This is the backend for the Simple app to help track hypertensive patients across a population.
We have a bin/setup
script that does most of the work of getting things setup, but you need a few things in place first.
If you are on a Mac, install homebrew and then install rbenv, redis, postgres@14, and yarn:
brew install rbenv ruby-build redis yarn postgresql@14
After this is done, it is highly recommended to tune your local PostgreSQL installation, otherwise your server will get bogged down when doing things like refreshing materialized views.
You can use PGTune to do this, it takes about 2 minutes. You can find your local postgresql.conf file at /opt/homebrew/var/postgresql@14/postgresql.conf
on M1 Macs,
and /usr/local/var/postgresql@14/postgresql.conf
on Intel Macs.
To set up the Simple server for local development, clone the git repository and run the setup script included:
$ git clone [email protected]:simpledotorg/simple-server.git
$ cd simple-server
$ bin/setup
Note: If you already have a previous dev environment you're trying to refresh, it's easiest to drop your database run setup again.
$ rails db:drop
$ rails parallel:drop
$ bin/setup
If you encounter issues with this script, please open a new issue with details. Please include the entire log from bin/setup, as well as your computer / OS details.
The error message will look like:
Extracting libxml2-2.9.13.tar.xz into <...>
========================================================================
tar (child): xz: Cannot exec: No such file or directory
tar (child): Error is not recoverable: exiting now
/bin/tar: Child returned status 2
/bin/tar: Error is not recoverable: exiting now
========================================================================
Ensure that you have xz
installed and linked with brew link xz
.
With recent gem updates, all of our gems and dependencies now build ARM native on m1 macs. This means you do not need to use Rosetta to set up simple-server, and in fact using Rosetta will make things more complicated and confusing in day to day dev experience, and also hurts performance.
There is one possible caveat to this -- if you see any problems with google-protobuf, run the following:
gem uninstall google-protobuf
gem install google-protobuf -v 3.21.5 --platform=ruby
Then rerun bundler and everything will work. This is being tracked over in protocolbuffers/protobuf#8682, hopefully there will be a better fix soon.
Beyond that, the setup instructions are now the same for Intel or M1 macs, as you can install homebrew normally and go from there.
Dev environment setup using docker and docker-compose
brew install docker
brew install docker-compose
bin/docker-up
After a successful docker-compose initialisation, an admin dashboard account is automatically created.
username: [email protected]
password: Resolve2SaveLives
Open http://localhost:3000 in your browser to view the simple dashboard
Use below Ngrok guide for Android development setup
bin/docker-down
If the included bin/setup
script fails for some reason, you can also manually
set up the application step by step. You can do so as follows.
First, you need to install ruby. It is recommended to use rbenv to manage ruby versions. Note that we currently use Bundler version 2.3.22, so that is also hardcoded below.
Next, install NodeJS v18.11.0 using nvm.
gem install bundler -v 2.3.22
bundle _2.3.22_ install
brew install nvm
nvm install 18.11.0
rake yarn:install
rails db:setup
We cleanup old migration files every once in a while and so running db:migrate
would not work for the initial setup.
When setting up a new database, db:setup
will take care of everything (it runs db:structure:load
under the hood).
To run simple-android app with the server running locally, you can use ngrok.
brew install --cask ngrok
rails server
ngrok http 3000
The output of the ngrok command is HTTP and HTTPS URLs that can be used to access your local server. The HTTP URL cannot be used since HTTP traffic will not be supported by the emulator. Configure the following places with the HTTPS URL.
In the gradle.properties
file in the simple-android
repository, set:
manifestEndpoint=<HTTPS URL>/api/
fallbackApiEndpoint=<HTTPS URL>/api/
In the .env.development.local
(you can create this file if it doesn't exist),
SIMPLE_SERVER_HOST=<URL> # i.e. without https://
SIMPLE_SERVER_HOST_PROTOCOL=https
Alternatively, you can make the change on the server side. In the server repo, open app/views/api/manifests/show.json.jbuilder
. Change:
json.endpoint "#{ENV["SIMPLE_SERVER_HOST_PROTOCOL"]}://#{ENV["SIMPLE_SERVER_HOST"]}/api/"
to:
json.endpoint "<HTTPS URL>/api/"
We use sidekiq to run async tasks. To run them locally you need to start redis:
redis-server -v
We use Mailcatcher for testing email in development. Please use the following to set it up on your machine.
Note: Please don't add Mailcatcher to the Gemfile
, as it causes conflicts.
gem install mailcatcher
mailcatcher
Now you should be able to see test emails at http://localhost:1080
When testing web views like the progress tab or help screens, you will need to authenticate yourself with specific request headers. You can run the following command to get a set of request headers for a user that you can attach to your requests.
$ bundle exec rails get_user_credentials
The command will output a set of request headers that you can attach to your requests using tools like Postman or ModHeader.
Attach the following request headers to your requests:
Authorization: Bearer 9b54814d4b422ee37dad46e7ebee673c59eed088c264e479880cbe7fb5ac1ce7
X-User-ID: 452b96c2-e0cf-49e7-ab73-c328acd3f1e5
X-Facility-ID: dcda7d9d-48f9-47d2-b1cc-93d90c94386e
Here are two Simple App pages you can test on your browser:
- "Progress Tab":
http://localhost:3000/api/v3/analytics/user_analytics.html
- "Help Page":
http://localhost:3000/api/v3/help.html
Every pull request opened on the simple-server
repo creates a Heroku review app
with the branch's code deployed to it. The review app is hosted at the URL https://simple-review-pr-.herokuapp.com.
