A buddy for babies! Helps caregivers track sleep, feedings, diaper changes, and tummy time to learn about and predict baby's needs without (as much) guess work.
Table of Contents
A demo of Baby Buddy is available on Heroku. The demo instance resets every hour. Login credentials are:
- Username:
admin
- Password:
admin
The default user name and password for Baby Buddy is admin
/admin
. For any
deployment, log in and change the default admin password immediately.
Many of Baby Buddy's configuration settings can be controlled using environment variables - see Configuration for detailed information.
A basic Elastic Beanstalk
configuration is provided in .ebextensions/babybuddy.config
. The steps
below are a rough guide to deployment. See Working with Python
for detailed information.
-
Clone/download the Baby Buddy repo
git clone https://github.com/cdubz/babybuddy.git
-
Enter the cloned/downloaded directory
cd babybuddy
-
Change the
SECRET_KEY
value to something random in.ebextensions/babybuddy.config
-
Create an IAM user in AWS with EB, EC2, RDS and S3 privileges.
-
Initialize the Elastic Bean application (using the IAM user from the previous step)
eb init -p python-3.6
-
Create/deploy the environment! π
eb create -db -db.engine postgres
The create command will also do an initial deployment. Run eb deploy
to
redeploy the app (e.g. if there are errors or settings are changed).
A Docker deployment requires Docker and Docker Compose to create two containers - one for the database and one for the application.
-
Copy the
docker.env.example
todocker.env
and set theALLOWED_HOSTS
andSECRET_KEY
variables withincp docker.env.example docker.env editor docker.env
See Configuration for other settings that can be controlled by environment variables added to the
docker.env
file. -
Build/run the application
docker-compose up -d
-
Initialize the database (first run/after updates)
docker-compose exec app python manage.py migrate
The app should now be locally available at http://127.0.0.1:8000. See Get Started, Part 6: Deploy your app for detailed information about deployment methods with Docker.
For manual deployments to Heroku without using the deploy button, make sure to create the following settings before pushing:
heroku config:set DJANGO_SETTINGS_MODULE=babybuddy.settings.heroku
heroku config:set SECRET_KEY=<CHANGE TO SOMETHING RANDOM>
heroku config:set DISABLE_COLLECTSTATIC=1
See Configuration for other settings that can be controlled
by heroku config:set
.
There are many ways to deploy Baby Buddy manually to any server/VPS. The basic requirements are Python, a web server, an application server, and a database.
- Python 3.6+, pip, pipenv
- Web server (nginx, Apache, etc.)
- Application server (uwsgi, gunicorn, etc.)
- Database (sqlite, Postgres, MySQL, etc.)
This example assumes a 512MB VPS instance with Ubuntu 18.04. It uses Python 3.6+, nginx, uwsgi and sqlite and should be sufficient for a few users (e.g. two parents and 1+ child).
-
Install system packages
sudo apt-get install python3 python3-pip nginx uwsgi uwsgi-plugin-python3 git libopenjp2-7-dev
-
Default python3 to python for this session
alias python=python3
-
Install pipenv
sudo -H pip3 install pipenv
-
Set up directories and files
sudo mkdir /var/www/babybuddy sudo chown user:user /var/www/babybuddy mkdir -p /var/www/babybuddy/data/media git clone https://github.com/cdubz/babybuddy.git /var/www/babybuddy/public
-
Move in to the application folder
cd /var/www/babybuddy/public
-
Set pipenv to install locally.
export PIPENV_VENV_IN_PROJECT=1
-
Initiate and enter the Python environment
pipenv install --three pipenv shell
Note: Python dependencies are locked on x86-64 architecture. Installs on other architectures (like Raspberry Pi's ARM) may result in a
THESE PACKAGES DO NOT MATCH THE HASHES FROM Pipfile.lock!
error. Add the--skip-lock
flag to the above command to suppress this error (i.e.:pipenv install --three --dev --skip-lock
). -
Create a production settings file and set the
SECRET_KEY
andALLOWED_HOSTS
valuescp babybuddy/settings/production.example.py babybuddy/settings/production.py editor babybuddy/settings/production.py
-
Initiate the application
export DJANGO_SETTINGS_MODULE=babybuddy.settings.production python manage.py migrate
-
Set appropriate permissions on the database and data folder
sudo chown -R www-data:www-data /var/www/babybuddy/data sudo chmod 640 /var/www/babybuddy/data/db.sqlite3 sudo chmod 750 /var/www/babybuddy/data
-
Create and configure the uwsgi app
sudo editor /etc/uwsgi/apps-available/babybuddy.ini
Example config:
[uwsgi] plugins = python3 project = babybuddy base_dir = /var/www/babybuddy chdir = %(base_dir)/public virtualenv = %(chdir)/.venv module = %(project).wsgi:application env = DJANGO_SETTINGS_MODULE=%(project).settings.production master = True vacuum = True
See the uWSGI documentation for more advanced configuration details.
-
Symlink config and restart uWSGI:
sudo ln -s /etc/uwsgi/apps-available/babybuddy.ini /etc/uwsgi/apps-enabled/babybuddy.ini sudo service uwsgi restart
-
Create and configure the nginx server
sudo editor /etc/nginx/sites-available/babybuddy
Example config:
upstream babybuddy { server unix:///var/run/uwsgi/app/babybuddy/socket; } server { listen 80; server_name babybuddy.example.com; location / { uwsgi_pass babybuddy; include uwsgi_params; } location /media { alias /var/www/babybuddy/data/media; } }
See the nginx documentation for more advanced configuration details.
