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Q&A

How to set up a new (development) instance of Codidact/QPixel Question

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The QPixel repository on GitHub contains the source code for the Codidact software.

How can I set up a new development instance of it, so that I can work on it on my local machine?

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Debian-based (including on WSL)

Required time: less than 1 hour.

This workflow was tested on :

  • Debian 12 (fresh install with debian-12.0.0-amd64-netinst.iso on Virtual Box 7.0.8 and Windows 11 22H2 host)
  • Debian 11 on WSL2 (Windows Subsystem Linux Version 2)[1] (on Windows 11 22H2 host).
  • Ubuntu 22.04.2 LTS on WSL2 (on Windows 11 22H2 host).

1. Prerequisites

sudo apt update
sudo apt install gcc
sudo apt install make
sudo apt install default-libmysqlclient-dev # libmysqlclient-dev not disponible on Debian
sudo apt install libmagickwand-dev
sudo apt install autoconf bison build-essential libssl-dev libyaml-dev libreadline-dev zlib1g-dev libncurses5-dev libffi-dev libgdbm-dev
sudo apt install curl
sudo apt install nodejs
sudo apt install redis
sudo apt install imagemagick
sudo apt install git

1.1. Database server

MySQL is not available on the Debian default distribution, thus MariaDB can be installed instead[2]:

sudo apt install mariadb-server

1.2. Ruby install

Example with rvm:

curl -sSL https://rvm.io/mpapis.asc | gpg --import -
curl -sSL https://rvm.io/pkuczynski.asc | gpg --import -
curl -sSL https://get.rvm.io | bash -s stable

If rvm installation is complete it will tells you which command to run in order to be able to use the rvm command. In the installation outputs sample below, this command is (you need to run this command in each new openend terminal):

source /home/zetyty/.rvm/scripts/rvm
Installation outputs sample on Debian 12 (for user "zetyty"):
~$ curl -sSL https://get.rvm.io | bash -s stable
Downloading https://github.com/rvm/rvm/archive/1.29.12.tar.gz
Downloading https://github.com/rvm/rvm/releases/download/1.29.12/1.29.12.tar.gz.asc
gpg: Signature made Fri 15 Jan 2021 07:46:22 PM CET
gpg:                using RSA key 7D2BAF1CF37B13E2069D6956105BD0E739499BDB
gpg: Good signature from "Piotr Kuczynski <[email protected]>" [unknown]
gpg: WARNING: This key is not certified with a trusted signature!
gpg:          There is no indication that the signature belongs to the owner.
Primary key fingerprint: 7D2B AF1C F37B 13E2 069D  6956 105B D0E7 3949 9BDB
GPG verified '/home/zetyty/.rvm/archives/rvm-1.29.12.tgz'
Installing RVM to /home/zetyty/.rvm/
    Adding rvm PATH line to /home/zetyty/.profile /home/zetyty/.mkshrc /home/zetyty/.bashrc /home/zetyty/.zshrc.
    Adding rvm loading line to /home/zetyty/.profile /home/zetyty/.bash_profile /home/zetyty/.zlogin.
Installation of RVM in /home/zetyty/.rvm/ is almost complete:

  * To start using RVM you need to run `source /home/zetyty/.rvm/scripts/rvm`
    in all your open shell windows, in rare cases you need to reopen all shell windows.
Thanks for installing RVM 🙏
Please consider donating to our open collective to help us maintain RVM.

👉  Donate: https://opencollective.com/rvm/donate

Then, install ruby:

rvm install 3.1.2

2. QPixel

Download and install QPixel:

git clone https://github.com/codidact/qpixel
cd qpixel
bundle install

bundle install outputs sample on Debian 12 (QPixel install in /home directory):

~/qpixel$ bundle install
Bundler 2.3.7 is running, but your lockfile was generated with 2.4.13. Installing Bundler 2.4.13 and restarting using that version.
Fetching gem metadata from https://rubygems.org/.
Fetching bundler 2.4.13
Installing bundler 2.4.13
Fetching gem metadata from https://rubygems.org/.........
Using rake 13.0.6
Fetching concurrent-ruby 1.1.10
Installing concurrent-ruby 1.1.10
Fetching i18n 1.12.0
Installing i18n 1.12.0
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Installing minitest 5.16.3
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Installing tzinfo 2.0.5
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Installing activesupport 7.0.4
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Installing builder 3.2.4
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Installing erubi 1.11.0
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Installing nokogiri 1.14.3 (x86_64-linux)
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Bundle complete! 58 Gemfile dependencies, 157 gems now installed.
Use `bundle info [gemname]` to see where a bundled gem is installed.

