Skip to content

nashville-lug/sydjs-site

 
 

Repository files navigation

sydjs.com

The SydJS Website.

Initially built in two and a half days by the team at Thinkmill as a demo of what KeystoneJS can do, it's now a showcase for the Sydney Javascript community.

Get Involved!

Please use the GitHub Issues to log any ideas you have to improve the site, or problems you may come across.

Or if you're feeling more adventurous, go pick an issue and submit a pull request.

Feel free to ask questions about how it works, if you're getting into the code.

If you are part of another meetup group and want to use our site as a basis for your own, that's great, we'd love to hear about it.

Coding Guidelines

If you're contributing code, please do your best to follow the conventions established in the codebase already. This makes pull requests much easier to review and merge.

We have generally followed the guidelines set out in AirBnB's Javascript Style Guide, with the exception of using real tabs for indentation.

Getting Started

To run the SydJS site locally, there are a few things to set up.

Because we have some private keys for our MongoDB, Cloudinary and Mandrill accounts, you'll need to set up your own equivalents before the site will run properly.

If you're looking to work on the SydJS site and want access to our accounts, please get in touch

Install Node.js and MongoDB

You'll need node 0.10.x and npm 1.3.x installed to run SydJS. The easiest way is to download the installers from nodejs.org.

You'll also need MongoDB 2.4.x - if you're on a Mac, the easiest way is to install homebrew and then run brew install mongo.

If you're on a Mac you'll also need Xcode and the Command Line Tools installed or the build process won't work.

Setting up your copy of SydJS

Get a local copy of the site by cloning this repository, or fork it to work on your own copy.

Then run npm install to download the dependencies.

Before you continue, create a file called .env in the root folder of the project (this will be ignored by git). This file is used to emulate the environment config of our production server, in development. Any key=value settings you put in there (one on each line) will be set as environment variables in process.env.

The only line you need to add to your .env file is a valid CLOUDINARY_URL. To get one of these, sign up for a free account at Cloudinary and paste the environment variable if gives you into your .env file. It should look something like this:

CLOUDINARY_URL=cloudinary://12345:abcde@cloudname

Running SydJS

Once you've set up your configuration, run node keystone to start the server.

By default, Keystone will connect to a new local MongoDB database on your localhost called sydjs, and create a new Admin user that you can use to log in with using the email address [email protected] and the password admin.

If you want to run against a different server or database, add a line to your .env file to set the MONGO_URI environment variable, and restart the site.

When it's all up and running, you should see the message SydJS is ready on port 3000 and you'll be able to browse the site on localhost:3000.

Facebook login

Add FACEBOOK_API=X.x in your .env file. For Facebook API >= 2.4 you must specify the fields you want to get in user profile.

Here be dragons errors

or, how you don't have any content yet

The first time you run the site, the homepage will warn you that it expects there to be at least one meetup, and your database won't have any. Don't freak out, just go to /keystone, sign in as the admin user, and create one.

You'll probably want to add some other content too (blog post, members, etc) to get all the pages looking right.

... happy hacking!

Releases

No releases published

Packages

No packages published

Languages

  • JavaScript 38.5%
  • CSS 37.8%
  • HTML 23.7%