Posts Tagged ‘Development’

Getting Rails, Git and Capistrano to work on a Joyent Accelerator

Tuesday, April 8th, 2008

After several days of repeatedly smashing my head into both a metaphorical and an all too real brick wall, I seem to have managed to get git and capistrano working happily together on my Joyent Accelerator. I’m also using github for my git hosting, which threw up it’s own little challenge mid-way through the entire process.

Now, I should probably also say that I already had my site up and running using subversion, capistrano and my accelerator, so this article isn’t necessarily going to help with getting everything setup the first time. For that, you probably need to read this wiki entry.

Things You Will Need

  • A github.org account
  • A dedicated Joyent Accelerator (I have no idea how to do all of this on a shared accelerator. Sorry.)
  • Also, I’m really only talking about RubyOnRails apps here … not too sure how applicable a lot of this is to other frameworks (it will probably help at least.)

Getting started

Assuming that you have your project in a git repository, and have a github account (and obviously an Accelerator) we can start.

Compiling git on your accelerator

Unfortunately, the first step in the process was, for me at least, a total nightmare. I’m not the biggest unix-head by any stretch, but I can do some basic tasks with a degree of proficiency. Unfortunately, I went into a dark place trying to get git compiled. One thing to note is that I’m talking about setting up the git client here, not a git server. Because capistrano executes scripts on your remote server, you need to have a copy of the client software setup for capistrano to call.

So what did I do? There are a couple of helpful threads on the Joyent Forums:

Hopefully those threads will put you onto the path of successfully compiling and installing git onto your Accelerator.

Setting up SSH keys with github and your accelerator

When you setup your account on github, you need to setup an SSH key for authentication. github has a really good tutorial on how to do this. I have a user defined on my accelerator that my website “runs” under, so what I did was to create a key for that user which gets stored into the ~/.ssh directory. I then added the contents of the id_rsa.pub key to my github account, which allows that user to access the repository.

Another tip: don’t forget your passphrase. It’s needed in the next step.

Configuring capistrano

Assuming that you have your capistrano deploy.rb file setup as outlined here there are a few changes that you will need to make to get things working with git.

I’m using Capistrano 2.2 at the moment. I don’t think it will work with earlier versions because of the relatively new git support.

Here’s my deploy.rb file:

  require 'erb'
  require 'config/accelerator/accelerator_tasks'

  set :application, "website"
  set :repository, "git@github.com:your_username/website.git" 

  default_run_options[:pty] = true
  set :domain, 'XX.XX.XX.XX' #Your Accelerators public IP address
  set :deploy_to, "/var/www/apps/#{application}"
  set :user, 'website_account_username'
  set :scm, :git
  set :scm_username, "github_username"
  set :scm_passphrase, "your passphrase here" 

  role :app, domain
  role :web, domain
  role :db,  domain, :primary => true

  set :server_name, "url.for.website"
  set :server_alias, "*.url.for.website" 

  # Example dependancies
  depend :remote, :command, :gem
  depend :remote, :gem, :money, '>=1.7.1'
  depend :remote, :gem, :mongrel, '>=1.0.1'
  depend :remote, :gem, :image_science, '>=1.1.3'
  depend :remote, :gem, :rake, '>=0.7'
  depend :remote, :gem, :BlueCloth, '>=1.0.0'
  depend :remote, :gem, :RubyInline, '>=3.6.3'

  ################################
  # Some tasks for the old server
  ################################

  task :after_deploy do
    # tasks to run after deploy
  end

  ################################
  # End tasks for the old server
  ################################

  deploy.task :restart do
    accelerator.smf_restart
    accelerator.restart_apache
  end

  deploy.task :start do
    accelerator.smf_start
    accelerator.restart_apache
  end

  deploy.task :stop do
    accelerator.smf_stop
    accelerator.restart_apache
  end

  after :deploy, 'deploy:cleanup'

It appears that the important line here is ’ default_run_options[:pty] = true ’. This means that capistrano can respond automatically for the request for the SSH Key passphrase that github replies with when you try to clone the repository.

