Installation

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Contents

Overview

mx can be installed locally for development or testing purposes or on a server. If you're seriously considering supporting a mx installation in your lab or workplace you should have an intermediate to advanced programmer or server admin on your team. Because of the relatively rapid updates to mx we recommend that you should presently use the edge branch.

Dependencies

Required

MySQL

  • MySQL 5.n is in use on development and production servers. Its easiest to install the community addition with the startup item, then reboot.
  • There are many examples of how to install and secure MySQL on your machine available on whe world-wide web. If you are using OS X chances are you have a copy installed already (it will need configuration if you haven't already done so).

Ruby

  • If you don't already have Ruby (most *nix systems come with it installed) you can find more about it here. Ruby v. 1.8.7 or higher is now required. We recommend building from source. Get the source here.

RubyGems

  • Its easiest to install several Ruby packages (including Rails) through the Ruby package manager RubyGems.

IMPORTANT: There appear to be issues with the rubygems > 1.7.2, the last know rubygem version to work is apparently 1.7.2. This issue (and many others) should dissappear when we finish the jump to Rails 3.

Rails

Production is now using Rails 2.3.10. Install the required version with the -v flag.

  • Do (appending --no-rdoc will speed things up, but not install local documentation):
 gem install rails -v=2.3.10 --include-dependencies --no-rdoc

Optional

ImageMagik

  • NOTE: This is optional, and not required for MorphBank images.
  • The tools 'convert' and 'identify' must be in your systems PATH, copying them to /usr/bin generally works. You do not need a rubygem hook.
  • Ensure that you have created the necessary paths for storing the images.
  • If possible install the additional jpg, tiff, png, and gs libraries before installing ImageMagick, this will let you handle additional image formats.

Passenger

  • Used only on a production server.
  • If you are running passenger, on CentOS/RHEL 5 servers there is a default daily chron that deletes some necessary passenger files in /tmp/passenger.PID. The easiest way to deal with this is to set the PassengerTempDir in the apache conf to something else, like so:
 PassengerTempDir /some_other_tmp_dir

Installation

Stepwise overview

  1. Install the required software (see above). There are numerous external sites that will help with installing these software, as such their installation is not documented here.
  2. Download the mx source and required gems.
  3. Create the database(s)
  4. Populate the database with some initial data
  5. Configure the local environment
  6. Configure your folders
  7. Start the server

Download the mx source

The preferred method is now to checkout the source from Sourceforge using [SVN]].

The (most) stable branch is the trunk, though it presently lags significantly behind edge (see comments in intro):

svn co https://mx-database.svn.sourceforge.net/svnroot/mx-database/trunk your_local_folder_name_here

For developers or those wanting to see the latest changes an edge branch that should be relatively stable but may contain production restricting commits is here:

svn co https://mx-database.svn.sourceforge.net/svnroot/mx-database/branches/edge your_local_folder_name_here

Several site-specific branches are being added, these are not recommended as a base for new installs but do provide a lot of example code. To grab everything you can just do:

 svn co https://mx-database.svn.sourceforge.net/svnroot/mx-database your_local_folder_name_here

Get the required gems

Depending on the checkout you downloaded you might need to install the ruby-debug gem first (note for Ruby 1.9.1 users you will likely need to install the ruby-debug19 gem).

sudo gem install ruby-debug

You need various Ruby gems listed in the environment.rb. The easiest way to install them all is to enter your mx folder (you should see the folders 'app', 'config' etc. if you are in the right place) and type:

sudo rake gems:install

Note that the native mysql gem is nearly always problematic, and you might have to work at getting it installed. You can try:

  sudo env ARCHFLAGS="-arch i386" gem install mysql -- --with-mysql-config=/usr/local/mysql/bin/mysql_config

On RHEL (after yum install mysql-devel) this worked:

gem install mysql -- --with-mysql-config=/usr/lib64/mysql/mysql_config 

On Ubuntu 9.10 (see also here) this worked:

sudo apt-get install libmysqlclient-dev
sudo gem install mysql

See here, or here, and more recently here for other possible solutions if you have no luck with the above.

Configuring the database

Create the databases

These instructions follow the defaults included in the database.yml file. Edit that file to change your configuration as necessary.

If you haven't yet create the databases (don't forget the ';' for mysql commands):

       mysql -u root -p
       <enter password>
       create database mx_test;
       create database mx_development;
       create database mx_production;
       

You'll need to add a MySQL account so that the app can access the database:

       GRANT ALL PRIVILEGES ON mx_development.* TO 'mx'@'localhost' IDENTIFIED BY 'MmmXxx';

Repeat the above but swap out the word development for 'test' and 'production'.

Build the tables and populate some initial data

Do this step if you have are starting from scratch, and have no existing mx dump to work with. If you have a mx data dump (see below) skip this step.

