The ToDo sample apps are meant to be simple demos of how you can take advantage of Bluemix and a database service. In addition it shows how to take advantage of both the built-in and community buildpacks to deploy your app using whatever runtime you choose.
The ToDo app is pretty simple, it allows you to add an persist ToDos that you need to get done. As you complete different ToDos you can mark them done and eventually delete them from the list. The ToDos are stored in a database.
All implementations support two different database backends, Mongo DB and Couch DB via Cloudant. If you want to use Cloudant see the section of this README titled "Couch DB and Cloudant".
The front-end UI for the ToDo app uses a slightly modified version of the
Backbone sample from TodoMVC.com. The main change was
to change the collections/todo.js
file to not use localStorage
,
but to instead set the url
to apis/todos
,
so that the ToDos are retrieved from the server instead of from localStorage.
The original collections/todo.js
file is
here.
There are various implementation for the back-end of the ToDo app. We have implemented the back-end currently in Java, Node.js, Sinatra, Python, and PHP. If you want to contribute a backend in another language we enchourage you to do. See the "adding new implementations" section.
All of the implementations are similar; they serve up the files in the
frontend
directory as static web resources - html, css, js files. And they
also expose an api at the uri api/todos
to query and modify the ToDos.
Note that this isn't really a realistic ToDo app, at present, since it maintains a global list of Todos that the entire world shares. The intent is just to show using an existing simple front-end application with a simple database back-end. A real example would probably include user authentication, storing ToDo's on a per-user basis, etc.
To get the code you can just clone the repo.
git clone [email protected]:IBM-Bluemix/todo-apps.git
The repository contains a directory for each implementation, and the
frontend
directory contains the web resources that are used by each
implementation.
To run the samples on Bluemix you must have signed up for Bluemix and have installed the Cloud Foundry command line tool. To sign up for Bluemix head to bluemix.net and register.
You can download the Cloud Foundry command line tool by following the steps in the README file.
After you have installed the Cloud Foundry command line tool you need to point it at Bluemix so it knows where to deploy the applications. You can do this by running
cf login -a https://api.ng.bluemix.net
This will prompt you to login with your Bluemix user ID and password which is the same as your IBM ID and password. You should only need to do this once, the command line tool will remember this information.
Most of the projects use build technologies that are specific to the runtime the ToDo
app is written in to deploy the app to Bluemix (Maven, Rake, Paver, etc). The assumption
is that these are tools developers who are using these runtimes are familiar with.
Under the covers they are using the Cloud Foundry command line to deploy the apps.
The benefit is that you don't need to remember verbose commands (in most cases) and
continue to use tools you are comfortable with. See the individual runtime folders
(java, node, php, python, sinatra) for more details on how to deploy the various
versions.
Feel free to expand upon this project by adding new implementations in your favorite runtime or framework. Below is a simple specification you should keep in mind when adding new implementations.
- The server implementation should support GET, POST, PUT, and DELETE.
GET /api/todos
GET Response The response should be a JSON array of all ToDos.
[{"completed":false,"id":"001fbbe7bd708a34624b47526cd6ac89","order":1,"title":"test"},{"completed":false,"id":"4d6153cf4bc3bdaf9c6c7eebf42d67a6","order":2,"title":"1"},{"completed":false,"id":"be3855e004dd5d74c802992c09ea8d28","order":3,"title":"2"},{"completed":false,"id":"e7cb7149098961e5dc182715f1cb0e9d","order":4,"title":"3"},{"completed":false,"id":"9368ccc4629a1c8dfd99a9e741d01c44","order":5,"title":"4"},{"completed":false,"id":"e5752d462b83f13da3d8dced1c15eb43","order":6,"title":"5"}]
POST /api/todos/
POST Body
{"title":"another","order":7,"completed":false}
POST Response The response should be a JSON representation of a ToDo with the id field populated.
{"completed":false,"id":"f76424cc41f1ee8c2682a37069098794","order":7,"title":"another"}
PUT /api/todos/[id]
PUT Body
{"completed":true,"id":"4d6153cf4bc3bdaf9c6c7eebf42d67a6","order":2,"title":"1"}
PUT Response The response should be a JSON representation of the updated ToDo.
{"completed":true,"id":"4d6153cf4bc3bdaf9c6c7eebf42d67a6","order":2,"title":"1"}
DELETE /api/todos/[id]
DELETE Response The response should be a 204.
- The Mongo implementation should use a collection called "todos".
- You should create a Mongo DB service with the name "todo-mongo-db" or "todo-compose-mongo-db", depending on which Mongo provider you choose.
It will most likely be useful to have a local Mongo DB server for testing when adding new implementations.
See the Mongo DB install instructions for your platform to install a local Mongo DB server.
-
You should create a Cloudant service with the name "todo-couch-db".
-
The name of the Couch DB / Cloudant database to use is "bluemix-todo".
View
The application code should create a view document, if one doesn't already exist, in the bluemix-todo database with the following JSON.
{
views: {
allTodos: {
reduce: "_count",
map: "function(doc){if(doc.title && doc.completed != null){emit(doc.order,{title: doc.title,completed: doc.completed})}}"
}
}
}
It will most likely be useful to have a local Couch DB server for testing when adding new implementations.
Relax, this is very easy!
Head over to the official home of CouchDB - http://couchdb.apache.org/ - and click the red "DOWNLOAD" link. Follow the instructions to download a verison of CouchDB for your platform.
When running the Mac version of CouchDB, you'll have a menu bar tool-button you can use to start and manage the database.
The implementations will run locally as long as the CouchDB server is running. By default the Couch DB will be running at http://127.0.0.1:5984.