The Pixelated User Agent is the mail client of the Pixelated ecosystem. It is composed of two parts, a web interface written in JavaScript (FlightJS) and a Python API that interacts with a LEAP Provider, the e-mail platform that Pixelated is built on.
Here's a podcast that explains the projectt.
Pixelated is still in early development state!
If you are curious, have a look at the pixelated web client, it as simple as clicking here!
You are most welcome to contribute to the pixelated user agent code base. Please have a look at the contributions how to.
You like the idea and you want to run it locally, then before you have to install the following packages:
- Vagrant, Vagrant is a tool that automates the setup of a virtual machine with the development environment
- A vagrant compatible provider, e.g. Virtual Box.
- Clone the repo and start the virtual machine (downloads 600MB, you may want get a coffee or tea in the meantime):
$ git clone https://github.com/pixelated/pixelated-user-agent.git
$ cd pixelated-user-agent
$ vagrant up
- Log into the VM:
$ vagrant ssh
-
Register with a LEAP provider. You can create a developer account at our Dev Provider. Please contact us at team@pixelated-project.org for an invite code.
-
Run the user agent:
Please note: If you don't have an account on any provider, go directly to step 5b).
$ pixelated-user-agent --host 0.0.0.0
Which provider do you want to connect to:
dev.pixelated-project.org
What’s your username registered on the provider:
username (the one you created in previous step)
Type your password:
******** (the one you created in previous step)
5a) Connect to the provider using your credentials, as shown in step 4 above. If the user agent starts up successfully, you will not see any other output.
Note: For more convenience during development, you can also create a config file with your credentials (see Further Notes).
5b) If you don't have a dev.pixelated-project.org
account or just want to connect to our try.pixelated-project.org
environment, we have some sample configurations for you.
Please navigate to the project root in your vagrant box with: $ cd /vagrant
Then you can connect to try.pixelated-project.org
...
- as Alice via:
$ pixelated-user-agent --host 0.0.0.0 -c try.alice.ini
- as Bob via:
$ pixelated-user-agent --host 0.0.0.0 -c try.bob.ini
-
Go to localhost:3333. You should see a loading screen for a few seconds, then your inbox. If it sticks on the loading screen, check your terminal for errors, then get help.
-
If you like console output, you can also run the tests to see if everything went according to plan.
(user-agent-venv)vagrant@jessie:~$ cd /vagrant
To run the backend tests:
(user-agent-venv)vagrant@jessie:/vagrant$ cd service
(user-agent-venv)vagrant@jessie:/vagrant/service$ ./go test
(user-agent-venv)vagrant@jessie:/vagrant/service$ cd ..
To run the frontend tests:
(user-agent-venv)vagrant@jessie:/vagrant$ cd web-ui
(user-agent-venv)vagrant@jessie:/vagrant/web-ui$ ./go test
(user-agent-venv)vagrant@jessie:/vagrant/web-ui$ cd ..
To run the functional tests:
(user-agent-venv)vagrant@jessie:/vagrant$ cd service
(user-agent-venv)vagrant@jessie:/vagrant/service$ ./go functional
(user-agent-venv)vagrant@jessie:/vagrant/service$ cd ..
- You're all set! We've prepared a couple of issues labeled "Volunteer Task" that are a good place to dive into the project. Happy Hacking!
You can install the Pixelated User Agent and the Leap Platform at once, just by running the following command on your console (this may take a while, please be patient):
curl https://raw.githubusercontent.com/pixelated/puppet-pixelated/master/vagrant_platform.sh | sh
Once installed, you can create accounts by visiting the LEAP Webapp at localhost:4443/signup and see Pixelated in action at localhost:8080.
NOTE: Be aware that you will not be able to send mails outside, but you can test sending mails internally from one user to another.
If you want to run the tests in your IDE on your host machine outside of vagrant, set up your python virtualenv
$ pip install virtualenv setuptools
$ cd ~
$ virtualenv pixelated
$ virtualenv -p [PATH/TO/YOUR/PYTHON/EXECUTABLE] pixelated
$ source ~/.virtualenv/pixelated/bin/activate
If you want to run the tests in your IDE on your host machine outside of vagrant, there's a bug in a LEAP library that can't handle symlinks to your local GPG installation.
To fix it, add the path to your GPG binary to your $PATH so that it is found before the symlink in /usr/local/bin
(or similar).
See also, installations on native OS below.
For all Python changes, you will need to kill (Ctrl-C) the server and run $ pixelated-user-agent --host 0.0.0.0
again.
For most JavaScript or HTML changes, you will just need to reload the browser.
For most CSS or Handlebars templates changes, you will also need to run: $ cd /vagrant/web-ui && ./go build
I think I might be able to hack together a quick-and-dirty lo-fi solution for the issue I’m working with… what do I do?
