Skip to content

anjula-sack/scholarx-backend

 
 

Repository files navigation

ScholarX-Backend

ScholarX Logo

Welcome to the backend of the ScholarX project!

What is ScholarX?

ScholarX is an initiative that aims to provide free premium mentoring assistance to elite undergraduate students based in Sri Lanka. The program connects these students with Sri Lankan expatriates currently involved with some of the world's most renowned universities or Fortune 500 companies. The goal is to establish a sustainable education structure within Sri Lanka by leveraging knowledge and expertise from around the globe.

Contribution

Want to contribute to this project?

We welcome contributions to make ScholarX even better! Feel free to send us a pull request with your changes or improvements. Check out our Development Best Practices at SEF for guidelines.

Prerequisites

Before you can start using this project, make sure you have the following installed on your machine:

  • Node.js (version 18 or later)
  • npm (version 9 or later)

Getting Started

Follow these steps to get started with the ScholarX backend:

  1. Clone this repository to your local machine:

    git clone https://github.com/yourusername/scholarx-backend.git
  2. Install the dependencies:

    npm install
  3. Copy the .env file:

    cp .env.example .env
  4. Replace the environment variables in the newly created .env file with your configuration.

  5. Start the server:

    npm start
  6. Run Tests:

    npm test
  7. Open your web browser and navigate to http://localhost:${server_port} to access the running server.

Docker Setup

If you prefer to use Docker for development, follow these steps:

  1. Ensure Docker and Docker Compose are installed on your machine. You can download them from here https://www.docker.com/products/docker-desktop/.

  2. Build the Docker images:

docker-compose build

  1. Start the Docker containers:

docker-compose up

  1. The application and its services are now running in Docker containers. You can access the application at http://localhost:${SERVER_PORT}, where SERVER_PORT is the port number specified in your .env file.

  2. To stop the Docker containers, use the following commnd:

docker-compose down

Please note that the Docker Compose setup assumes that you have a .env file in your project root. You can create one by copying the .env.example file:

cp .env.example .env

Then, replace the environment variables in the newly created .env file with your configuration.

The environment directive sets environment variables inside the Docker container. These variables are used to configure the PostgreSQL server. The values for ${DB_USER}, ${DB_PASSWORD}, and ${DB_NAME} should be specified in your .env file.

Remember to replace ${SERVER_PORT} with the actual port number if it's a fixed value. If it's specified in the .env file, you can leave it as is.

In the docker-compose.yml file, we also have a db service for the PostgreSQL database:

db:
  image: postgres:15
  ports:
    - "5432:5432"
  environment:
    - POSTGRES_USER=${DB_USER}
    - POSTGRES_PASSWORD=${DB_PASSWORD}
    - POSTGRES_DB=${DB_NAME}

This service uses the official postgres:15 Docker image. The ports directive maps port 5432 inside the Docker container to port 5432 on your host machine, allowing you to connect to the PostgreSQL server at localhost:5432.

Now, you can connect to the PostgreSQL server running inside the Docker container using a database client. Use localhost:5432 as the server address, and the ${DB_USER}, ${DB_PASSWORD}, and ${DB_NAME} values from your .env file for the username, password, and database name, respectively.

Note

If you have a local PostgreSQL server running on port 5432, you will need to stop it before starting the Docker container, or change the port mapping to avoid a conflict.

Remember to replace ${SERVER_PORT} with the actual port number if it's a fixed value. If it's specified in the .env file, you can leave it as is.


Code Quality

We strive to maintain a high code quality. You can check for linting issues by running:

npm run lint

And to automatically format the code, use:

npm run format

Project Structure

Here's an overview of the project structure:

scholarx-backend/
├── src/
│   ├── controllers/
│   │   └── index.ts
│   ├── middleware/
│   │   └── index.ts
│   ├── routes/
│   │   └── index.ts
│   ├── services/
│   │   └── auth.service.ts
│   ├── entities/
│   │   └── profile.entity.ts
│   ├── index.ts
│   └── types.ts
├── .env.example
├── .gitignore
├── package.json
├── tsconfig.json
└── README.md
  • src/controllers/: Contains the controller classes that handle incoming requests.
  • src/middleware/: Contains the middleware functions used to modify requests and responses.
  • src/routes/: Contains the route definitions for the application.
  • src/services/: Contains the service definitions for the application.
  • src/entities/: Contains the entity models for the application.
  • src/index.ts: Creates and configures the Express application and starts the server.
  • src/types.ts: Defines custom types for the application.
  • .env.example: An example configuration file for environment variables.
  • .gitignore: A list of files and directories to be ignored by Git.
  • package.json: Contains information about the project and its dependencies.
  • tsconfig.json: Configuration file for the TypeScript compiler.

