This project was decommissioned by the Office of Government-wide Policy and redirected to digitaldashboard.gov in June of 2020.
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How the .gov domain space is doing at best practices and federal requirements.
Pulse is a Flask app written for Python 3.5 and up. We recommend pyenv for easy Python version management.
- Install dependencies:
pip install -r requirements.txt
gem install sass bourbon neat bitters
- If editing styles during development, keep the Sass auto-compiling with:
make watch
- And to run the app in development, use:
make debug
This will run the app with DEBUG
mode on, showing full error messages in-browser when they occur.
To initialize the dataset with the last production scan data and database, there's a convenience function:
make data_init
This will download (using curl
) the current live production database and scan data to the local data/
directory.
Download and set up domain-scan
from GitHub.
domain-scan
in turn requires pshtt
and sslyze
. These can be installed directly via pip
.
Pulse requires you to set one environment variable:
DOMAIN_SCAN_PATH
: A path todomain-scan
'sscan
binary.
However, if you don't have pshtt
and sslyze
on your PATH, then domain-scan
may need you to set a couple others:
PSHTT_PATH
: Path to thepshtt
binary.SSLYZE_PATH
: Path to thesslyze
binary.
To publish the resulting data to the production S3 bucket, install the official AWS CLI:
pip install awscli
And link it to AWS credentials that allow authorized write access to the pulse.cio.gov
S3 bucket.
From the Pulse root directory:
python -m data.update
This will kick off the domain-scan
scanning process for HTTP/HTTPS and DAP participation, using the .gov
domain list as specified in meta.yml
for the base set of domains to scan.
Then it will run the scan data through post-processing to produce some JSON and CSV files the Pulse front-end uses to render data.
Finally, this data will be uploaded to the production S3 bucket.
This project is in the worldwide public domain. As stated in CONTRIBUTING:
This project is in the public domain within the United States, and copyright and related rights in the work worldwide are waived through the CC0 1.0 Universal public domain dedication.
All contributions to this project will be released under the CC0 dedication. By submitting a pull request, you are agreeing to comply with this waiver of copyright interest.