A podcast site made specifically for the ExVo D&D games.
That being said, I'll be making it as easy as possible for others to use so feel free :)
Made with Go, Bulma, TypeScript and <3
The following environment variables are used in the configuration of the system;
POSTGRES_HOST
- The host name of the postgres server
- Defaults to
localhost
POSTGRES_PORT
- The port of the postgres server
- Defaults to
5432
POSTGRES_USER
- The username used to connect to postgres
- Defaults to
postgres
POSTGRES_PASS
- The password used to authenticate the postgres user
- Defaults to
postgres
POSTGRES_NAME
- This name of the database being used for the system
- Defaults to
postgres
POSTGRES_SECURE
- Flag stating whether or not the connection to postgres should be done with SSL
- Defaults to
false
LDAP_HOST
- The host name of the ldap server
- Defaults to
localhost
LDAP_PORT
- The port of the ldap server
- Defaults to
389
LDAP_USER
- The username used to connect to ldap
- Defaults to
cn=admin,dc=naturalvoid,dc=com
LDAP_PASS
- The password used to authenticate the ldap user
- Defaults to
nv
LDAP_SECURE
- Flag stating whether or not the connection to ldap should be done with SSL
- Defaults to
false
SECRET_KEY
- This is used to generate a secret key for secrets
- Defaults to
replacethiswithanactualsecretkey
PRODUCTION
- A flag stating whether or not the server is being run in a production environment
- Defaults to
false
To develop this project further you'll need to run an LDAP and Postgres server locally.
A docker-compose.yml
file has been supplied to set these up, and by default the conf is set to use these.
Run docker-compose up -d
and also go run seed.go
to pre-populate the test DB with some records.
A user has been set up for the ldap server with the following details;
- Username:
crnbrdrck
- Password:
password
It is completely possible to customize the colour scheme for the website by adding a very basic scss file.
In order to colour the website, I come up with a 2 colour scheme. This is expanded to a 5 colour scheme using websites like ColorMind, Coolors, etc.
The 5 colours are then used as light-shade
, light-accent
, main-brand
, dark-accent
, and dark-shade
.
The 2 colours are also set as scheme-primary
and scheme-secondary
depending on which is your main and which is your secondary colour.
If you look at scss/dread.scss
you'll see an example of a colour scheme;
// Set the 5 main colours
$light-shade: #B9ADA9;
$light-accent: #656993;
$main-brand: #2C0047;
$dark-accent: #600;
$dark-shade: #1A141D;
// Set the notification colours
$primary: #2c0047;
$primary-invert: $light-shade;
$info: #19141d;
$info-invert: white;
$success: #427a4d;
$success-invert: white;
$warning: #c06a15;
$warning-invert: white;
$danger: #f44336;
$danger-invert: white;
// Set the primary and secondary colours (they don't have to be from the ones defined above)
$scheme-primary: $main-brand;
$scheme-primary-invert: $light-shade;
$scheme-secondary: $dark-accent;
$scheme-secondary-invert: $light-shade;
@import "./_main.scss"
All you have to do is create an scss file similar to this, name it whatever you want and save it in the scss
folder.
Then by running npm run css-build
, you will get a file in static/css
with the same name as the scss
file you made.