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CodeWorkout

CodeWorkout is an online system for people learning a programming language for the first time. It is a free, open-source solution for practicing small programming problems. Students may practice coding exercises or multiple-choice-questions on a variety of programming concepts in a web browser and receive immediate feedback.

CodeWorkout was inspired by many great systems built by others, but aims to bring together the best from earlier forerunners while adding important new features. It provides comprehensive support for teachers who want to use coding exercises in their courses, while also maintaining flexibility for self-paced learners who aren't part of an organized course.

Try it out at [https://codeworkout.cs.vt.edu]. You can play around without signing up if you like.

Contents

Setting up a Development Environment Using Docker

Note: If you are comfortable setting up a Rails application, i.e., installing Ruby (2.3.8), Rails (4.2), and MySQL (5.7) on your own machine, you can just do that instead of using Docker. You'll need to change the host keys in config/database.yml to localhost.

The following steps will help set up a development environment for CodeWorkout using Docker and Docker Compose. You can do your editing on your own machine using an editor of your choice; changes will be reflected in the Docker container.

Clone this repository

$ git clone git@github.com:web-cat/code-workout.git
$ cd code-workout

Check out the staging branch. Most new changes won't be accepted directly into the master branch.

$ git checkout staging

Install Docker and build the containers

Instructions to install Docker may be found at the Docker website.

These instructions were written with Docker version 19.03.8 in mind. We don't do anything fancy, so things should work as long as you're reasonably up to date.

We use Docker Compose to tie multiple containers together. One for the web application, and one each for the test and development databases. Docker Compose comes installed with Docker automatically.

Inside the code-workout directory, do the following:

$ docker-compose up # build and start containers for the web application and the databases

This step builds the web container using the provided Dockerfile to install Ruby, Rails, and required dependencies. It also builds the db_dev and db_test containers, each of which pull a ready-to-use MySQL image from DockerHub. Two databases are set up:

  • codeworkout, running on port 3306 on the db_dev container and port 3307 on the host
  • codeworkout_test, running on port 3306 on the db_test container and port 3308 on the host

Credentials for both databases:

  • username: codeworkout
  • pwd: codeworkout

The first time you do this, it will take a bit of time to build all the containers. Subsequent runs of this command will just start the existing containers.

Output from the containers will appear in your console. Do Ctrl-C to exit and stop the containers.

Do the following if you want to run the containers in the background and get your terminal back:

$ docker-compose up -d

You can docker-compose down to stop and remove the containers (or just docker-compose stop to stop without removing).

Set up some development data

This next step sets up the database and populates it with fake data for development. Do the following in the code-workout directory on your machine.

$ docker-compose run web rake db:populate

The above command is telling Docker to "run the command rake db:populate on the web container and exit". This rake task is defined in lib/tasks/sample_data.rake, and runs the following tasks in order:

$ rake db:drop        # drop the database
$ rake db:create      # create the database
$ rake db:schema:load # load the schema from db/schema.rb
$ rake db:seed        # load the seeded data (like timezones, seasons, etc.)
$ rake db:populate    # load sample data; this is a custom rake task

Run rake -T in your project root to see a list of available rake tasks. What's rake?

The initial database population is defined by lib/tasks/sample_data.rake. It uses the factories defined in spec/factories to generate entities. If you add new model classes and want to generate test data in the database, please add to the sample_data.rake file so that this population will happen automatically for everyone. The sample_data.rake contains only "sample/try out" data for use during development, and it won't appear on the production server. Initial database contents provided for all new installs, including the production server, is described in db/seeds.rb instead.

  • The initial database includes the following accounts:

    It also includes the following other objects:

    • six terms (spring, summer I, summer II, fall, and winter of the current year),
    • one organization (VT)
    • one course (CS 1114)
    • two offerings of 1114 (one each semester)
      • one course offering is set up with the admin and instructor as instructors, and all other sample accounts as students
  • To reset the database to the initial state do the following:

    • $ cd code-workout
    • $ docker-compose run web rake db:populate

A note on setting up a development database.

We load the schema directly from db/schema.rb, because database migrations tend to go stale over time—running over 100 migrations, many of which are years old, is likely to run into errors. Migrations are useful for making new changes or reversing recent changes to the schema.

Run servers

To run the development server, do the following in the code-workout directory:

$ docker-compose up # this may take a minute

In your browser, navigate to https://localhost:9292 and you should see the CodeWorkout homepage. (Make sure you have https in front of the URL.)

You can edit files on your own machine; changes will be reflected in container.

Other notes

NOTE 1: Since the Rails application is running on the web container, your typical rails or rake commands are run as you see above, i.e., with docker-compose run web in front of it. For example, to generate a model you would do docker-compose run web rails g model MyModel.

NOTE 2: To end up in a bash shell in the container (i.e., to "SSH" into the server), do the following:

docker-compose run web bash

Note that this does not set up the port forwarding, so if you do this and manually run the server (./runservers.sh), you won't be able to access it from your browser.

NOTE 3: These docs and the Docker setup are recent. Please submit an issue if something is missing, incorrect, or unclear.

Making an Exercise

For instructions on how to make an exercise, see making_an_exercise.md. Note that this functionality is not directly available through the web interface for most users. Please get in touch if you want to add exercises to CodeWorkout.