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A beverage shopping system for bars of small private organizations

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pybarsys

A beverage shopping system for bars of small private organizations - based on Django and Python 3.

Main developer: Nicolai Spohrer (nicolai[at]xeve.de)

Features

  • Easy installation with Docker and docker-compose
  • Users can purchase products on their phone, tablet, or PC
  • Responsive main and admin interface
  • Handling of invoices and payments
  • Dependants feature: dependant/friend accounts can be created for users which do not pay themselves, i.e. for which another user is responsible
  • Semi-automatic mailing of
    • invoices
    • payment reminders
    • purchase notifications for dependants
  • Customizable statistics (both in main and admin interface)
  • Happy hour feature: change lots of product attributes (e.g. price or availability) in one step by creating a Product Autochange Set
  • Buy a round! Users can choose to "donate" products so a specific amount of them are available for free
  • Pay your bills! Users whose balance repeatedly falls below a threshold can be automatically locked from purchasing more until they clear their debts
  • MultiBuy! When multiple people order the same thing, use the MultiBuy feature to save lots of time
  • REST API (by courtesy of @jallmenroeder)
  • ...

Explanation & screenshots

All persons on the same network as the pybarsys server can purchase products with their tablet, phone, or PC. Admins can log into a special admin interface with lots of features.

Screenshots Screenshots Screenshots
Main page Purchasing as a single user Purchasing and "donating"
Purchasing with free items Admin: free items Admin: invoice details on phone (responsive)
User history 1 User history 2 MultiBuy step 1: Buying as multiple users at once
MultiBuy step 2 Admin: purchase list Admin: payment list
Admin: created invoices Admin: updating stats display Admin: updating product autochange set
Admin: applied product autochange set Purchase statistics 1 Purchase statistics 2
Main interface on phone Invoice mail Invoice mail: purchases of a dependant

Limitations

  • German and Dutch (thanks @Merlijnv) translations are available for the mail templates, but not for the main and admin interface
  • Based on the assumption that everyone with access to the main page may purchase products for all active users
    • You should run the server in a trusted local area network
    • Login is needed for admin access of course
    • Don't make this available to the internet...

Installation with Docker (recommended)

Pybarsys can be easily set up with Docker and docker-compose. This is the recommended installation method.

Initial installation

  1. Install Docker and a current version of docker-compose on your server.

  2. Choose where you want to put the database and configuration files of pybarsys. Create an empty folder with an appropriate name:

    mkdir pybarsys
    cd pybarsys/
  3. Use the automatic setup script to download the necessary configuration files:

    bash -c "$(curl -sSL "https://raw.githubusercontent.com/nspo/pybarsys/master/scripts/download_pybarsys_docker.sh" -o-)"

    Of course you can also download the script manually and review it before executing. Root permissions are not needed for this step if your user has write permissions in the current folder.

  4. Your system is ready to run pybarsys! Simply execute sudo docker-compose up to start pybarsys for the first time.

  5. You should be able to access the main page on http://server_address (e.g. http://localhost if you are running it locally). The admin interface can be accessed at http://server_address/admin with the default admin account admin@example.com (password: example). You should of course immediately change the password of the default admin account - alternatively you can create a new account with admin rights and delete the default account.

  6. If everything seems fine so far, you can cancel the docker-compose command from the previous step with CTRL+C and start it again with the -d option to keep it running in the background:

    sudo docker-compose up -d

    This also makes sure that everything will be restarted automatically when you reboot the system.

  7. Configure pybarsys! There are some options which you will surely want to set if you use pybarsys in production, e.g. the mail server settings and language. To change a setting, simply edit the .env file as described in the link and restart pybarsys with sudo docker-compose restart. If you want to change the nginx configuration or adapt the docker-compose.yml, everything is available to be edited in the pybarsys folder.

Apply pybarsys updates

First, backup your .env and db.sqlite3 files so that you can always restore them. You may also want to tag the current pybarsys image so you can more easily revert to it:

sudo docker tag nspohrer/pybarsys:latest nspohrer/pybarsys:pre-update

Check the pybarsys github page to see if any changes to your settings file may be necessary after the update.

cd to the folder where you set up pybarsys and update the pybarsys and nginx images:

sudo docker-compose stop
sudo docker-compose pull
sudo docker-compose up -d

Then check if everything still works fine! If you want to revert to your old state, stop the server, copy over your database backup, and revert to the older pybarsys image with sudo docker tag nspohrer/pybarsys:pre-update nspohrer/pybarsys:latest.

