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Here you will find information about the project, with more extensive and descriptive information than the README file of the project itself.
It all started with a pretty complicated project for which I was working, without specific training or an on-boarding process oriented to its architecture, I had to learn on my own, step by step while trying to close incidents, bugs, issues and tickets. The process was quite hard, confusing and frustrating.The project was delivered fast and finished early, the client didn't seem very happy. Finally the feedback about me and my performance was brutal, devastating.
I promised myself that I would try to prevent someone else from having such a process.. And I came up with the idea of building a sandbox for decoupled architectures taking advantage of existing tooling. That was the germ of my idea for Summer House.
The truth is that it's called Summer House because of the actions I use to deploy Drupal projects on the fly. I have built some bash functions based on DDEV to launch Drupal fast from my operating system, something like:
d9ddev () {
if [ -z "$1" ]
then
check=$(shuf -n1 /usr/share/dict/words)
shortened=${check::-2}
varkeyname=${shortened,,}
else
varkeyname=$1
fi
mkdir $varkeyname && cd $varkeyname
ddev config --project-type=drupal9 --docroot=web --create-docroot
yes | ddev composer create "drupal/recommended-project:^9"
ddev composer require drush/drush drupal/admin_toolbar drupal/devel
ddev exec drush si --site-name=$varkeyname --account-name=admin --account-pass=admin -y
ddev drush en -y admin_toolbar admin_toolbar_tools admin_toolbar_search admin_toolbar_links_access_filter devel devel_generate
ddev drush cr
ddev start && ddev launch
}
So when I started working with the idea of making a sandbox for decoupled Drupal, I launched this bash function and the Ubuntu word dictionary, from the line check=$(shuf -n1 /usr/share/dict/words)
, threw this at me: Summer House. I think it was the first time I was getting a naming from the dictionary that made sense. It was perfect for me.