This achieves the same thing and gets rid of the warning about being in a production environment when the app starts up.
GOV.UK Notify API
Contains:
- the public-facing REST API for GOV.UK Notify, which teams can integrate with using our clients
- an internal-only REST API built using Flask to manage services, users, templates, etc (this is what the admin app talks to)
- asynchronous workers built using Celery to put things on queues and read them off to be processed, sent to providers, updated, etc
Setting Up
Python version
At the moment we run Python 3.6 in production. You will run into problems if you try to use Python 3.5 or older, or Python 3.7 or newer.
AWS credentials
To run the API you will need appropriate AWS credentials. See the Wiki for more details.
environment.sh
Creating and edit an environment.sh file.
echo "
export NOTIFY_ENVIRONMENT='development'
export MMG_API_KEY='MMG_API_KEY'
export FIRETEXT_API_KEY='FIRETEXT_ACTUAL_KEY'
export NOTIFICATION_QUEUE_PREFIX='YOUR_OWN_PREFIX'
export FLASK_APP=application.py
export FLASK_ENV=development
export WERKZEUG_DEBUG_PIN=off
"> environment.sh
Things to change:
- Replace
YOUR_OWN_PREFIXwithlocal_dev_<first name>. - Run the following in the credentials repo to get the API keys.
notify-pass credentials/providers/api_keys
Postgres
Install Postgres.app. You will need admin on your machine to do this.
Choose the version with Additional Releases - you want 9.6. Once you run the app, open the sidebar, remove the default v11 server and create and initialise a v9.6 server.
Redis
To switch redis on you'll need to install it locally. On a OSX we've used brew for this. To use redis caching you need to switch it on by changing the config for development:
REDIS_ENABLED = True
To run the application
# install dependencies, etc.
make bootstrap
# run the web app
make run-flask
# run the background tasks
make run-celery
# run scheduled tasks (optional)
make run-celery-beat
To test the application
# install dependencies, etc.
make bootstrap
make test
To update application dependencies
requirements.txt file is generated from the requirements-app.txt in order to pin
versions of all nested dependencies. If requirements-app.txt has been changed (or
we want to update the unpinned nested dependencies) requirements.txt should be
regenerated with
make freeze-requirements
requirements.txt should be committed alongside requirements-app.txt changes.
To run one off tasks
Tasks are run through the flask command - run flask --help for more information. There are two sections we need to
care about: flask db contains alembic migration commands, and flask command contains all of our custom commands. For
example, to purge all dynamically generated functional test data, do the following:
Locally
flask command purge_functional_test_data -u <functional tests user name prefix>
On the server
cf run-task notify-api "flask command purge_functional_test_data -u <functional tests user name prefix>"
All commands and command options have a --help command if you need more information.
To create a new worker app
You need to:
- Create new entries for your app in
manifest.yml.j2andscripts/paas_app_wrapper.sh(example) - Update the jenkins deployment job in the notifications-aws repo (example)
- Add the new worker's log group to the list of logs groups we get alerts about and we ship them to kibana (example)
- Optionally add it to the autoscaler (example)
Important:
Before pushing the deployment change on jenkins, read below about the first time deployment.
First time deployment of your new worker
Our deployment flow requires that the app is present in order to proceed with the deployment.
This means that the first deployment of your app must happen manually.
To do this:
- Ensure your code is backwards compatible
- From the root of this repo run
CF_APP=<APP_NAME> make <cf-space> cf-push
Once this is done, you can push your deployment changes to jenkins to have your app deployed on every deployment.