This temporary environment can be used to test your changes in a production-like environment easily.
If you need to test your changes with a mobile app build as well, you can generate a mobile app build that points to your review app. To do so:
- Navigate to the GitHub Actions page on the
simple-server
repository - Select the "Mobile Review App Build" action
- Trigger a "workflow dispatch" at the top of the screen. You can keep the branch as
master
(it doesn't matter) and enter your PR number in the required input - Once the Action is complete, its page will contain the APK as an artifact.
Messages sent through Twilio are currently fixed to specific countries. To override this setting, go to the heroku console and add/update the DEFAULT_COUNTRY
config variable on your review app to your desired country. The supported country codes are listed here.
# for US/Canada
DEFAULT_COUNTRY = US
# for UK
DEFAULT_COUNTRY = UK
Updating this config will automatically restart the review app and should allow one to receive messages in their appropriate ISD codes.
The app uses a base development configuration using .env.development
. To add or override any configurations during
local development, create a .env.development.local
file and add your necessary configurations there. If a
configuration change is applicable to all dev environments, ensure that it is added to .env.development
and checked
into the codebase.
Foreman can be used to run the application locally. First, install foreman.
$ gem install foreman
Then, run the following command to start the Rails and Sidekiq together.
$ foreman start -f Procfile.dev
Note: Foreman will also execute the whenever
gem in trial mode. This will validate that the whenever
configuration is valid, but will not actually schedule any cron jobs.
Alternatively, you can start these services locally without foreman by using the following commands individually.
- Rails:
bundle exec rails server
orbundle exec puma
- Sidekiq:
bundle exec sidekiq
bin/rspec
Run tests interactively quickly while developing:
bin/guard
We use the standard gem as our default formatter and linter. To enable it directly in your editor, follow this.
To check all the offenses throughout the codebase:
$ bundle exec standardrb
To fix any offenses that standard can autofix, run
$ bundle exec standardrb --fix
NOTE: Its highly recommended to tune your local PostgreSQL before generating new seed data, especially large seed data sets. See the docs for that under Development. To generate a full set of seed data, including facilities, users, patients with BPs, etc, run the following:
bin/rails db:seed
You can always do a full reset to get back to a working dataset locally - note that reset clears all DBs, recreates them, runs seed, and refreshes matviews.
bin/rails db:reset
Need a larger dataset? Try adding the SEED_TYPE
ENV variable. Available sizes are small
, medium
, and large
, and profiling
. Large and profiling take a long time to run (20 mins to an hour), but they are very helpful for performance testing.
SEED_TYPE=medium bin/rails db:reset
# You also may want an entirely new large dataset, with more facilities and regions, and more patients per facility.
SEED_TYPE=large bin/rails db:reset
To purge the generated patient data only, run the following. Note that you usually don't want this, and a full db:reset
is safer in terms of generating a valid data set.
$ bin/rails db:purge_users_data
If you need new admin users, you can run the following command from the project root. Note that the standard seed process already creates various admins for you, so you probably don't need this for typical dev.
$ bin/rails 'create_admin_user[<name>,<email>,<password>]'
NOTE: generating seed data locally is the recommended way to get data in your env. Sandbox data is actually just generated via db:seed
, so the below
process really just adds SCP overhead to the process.
- Follow the steps in the "How to add an SSH key..." section here to add your SSH key to the deployment repo
- Ask someone from the Simple team to add you as an admin to Sandbox
- Create a password for your Sandbox account and use that to log into the Sandbox dashboard on https://api-sandbox.simple.org
- Run
ssh [email protected]
to verify that your SSH access from step 1 was completed successfully. - Run
bundle exec cap sandbox db:pull
to sync Sandbox data with your local machine. - Use your Sandbox email and password to log into your local environment (http://localhost:3000).
We use the vegeta utility to run performance benchmarks. The suite and additional instructions are here.
Security audits generally require some test data to be set up in a specific way, and account credentials and other information to be shared with the auditor. Run the following command to set up the necessary test data and print out an information sheet to be shared.
$ bin/rails 'prepare_security_environment'
This task can only be executed in development and security environments.
API Documentation can be accessed at /api-docs
on local server and hosted at https://api.simple.org/api-docs
To regenerate the Swagger API documentation, run the following command.
$ bundle exec rake docs
Architecture decisions are captured in ADR format and are available in /doc/arch
Guides, instructions and long-form maintenance documentation can go in /doc/wiki
These are not actively committed into the repository. But can be generated by running bundle exec erd
Simple Server is continuously deployed from master to all environments via Semaphore Workflows as long as the build passes.
If you need to make a manual production release, run the release script from master:
bin/release
This will create a git release tag and automatically trigger a deployment to all environments through Semaphore. You can monitor the deployment progress in Semaphore via the tagged release's workflow. Please make sure to copy / paste the changelog from bin/release
so you can post it in the #releases channel.
The infrastructure setup including the ansible and terraform scripts are documented in the deployment repository.
If you're working on a project that will affect any of the indicators listed in this document, please contact the product / design team.