A todo list application. This project began as an exercise in learning to use Inertia.js (along with CakePHP Adapter), React and CakePHP together, and to try a new approach to CSS. Heavily inspired in functionality and design by Todoist and Things.
This project is great if you want to host and operate your personal todo lists in your personal cloud, where you know exactly what is being done with your data.
- Clone this repository.
- Download Composer or update
composer self-update
. - Ensure you have a nodejs environment with yarn.
- Install dependencies:
php composer.phar install yarn install
- Build static assets to generate a
manifest.json
file used to generate URLs to generated UI assets.yarn build
- Start up the development server:
node bin/server.js
- Visit
localhost:8765
to get started.
Docket is tested against MySQL, Postgres and SQLite, and will work equally well
on all of them. Create your database, and ensure your database is encoded as
UTF8
or utf8mb4
if you are using MySQL. Next setup your database
configuration in config/app_local.php
; then run migrations:
bin/cake migrations migrate
You can now serve Docket using either the built-in PHP webserver, or more robust webserver like Apache or Nginx.
To use the built-in PHP server run:
bin/cake server -p 8765
Then visit http://localhost:8765
to see the landing page, and create your account.
While you shouldn't need to configure much, if you do want to tweak settings,
the config/app_local.php
file is where you should make any changes specific to
your setup. During application start, this file is loaded and merged onto the
defaults in config/app.php
.
Using node bin/server.js
you can run a PHP webserver and vite in watch mode.
This is the recommended development environment for docket.
Server tests can be run via phpunit
. By default only the functional and
integration tests are run. Docket also uses
panther to do automated browser testing.
Running acceptance tests requires you to have a browser driver available. Follow
the installation guide in panther to get started. Once you have a driver
installed acceptance tests can be run using phpunit
:
phpunit --testsuite=acceptance
Javascript tests can be run via jest
:
yarn test
Flutter tests can be run via flutter
:
cd flutterapp
flutter test
Docket offers a google calendar integration that will automatically sync calendar events into your 'today' and 'upcoming' views. This is a great way to have your meetings and appointments alongside your tasks.
The google calendar integration has a fairly involved setup, as you will need to create a google OAuth consumer.
- Ensure your Docket install is running under an HTTPs connection.
- Get your site 'verified' in google search console.
- Create an API Application in Google. Your OAuth Client application and its accompanying 'Consent Screen' will need to:
- Use the
$your_domain/auth/google/callback
as its redirect URI. - Request the
calendar.readonly
,calendar.events.readonly
, anduserinfo.email
scopes. - Add your verified site to your API application.
- Use the
- Next, download the credentials file for your application and save it into
config/google-auth.json
. You should take care to make sure this file is encrypted if it is added to any repositories.
If you've managed to do all of that you should have a working google calendar integration, and you should be able to go to Profile Menu > Calendars and add your google account.
If not, I'm sorry but google has made this really hard and you'll have to keep trying until you get it working. There isn't much I can do to help either.
Adding a calendar to docket will also create a 'watch' subscription that will receive updates from google. Subscriptions only last around a week after which they need to be renewed. You can add the following command to run as a daily cron job:
bin/cake calendar_subscription_renew
This command will iterate all the subscriptions that will expire in the next day and create a new subscription for those calendar sources.
When building the flutter application you need another OAuth Client ID for the flutter application.
- Setup a keystore file. I followed this tutorial.
- Fill out
key.properties
. It should look likekeyAlias=upload keyPassword=androidpassword storeFile=/Users/markstory/code/docket-app/flutterapp/upload-keystore.jks storePassword=androidpassword
- Populate
assets/google-auth.json
. It should look like{ "clientId": "a-big-number.apps.googleusercontent.com", "redirectUrl": "com.docket.flutterapp" }
You should now be able to generate an android build.
This video was fantastic and helped me get through the setup pain of this integration.