Web frontend for
the cesium
library. Within
the browser, users can upload time series data data, extract features,
fit a model, and generate predictions for new data.
The easiest way to try the web app is to run it through Docker:
-
Download the docker-compose file for Cesium:
curl -Lo docker-compose.yml https://raw.githubusercontent.com/cesium-ml/cesium_web/master/docker-compose/docker-compose.yml
-
Ensure you have Docker Compose up and running, then:
docker-compose up
-
Wait a few seconds and navigate to
http://localhost:9000
-
Create a project and go! If you want some test data, an example header file and time series data are available at
curl -Lo example-headers.dat https://raw.githubusercontent.com/cesium-ml/cesium-data/master/asas_training/asas_training_subset_classes.dat curl -Lo example-series.tar.gz https://raw.githubusercontent.com/cesium-ml/cesium-data/master/asas_training/asas_training_subset.tar.gz
-
A Python 3.5 or later installation is required.
-
Install the following dependencies: Supervisor, NGINX, PostgreSQL, Node.JS.
-
On macOS:
- Using Homebrew:
brew install supervisor nginx postgresql node
- Start the postgresql server:
- to start automatically at login:
brew services start postgresql
- to start manually:
pg_ctl -D /usr/local/var/postgres start
- Using Homebrew:
-
On Linux:
- Using
apt-get
:sudo apt-get install nginx supervisor postgresql libpq-dev npm nodejs-legacy
- It may be necessary to configure your database permissions: at the end of your
pg_hba.conf
(typically in/etc/postgresql/9.5/main
), add the following lines:
local all postgres peer local cesium cesium trust local cesium_test cesium trust
and restart
postgresl
(sudo service postgresql restart
). - Using
- Install Python and JavaScript dependencies with
make_dependencies
- Initialize the database with
make db_init
If you've run this script before, you may see warnings here about the database already existing. Ignore those.
- Run
make
to start the server and navigate tolocalhost:5000
To execute the test suite:
- Install ChromeDriver from: https://sites.google.com/a/chromium.org/chromedriver/home (The binary has to be placed somewhere on your path.)
- Install Chrome or Chromium
- Optional: install xfvb for headless tests (only available on Linux)
make test_headless
ormake test
Debugging:
- Run
make log
to watch log output - Run
make debug
to start webserver in debug mode - Run
make attach
to attach to output of webserver, e.g. for use withpdb.set_trace()
- Run
make check-js-updates
to see which Javascript packages are eligible for an upgrade.
To ensure that JavaScript & JSX code conforms with industry style
recommendations, after adding or modifying any .js or .jsx files, run ESLint with
node_modules/eslint/bin/eslint.js -c .eslintrc --ext .jsx,.js public/scripts/
.
To automatically run ESLint when you make changes to your JavaScript code, add
a pre-commit hook by adding the following to your .git/hooks/pre-commit:
#!/bin/bash
# Pre-commit Git hook to run ESLint on JavaScript files.
#
# If you absolutely must commit without testing,
# use: git commit --no-verify (git commit -n)
filenames=($(git diff --cached --name-only HEAD))
for i in "${filenames[@]}"
do
if [[ $i =~ \.js$ ]] || [[ $i =~ \.jsx$ ]] ;
then
echo node_modules/eslint/bin/eslint.js -c .eslintrc $i
node_modules/eslint/bin/eslint.js -c .eslintrc $i
if [ $? -ne 0 ];
then
exit 1
fi
fi
done
Run make docker-images
to build and push to Docker hub.