Skip to content

Call for proposals for RubyConf Colombia 2015

License

Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

RubyConfCo/cfp-app

 
 

Repository files navigation

CFP-App

This is a Ruby on Rails application that you can deploy to manage your conference's call for proposal (CFP) and program. It was written by Ruby Central to run the CFPs for RailsConf and RubyConf. We've open sourced it so other organizers can use it themselves.

The CFP app is not the conference website but just to place for potential speakers to submit talks for your CFP. You'll end up pointing those interested in submitting a talk to your deployed version of this application. From there speakers can submit their talk, track their talk's progress and update their profile and talk details as need be. As an organizer you can have a group of reviewers that blindly look over proposals, give feedback, tag and rate them. You can have a different group of organizers that then sift through talks, curate your program, send out acceptance emails and manage the program. We'll get into the details of the specifics of all of these things below.

Heroku

The app was written with a Heroku deployment stack in mind. You can easily deploy the application using the button below, or you can deploy it anywhere assuming you can run Ruby 2.1.2 and Rails 4.1.2 with a postgres database and an SMTP listener.

The Heroku stack will use the free SendGrid Starter and Heroku postgreSQL addons.

Deploy to Heroku

Upon deploying to Heroku you will probably want to log in using Twitter or GitHub and then run heroku run console to update the first Person object to be an admin like this:

```bash
p = Person.first
p.admin = true
p.save
```

Do make sure that the Person record you pull back is indeed your newly created user and the one that should get admin permissions!

Setup

  • Required Items

Make sure you have Ruby 2.1 and Postgres installed in your environment. This is a Rails 4.1 app and uses bundler to install all required gems. We are also making the assumption that you're familiar with how Rails apps and setup and deployed. If this is not the case then you'll want to refer to documentation that will bridge any gaps in the instructions below.

  1. Install gem requirements

    bundle install

    NOTE: You may need to install Qt/qmake to get Capybara to work; with Homebrew you can run brew install qt.

  2. Duplicate and edit environment variables

    cp env-sample .env

    Omniauth is set up to use Twitter and Github for logins in production. You'll want to put your own key and secret in for both. Other environment variables will include your postgres user and Rails' secret_token.

  3. Duplicate and edit database.yml

    cp config/database_example.yml config/database.yml
  4. Build dev database

    bundle exec rake db:create db:migrate db:seed

    NOTE: Seed will make an admin user with an email of [email protected] to get started. There is a special, development only login method in Omniauth that you can use to test it out.

  5. Start the server

    bundle exec rails server

Environment variables

TIMEZONE (defaults to Pacific if not set)
POSTGRES_USER (dev/test only)
MAIL_HOST (production only - from host)
MAIL_FROM (production only - from address)
SECRET_TOKEN (production only)
GITHUB_KEY
GITHUB_SECRET
TWITTER_KEY
TWITTER_SECRET

Contributing

View our CONTRIBUTING.md file to see guidelines on how to make CFP App better.

Contributors

The CFP App was initially authored by Ben Scofield. Marty Haught took over the project and lead development for the CFP for RailsConf 2014. Below are the others that participating on the project while it was a private project.

  • Matt Garriott
  • Andy Kappen
  • Timothy King
  • Ryan McDonald
  • Scott Meade
  • Sarah Mei

It was open sourced in May 2014 and moved to its new home. Please view the contributor graph for those that have contributed since it was open sourced.

About

Call for proposals for RubyConf Colombia 2015

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Releases

No releases published

Packages

No packages published

Languages

  • Ruby 67.5%
  • HTML 20.7%
  • CSS 9.7%
  • JavaScript 2.1%