- added a subsection for Windows users on what they need to do in lieu of 'vagrant ssh' not working on the Win platform.
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Discourse Developer Install Guide (Vagrant)
If you'd like to set up a development environment for Discourse, the easiest way is by using a virtual machine. If you have experience setting up Rails projects, you might want to take a look at our Discourse Advanced Developer Guide. It also contains instructions on building your own Vagrant VM.
The following instructions will automatically download and provision a virtual machine for you to begin hacking on Discourse with:
Getting Started
- Install VirtualBox: https://www.virtualbox.org/wiki/Downloads
- Install Vagrant: http://www.vagrantup.com/
- Open a terminal
- Clone the project:
git clone git@github.com:discourse/discourse.git
- Enter the project directory:
cd discourse
Using Vagrant
When you're ready to start working, boot the VM:
vagrant up
Vagrant will prompt you for your admin password. This is so it can mount your local files inside the VM for an easy workflow.
(The first time you do this, it will take a while as it downloads the VM image and installs it. Go grab a coffee.)
Once the machine has booted up, you can shell into it by typing:
vagrant ssh
Note to Windows users: You cannot run vagrant ssh
from a cmd prompt; you'll receive the error message:
`vagrant ssh` isn't available on the Windows platform. You are still able
to SSH into the virtual machine if you get a Windows SSH client (such as
PuTTY). The authentication information is shown below:
Host: 127.0.0.1
Port: 2222
Username: vagrant
Private key: C:/Users/Your Name/.vagrant.d/insecure_private_key
At this point, you will want to get an SSH client, and use it to connect to your Vagrant VM instead. We recommend PuTTY:
You may use this client to connect to the VM by using vagrant/vagrant
as your username/password, or by using
PuTTYGen to import the insecure_private_key file
(mentioned above) into a PuTTY profile to quickly access your VM.
Keeping your VM up to date
Now you're in a virtual machine is almost ready to start developing. It's a good idea to perform the following instructions every time you pull from master to ensure your environment is still up to date.
bundle install
bundle exec rake db:migrate
bundle exec rake db:seed_fu
Starting Rails
Once your VM is up to date, you can start a rails instance using the following command:
bundle exec rails server
In a few seconds, rails will start serving pages. To access them, open a web browser to http://localhost:4000 - if it all worked you should see discourse! Congratulations, you are ready to start working!
You can now edit files on your local file system, using your favorite text editor or IDE. When you reload your web browser, it should have the latest changes.
Guard + Rspec
If you're actively working on Discourse, we recommend that you run Guard. It'll automatically run our unit tests over and over, and includes support for live CSS reloading.
To use it, follow all the above steps. Once rails is running, open a new terminal window or tab, and then do this:
vagrant ssh
bundle exec rake db:test:prepare
bundle exec guard -p
Wait a minute while it runs all our unit tests. Once it has completed, live reloading should start working. Simply save a file locally, wait a couple of seconds and you'll see it change in your browser. No reloading of pages should be necessary for the most part, although if something doesn't update you should refresh to confirm.
Sending Email
Mail is sent asynchronously by Sidekiq, so you'll need to have sidekiq running to process jobs. Run it with this command:
bundle exec sidekiq
Mailcatcher is used to avoid the whole issue of actually sending emails: https://github.com/sj26/mailcatcher
To start mailcatcher, run the following command in the vagrant image:
mailcatcher --http-ip 0.0.0.0
Then in a browser, go to http://localhost:4080
Sent emails will be received by mailcatcher and shown in its web ui.
Shutting down the VM
When you're done working on Discourse, you can shut down Vagrant like so:
vagrant halt