-
Symlink config and restart NGINX:
sudo ln -s /etc/nginx/sites-available/babybuddy /etc/nginx/sites-enabled/babybuddy sudo service nginx restart
-
That's it (hopefully)! π
Environment variables can be used to define a number of configuration settings.
Baby Buddy will check the application directory structure for an .env
file or
take these variables from the system environment. System environment variables
take precedence over the contents of an .env
file.
ALLOWED_HOSTS
ALLOW_UPLOADS
AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID
AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY
AWS_STORAGE_BUCKET_NAME
DEBUG
NAP_START_MAX
NAP_START_MIN
SECRET_KEY
TIME_ZONE
Default: * (any)
This option may be set to a single host or comma-separated list of hosts (without spaces). This should always be set to a specific host or hosts in production deployments.
See also: Django's documentation on the ALLOWED_HOSTS setting
Default: True
Whether or not to allow uploads (e.g. of Child photos). For some deployments (AWS, Heroku, Nanobox) this setting will default to False due to the lack of available persistent storage.
Default: None
Required to access your AWS S3 bucket, should be uniquely generated per bucket for security.
See also: AWS_STORAGE_BUCKET_NAME
Default: None
Required to access your AWS S3 bucket, should be uniquely generated per bucket for security.
See also: AWS_STORAGE_BUCKET_NAME
Default: None
If you would like to use AWS S3 for storage on ephemeral storage platforms like Heroku you will need to create a bucket and add it's name. See django-storages' [Amazon S3 documentation] (http://django-storages.readthedocs.io/en/latest/backends/amazon-S3.html).
Default: False
When in debug mode, Baby Buddy will print much more detailed error information for exceptions. This setting should be False in production deployments.
See also Django's documentation on the DEBUG setting.
Default: 18:00
The maximum start time (in the instance's time zone) before which a sleep entry is consider a nap. Expects the format %H:%M.
Default: 06:00
The minimum start time (in the instance's time zone) after which a sleep entry is considered a nap. Expects the format %H:%M.
Default: None
A random, unique string must be set as the "secret key" before Baby Buddy can be deployed and run.
See also Django's documentation on the SECRET_KEY setting.
Default: Etc/UTC
The time zone to use for the instance. See List of tz database time zones for all possible values.
Baby Buddy includes translation support as of v1.2.2. Language can be set on a per-user basis from the user settings page (/user/settings/
). See CONTRIBUTING.md for information about how to create/update translations.
πΊπΈ English (U.S.) (base)
π«π· French
π©πͺ German
π²π½ πͺπΈ Spanish
πΈπͺ Swedish
πΉπ· Turkish
Baby Buddy uses the Django REST Framework (DRF) to provide a REST API.
The only requirement for (most) requests is that the Authorization
header is
set as described in the Authentication section. The one
exception is the /api
endpoint, which lists all available endpoints.
Currently, the following endpoints are available for GET
, OPTIONS
, and
POST
requests:
/api/children/
/api/changes/
(Diaper Changes)/api/feedings/
/api/notes/
/api/sleep/
/api/temperature/
/api/timers/
/api/tummy-times/
/api/weight/
By default, the TokenAuthentication and SessionAuthentication classes are enabled. Session authentication covers local API requests made by the application itself. Token authentication allows external requests to be made.
β In a production environment, token authentication should only
be used for API calls to an https
endpoint. β
Each user is automatically assigned an API key that can be used for token
authentication. This key can be found on the User Settings page for the logged
in the user. To use a key for an API request, set the request Authorization
header to Token <user-key>
. E.g.
Authorization: Token 2h23807gd72h7hop382p98hd823dw3g665g56
If the Authorization
header is not set or the key is not valid, the API will
return 403 Forbidden
with additional details in the response body.
The limit
and offset
request parameters can be used to limit
and offset the results set respectively. For example, the following request
will return five diaper changes starting from the 10th diaper change entry:
curl -X GET 'https://[...]/api/changes/?limit=5&offset=10' -H 'Authorization: Token [...]'
{
"count": <int>,
"next": "https://[...]/api/changes/?limit=5&offset=15",
"previous": "https://[...]/api/changes/?limit=5&offset=5",
"results": [...]
}
Field-based filters for specific endpoints can be found the in the filters
field of the OPTIONS
response for specific endpoints.
Returns JSON data in the response body in the following format:
{
"count":<int>,
"next":<url>,
"previous":<url>,
"results":[{...}]
}
count
: Total number of records (in the database, not just the response).next
: URL for the next set of results.previous
: URL for the previous set of results.results
: An array of the results of the request.
All endpoints will respond to an OPTIONS
request with detailed information
about the endpoint's purpose, parameters, filters, etc.
Returns JSON data in the response body describing the endpoint, available
options for POST
requests, and available filters for GET
requests. The
following example describes the /api/children
endpoint:
{
"name": "Child List",
"renders": [
"application/json",
"text/html"
],
"parses": [
"application/json",
"application/x-www-form-urlencoded",
"multipart/form-data"
],
"actions": {
"POST": {
"id": {
"type": "integer",
"required": false,
"read_only": true,
"label": "ID"
},
[...]
}
},
"filters": [
"first_name",
"last_name",
"slug"
]
}
To add new entries for a particular endpoint, send a POST
request with the
entry data in JSON format in the request body. The Content-Type
header for
POST
request must be set to application/json
.
Regular sanity checks will be performed on relevant data. See the OPTIONS
response for a particular endpoint for details on required fields and data
formats.
Returns JSON data in the response body describing the added/updated instance or error details if errors exist. Errors are keyed by either the field in error or the general string "non_field_errors" (usually when validation incorporates multiple fields).
Contributions are welcome! See CONTRIBUTING.md for detailed information about how to develop and contribute to Baby Buddy.