QuantifiedCode is a code analyis & automation platform. It helps you to keep track of issues and metrics in your software projects, and can be easily extended to support new types of analyses. The application consists of several parts:
- A frontend, realized as a React.js app
- A backend, realized as a Flask app, that exposes a REST API consumed by the frontend
- A background worker, realized using Celery, that performs the code analysis
We provide several options for installing QuantifiedCode. Which one is the right one for you depends on your use case.
- The manual installation is best if you want to modify or change QuantifiedCode
- The Docker-based installation is probably the easiest way to try QuantifiedCode without much work
- The Ansible-based installation is the most suitable way if you want to run QuantifiedCode in a professional infrastructure (possibly with multiple servers)
The following section will only discuss the manual installation process, for the other options please check their corresponding repositories.
The installation consists of three parts:
- Install the dependencies required to run QuantifiedCode
- Download the required source code
- Set up the configuration
QuantifiedCode requires the following external dependencies:
- A message broker (required for the background tasks message queue). We recommend either RabbitMQ or Redis.
- A database (required for the core application). We recommend PostgreSQL, but SQLite is supported as well. Other database systems might work too (e.g. MySQL), but are currently not officially supported. If you need to run QuantifiedCode on a non-supported database, please get in touch with us and we'll be happy to provide you some guidance.
Now with the dependencies installed, we can go ahead and download QuantifiedCode:
git clone [email protected]:quantifiedcode/quantifiedcode.git
In addition, it is advised to create a (Python 2.7) virtual environment to run QuantifiedCode in:
virtualenv venv
#activate the virtual environment
source venv/bin/activate
QuantifiedCode manages dependencies via the Python package manager, pip. To install them, simply run
pip install -r requirements.txt
QuantifiedCode gets configured via YAML settings files. When starting up the application, it incrementally loads settings from several files, recursively updating the settings object. First, it will load default settings from quantifiedcode/settings/default.yml
. Then, it will check if a QC_SETTINGS
environment variable is defined and points to a valid file, and if so it will load settings from it (possibly overwriting default settings). If not, it will look for a settings.yml
file in the current working
directory and load settings from there. Additionally, it will check if a QC_SECRETS
environment variable is defined and points to a valid file, and also load settings from there (this is useful for sensitive settings that should be kept seperate from the rest [e.g. to not check them into version control]).
There is a sample settings.yml
file in the root of the repository that you can start from.
After editing your settings, run the setup command via
#run from the root directory of the repository
python manage.py setup
The setup assistant will iteratively walk you through the setup, and when finished you should have a working instance of QuantifiedCode!
To run the web application, simply run
python manage.py runserver
To run the background worker, simply run
python manage.py runworker
Coming Soon!
Coming Soon!