If the bundle install failed because of some kind of "PermissionError", you may have several ruby installs on your system and then you can take a look at this post.

3. Start MariaDB and redis servers

Run:

sudo systemctl start mariadb

On WSL we can't use systemctl but service instead (see this answer), it is also necessary to stop the execution of a MySQL/MariaDB server on the Windows Host and on other running WSL (because this prevents the server from being launched on the current WSL)[3]:

sudo service mariadb start

And don't forgot redis:

sudo service redis-server start

4. Final steps

At this point, you can follow the workflow described in this answer (starting with new database user creation and generation of config/database.yml and config/storage.yml).

But, with MariaDB, "you will need to replace all occurrences of utf8mb4_0900_ai_ci with utf8mb4_unicode_ci in db/schema.rb" (4 occurrences) [cited from the GitHub installation Guide].

NB: if you stop your system before the rails s "big moment", be sure you have redis-server running (you can do sudo service redis-server restart). Same comment for mariadb-server.


  1. I was not able to run QPixel on Debian WSL1 because I was not able to run the rails console (but I got no problem with WSL2). Also the install is significantly faster with WSL2. ↩︎

  2. If you really want to install MySQL, you can take a look at this discussion, this answer regarding Dockerized instance of MySQL on WSL or directly on the Windows Host and this official workflow). ↩︎

  3. To stop MySQL on Windows: Open a on command prompt and run net stop MySQL80. On other running WSL, (i) you can stop MySQL/MariaDB server on other WSL or (ii) stop some running WSL by opening a PowerShell and run wsl -t DISTRO-NAME - you can find the list of all DISTRO-NAME installed and their status (running/stopped) with wsl -l -v. ↩︎

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Before you can get started, you need to check, whether you have all the prerequisites. QPixel is built with Ruby on Rails, therefore you'll need:

  • a Linux or Mac computer (Windows WSL is also okay, but slower; running Ruby on Windows is ultra-slow)
  • Ruby installed (we recommend RVM or rbenv)

Prerequisites

If you have all of that, we can continue with installing the necessary packages. For Linux, run these commands:

sudo apt update
sudo apt install gcc
sudo apt install make
sudo apt install libmysqlclient-dev libmagickwand-dev
sudo apt install autoconf bison build-essential libssl-dev libyaml-dev libreadline-dev zlib1g-dev libncurses5-dev libffi-dev libgdbm-dev
sudo apt install mysql-server

For Mac, run:

xcode-select --install
brew install mysql bison openssl mysql-client
bundle config --global build.mysql2 --with-opt-dir="$(brew --prefix openssl)"
Next, you need to install the following helper applications:

Installing QPixel

Once you have completed installing the prerequisites, you can download QPixel:

git clone https://github.com/codidact/qpixel
cd qpixel

After downloading QPixel, you need to install all the dependencies. For that, you need to run

bundle install

If Ruby complains, that the Bundler hasn't been installed yet, use gem install bundler and then re-run the above command.

Setting up the Database

If the database is not already running, start it. On MacOS you can do:

brew services start mysql

Before we can create, set up and seed the database, we need to make sure that we have a MySQL user. Sign into the MySQL console (sudo mysql -u root for the default installation) and execute the following commands (replace the dummy credentials with secure ones):

CREATE USER qpixel@localhost IDENTIFIED BY 'choose_a_password_here';
GRANT ALL ON qpixel_dev.* TO qpixel@localhost;
GRANT ALL ON qpixel_test.* TO qpixel@localhost;
GRANT ALL ON qpixel.* TO qpixel@localhost;

Then you'll have to tell QPixel which credentials to use. Copy the config/database.sample.yml to config/database.yml and fill in the correct host, username and password. You'll also need to copy the Active Storage configuration from config/storage.sample.yml to config/storage.yml. Also, you will need to set the Redis connection details there too. Assuming that you always chose the default installation options, you'll only need to make changes to the username and the password from the sample file.