Exit mysql and navigate to the root of your mx install. Create the development database with the rake task (you may need to prefix with 'sudo'):

       rake db:migrate RAILS_ENV=development

You can create the production database like so if necessary:

       rake db:migrate RAILS_ENV=production

To create the test database do

       rake db:test:clone_structure

Anytime the source is updated just repeat the rake db:migrate and your database will be updated if there are changes. There are several rake tasks available for dumping and restoring data, make sure to check them out.

A single user with administrator privileges will have to be manually added to the 'people' tables prior to using mx. Once this user is added additional users can be added from the mx interface.

       mysql -u root -p
       <enter password>
       use mx_development;
       insert into people (first_name, last_name, login, password, is_admin,
         creates_projects) values ('joe', 'smith', 'jsmith', sha1('foosomepwdbar'), 1,1);
       
  • IMPORTANT - you must wrap 'foo' and 'bar' around your password in the above line. In the example above the password for 'jsmith' is 'somepwd' #

While in the MySQL client you'll also want to add a root node to your taxonomic names hierarchy (this assumes the admin you created has id 1).

       insert into taxon_names (name, cached_display_name, l, r, creator_id, updator_id) values ('root', 'root', 1, 2, 1, 1);

Importing existing data

If you have access to an existing dump of mx data (it will look something like "2011_08_19_110700.sql") generated by you or an existing mx adminstrator, then you need not do the 'Build the tables and populate some initial data' step. To use this data copy the .sql file mx_root/db/dumps, then do this

       rake mx:db:restore_last RAILS_ENV=development

This will both build the database and load your data dump into it.

Configure the mx environment

If you are starting with a new mx, i.e. not a version in production somehwere, you'll need to configure the local environment.

Open

  /config/initializers/local_config.rb 

and update the various FOO variables as needed, see comments therein.

You'll need to grab GoogleMaps API keys and add them to BOTH of:

 GMAPS_KEY_PRODUCTION
 GMAPS_KEY_DEVELOPMENT

Finally, replace the emails in

   ExceptionNotifier.exception_recipients = %w(joe@schmoe.com bob@gmail.com)

with those you want e-mails to be sent to when errors are thrown.

Configure your operating system environment

Specific to *nix systems: check the path of your MySQL socket

By default, the path of mysql.sock is set to

  /tmp/mysql.sock

However, several distributions do not use this path. To change it edit the file

  config/database.yml

and replace the 3 occurrences of

  socket: /tmp/mysql.sock

by your actual path. For instance in Ubuntu

 socket: /var/run/mysqld/mysqld.sock

Configuring file and image storage

Edit the /config/initializers/local_config.rb file and configure the various FILE_PATH variables, they can be left is if needed. If left is they correspond to the folders that you'll need to create below in the /public folder.

       files
       files/images
       files/images/big
       files/images/medium
       files/images/original
       files/images/thumb
       files/pdfs
       files/datasets
       files/chromatograms

On a *nix system you can also use a symbolic link to keep your images, pdfs, and datasets elsewhere.

Start the server (development)

ruby script/server

Navigate to http://127.0.0.1:3000

Troubleshooting

Configuring my.cnf

If you get a 'Mysql::Error: Got a packet bigger than 'max_allowed_packet' bytes:' you can add the following line to your my.cnf under [mysqld]: 'max_allowed_packet = 32M;'.

Usage (development)

Using the server/application

To test/develop in development mode navigate to the root of your installation and type

       ruby script/server

Open a web browser and browse to

       127.0.0.1:3000

You should see a login page. If you see the mx page but no login fields then you have not correctly added your administrator user.

Once logged in navigate to

       127.0.0.1:3000/admin

to create new projects.

You can also navigate to

       127.0.0.1:3000/account/signup

to add regular users.

Upgrading

Once you have mx installed upgrading should be relatively straightforward. First, make a backup of both the database and the application, we assume you know where your data reside by this point, and we assume that you know that things can go horribly wrong. After backing up replace the old source with the new (see below for comments). Then, make sure you have the required Rails/Gems (plugins are included in the source already). Finally, run the rake task to update the database like so:

rake db:migrate RAILS_ENV=<development|production>

Its always a good idea to run the test suite as well, this will give you a good idea of what possible problems you might still have.

rake test

Usage (production)

Production installation follows, for the most part, the same installation process as above. See the Rails homepage for setting up the server. Note that only users with accounts can see data in a clean installation of mx, i.e. you must manually configure the installation to make data available to the public.

If you plan to set up a production installation of mx, it would be a good idea to read chapter 27 of Agile Web Development with Rails, second edition.

Production with no customizations

We don't have Capistrano working, so essentially you'll have to devise your own method of rolling to production, we use an SVN checkout for now.

Production with customizations

If you have begun to build public front ends you know where your custom code resides (/public, /app/models/public, /app/controllers/public, /app/views/public), manage these as you like.

Apache configuration

If you plan to use the API functionality you'll need add the following to your virtual .conf:

 AllowEncodedSlashes On

Legacy notes on installation / configuration

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