## Application configuration
-Many settings are available in `config/settings.yml`. You can customize your installation of The Rails Port by overriding these values using `config/settings.local.yml`
+Many settings are available in `config/settings.yml`. You can customize your installation of `openstreetmap-website` by overriding these values using `config/settings.local.yml`
## Populating the database
* 'Modify notes'
* On the next page, copy the "Client ID"
* Edit config/settings.local.yml in your rails tree
-* Add the "id_oauth_application" configuration with the "Client ID" as the value
+* Add the "id_application" configuration with the "Client ID" as the value
* Restart your rails server
An example excerpt from settings.local.yml:
# Default editor
default_editor: "id"
# OAuth 2 Client ID for iD
-id_oauth_application: "Snv…OA0"
+id_application: "Snv…OA0"
```
To allow [Notes](https://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/Notes) and changeset discussions to work, follow a similar process, this time registering an OAuth 2 application for the web site:
If your installation stops working for some reason:
-* Sometimes gem dependencies change. To update go to your rails_port directory and run ''bundle install'' as root.
+* Sometimes gem dependencies change. To update go to your `openstreetmap-website` directory and run ''bundle install'' as root.
-* The OSM database schema is changed periodically and you need to keep up with these improvements. Go to your rails_port directory and run:
+* The OSM database schema is changed periodically and you need to keep up with these improvements. Go to your `openstreetmap-website` directory and run:
```
-bundle exec rake db:migrate
+bundle exec rails db:migrate
```
## Testing on the osm dev server
-For example, after developing a patch for the rails_port, you might want to demonstrate it to others or ask for comments and testing. To do this one can [set up an instance of the rails_port on the dev server in ones user directory](https://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/Using_the_dev_server#Rails_Applications).
+For example, after developing a patch for `openstreetmap-website`, you might want to demonstrate it to others or ask for comments and testing. To do this you can [set up an instance of openstreetmap-website on the dev server in your user directory](https://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/Using_the_dev_server#Rails_Applications).
# Contributing
# Production Deployment
-If you want to deploy The Rails Port for production use, you'll need to make a few changes.
+If you want to deploy `openstreetmap-website` for production use, you'll need to make a few changes.
* It's not recommended to use `rails server` in production. Our recommended approach is to use [Phusion Passenger](https://www.phusionpassenger.com/). Instructions are available for [setting it up with most web servers](https://www.phusionpassenger.com/documentation_and_support#documentation).
* Passenger will, by design, use the Production environment and therefore the production database - make sure it contains the appropriate data and user accounts.
-* Your production database will also need the extensions and functions installed - see [INSTALL.md](INSTALL.md)
* The included version of the map call is quite slow and eats a lot of memory. You should consider using [CGIMap](https://github.com/zerebubuth/openstreetmap-cgimap) instead.
-* Make sure you generate the i18n files and precompile the production assets: `RAILS_ENV=production rake i18n:js:export assets:precompile`
+* Make sure you generate the i18n files and precompile the production assets: `RAILS_ENV=production rails i18n:js:export assets:precompile`
* Make sure the web server user as well as the rails user can read, write and create directories in `tmp/`.
-* If you expect to serve a lot of `/changes` API calls, then you might also want to install the shared library versions of the SQL functions.