README.md 2.9 KB

The COIN project

Coin is Illyse's Information System, designed to manage both members and Internet accesses, such as through DSL, VPN, wireless…

It is written in Django, and makes an heavy use of LDAP (for authentication, and to store configuration information).

It features a generic configuration interface, which allows to implement custom backends for different technologies. Currently implemented is a LDAP-based backend for OpenVPN.

Coin currently only works with python2, because python-ldap is (as of 2013) not compatible with python3.

The project page (issue, wiki, etc) is here:

https://www.illyse.org/projects/ils-si/

A mirror of the code is available at:

https://code.ffdn.org/zorun/coin/

Quickstart

Get yourself a virtualenv. On Debian, install python-virtualenv. On Archlinux, the package is called python2-virtualenv, and you must replace the virtualenv command with virtualenv2 in the following.

To create the virtualenv (the first time):

virtualenv ~/tmp/venv-illyse

To activate the virtualenv (you need to do this each time you work on the project):

. ~/tmp/venv-illyse/bin/activate

Install dependencies. On Debian, you will probably need the python-dev, python-pip, libldap-dev, libpq-dev and libsasl2-dev packages.

sudo apt-get install python-dev python-pip libldap2-dev libpq-dev libsasl2-dev

Then run:

pip install -r requirements.txt

You should now be able to run python manage.py (within the virtualenv, obviously) without error.

The coin/settings_local.py file is ignored by Git: feel free to override any setting by writing into that file. For example, to override the DEBUG settings:

echo '# -*- coding: utf-8 -*-' > coin/settings_local.py
echo 'DEBUG = TEMPLATE_DEBUG = True' >> coin/settings_local.py

At this point, you should setup your database. Recommended is postgreSQL, but you might be able to use SQLite. For more information, see https://www.illyse.org/projects/ils-si/wiki/Mise_en_place_environnement_de_dev

If you don't want to use LDAP, just set in your settings_local.py:

LDAP_ACTIVATE = False

The first time, you need to create the database, create a superuser, and import some base data to play with:

python manage.py migrate
python manage.py createsuperuser
python manage.py loaddata offers ip_pool

Note that the superuser will be inserted into the LDAP backend exactly in the same way as all other members, so you should use a real account (not just admin/admin).

Then, at each code update, you only need to apply migrations:

python manage.py migrate

At this point, Django should run correctly:

python manage.py runserver

More information

For the rest of the setup (database, LDAP), see

https://www.illyse.org/projects/ils-si/wiki/Mise_en_place_environnement_de_dev

For real production deployment, see file DEPLOYMENT.md.