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Helferinnensystem

This is our fork of the engelsystem, including some information about how to set it up. It might be somewhat FrOSCon-specific. See /README.md for the original readme file with more details.

Installation

The basic installation steps are:

  • install git, docker and docker-compose
  • clone https://github.com/froscon/engelsystem.git
  • change configuration to your needs
  • start the containers via docker-compose

Check the following configurations and adapt as necessary:

  • docker/secrets/ holds all passwords as separate files. These are mounted into the containers via docker-compose secrets and consumed accordingly by the containers. Note that the database only uses the secrets when it is initially created. Changing the secrets later on will not make the database change the passwords!
  • docker/docker-compose.override.yml holds all normal configuration. Some info on what they do is in config/config.default.php. Adapt as necessary.
  • we use the FrOSCon frog logo as icon. Change if you want something else.

Starting docker-compose will first build and then start three containers:

  • es_database is a standard mariadb container. To inspect it manually, use the phpmyadmin container.
  • es_server hosts the engelsystem itself. It takes some time to build...
  • backup for database backups, see here.

Once the containers are running, initialize or update the database using the bin/migrate script within the es_server container.

$ cd docker
$ docker compose up -d
... containers are built, takes some time ...
... containers are started ...
$ docker compose exec es_server bin/migrate
... database is created and initialized ...

You should now find a working helferinnensystem on port 80!

Updates

The general idea of this fork is to maintain a set of commits that can be rebased easily onto new upstream versions. Hence, any changes to this fork should be easy to rebase: try to avoid modifying files and instead add new files (examples: docker-compose.override.yml, .github/README.md).

To propose a new change, open a PR against this fork and consider the following:

  • if the change is rather a general patch for the engelsystem, head over there and open your PR against the upstream
  • try to make it as easy as possible to rebase in the future; try not to touch any files that exist in the upstream.

If our main changed, follow the instructions below but skip the rebase step.

New upstream version

To update to a new upstream version, rebase the current main branch on the upstream's main branch. If the rebase looks good and the whole setup boots locally, then (and only then) force-push the result back to main. Finally, go to your server, pull the changes, rebuild the docker container, restart it and (most likely) run the migrations.

$ git remote -v
...
upstream	[email protected]:engelsystem/engelsystem.git (fetch)
upstream	[email protected]:engelsystem/engelsystem.git (push)
$ git rebase -i main upstream/main
...
$ git push -f
$ ssh <your server>
$ cd engelsystem/docker/
$ git pull
$ docker compose build
... es_server is rebuilt ...
$ docker compose up -d
... es_server is restarted ...
$ docker compose exec es_server bin/migrate
... new migrations are integrated ...

Preparing for a new year

For FrOSCon, or other recurring events, we avoid recreating all shifts every year. Instead we purge data that is specific to a particular year and carefully move the shifts to the next year. To do this:

Be careful! The second step removes all shifts and locations that originate from a schedule (i.e. from talks), moves all remaining shifts into the given FrOSCon weekend and updates the event config. Furthermore it removes all non-admin users as well as all messages, news, questions, schedules, shift entries and log entries. As this script is somewhat FrOSCon specific, it lives in our internal repository. We should be happy to provide it on request, though.

Differences compared to upstream

See this diff for an exhaustive diff of our main branch with the upstream main branch.

Docker compose file

The normal way to configure the engelsystem is via environment variables passed to the es_server docker container. Do make rebasing easy, we add a docker-compose.override.yml file that sets a bunch of environment variables, passwords and additional containers (backup and phpmyadmin).

These environment variables are used in config/config.default.php. Note that the MYSQL_PASSWORD_FILE still requires a custom patch while we are waiting this to be upstreamed.

Language files

We choose to avoid the whole angel terminology and refer to our volunteers as "volunteers" (English) and "Helferinnen" (German). On top, we choose to use the generic feminine form ("Helferinnen"). To implement this, we modify the language files that live in resources/lang/.

The main Dockerfile already compiles the .mo files from the respective .po files. We conveniently hook into this process and patch these .po files before the compilation by executing a few custom scripts.

Whenever the upstream changes or adds new texts, these scripts might need to be adapted! At the end of the scripts, they look for common words from the "angel terminology" so you can run them locally to check whether they currently miss any instances.

For the German language files, we run sed -i a bunch of times. While most patterns are fairly generic, some are very specific to individual strings. We tried to avoid patterns that are "sub-patterns" of others, but beware!

For the English language, not all strings are put into .mo files (yet?). Some (still?) live as default values in the source code. We thus first create the additional.po file that contains all such strings that are not yet part of default.po. After that, we apply a similar script as for the German files.

Backups

In the FrOSCon context, the helferinnensystem runs on a dedicated VM that gets regular snapshots. We do regular backups because

  • we want to have backups in place in case the FrOSCon setup changes or this is used in another context where the backup strategy is different
  • we might not want to rely on getting a full-VM backup in an emergency
  • we might want to be able to diff changes since the last backup in a meaningful and easy way
  • the backups are simple and small

We add a docker/backup.Dockerfile that is built and started as another container with (root) access to the database. This container runs cron with two jobs:

  • an hourly mysqldump of all databases to a file
  • a daily removal of all files older than a week

The files are written to a backup volume living on the host. We retain 7 * 24 = 168 files at most, and full dumps at the end of FrOSCon used to be below 1MB.

Restore a backup

Due to the whole container setup, we recommend using the phpmyadmin container for all database operations. If you really want to use the command line, you might need to go into the database container and connect from there. Note that piping files into mysql in this scenario either requires copying this file into the container first, or some pretty fragile piping magic through docker exec...

To first inspect a backup file and possibly compare to the current state:

  • create a new database helferinnensystem_backup
  • import the backup file

To replace the current database with a backup:

  • rename the current database to helferinnensystem_backup
  • create a new database helferinnensystem
  • import the backup file

Note that these operations drop database-specific privileges. This is the reason why we initially grant all privileges on helferinnensystem%. If you fail to use the proper prefix for the database name, you may not have access to the database, unless you use the root user.

Minor stuff

Our fork does a few other rather simple changes:

  • Add the FrOSCon logo as favicon and volunteer icon
  • Grant database privileges on all helferinnensystem% to simplify typical backup operations where we create helferinnensystem_<last year> and such. This is automatically executed when the database container is first started.
  • Add phpmyadmin container to allow for manual inspection and modification of the database. Only starts with docker compose --profile dev up -d on port 5081.

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