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Abstract Information Management and Authority Service (aimaas)

aimaas aims to be a central authoritative web service for information management. Main aspects in (future) development are:

  • EAV data model
  • Modular architecture
  • Easy to use interfaces for humans (WebUI) and machines (API)
  • Role-based permission management
  • Traceability of information changes

For more details on aimaas see: Philosophy & Architecture.

Status

This project is currently under active development.

Getting started

We assume that interested parties are familiar with Python, JavaScript, FastAPI and NodeJs.

Setup

In a nutshell, these are the steps to set up a development environment:

  1. Install PostgreSQL.
  2. Create a database.
  3. Backend
    1. Create a file with environment variable definitions (See config.py for which variables are available/required).
    2. Create a Python virtualenv (Our suggestion: Python 3.12).
    3. Install Python dependencies with pip.
    4. Run database migrations: alembic upgrade head.
  4. Frontend
    1. Install npm (and nodejs, our suggestion: v20).
    2. Install JS dependencies with npm install.

Updating NPM packages

The safe way to update packages is to run:

npm update

If you want to upgrade more aggressively (i.e. potentially introduce breaking changes) you can consider something like this:

npm install ---no-save npm-check-updates
ncu --upgrade
npm install

Running development servers

Backend

Having set up the Python backend as described you should now be able to run the backend with this command:

uvicorn backend.main:app --reload  # --env-file <path_to_your_envfile>

Note: The --env-file argument is not required, if your env. file is stored in the project root directory.

This will run the backend on localhost:8000.

Frontend

Having set up the NodeJS frontend as described you should now be able to run the frontend with this command:

cd frontend
npm run dev

This will run the frontend on localhost:8080.

Note: The dev server is configured to proxy API requests to localhost:8000 by default. If your backend development server is listening somewhere else, make sure to adjust the proxy target in vite.config.js!

Building production images

In order to build a production-ready container images you can simply run:

make all

The resulting images can be started like this:

docker run \
  -d \                                 # Demonize
  --restart unless-stopped \           # Automatically restart
  --name aimaas_ui \                   # Easy to remember name
  aimaas-ui:latest \                   # Our container image

docker run \
  -d \                                 # Demonize
  --restart unless-stopped \           # Automatically restart
  --env-file <path_to_your_envfile> \  # Use the config
  --name aimaas_api \                  # Easy to remember name
  aimaas-api:latest \                  # Our container image
  --workers 4                          # Parameters for `uvicorn`
  --root_path /api

Caveat: This obviously requires that make and docker are installed.

Caveat: A central assumption is, that the backend is reachable via the same base URL as the frontend, e.g. if the frontend is available at http://example.com/, the backend is expected at http://example.com/api/. For the development environment a reverse proxy is pre-configured. On production, this needs to be handled explicitly!

Cheat Sheet

This is a collection of helpful links:

Contributing

Right now anyone can contribute by defining requirements or submitting pull requests.