The Pet Rescue app is derived from the Baja Pet Rescue Dog Adoption Application created by @kasugaijin who wanted to give back to the grassroots organization from where he adopted his dog in Mexico by building them a web application. Pet Rescue is an application that makes it easy to link adopters with pets.
Let's get your machine setup to startup the application!
Clone the codebase
git clone git@github.com:rubyforgood/animal-rescue.git
Create a new config/application.yml
file from the config/application.example.yml
:
cp config/application.example.yml config/application.yml
Update your config/application.yml
by replacing the places that say REPLACE_ME.
Run the setup script to prepare DB and assets
bin/setup
To run the app locally, use:
bin/dev
You can use the following login credentials to access the following roles:
Adopter
- email:
adopter1@example.com
- password:
123456
Staff
- email:
staff@example.com
- password:
123456
You are also able to register an account.
The app will work OK with no subdomains, but to really test out the multi-tenant capabilities, you will need to configure subdomains. Every Organization
has a subdomain field, and that Org will be accessible via ApplicationController#current_tenant
.
To configure your local dev env to test subdomains, you will need to edit your /etc/hosts
file
Add the following line:
This will map the two seed Orgs with the correct subdomains
Run unit tests only
./bin/rails test
Run system tests only (Headless)
./bin/rails test:system
Run system tests only (Not-Headless)
CI=false ./bin/rails test:system
Note: If system tests are failing for you, try prepending the command with APP_HOST=localhost
. Your host might be misconfigured.
APP_HOST=localhost ./bin/rails test:system
Run ALL tests:
./bin/rails test:all
We use standard for linting. It provides a command for auto-fixing errors:
rails standard:fix
This google sheets contains a list of tools, their purposes, and who has access to grant permissions.
Pet Rescue is one of many projects initiated and run by Ruby for Good. You can find out more about Ruby for Good at https://rubyforgood.org
While vision is the destination, and strategy is how we'll get there, core values are what we'll use to handle times of change or uncertainty (both of which are expected, guaranteed to happen, and positive signs of growth!).
We are committed to promoting positive culture and outcomes for all, from coders and maintainers and leads to pet rescue and adoption administrators -- and animals everywhere.
We will lean on the following as guiding principles when interacting with others -- stakeholders, as well as current and future maintainers, leads, and collaborators -- and we ask that anyone engaging with this project in any capacity to do the same. Know that we do want to know how and when (not if) we can improve upon these values and/or the way in which we live by and act in accordance with them, so please comment here and in PRs when you have ideas.
Here are our core values defined by early contributors and leads:
Write maintainable code that is accessible and enjoyable (for beginners and seasoned coders alike), supports and encourages contributors and their contributions, and ensures long-term sustainability of this project and the efforts it supports.
Prioritize clear communication, embrace diverse viewpoints, and always engage feedback -- all with a commitment to timely responses and ongoing improvement for all. Rescue and adoption partner perspectives will be prioritized over abstracted conceptualization of their needs.
Build upon stakeholder partnerships to foster and encourage their active involvement, focusing constructive discussion and dispute resolution on the practical impact of our collective work.
These are just some of the documents put together before writing any code: