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My Sentry

There are many moments in our life where we find ourselves in uncomfortable or isolated situations. Such as showing an apartment, going on or even walking home at night. In these moments we are not always able to alert people of our safety. My Sentry allows you to create a safety event that alerts a group of your family, friends or coworkers if you are ever in danger.

Table Of Contents

  1. Usage
  2. Requirements
  3. Setup
    1. Android Studio Setup
    2. Installing Android 6.0 Marshmallow
    3. Environment Setup
  4. Development
    1. Installing Dependencies
    2. Tasks
  5. Team
  6. Contributing

Usage

To keep your group protected, install the My Sentry app on each member's Android device. Each user should then create an individual user account from the landing page. Once logged in, any user can then create a group and invite all of the other members to join. When a user is associated with at least one group, they are then able to create an event in which they will be in a potentially insecure situation. In the event creation view the user is prompted to supply the event begin and end time, information about the location, and any other details that would be useful in an emergency situation. If the user does not mark themselves safe by the event end time, the users in their group will be alerted to take the appropriate action.

Requirements

Setup

1. Install Requirements

Install all of the requirements above using the links for installation instructions for your specific device.

Go ahead and fork a copy of this repository and clone it down to a convenient place for you. The command should look something like:

git clone https://github.com/${your-github-profile}/my-sentry.git

Go ahead and install all dependencies for the project using npm. You will also eventually need to have react-native-cli installed globally, so go ahead and do that at this point:

cd my-sentry
npm install -g react-native-cli
npm install

2. Database Setup

Once you have installed MySQL, use the MySQL Command-Line Tool or a graphical tool like Sequel Pro to create a database named mysentry. If you are using the command line, your SQL command will look like this:

CREATE DATABASE mysentry;

Install knex globally on your machine and use it to populate your database with the schema, and if you wish, seed data:

npm install -g knex
knex migrate:latest
knex seed:run # optional

3. Emulator Set Up

Since My Sentry is built to work on Android devices, you will need to set up an Android Emulator for development. This step is optional if you decide to debug directly on an Android device over USB. If you decide to forgo an emulator, make sure to configure your Android device to allow USB debugging and make sure it is plugged in and unlocked whenever you see a reference to starting the emulator. It is also useful to configure your device to stay awake when in debugging mode to avoid constantly having to unlock.

Android Studio Setup

To set up your emulator, open up Android Studio. If this is your first time opening Android Studio, make sure you choose custom installation before proceeding through the installer. Use all of the default options as well as making sure all these boxes are checked when they appear on the screen:

  • Android SDK
  • Android SDK Platform
  • Performance (Intel ® HAXM)
  • Android Virtual Device

If this is not your first time running Android Studio, make sure HAXM is installed by following these instructions.

Install Android Marshmallow

React native requires Android 6.0 (Marshmallow) for development, but Android Studio installs 7.0 by default. To make sure you have the correct version, launch the SDK manager by going to Preferences > Appearance && Behavior > System Settings > Android SDK. Select SDK Platforms from within the manager and check the box next to Show Package Details in the bottom right corner. Make sure all of the following items are checked:

  • Google APIs
  • Android SDK Platform 23
  • Intel x86 Atom_64 System Image
  • Google APIs Intel x86 Atom_64 System Image

Next, select the SDK Tools and check the box next to Show Package Details. Look for and expand the Android SDK Build Tools and make sure Android SDK Build-Tools 23.0.1 is selected.

Click Apply to install all of the new packages.

Once all packages are installed, open the AVD Manager in Android Studio by clicking the button shown below.

AVD Manager Button

Once in the AVD Manager, select your AVD and click Edit. Make sure Android 6.0 - API Level 23 is selected under Device and Intel Atom (x86_64) under CPU/ABI. Make sure to note of the exact name of your AVD. It should be something like Nexus_5X_API_25_x86. Click Okay and exit the AVD Manager.

Environment Setup

To set up your environment, find your shell's environment profile. If you are using a bash shell, this is probably either ~/.profile or ./bash_profile depending on if you have a Linux machine or a Mac. After you have found the appropriate file, append the following lines in your text editor of choice:

export ANDROID_HOME=${HOME}/Library/Android/sdk
export PATH=${PATH}:${ANDROID_HOME}/tools
export PATH=${PATH}:${ANDROID_HOME}/platform-tools
export PATH=${PATH}:${ANDROID_HOME}/tools/bin
alias start-android="cd ${ANDROID_HOME}/tools; ./emulator -avd Nexus_5X_API_25_x86"

Make sure that the string following -avd on the last line matches exactly the AVD name you noted on the last step.

Troubleshooting

For more in depth infromation about how your emulator environment should be set up, go directly to the React Native Starting Guide

Configuration

My Sentry relies on push notifications to effectively alert group members of potentially dangerous situations. For a functional app, you must sign up for the Google Firebase Service. Proceed through Google's signup process filling in any relevant information. Don't enter any credit card information or mind anything it says about pricing. The push notification portion of Firebase is 100% free. Once you've created an account, go to your Firebase Console and create a new project. Follow the prompts and fill out all fields as necessary.

Once your project is created, navigate to the Notifications tab on the left hand side. Then select the Android icon to set up notifications for you android device. You will need to enter the package name for the app, which is com.mysentry. On the next step, download the google-service.json file and add it to the android/app/ directory in your project. This file is git ignored and should not be included in any commits. Finally, the third step in setting up your firebase notifications should already be completed for you. Double check this code exists and hit Continue to complete the setup.

You will also need to register for a Google Places API Key with Google Places. Register for a key and keep it in a place where you can come back to it.

For the final configuration, create a file config/config.js in your project and fill out all of the configuration variables. A template for this config file exists at config/config.example.js. URL_CONFIG should contain the address where the My Sentry server will be hosted. The FCM_CLIENT_KEY can be found in your Firebase console under Project Settings > Cloud Messaging > Server Key. Finally, your PLACES_API_KEY is the key that you saved from your Google Places API Key registration. Your config file should look like this at the end:

exports.URL_CONFIG = 'http://YOUR_URL_HOST.DOMAIN:PORT';
exports.PLACES_API_KEY = 'YOUR_PLACES_API_KEY';
exports.FCM_CLIENT_KEY = 'YOUR_FCM_SERVER_KEY';

Development And Deployment

The timer service that manages push notifications must be started before your server is started. This process should be started and left open in a terminal window for as long as you want the app to remain online. The service command is run from the root directory as:

npm run service

Once the service is running, you may start the server. In a separate terminal window, run the command:

npm run server

Alternatively, you may want to run these processes with a deployment tool such as Forever.

Once you have both the service and server running, you may build the client application. First make sure your emulator is running by issuing the command start-android in your terminal. Now you can start developing by running react-native run-android in the root of your project folder. This will start up a debugger window along with the javascript server and open your development build in your debugging environment.

To make an APK Build for production, run the following command from your root project folder:

cd android/ && ./gradlew assembleRelease

The production build will be available at android/app/build/outputs/apk/app-release.apk. Distribute this file to each appropriate Android Device for emulation.

Team

  • Product Owner: Jerry Krusinski - @jkrusinski
  • Scrum Master: Jonathan Granstaff - @jgranny
  • Development Team Member: Cory Grinstead - @universalmind303
  • Development Team Member: Christian Arredondo - @dondo09

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