-style, commit Unix-style line endings" is selected.
- To run git, open Programs > Git > Git Bash
- Then to test the Git install and see Git commands, in the command prompt type:
git
Configure Git
- Set up Git with your name and email to tag your code changes. In the command prompt type:
git config --global user.name <Your ActualName>
and:
git config --global user.email <YourEmail@domain.com>
- Tip: Colors
To have colored output, in the command prompt type each line followed by <enter>:
git config --global color.diff auto git config --global color.status auto git config --global color.branch auto
Install SQLite Manager
- If you already have Firefox installed, verify that it is version 3.5.0 or greater. (Help -> About Mozilla Firefox. The version number is right under the "Firefox" title.)
- If you don't have Firefox installed, or it's an older version, install Firefox.
- Once it's installed, open Firefox and go to Tools -> Add-ons. At the top of the add-ons window, click "Get Add-ons."
- There will be search box directly underneath "Get Add-ons" that says "Search All Add-ons." Enter "SQLite" (without the quotes) in the box and hit enter.
- SQLite Manager should be the top result. Click "Add to Firefox..." (If SQLite Manager isn't in the results, check the spelling - SQLite only has one L. Also, check that you have at least Firefox 3.5.)
- Wait for the countdown, then click "Install Now."
- In the Add-ons windows, click "Restart Firefox."
- Once Firefox restarts, the Add-ons window should say "1 new add-on has been installed." Go to the Tools menu and verify that there is an option for SQLite Manager.
Install KomodoEdit
You need a text editor to do Python. If you already have a preferred text editor, such as vi, emacs, jedit, etc., you can skip this step. It must be a plain text editor and not something with styling like Microsoft Word.
When in doubt, use KomodoEdit.
- Download KomodoEdit here.
- Double-click to install.
Create an ssh public key
You'll need one of these to create your Heroku account in the next section.
- Open up a new GitBash window.
ssh-keygen -C "Your Actual Email" -t rsa
(email should match git config setting)- Hit enter to accept default location for ssh key.
- Hit enter to accept blank passphrase (if computer is shared with other people, as in a work laptop, you should create a passphrase). Hit enter again to accept blank passphrase (or enter passphrase again).
- Output of ssh-keygen command
- Your brand-new public key is now stored at
~/.ssh/id_rsa.pub
.
Django
- Open a new GitBash window.
curl -L http://www.djangoproject.com/download/1.2.5/tarball/ -o Django-1.2.5.tar.gz tar zxvf Django-1.2.5.tar.gz cd Django-1.2.5 python setup.py install
Verify you can create a new Django app
- Create a folder on the desktop called
django_projects
- Open a new GitBash window and type the following:
cd Desktop/django_projects /c/python27/scripts/django-admin.py startproject myproject
- Both commands should provide no output.
- Once that's finished, type the following in the Terminal window:
cd myproject /c/python27/python manage.py runserver
- The first command should produce no output. The second command will put out a bunch of output, then just sit there until you cancel it (2 steps from now).
- In your browser, go to http://localhost:8000/
- Back in the Terminal window where you ran
manage.py runserver
, type control-c to kill the server.
Congratulations!
You have everything you need to write a Ruby on Rails application.
Almost there!
Find a volunteer and have them watch the next steps. If this works - get a sticker from them for your computer!
rails new suggestotron -m http://robotarmymade.com/611071.txt
cd suggestotron
rake cucumber
After running this, the last few lines of output should look something like this:
11 scenarios (5 failed, 6 skipped)
84 steps (5 failed, 79 skipped)
0m0.998s
rake aborted!
Command failed with status (1): [bundle exec /Users/sasha/.rvm/rubies/ruby-...]
(See full trace by running task with --trace)
Cleanup
Ok, there is one more step. You won't be using the test application in the workshop; we just created it to make sure everything was working. You should delete it now to reduce confusion during the workshop. Don't worry about losing information - you'll repeat all the steps tomorrow, but more slowly so you can better understand what's going on under the hood.
- Drag the test_app folder (inside rails) to the trash. Leave rails on the desktop.
- Delete the app from Heroku. Go to https://heroku.com/myapps and then click on your app name. Scroll to the bottom of the page and click Destroy App.