Bert's Interactive Lesson Loader
Project description
Table of Contents generated with DocToc
- BILL - Bert's Interactive Lesson Loader
- Overview
- Features
- Quick Start
- Building the app
- Building the installer
- Developing the app
- Configuration File
- Lessons
- WebTerminal
- Appendix
BILL - Bert's Interactive Lesson Loader
Overview
What is this and why did you make it?
Think Katacoda, but instead of a website with learning examples, you have a desktop app that creates hands-on lessons from markdown-formatted, jina-templated documents, complete with a web terminal for interactive practice.
How did you make this?
The UI is written in ReactJS, with the Flask python package rendering serving up the optimized HTML assets.
What's it look like?
Here's a screenshot:
Notice the menu dropdown for Available Lessons. The entries are generated dynamically as defined in the app's configuration file.
Features
- Define your lessons catalog in a YAML-formatted configuration file, e.g. bill.config.yaml.example
- Lessons are Markdown-formatted files
- First rendered as jinja templates
- Then rendered as HTML
- Web-based terminals via xtermjs component
See section on WebTerminal - Interaction with OS/system is possible via underlying python process
Quick Start
Step 1 - Install
Note that for pip installations, you'll need a minimum python version of 3.7.
You can install the app in any of the following ways:
- Download appropriate installer from the releases page
- Install pip package from pypi.org:
pip install bertdotbill
- Install pip package from locally-cloned repo:
git clone https://github.com/berttejeda/bert.bill.git
cd bert.bill
pip install bertdotbill .
- Install pip package from locally-cloned repo, in development mode: same as above, but with
pip install -e .
instead - Install pip package directly from git repo
pip install git+http://www.github.com/berttejeda/bert.bill.git
Step 2 - Create your configuration file
Using the provided sample config bill.config.yaml.example, create your own configuration file, ensuring the following:
- The file name is bill.config.yaml
- The file is located in one of the app's search paths, see the section on Configuration File
Step 3 - Launch!
- If you installed using the Windows installer from releases page, a shortcut should have been placed on your desktop.
- If installed via pip, launch the app from your terminal:
bill
- If installed via pip as a development instance, launch via python with
python ./bertdotbill/app.py
Usage
Usage information can be obtained by invoking the executable with the --help
flag, as with: bill --help
or python ./bertdotbill/app.py --help
.
The help output should be similar to:
usage: bill [-h] [--username USERNAME] [--password PASSWORD]
[--lesson-url LESSON_URL]
[--config-file CONFIG_FILE] [--config-file-templatized]
[--no-ui] [--debug]
[--verify-tls] [--norender-markdown]
Bert's Interactive Lesson Loader (BILL)
optional arguments:
-h, --help show this help message and exit
--username USERNAME, -u USERNAME
Username, if the URL requires authentication
--password PASSWORD, -p PASSWORD
Password, if the URL requires authentication
--lesson-url LESSON_URL, -url LESSON_URL
The URL for the lesson definition
--config-file CONFIG_FILE, -f CONFIG_FILE
Path to app configuration file
--config-file-templatized, -fT
Render configuration via jinja2 templating
--no-ui, -noui Don't launch the UI
--debug
--verify-tls Verify SSL cert when downloading web content
--norender-markdown, -nomarkdown
Building the app
- Install and configure prerequisites:
- Python 3.7+
- Nodejs (tested with version 16.5.0)
- Install yarn:
npm install yarn
- Install modules:
yarn install
- Install python prerequisites:
pip install -r requirements.txt
- Build:
yarn build
- Launch the development instance of the desktop app:
yarn start:gui:dev
Under the hood, this recompiles the HTML and launches bertdotbill/app.py
Notes for users on Windows 10 x64:
- If you want to be able to open the Developer Console from the Desktop App, you'll need to install
Microsoft Edge WebView2 Runtime - Ensure you configure Nodejs as per https://github.com/nodejs/node-gyp#on-windows:
- Install the current version of Python from the Microsoft Store package.