Manual installation

In case you do not want to use the Docker installation method, e.g. because you want to change and debug the pybarsys code in your IDE or have other special requirements, pybarsys can of course also be installed manually.

Initial installations

  1. Download pybarsys into e.g. /var/www/pybarsys (you may need to create the parent folder first)

    # possibly: sudo mkdir /var/www
    cd /var/www
    sudo mkdir pybarsys && sudo chown $(whoami) pybarsys
    git clone https://github.com/nspo/pybarsys.git
  2. Setup virtualenv and configuration (you may need to install virtualenv first)

    # Setup virtualenv and dependencies
    cd /var/www/pybarsys
    # possibly: sudo apt install virtualenv
    virtualenv -p python3 .
    source bin/activate # activate virtualenv
    pip3 install -r requirements.txt
    # Create .env configuration file and generate SECRET_KEY
    cat .env.example | grep -v "SECRET_KEY" > .env
    echo SECRET_KEY=$(tr -dc 'a-z0-9!@#%^&*(-_=+)' < /dev/urandom | head -c50) >> .env
    # Start a test server
    scripts/run_test_server.sh
    # CTRL+C to stop the server
  3. If you just want to debug pybarsys, you should be able to stop here. Maybe you want to set some debug settings in your .env file. If you plan to run pybarsys in production, continue.

  4. Think about how to deploy Django. Django is written in Python and does not include a real production webserver. Therefore, you should use something else (e.g. Apache2) to run a Django site. The example method we are going to use here is apache2 with mod_wsgi

  5. Install apache2 (if not yet installed)

    sudo apt-get install libapache2-mod-wsgi-py3 apache2
  6. Fix permissions (apache2 access needs r/w in pybarsys folder and db.sqlite3)

    sudo chown www-data.www-data .
    sudo chown www-data.www-data db.sqlite3
  7. Create pybarsys apache2 config file (examples should work on Debian/Ubuntu and related Linux distributions):

    sudo nano /etc/apache2/sites-available/pybarsys.conf

    File contents (example):

    WSGIDaemonProcess pybarsys python-home=/var/www/pybarsys python-path=/var/www/pybarsys home=/var/www/pybarsys
    WSGIProcessGroup pybarsys
    
    <VirtualHost *:80>
        Alias /static/ /var/www/pybarsys/barsys/static/
        <Directory /static>
            Require all granted
        </Directory>
        WSGIScriptAlias / /var/www/pybarsys/pybarsys/wsgi.py process-group=pybarsys
        <Directory /var/www/pybarsys/pybarsys>
            <Files wsgi.py>
                Require all granted
            </Files>
        </Directory>
    </VirtualHost>
  8. As with the Docker approach, you can configure pybarsys-related settings in your .env file.

  9. Disable the apache2 default site that uses port 80, enable the pybarsys site and restart apache2:

    sudo a2dissite 000-default
    sudo a2ensite pybarsys
    sudo systemctl restart apache2
  10. Login at http://server_address/admin/ with the default admin account (admin@example.com, password example) to create more users, categories, products etc. and understand pybarsys!

Apply pybarsys updates

First, backup everything:

sudo systemctl stop apache2
cd /var/www
sudo cp -a pybarsys /var/backups/$(date --iso-8601)-pybarsys

Make sure you have write permissions for all files in the pybarsys folder. Basically, the following command should return nothing (except maybe a few static files under .git):

cd /var/www/pybarsys
find . -not -writable | grep -v ./lib

If you installed pybarsys with your current user you should be able to just add it to apache2's www-data group and change some file permissions slightly. If you add your user to a new group, you need to close and reopen your shell.

sudo adduser $(whoami) www-data
sudo chmod g+w . db.sqlite3
# close and then reopen shell!

It is recommended to check the pybarsys github page for explanations of important changes. You can also look into the git log:

git fetch # get information about changes but do not touch local files
git log origin/master # show latest changes on master

When you want to apply the update, simply pull in the changes (you should not have modified any pybarsys files):

git pull

It may be necessary to update the dependencies. Also, start a test server (which will automatically migrate the database if necessary):

source bin/activate # activate virtual environment
pip3 install -r requirements.txt # update dependencies
scripts/run_test_server.sh
# If everything works fine, stop the test server with CTRL+C and restart apache2
sudo systemctl start apache2

If there are any issues you can try to fix them or in the worst case use your backup.

Bug reports

Please feel free to open an issue in case you think you spotted a bug. If you want to report a crash of pybarsys, don't forget to set DEBUG=on in your .env configuration file to get a more verbose error message.

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