This project, and all others in projecthydra-deprecated, have been deprecated and are no longer actively maintained by the Hydra Project developer community. See the Hydra Project’s main Github page at projecthydra for projects that are actively maintained.
Original README is below
Hypatia (see https://wiki.duraspace.org/display/HYPAT/Home) is a Hydra application (see https://wiki.duraspace.org/display/hydra/The+Hydra+Project) which supports accessioning, arrangement, description, discovery, delivery, and long term preservation of born digital collections.
Hypatia is being developed as part of the AIMS Project (http://www2.lib.virginia.edu/aims/) (“Born-Digital Collections: An Inter-Institutional Model for Stewardship”) funded by the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation.
For a more thorough overview of the Hydra framework, see HYDRA_OVERVIEW.textile.
See the Hydra-Head project prerequisite document: INSTALL_PREREQ
git clone [email protected]:projecthydra/hypatia.git cd hypatia
bundle install
Note that if you have RVM installed, it will create/use a gemset called “hypatia”.
rake db:migrate
Note that this is for the development environment, not production or test.
See README_TESTING for more information on testing.
The following will pull down a copy of hydra-jetty into the “jetty” directory as a git submodule:
git submodule init git submodule update
Stop any copies of jetty (or anything else using port 8983) before running this command.
(Note that java 1.6 must be invoked by the “java” command or Fedora won’t work.)
The following will copy Solr and Fedora configuration files over to jetty in addition to starting it:
rake hydra:jetty:load
You can check if Solr is running:
localhost:8983/solr
You can check if Fedora is running:
localhost:8983/fedora
script/server
You should now be able to go to your application at http://localhost:3000.
Note that there are no objects pre-installed into Fedora (or Solr). See README_FIXTURES for information on how to pre-install fixture objects into Fedora and Solr.