Skip to content

KaKituken/IT2002

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

Database Management Application Prototype

The role of this small web relation management application is to be a standard where the student may extend the capabilities integrating more relational operations. The view of the application is written in a compact view (front-end) library React, in TypeScript. Feel free to check the detailed comments on the code to get to know what it does. The main part, the back-end operations are written in Python, using the library flask, and PostgresQL is used as the database engine. The directory structure and program architecture is given below and to activate/setup the environment, follow the instructions below.

Directory Structure

  1. docker-compose.yaml - Docker compose file used to build the Postgres environment and its admin interface
  2. app.py - codebase of the backend API and database integration. SQL statements to be written here
  3. view/src/api.ts - codebase communicating the view with the main api (namely functionalities of app.py)
  4. view/App.tsx - main view file where the relation data gathered from the database is rendered
  5. view/components/<View>.tsx - auxiliary view components used in App.tsx to render the relation and the editor application structurally (check the comments in the files for a detailed cover)

Miscellaneous (you won't need to modify manually):

  1. main.tsx and index.css - entrance point files not to be modified: all content of App.tsx and App.scss are compiled into them respectively
  2. Files including vite - config files for a fast build tool Vite
  3. tsconfig.json - compiler configuration for TypeScript
  4. package.json - includes names and versions of the necessary view libraries used in the application
  5. .gitignore; index.html; node_modules - keeps unnecessary files away from version control; main entry point for the browser; folder storing necessary installed JavaScript libraries

Setting up Python development environment with pipenv

  1. On Windows / MacOS / Linux machines - make sure you've installed Python and python (or python3) executable is accessible from the terminal (bash, batch or powershell). Many Linux-based OS's have Python already installed. On Windows installation, make sure to check the highlighted box. Click here to see a full installation guide for Windows / MacOS / Linux machines

windows-image

  1. To install pipenv - Python pip environment manager, run pip install pipenv in your terminal. Make sure pipenv is also in your OS path and accessible from your shell. Note that isolated environments are for protecting your system packages written in Python, in case anything crashes. It also separates your different projects using different names and versions of pip packages.
  2. In the current project directory, use pipenv shell to enter the virtual environment. Execute exit when you want to leave it.
  3. Once you're in the pip environment, run pip install -r requirements.txt to install necessary libraries for database management with Python (run sudo apt-get install libpq-dev if you face problems on Linux and brew install postgresql if you get errors with pip install psycopg2).
  4. If you're using VSCode with its Python extension as your development environment (which is preferable for this project), after creating the pipenv environment in the folder, you may enable in-editor for VSCode:
    1. Open Command Pallette using Shift + Command + P on Mac and Ctrl + Shift + P on Windows/Linux cmd_palette
    2. Search and select "Python: Select Interpreter"
    3. Select the newly created pipenv environment, which'll have the name of the folder to which you've added the project in it cmd_palette
    4. Then you can debug your code in full capacity

Setting up the application view development environment

  1. Only thing needed to be installed is npm and vite. You can select your OS version from this link and see the instructions to install npm.
  2. After successfully installing npm, run the command npm i -g vite to globally install vite (try install_npm.sh to install it on your Linux-based OS).

Deploying PostgreSQL DBMS using Docker

  1. Make sure you have Docker installed on your device and you can run docker-compose command. You may refer to this link in order to do so.
  2. You may want to modify the POSTGRES_PASSWORD environment variable in the docker-compose.yml file if you're going to deploy it to public for security purposes.
  3. In the project directory, run docker-compose up -d or docker compose up -d to build the virtual containers for PostgreSQL and its adminer interface.
  4. Default port for the Postgres DBMS is given 5432, and for admin interface application it's 7890. You can go to 0.0.0.0:7890 in your browser to visually interact with the DBMS. Note that it's only done for the verification purposes to check if your code works.
  5. If both successful, you should see Running status for both container (names may differ) in you Docker Desktop application. Docker Running View
  6. Alternatively, you may run docker ps command to see the similar view in the shell.

Running the application (in the Debug / Development mode)

  • You can run app.py in debug mode in VSCode (F5 key), or alternatively, use python app.py in the terminal where pipenv environment is activated
  • For the view part, you can simply run vite command from the shell in the project directory. If you want to debug in detail, go to package.json file in VSCode and run by clicking the hovered Debug button: vite-debug-package-json
  • Now refer to the code to get more closely acquainted!

Issues and bugs:

  • In case you face an error while running app.py related to Postgres libraries, try to install psycopg2 again as:
    1. pip uninstall psycopg2
    2. pip install --no-binary :all: psycopg2

About

Database Group project for NUS IT2002

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Releases

No releases published

Packages

No packages published