Geospatial discovery application for Stanford University Libraries, built using GeoBlacklight.
For the currently supported Ruby version, see the .github/workflows/ruby.yml
file.
Pull down the code:
git clone [email protected]:sul-dlss/earthworks.git
You can do this by either running them directly on your dev machine, or by running them in containers using Docker (you should choose one or the other)
Start an Apache Solr instance using solr_wrapper:
solr_wrapper
A more production-like setup using Redis and Postgresql is available via Docker. To start the stack:
docker compose up
To have the app use the Postresql container instead of SQLite, uncomment the DATABASE_URL
line in the .env[.test]
file(s) (in the project root).
To have the app use the Redis container, uncomment the REDIS_URL
, REDIS_HOST
, and REDIS_PORT
lines in the .env[.test]
file(s).
The Solr connection info is the same regardless of whether it's run using solr_wrapper or Docker.
Alternatively, you could specify those env vars by prefixing the rails command with them, to (for example) run the app once using Postgres while generally defaulting to SQLite (e.g. DATABASE_URL='postgresql://earthworks:earthworks@localhost/earthworks?pool=5' bin/rails server
).
Next, run the setup script:
bin/setup
Finally, start the development web server:
bin/dev
This will compile the SCSS stylesheets with live reloading in addition to running a rails server.
To add a small amount of test records to the Solr index, you can use the seed
task:
bin/rake earthworks:fixtures
To index arbitary data from SDR, see the searchworks_traject_indexer README.
You can also fetch non-Stanford records from OpenGeoMetadata using GeoCombine:
export OGM_PATH=tmp/opengeometadata # location to store data
bin/rake geocombine:clone[edu.nyu] # pull data from NYU
bin/rake geocombine:index # index data in Solr
You can run the full suite of tests with the ci
command. Do not run this while ssh tunneled as it may delete the production index!
bin/rake ci