Do it the easy way first, and submit a pull request as a “work in progress” as soon as you have a quick-and-dirty solution (or even an unfinished solution) — that means you can get feedback from the other developers about whether you’re heading in the right direction sooner rather than later. Include “WIP” (work in progress) in the description of your pull request and ask for review, or feedback on anything specific.
To run the pixelated user agent multi user mode, please run the following:
(user-agent-venv)vagrant@jessie:/vagrant$ pixelated-user-agent --host 0.0.0.0 --multi-user --provider=dev.pixelated-project.org
You will need to change dev.pixelated-project.org
to the hostname of the leap provider that you will be using.
Once that is done, you can use by browsing to http://localhost:3333, where you will be prompted for your email username and password.
The config file has to be in ini
format, see for example
try.alice.ini
or try.bob.ini
in the root directory, or this one:
credentials.ini
[pixelated]
leap_server_name=dev.pixelated-project.org
leap_username=<your_username>
leap_password=<your_password>
To use it start the user agent like this:
$ pixelated-user-agent --host 0.0.0.0 --config credentials.ini
You can also include the host in the config file, as shown in the example files given above.
You might also need to add your LEAP provider ssl certificate to pixelated manually for now, with the following steps:
The easiest way to get this is downloading if from https://your.provider.org/ca.crt.
Rename the certificate based on your provider domain name like this your.leapprovider.org.crt
and put it into services/pixelated/certificates/
.
All commits to the pixelated user agent code trigger all tests to be run in snap-ci.
- You can access the guest OS shell via the command
vagrant ssh
run within thepixelated-user-agent/
folder in the host OS. /vagrant/
in the guest OS is mapped to thepixelated-user-agent/
folder in the host OS. File changes on either side will reflect in the other.- First time email sync could be slow, please be patient. This could be the case if you have a lot of emails already and it is the first time you setup the user agent on your machine.
- CTRL + \ will stop the server.
- For all backend changes, you will need to stop and restart the server again (Step 5 above).
- For most frontend changes, you will just need to reload the browser. Some changes (in particular, those involving css or handlebars) you will need to run:
(user-agent-venv)vagrant@jessie:/vagrant$ cd web-ui
(user-agent-venv)vagrant@jessie:/vagrant/web-ui$ ./go build
Please ensure that you have an email user from your preferred leap provider (How to). Details for developer installations on OSX and Debian distributions are explained below. In case of any issues, please ping us on IRC (#pixelated on irc.freenode.net), we will be available to help you from there.
First, you will need to install the GPG tools for Mac. Then, run the following sequence of commands:
$ curl https://raw.githubusercontent.com/pixelated/pixelated-user-agent/master/osx_setup.sh | sh
$ cd pixelated-user-agent && source ~/.virtualenv/user-agent-venv/bin/activate
Please note that you will have to activate the virtualenv anytime you work on a different terminal. This is done by simply running $ source ~/.virtualenv/user-agent-venv/bin/activate
first.
Running the user agent and the various tests are the same as in the vagrant setup in step 5) and 8) above.
This is the setup for developers. Please run the following commands:
$ curl https://raw.githubusercontent.com/pixelated/pixelated-user-agent/master/debian_setup.sh | bash
$ cd pixelated-user-agent && source ~/.virtualenv/user-agent-venv/bin/activate
Please note that you will have to activate the virtualenv anytime you work on a different terminal. This is done by simply running $ source ~/.virtualenv/user-agent-venv/bin/activate
first.
Running the user agent and the various tests are the same as in the vagrant setup in step 5) and 8) above.
For people that just want to try the user agent, we have debian packages available in our repository. To use it, you have to add it to your sources list:
echo "deb [arch=amd64] http://packages.pixelated-project.org/debian jessie-snapshots main" > /etc/apt/sources.list.d/pixelated.list
apt-key adv --keyserver pool.sks-keyservers.net --recv-key 287A1542472DC0E3
apt-get update
apt-get install pixelated-user-agent
for multi-user mode, change the last line above to
apt-get install pixelated-server
For people who want to run the user agent on docker container can use the Dockerfile.
All the translation work is managed at Transifex. To sync translation files at Transifex and those versioned with the source code itself, we use The Transifex Client. To get it up and running you can follow the Client installation guide. For more informations about, see the Client Usage.
With the Client installed, the most common operations is really simple:
tx pull -a
to pull the most recent version of translation files at Transifextx push -s -t
to push source (-s) translation files and the translations (-t) as well.
After pulling the updates from Transifex, probably you will see differences pointed by git. So, it's just a matter of commit and push these new changes.
Important: since the Transifex Client uses api calls to comunicate with Transifex, you need a Transifex account to use it.