Salmon Pueblo Archaeological Research Collection
This is an application to work with the SPARC data derived from the spreadsheets.
The interface is primarily driven by the ActiveScaffold gem to provide a simple and intuitive editing interface with minimal effort to setup and customize.
https://github.com/activescaffold/active_scaffold
git clone [email protected]:CDRH/sparc.git
cd sparc
Make sure that you have the latest Ruby 2.3.x version installed and operating in this directory. You may want to also make sure that you are installing gems into a distinct place from other Ruby projects using the same version. RVM is recommended for this.
The pg
gem requires postgresql-devel
be installed on the system before the gem will bundle.
Once you have the correct ruby version, run the following. This may take a few minutes.
gem install bundler
bundle install
Set up your config file and fill out the location of your iiif_server:
cp config/config.example.yml config/config.yml
Now let's take a minute to set up your secrets file.
cp config/secrets.demo.yml config/secrets.yml
Now you can run rails secret
as many times as you like to generate new secrets for your config/secrets.yml
file.
Create a symlink for the universal viewer files.
ln -s /path/to/app/public/uv-2.0.2 /path/to/app/public/assets/uv-2.0.2
Set up your apache configuration to allow symlinks:
Options FollowSymLinks
This repo is using postgres, but you could switch it out for sqlite or mysql2 if needed.
If you do have postgres installed, you'll need to create a user that rails can use to manage three databases: production, development, and test.
sudo -i -u postgres createuser -d -P sparc
Now you'll need to set up your database configuration.
cp config/database.demo.yml config/database.yml
Open config/database.yml
and add the role (sparc) and password that you set above
Before you get too much farther, you will need to locate and add Burials.xlsx
, which is not stored in this repository. Otherwise, comment out Burials at the bottom of seeds.rb
.
Now set your dev and test databases up! This step may take a few minutes while it loads all the spreadsheet data.
rake db:setup
You can also do it by hand, if you prefer:
rake db:create
rake db:migrate
rake db:seed
There are several other steps that need to be taken to prepare the database.
Add descriptions to units and zones:
rails units:description
Mark images which do exist on the file system. You will need to generate that list ahead of time by going to the IIIF directory and running:
find field polaroids -type f > all_mediaserver_images.txt
Copy the text file results to reports/all_mediaserver_images.txt
and then run:
rails images:file_exists
If you don't care if some images are broken and just want to see some images (for example, if working in development), run the following in your rails console (rails c
):
Image.update_all(file_exists: true)
rails s
You can view the site at localhost:3000
Images should be stored in app/assets/images/field
in the large
and thumb
directories. To check if all the images and there and if each image in the directories has metadata, run the following, respectively:
rake images:find_missing
rake images:find_extra
In the event that new documents have been added, filenames altered, etc, you may need to regenerate the file used to seed the database. First, open up lib/tasks/document.rake
and verify that the path to the jpegs is correct, for your system. The path was hardcoded because it is (hopefully) unlikely that the documents.csv file will need to be regenerated.
DOCUMENT_PATH = "/your/path/here"
Verify that exiftool is installed on your system, then run:
rake documents:create_csv
NOTE: This may take up to an hour to run, depending on your machine! The script pulls out metadata from the images with exiftool, which is where the bottleneck occurs.
To generate assets (production only):
rails assets:precompile RAILS_ENV=production
rake test
Because of the way that foreign keys are set up currently, in order to run the tests you will have to grant the postgres role you're using superuser privileges on the rails test database. If you just want to grant sweeping privileges, you can do this:
sudo -i -u postgres psql
:
# Add privileges
ALTER ROLE sparc WITH SUPERUSER;
# Revoke
ALTER ROLE sparc WITH NOSUPERUSER;
# Exit psql shell
exit # or Ctrl+D
I do not recommend doing the above in a production environment. In the near future we should figure out how we would like cascading deletes, etc, to work for these PKs.
When asked to redact images, take the following steps.
Verify which image you need to redact. The files themselves are arranged in two directories, polaroid and field, but while the filenames have nothing prepended to the number, the database lists polaroids as PA0#####
. If you are redacting a polaroid, make sure that you use PA0
in the following commands.
Navigate to the production rails application.
** USE EXTREME CAUTION WHEN RUNNING CONSOLE DB OPERATIONS ON THE PRODUCTION SERVER **
rails c production
> # field image
> i = Image.find_by(image_no: "12038")
> i.update_attributes(image_human_remain_id: 2)
>
> # polaroid image
> i = Image.find_by(image_no: "PA012038")
> i.update_attributes(image_human_remain_id: 2)
> exit
Refresh the website to make sure that the image is no longer available in the gallery views.
Now manually move the redacted image. Navigate to the mediaserver directory housing the images and move the image in question into the sensitive
directory. This means it will not be available to view through the media server / IIIF URLs.