Database Configuration and Migration

Setting up the Database

  1. Ensure you have PostgreSQL installed on your machine. If not, you can download it from here.

  2. Create a new PostgreSQL database:

CREATE DATABASE scholarx;
  1. Update your .env file with your database configuration:

    DB_HOST=localhost
    DB_PORT=5432
    DB_USER=your_db_user
    DB_PASSWORD=your_db_password
    DB_NAME=scholarx

Running Migrations and Seeding the Database

Migration Commands

  1. Generate a new migration:

    npm run migration:generate -- -n MigrationName

    This command generates a new migration file with the specified name.

  2. Run migrations:

    npm run migration:run

    This command runs all pending migrations.

  3. Synchronize the database schema:

    npm run sync:db

    This command synchronizes your database schema with the current state of your entities.

  4. Seed the database:

    npm run seed

    This command builds the project and runs the database seeding script located in dist/src/scripts/seed-db.js.

Example Migration and Seeding Commands

  • To generate a new migration named AddUserTable:

    npm run migration:generate -- -n AddUserTable
  • To run all pending migrations:

    npm run migration:run
  • To synchronize the database schema:

    npm run sync:db
  • To seed the database:

    npm run seed

Setting up Google Authentication

  1. Open Google Cloud Console:

Visit https://console.cloud.google.com

  1. Sign In:

Sign in with your Google account. If you don't have one, you'll need to create one.

  1. Navigate to the Project Selection Page:

Once signed in, you'll be directed to the Google Cloud Console. At the top left of the page, you'll see a drop-down menu with text "Select a Project". Click on this menu.

  1. Create a New Project:

If you have existing projects, you can select one or click on the "New Project" button.

  1. Enter Project Details:

In the "Project Name" field, give your project a unique name. Then select a location (region) for your project's resources.

  1. Click "Create":

Once the details are filled, click the "Create" button at the bottom.

  1. Wait for Project Creation:

Google Cloud Platform will now create your project. This might take a few moments.

Enabling Google+ API for the Project

  1. Navigate to the Google Cloud Console. Select your project using the project selector at the top. In the left navigation pane, click on "APIs & Services" and then click on "Library."

  2. Search for "Google+ API" in the library.

  3. Click on the Google+ API and then click the "Enable" button.

Create OAuth Consent Screen

  1. Navigate to the API & Services Dashboard: Open the Google Cloud Console. Select your project.

  2. Open the API & Services Dashboard:

In the left navigation pane, click on "APIs & Services" and then click on "Credentials."

  1. Configure Consent Screen:

Click on "Create Credentials" and choose "OAuth consent screen." Fill in the required details for your OAuth consent screen, such as product name, user support email, and developer contact information.

  1. Save and Continue: Save the consent screen configuration.

Create OAuth Client ID Credentials

  1. Navigate to the API & Services Dashboard: In the "Credentials" page, click on "Create Credentials" and choose "OAuth client ID." Configure OAuth Client ID: Select the application type and Enter a name for your client ID. Configure the authorized redirect URIs.

  2. Save Credentials:

Click "Create" to generate your OAuth client ID and client secret.

Set Environment Variables

After obtaining the OAuth client ID and client secret,set the environment variables in your application to use these credentials.

Ex:

process.env.GOOGLE_CLIENT_ID = 'your-client-id'; process.env.GOOGLE_CLIENT_SECRET = 'your-client-secret'; process.env.GOOGLE_REDIRECT_URL = 'your-redirect-uri';

We appreciate your interest in ScholarX. Happy contributing! If you have any questions or need assistance, please don't hesitate to reach out to us.

Setting up LinkedIn Authentication

  1. Create LinkedIn page with the mandatory information.

  2. Navigate to https://developer.linkedin.com/

  3. Select "Create App":

    • Add App name.
    • Search for the LinkedIn page that was previously created.
    • Upload an image as a Logo.
    • Create the App.
  4. In Products section select Share on LinkedIn and Sign In with LinkedIn using OpenID Connect request access.

  5. In Auth section edit the Authorized redirect URLs for your app and add the redirect url. http://localhost:3000/api/auth/linkedin/callback

  6. Copy Client Id and Client Secret from the Auth Section.

  7. In setting section verify the LinkedIn Page and generate URL.

  8. Verify it from your account.

Create dummy data

  1. Run the seeding script:

    npm run seed

About

This is the backend of the ScholarX

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Releases

No releases published

Packages

No packages published

Languages

  • TypeScript 89.8%
  • EJS 9.8%
  • Dockerfile 0.4%