2.6 KiB
TomodachiShare Development Instructions
Welcome to the TomodachiShare development guide! This project uses pnpm for package management, Next.js with the app router for the front-end and back-end, Prisma for the database, TailwindCSS for styling, and TypeScript for type safety.
Getting started
To get the project up and running locally, follow these steps:
$ git clone https://github.com/trafficlunar/tomodachi-share
$ cd tomodachi-share
$ pnpm install
Prisma types are generated automatically post-install, which is quite convenient. However, sometimes you might need to:
# Generate Prisma client types
$ pnpm prisma generate
# Or, if you've added new database properties
$ pnpm prisma migrate dev
$ pnpm prisma generate
Environment variables
You'll need a PostgreSQL database and Redis database. I would recommend using Docker to set these up quickly. Just create a docker-compose.yaml with the following content and run docker compose up -d:
services:
db:
image: postgres
restart: always
shm_size: 1024mb
ports:
- 5432:5432
environment:
POSTGRES_PASSWORD: frieren
adminer:
image: adminer
restart: always
ports:
- 8080:8080
redis:
image: redis
restart: always
ports:
- 6379:6379
After, make a copy of the .env.example file and rename it to .env. The database variables should be pre-configured, but you'll need to fill in the rest.
For the AUTH_SECRET, run the following in the command line:
$ pnpx auth secret
Now, let's get the Discord and GitHub authentication set up.
For Discord, create an application in the developer portal, go to 'OAuth2', copy in the Client ID and Secret into the respective variables and also add this as a redirect URL: http://localhost:3000/api/auth/callback/discord.
For GitHub, navigate to your profile settings, then 'Developer Settings', and create a new application. Set the homepage URL to http://localhost:3000 and copy the Client ID and generate a new client secret. Finally, add in a callback URL with the value http://localhost:3000/api/auth/callback/github.
After configuring the environment variables, you can run a development server.
$ pnpm dev
Building
It's a good idea to build the project locally before submitting a pull request. This helps catch any potential errors and see how things will look in a production environment.
# Build the project
$ pnpm build
# Run the built version
$ pnpm start