Now we want to create the database and the tables. Run:

rails db:create
rails db:schema:load
rails r db/scripts/create_tags_path_view.rb
rails db:migrate

Before we can continue and seed the data, you'll have to create the record for your (first) community. Open the Rails console with rails c and run these two commands:

Community.create(name: 'Dev Community', host: 'localhost:3000')
Rails.cache.clear

After that you can call rails db:seed to fill the database with necessary seed data, such as settings, help posts and default templates.

Now comes the big moment: You can start the QPixel server for the first time. Run:

rails s

Open a web browser and visit your server, which should be running under http://localhost:3000.

Creating an administrator account

On the dev server, create a new account through the "Sign up" route. Then switch back to the console to confirm your account (as sending mails shouldn't have been configured yet) and to promote your account to an administrator one. Open the rails console again and run:

User.last.update(confirmed_at: DateTime.now, is_global_admin: true)

If you prefer confirming accounts from the web, you can visit http://localhost:3000/letter_opener to access the confirmation email and then promote your user to admin with rails r "User.last.update(is_global_admin: true)".

Reload the web browser and you should see the elevated access.

New site setup

There's one more thing before your development server is fully up and running: the new site setup.

While being logged into your administrator account, go to http://localhost:3000/admin/setup. Review the settings (if you want; you can change them later) and click "Save and continue" to complete setting up the dev server.

✨ Your dev server is now ready.

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General comments (6 comments)
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Installing QPixel on Fedora Linux using RVM without brew

If you happen to be installing in this situation, a few things might have different names. Here are some of the differences I had to allow for.

Disclaimer: I have no insight or familiarity with QPixel or any of the packages described below. These are just the variations that got me to a QPixel installation that was working well enough to display the Codidact homepage.

This may or may not be similar for Red Hat and CentOS installations.

ImageMagick

An error occurred while installing rmagick (4.2.6), and Bundler cannot continue.

Instead of the recommended libmagickwand-dev, which is not available on Fedora, you can use ImageMagick-devel:

dnf install ImageMagick-devel

I couldn't find an official guide to this but I stumbled upon the alternative name for the package in a guide to Python bindings for ImageMagick. That guide refers to yum instead of dnf as it's aimed at Red Hat, but it installed for me on Fedora using dnf.

MySQL

An error occurred while installing mysql2 (0.5.4), and Bundler cannot continue.

Instead of the recommended mysql-server, which is not available on Fedora, you can use the community maintained community-mysql-server:

dnf install community-mysql-server
systemctl enable mysqld
systemctl start mysqld

I found I also needed to install mysql-devel:

dnf install mysql-devel

The guide to installing MySQL on Fedora also includes instructions for installing Oracle's package instead of the community maintained one if you prefer.

libvips

libvips is not available under that name on Fedora, instead it is called vips:

dnf install vips

Redis

I discovered on the Redis Fedora page that redis-server is not available under that name on Fedora, instead it is called redis:

dnf install redis
systemctl enable redis
systemctl start redis

Integrating RVM with Gnome terminal

If you are using Gnome (the default desktop environment for Fedora), then the terminal is by default set up in a way that will give you the following error:

RVM is not a function

This is likely to be part of a larger error message depending on what you were trying to do. In particular, this prevents selecting a Ruby version using rvm use 3.3.0.

You can find guidance and explanation on RVM's dedicated gnome terminal page (the solution is simply ticking a checkbox in the terminal preferences).


Security

This is not a security guide. Please use your own judgement on whether each command does or does not need to be entered with something like sudo or su. I am not qualified to tell you what is safe for your particular system.

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Works for me (1 comment)
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I am adding some more information on prerequisites.

For Arch-Based Linux :

sudo pacman -Syyu
sudo pacman -Sy gcc
sudo pacman -Sy make
sudo pacman -Sy ruby autoconf bison base-devel ruby unixodbc
sudo pacman -Sy openssl
sudo snap install mysql --beta Or, sudo pacman -S mysql

For Windows :

You have to follow following method to get started.

  1. Install RubyInstaller.
  2. You have run the following commands in command prompt(I forgot the name, simply called cmd)
    gem install rails and, gem install bundler

  3. Download and install mysql.
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