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nairobi/docs/en/installation/local_installation.md
Javi Martín b686489652 Update Debian local installation instructions
So now we install a specific version of Node.js and use the packages
required for Debian Bookworm.

For consistency, we're also making them similar to the Ubuntu
instructions and installing rbenv instead of RVM. Since we now suggest
rbenv in both cases as well as in the macOS instructions, we're also
listing rbenv as the first option in the generic local installation
instructions.
2024-08-07 15:48:50 +02:00

2.8 KiB

Local installation

Before installing Consul Democracy and having it up and running make sure you all prerequisites installed.

  1. First, clone the Consul Democracy Github repository and enter the project folder:
git clone https://github.com/consuldemocracy/consuldemocracy.git
cd consuldemocracy
  1. Install the Ruby version we need with your Ruby version manager. Here are some examples:
rbenv install `cat .ruby-version` # If you're using rbenv
rvm install `cat .ruby-version` # If you're using RVM
asdf install ruby `cat .ruby-version` # If you're using asdf
  1. Check we're using the Ruby version we've just installed:
ruby -v
=> # (it should be the same as the version in the .ruby-version file)
  1. Install the Node.js version we need with your Node.js version manager. If you're using NVM:
nvm install `cat .node-version`
nvm use `cat .node-version`
  1. Copy the example database configuration file:
cp config/database.yml.example config/database.yml
  1. Setup database credentials with your consul user in your new database.yml file
nano config/database.yml

And edit the lines containing username: and password:, adding your credentials.

  1. Install the project dependencies and create the database:
bin/setup
  1. Run the following Rake task to fill your local database with development data:
bin/rake db:dev_seed
  1. Check everything is fine by running the test suite

Note: running the whole test suite on your machine might take more than an hour, so it's strongly recommended that you setup a Continuous Integration system in order to run them using parallel jobs every time you open or modify a pull request (if you use GitHub Actions or GitLab CI, this is already configured in .github/workflows/tests.yml and .gitlab-ci.yml) and only run tests related to your current task while developing on your machine. When you configure the application for the first time, it's recommended that you run at least one test in spec/models/ and one test in spec/system/ to check your machine is properly configured to run the tests.

bin/rspec
  1. Now you have all set, run the application:
bin/rails s

Congratulations! Your local Consul Democracy application will be running now at http://localhost:3000.

In case you want to access the local application as admin, a default user verified and with admin permissions was created by the seed files with username admin@consul.dev and password 12345678.

If you need an specific user to perform actions such as voting without admin permissions, a default verified user is also available with username verified@consul.dev and password 12345678.