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Kumi 4c90218490
feat(editor): enhance element property forms
Refined the `createElementPropertiesForm` in the editor to include
position and rotation inputs, improving user interaction for specifying
these attributes. Simplified the function's parameters by removing
unnecessary event and thetaStart arguments, streamlining the codebase.
Also corrected the naming of `destination_x`, `destination_y`, and
`destination_z` input names for consistency. Marked handling of unknown
element types with a TODO to prompt future development. This enhancement
allows for more precise control over element positioning and
orientation, directly impacting user experience positively.
2024-03-28 11:26:24 +01:00
assets feat(editor): enhance element property forms 2024-03-28 11:26:24 +01:00
quackscape feat: improve UI visibility and interaction 2024-03-28 11:15:36 +01:00
.gitignore feat: integrate media deletion and swap icon 2024-03-27 10:08:07 +01:00
CODE_OF_CONDUCT.md feat: introduce Code of Conduct and Contributing Guidelines 2024-03-15 09:33:56 +01:00
CONTRIBUTING.md feat: introduce Code of Conduct and Contributing Guidelines 2024-03-15 09:33:56 +01:00
LICENSE Added LICENSE and enhanced project documentation 2024-03-14 18:14:25 +01:00
package-lock.json feat: integrate aframe-click-drag and improve 2024-03-27 19:54:48 +01:00
package.json feat(editor): enhance element positioning with 2024-03-28 10:22:42 +01:00
pyproject.toml feat: enhance UI and extend form functionality 2024-03-27 09:22:04 +01:00
README.md feat: Upgrade project setup and dependencies management 2024-03-15 09:36:18 +01:00
SECURITY.md feat: add initial SECURITY.md for project 2024-03-15 14:33:14 +01:00
settings.dist.ini Added LICENSE and enhanced project documentation 2024-03-14 18:14:25 +01:00
webpack.config.js refactor(js): streamline frontend SCSS import 2024-03-15 15:06:15 +01:00

Quackscape - A panoramic content management system for the web.

Quackscape is a content management system for panoramic/VR photos and videos. It is designed to be a simple and easy to use platform for sharing panoramic content on the web. It is built using the Django web framework and is designed to be easily deployable on a variety of platforms.

Requirements

  • Python 3.8+
  • Redis
  • NodeJS / NPM
  • ffmpeg (for video processing)
  • MariaDB or MySQL (optional but recommended)
  • A web server (Caddy, gunicorn, Nginx, Apache, etc.) (optional but recommended)

Development Setup

  1. Clone the repository and enter it
git clone https://git.private.coffee/PrivateCoffee/quackscape.git
cd quackscape
  1. Create a virtual environment and install the requirements
python3 -m venv venv
source venv/bin/activate
pip install -e .

# Or, to install with MySQL support:
pip install -e .[mysql]

# Or for Postgres support:
pip install -e .[postgres]
  1. Install the frontend dependencies
npm install
  1. Copy settings.dist.ini to settings.ini and fill in the required settings

  2. Run the migrations

quackscape-manage migrate
  1. Compile the frontend assets
quackscape-manage build

If you are working on the frontend, you can instead use the npm run watch:dev command to automatically recompile the frontend assets when they change. Note that if you do this, you will have to keep this running while you are working, so it will probably occupy one of your terminals.

  1. Run the development server
quackscape-manage rundev
  1. Create a superuser
quackscape-manage createsuperuser
  1. Visit http://localhost:8000 in your web browser

Production Setup

As this is still quite a ways from a stable project, we do not include production setup steps here. Very fundamentally, the production setup would be similar to the development setup. However, there are a few differences:

  • You can omit the -e switch when running pip install.
  • Instead of npm run build:dev, you should run npm run build.
  • You should make sure to configure a database such as MariaDB or MySQL. You should not use the default SQLite database in production.
  • Instead of quackscape-manage runserver, you should use a production-ready web server such as Caddy and gunicorn.
  • Instead of quackscape-manage runserver, you will want to use the quackscape-manage runworker command to start the background worker process.
  • You may want to use systemd or another process manager to keep the server and worker processes running in the background.

S3 Storage

Quackscape supports storing your static files and uploaded media in S3 buckets. During development, only MinIO was tested, but other providers, such as AWS, should work as well.

This has the advantage that your local hard drive needs less capacity, but note that the workers that do your video processing will still need to have enough disk space for this task.

Using S3 storage also allows you to run multiple public-facing instances, for example to balance the load, while ensuring to serve the same statics and media content on all instances.

To enable S3, refer to the provided section in settings.dist.ini. After that, you can run quackscape-manage collectstatic to upload your static files to S3.

One feature that may be of particular interest to those who want to work on the frontend is the LocalStatic option. If this is set to 1, static files will be served by the local server instead of S3, which ensures you always work with the current state without having to run collectstatic all the time. In conjunction with npm run watch:dev, this makes it easy to work on the frontend without having to worry about the static files, while still being able to use S3 to store the media files.

Workers

Quackscape uses a background worker to process uploaded photos and videos. You can start the worker process using the quackscape-manage runworker command.

You may want to run the worker process on another machine. The server part is not very resource-hungry, so it can easily run on a VPS, but for video processing, you may want to use a machine with more resources, ideally with a powerful GPU.

To run the worker process on another machine, you first follow the basic setup instructions on that machine as well, then add a line like this to the worker's settings.ini:

[Quackscape]
Redis = redis://<redis-ip>:6379/0

Replace <redis-ip> with the IP address of the machine running the Redis server. This way, the worker will be able to fetch tasks from the same Redis server the Quackscape server is writing them to.

Contributing

We welcome contributions to this project. Please see the CONTRIBUTING file for more information.

License

This project is licensed under the MIT License - see the LICENSE file for details.