People is an application to handle users and teams, and distribute permissions accross La Suite.
It is built on top of Django Rest Framework.
All interoperabilities will be described in docs/interoperability.
Make sure you have a recent version of Docker and Docker Compose installed on your laptop:
$ docker -v
Docker version 20.10.2, build 2291f61
$ docker compose -v
docker compose version 1.27.4, build 40524192
⚠️ You may need to run the following commands withsudobut this can be avoided by assigning your user to thedockergroup.
The easiest way to start working on the project is to use GNU Make:
$ make bootstrapThis command builds the app-dev container, installs dependencies, performs
database migrations and compile translations. It's a good idea to use this
command each time you are pulling code from the project repository to avoid
dependency-related or migration-related issues.
Your Docker services should now be up and running! 🎉
Note that if you need to run them afterward, you can use the eponym Make rule:
$ make runor if you want to run them in development mode (with live reloading):
$ make run-devYou can check all available Make rules using:
$ make helpYou can access the Django admin site at http://localhost:8071/admin.
You first need to create a superuser account:
$ make superuserYou can then login with sub admin and password admin.
You can create a basic demo site by running:
$ make demoTo ease local development when working on interoperability between people and dimail, we embark dimail-api in a container running in "fake" mode.
To populate dimail local database with users/domains/permissions needed for basic development:
- log in with "people" user
- run
make dimail-setup-db
Run the front with:
$ make run-front-deskThen access http://localhost:3000 with : user: people password: people
This project is intended to be community-driven, so please, do not hesitate to get in touch if you have any question related to our implementation or design decisions.
This work is released under the MIT License (see LICENSE).