#Ohana Web Search
Ohana Web Search is one of two Rails apps that come out of the box with the Ohana API platform. The other app is an admin interface that allows people to update the data. Both apps also serve as examples of what can be built on top of the social services data that the Ohana API exposes.
This project was developed by Code for America's 2013 San Mateo County, CA, fellowship team. Thanks to a grant from the Knight Foundation, @monfresh, @spara, and @anselmbradford will continue to push code in 2014.
Ohana Web Search aims to make it easy to find available services in a community, and to provide as much pertinent information as possible, such as travel directions, hours of operation, other services residents in need might be eligible for, etc. You can see a live example for services in San Mateo County, CA, here: http://smc-connect.org
We gladly welcome contributions. Below you will find instructions for installing the project and contributing.
You can see a running version of the application at http://ohana-web-search-demo.herokuapp.com/.
- Ruby version 2.2.1
- Rails version 4.2.1
- Template Engines: ERB and HAML
- Testing Frameworks: RSpec, Capybara, Poltergeist
See the Wiki.
Follow the instructions in INSTALL.md.
Follow the instructions in CUSTOMIZE.md.
To test locally, you can run tests with this simple command:
script/test
To configure the way RSpec displays test results, create a file called .rspec
in the root directory, and add the following to it:
--color
--format progress
The --color
option allows you to see passing tests in green and failing ones in red. Otherwise, by default, you would just see a series of dots for passing tests, and the letter "F" for failing ones.
Parameters for the --format
option are: progress
(default - shows a series of dots), documentation
, html
, or textmate
. More information can be found on the RSpec website.
To see the actual tests, browse through the spec directory.
We'd love to get your help developing this project! Take a look at the Contribution Document to see how you can make a difference.
Copyright (c) 2013-2014 Code for America. See LICENSE for details.