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Frequently Asked Questions
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When running with the development environment settings, registration emails are not sent out. However, the URL with their activation key is logged to the console. Just copy it from there and paste it into the browser.
User: honor Password: edx User: audit Password: edx User: verified Password: edx User: staff Password:edx
When you make a new account on your local dev environment, it will be a standard student account. You can drop into the sql shell and make your account global staff, which means that it will automatically have access to "Instructor" tab on all courses in the LMS. To do this, drop into the sql shell:
sudo -u www-data /edx/app/edxapp/venvs/edxapp/bin/python /edx/app/edxapp/edx-platform/manage.py lms --settings aws dbshell
The following command will make all local users global staff:
update auth_user set is_staff=1;
A similar command will make all local users global superusers, which means they'll have unrestricted access to localhost:8000/admin
:
update auth_user set is_superuser=1;
You can reuse the same playbook which you used for installation. Just put use the deploy tag with "--tags deploy".
Using Studio, upload an image named images_course_image.jpg
Please read: https://github.com/edx/edx-platform/wiki/Controlling-course-creation-rights
Modify the server deployment commands to include the IP address, like this: rake cms[dev,0.0.0.0:8001]
and rake lms[cms.dev,0.0.0.0:8000]
.
From a stackoverflow question on 0.0.0.0 in Django,
0.0.0.0:80 is a shortcut meaning "bind to all IP addresses this computer supports". 127.0.0.1:80 makes it bind only to the "lo" or "loopback" interface. If you have just one NIC with just one IP address, you could bind to it explicitly with, say, "192.168.1.1:80" (if 192.168.1.1 was your IP address), or you could list all the IPs your computer responds to, but 0.0.0.0:80 is a shortcut for that.
For devstack, the simplest way is to create a private.py in cms/envs or lms/envs, settings there will override others.
'Courseware content' is stored in MongoDB and user-data (e.g. user tables, user state, authN, authZ, etc.) are stored in a relational database. For localdev environments, SQLite is used for the relational database to keep dependencies simple, for production environments mysql is used as the relational database. So there's actually really just two rather than three, from that perspective.
In the history of edX, the use of MongoDB as a contentstore is relatively new (previous architectures used XML-based files from the filesystem) and it seemed like a good match since courseware are well modeled as flexible JSON documents. The use of relational datastores for user-data predated the transition of the contentstores and we did not migrate those databases to a NoSQL platform.
CMS and LMS should share the same databases (mysql/RDS for user-data and MongoDB for courseware content and discussion forums) for any deployments. SSO is accomplished by both Django Apps using shared cookies (e.g. *.edx.org, in our case) as well as the same Session database. So if you're deployment is on *.example.org, then the cookie domain should be set to .example.org, where the LMS is on www.example.org and the CMS is on studio.example.org.
With django-admin syncdb and migrate - is that run both in LMS and CMS or is it sufficient to run once?
Yes, there are no new CMS specific tables in Django, so you should just have to run it once.
You need to put the server name in the PREVIEW_LMS_BASE variable, found in the cms.env.json and lms.env.json files.