- Install tools and configuration manually:
- Install Visual C++ Build Environment: Visual Studio Build Tools (using "Visual C++ build tools" workload) or Visual Studio Community (using the "Desktop development with C++" workload)
- Launch cmd, npm config set msvs_version 2017
- If the above steps didn't work for you, please visit Microsoft's Node.js Guidelines for Windows for additional tips.
Building the installer
You can run yarn build:installer
to generate the installer.
Under the hood, the above command calls the setup.sh script to do the heavy lifting.
Once the process completes, the installer file should be located in the dist folder.
Platform-specific notes:
- Windows: The above script calls InnoSetup against the InnoSetup script setup.iss
As such, you'll need to install InnoSetup for this to work,
Important: The setup.sh script is written in bash, so it'll only work if you're on a posix emulation environment, e.g. Cygwin, git-bash, etc - Linux: Not yet implemented
- OSX: Not yet implemented
Developing the app
If you want to make changes to the UI, you'll need to launch the
web instance with yarn start:web:dev
.
Your changes to UI components will re-render the HTML on-the-fly.
Configuration File
The configuration file is read by the desktop app , and is a YAML-formatted file.
As mentioned above, a sample configuration file is provided: bill.config.yaml.example
The desktop app will attempt to find the config file in the following locations:
- Under ~/bill.config.yaml
- Adjacent to the app, i.e. in the same folder as the app's script
- Under ~/.bill/bill.config.yaml
- Under /etc/bill.config.yaml
Do review the comments in the sample file, as these explain how the sections are interpreted/handled by the UI.
Configuration File - Defaults
If no settings can be found, the app will resort to its defaults, see defaults.py
As such, the defaults settings call for the import of an external config, hosted in my bert.lessons repo:
see bert.lessons/bill.config.yaml
This external config is where I am listing all of my (mostly) hand-crafted tutorials and learning materials.
Lessons
As already mentioned, lessons are Markdown-formatted files interpreted as jinja templates.
You can define a lesson catalog in the configuration file.
If these files are stored in a password-protected web location, you'll need to specify credentials in the auth.global section of the config file.
Per-lesson credentials are not yet implemented, but will be in a future version.
Jinja Templating
To add to the templating goodies provided by the Jinja library, I've exposed the OS Environment via the environment key of the sessions object.
This means you should be able to reference any OS-level environment variable in your lesson content, e.g.
# Overview
Hello {{ session['environment']['USERNAME'] }}, welcome to Lesson 1
WebTerminal
Every lesson rendered through the app includes a web-based terminal emulator component that allows for practicing the lesson material.
These web terminals are embedded in the user interface, available at its footer and as a slide-in from the right (click Utils to reveal).
As mentioned before, the underlying technology for these web terminals is xterm.js.
As such, the xterm.js component requires a websocket to a bash process.
By default, the bert.bill desktop app will attempt to connect to a local instance of the websocket via http://127.0.0.1:5000/.
You can get this websocket running either by:
- Running the pre-built docker image:
docker run --rm -it --name aiohttp -p 5000:5000 berttejeda/aiohttp-websocket-bash
- Running the pre-built docker image above via the Web UI (click Utilities, then Launch Local Web Terminal)
- Launching the bash+websocket script yourself: https://github.com/berttejeda/bert.docker/blob/master/shared/start-bash-websocket.py
Note: The script will only work on a POSIX OS
Either of the commands above will start the websocket and bash process on the target platform on port 5000 by default.
Feel free to adjust either approach to your need, e.g. change the listening port, but be aware that the desktop app's configuration file must be adjusted to reflect any changes to the way the websocket is accessed.
Appendix
OS Commands
You can define commands that can be launched from the Top Navigation bar of the UI.
These commands are defined in the commands section of the config file, see bill.config.yaml.example.
Any defined commands will appear under the Utilities dropdown menu of the Top Navigation bar, as illustrated below:
Note that you'll also have to define Allowed Command Patterns (Regular Expressions), as exemplified in the config file
Any commands that do not match any of the regular expressions will be denied execution.
Read more on Python Regular Expression syntax: https://docs.python.org/3/library/re.html
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