If everything is working, you can type ‘cap deploy’ and it should all deploy nicely. If you get this error:


[err] Permission denied (publickey).

then there’s a problem with your SSH key and your settings on github. Make sure the key you copied into your github account is the public key for the SSH in your .ssh directory.

Hopefully, you’ll be up and running. If you have any tips, recommendations or corrections, leave a comment.

Upgrading to Capistrano 2

Friday, September 14th, 2007

For no other reason than this is something I need to remember on other projects, here is a list of the changes I made when I uninstalled deprec and upgraded to capistrano 2 for deployment.

Things to do

Do this once


gem install mongrel_cluster

then in the application directory


capify .

then remove “require ‘deprec/recipes’ from the deploy.rb file

then put the following in to the deploy.rb file


namespace :deploy do
task :start, :roles => :app do start_mongrel_cluster end
task :stop, :roles => :app do stop_mongrel_cluster end
task :restart, :roles => :app do restart_mongrel_cluster end
end

Maps, Geocoding and Great Timing

Saturday, February 10th, 2007

On one of the sites I’ve been working on for quite a while (SchoolSeek) we’ve been wanting to add the ability for users to find out how far a school is from their current location. There are services that have been able to geocode addresses for a while, but they were either based in the US, or cost money. Not a lot of money, but free is always good.

A couple of years ago, Google Maps launched in the US and opened up a massive range of possibilities for programmers to develop cool “mashups”, which took information from one site, mashed it together with maps from google, and created a whole new website. They were all really cool, but unfortunately (at least for the non-US based of us) it was nothing more than something we could sit back and watch – which was kind of weird because the team of developers that built Google Maps was based in Sydney.

But finally the Australian version of google maps was released, and then recently integrated with Local Search, which means you can search on Pizza shotps near a particular address. Which is cool.

What is even cooler (if you’re a ruby developer), though, is the release of this: GeoKit. It integrates with all of the major geocoding/mapping services and provides a huge range of options and services. So now you can do stuff like this:

add_1=GeoKit::Geocoders::GoogleGeocoder.geocode("1 St Georges Terrace, Perth, Western Australia")
add_2=GeoKit::Geocoders::GoogleGeocoder.geocode("1 York St, Albany, Western Australia")

distance = add_1.distance_from(add_2, :units => :kms)

Which returns


389.248018478531

which is, of course, how far it is between the main streets of Perth and Albany in Western Australia.

Sawwweeeeeet.

Update

Well, that didn’t take long at all. A quick loop over the existing schools in the SchoolSeek database got the lat/long information for all the addresses. Then adding this line

acts_as_mappable default_units => :kms

to my Address model allows you to do this

@addresses = Address.find(:all, :o rigin => "18 Bland St, Ashfield, New South Wales", :conditions => "distance < 10")

which gives me all of the addresses within 10Kms of 18 Bland St, Ashfield. Nice.

So, basically GeoKit let me add distance searching to the site within about 45 minutes (allowing 25 minutes for me to read through the examples and such!)

Smallest possible expenditure of intelligence

Tuesday, July 11th, 2006

Intellectual Bargain Shopping, by Jeffrey Veen

To predict the behavior of ordinary people in advance, you only have to assume that they will always try to escape a disagreeable situation with the smallest possible expenditure of intelligence. – Friedrich Nietzsche

Still, to this day, I am presented with the tired old argument that “users are stupid” – that the hubris of developers and designers somehow trumps investment in usable products. I love how this quote turns the tables. Users aren’t stupid, they’re efficient. They’re spending the least amount of effort (i.e. intelligence) as they possible can on each step of the goal they’re trying to achieve. If you make them spend more, they’ll go somewhere else – it’s like intellectual bargain shopping.