Observatory Configuration Database is a simple frontend to a relational database where we attempt to represent the physical state of a Telescope Network. It provides a RESTful API as well as HTML views of the data. This is used by other applications in the observatory control system to understand what components make up the observatory, and to allow for automated validation of component properties.
- Python>=3.7
- PostgreSQL >= 10
The application requires a PostgreSQL database backend because it uses JSONFields in the model.
This project is configured using environment variables.
Variable | Description | Default |
---|---|---|
SECRET_KEY |
Django Secret Key, this value must be set to run the app | None |
DEBUG |
Enable Django debugging features, set to True for local development |
False |
DB_ENGINE |
Database Engine, set to django.db.backends.postgresql to use PostgreSQL |
django.db.backends.postgresql |
DB_NAME |
Database Name | configdb |
DB_HOST |
Database Hostname, set this when using PostgreSQL | 127.0.0.1 |
DB_USER |
Database Username, set this when using PostgreSQL | postgres |
DB_PASS |
Database Password, set this when using PostgreSQL | postgres |
DB_PORT |
Database Port, set this when using PostgreSQL | 5432 |
OAUTH_CLIENT_ID |
OAuth2 application client_id, set this to use OAuth2 authentication | "" |
OAUTH_CLIENT_SECRET |
OAuth2 application client_secret, set this to use OAuth2 authentication | "" |
OAUTH_TOKEN_URL |
OAuth2 token URL, set this to use OAuth2 authentication | "" |
We use Poetry for package management. If you already have Poetry installed, you can skip this section.
You can install Poetry using one of the many options listed at https://python-poetry.org/docs/#installation. One simple option is using Pipx:
python3 -m pip install --user pipx
python3 -m pipx ensurepath
pipx install poetry
Install the project and its Python dependencies:
poetry install
This will install the project in a Poetry managed virtual environment. To run
commands in that environment either use poetry run ...
or start a shell in
that environment with poetry shell
This application requires the use of a PostgreSQL database (or another database that supports JSONField in Django). If using PostgreSQL, the following command uses the PostgreSQL Docker image to create a test PostgreSQL database. Make sure that the options that you use to set up your database correspond with your configured database setting environment variables.
docker run --name configdb-postgres -e POSTGRES_PASSWORD=postgres -e POSTGRES_DB=configdb -v/var/lib/postgresql/data -p5432:5432 -d postgres:11.1
After creating the database, migrations must be applied to set up the tables in the database.
poetry run python manage.py migrate
poetry run python manage.py test
poetry run python manage.py runserver
The configdb should now be accessible from http://127.0.0.1:8000!
The application connects to a running Observation Portal for OAuth2 authentication. Staff accounts should have
access to the admin interface. Remember to set the appropriate environment variables - the token url
will be the /o/token/
endpoint of the Observation Portal you are connecting to.
If no Observation Portal is connected during development, creating a local superuser account should work to access the admin interface as well:
poetry run python manage.py createsuperuser
The admin interface is used to define the components of the Observatory. It is accessible by going to http://127.0.0.1:8000/admin/. The different components of the Observatory should be defined one-by-one, and will often reference each other when creating them. A sensible order to initially create the components of an Observatory is:
- Site - The geographic location with one or more enclosures
- Enclosure - A physical building containing one or more telescopes
- Telescope - A single light collection system
- Camera type - The generic properties of a single type of camera
- Optical element - A single component within the optical path of a camera
- Optical element group - A logical grouping of one or more optical elements of a single type that can be selected on a camera
- Camera - A specific instance of a camera type with a set of optical element groups
- Generic modes - A generic definition for a single mode, including an associated overhead and validation schema
- Generic mode group - A grouping of one or more generic modes of a single type associated with a camera type. The type is user definable, but some examples used in the Observation Portal include
readout
,acquisition
,guiding
,exposure
, androtator
- Instrument - A combination of one or more science cameras and a guide camera on a specific Telescope
- Check out the updated step-by-step setup guide here
- It is recommended that all codes use lowercase characters by convention, except for type codes such as instrument type, camera type, and mode type which should use all upper case. While this convention isn't strictly required, it is useful to choose a convention and apply it consistently when defining your codes.
GenericMode structures have a field called validation_schema
which accepts a dictionary Cerberus Validation Schema. This validation schema will be used to provide automatic validation and setting of defaults within the Observation Portal. The validation schema will act on the structure in which the GenericMode is a part of. For example:
Mode type | What structure validation applies to |
---|---|
readout | InstrumentConfig |
exposure | InstrumentConfig |
rotator | InstrumentConfig |
acquisition | AcquisitionConfig |
guiding | GuidingConfig |
Every component has an endpoint to query, but to get the entire structure of the Observatory, it is common to query the sites endpoint and parse the data from within your client application.
Return all observatory configuration information
GET /sites/
Return a specific camera's configuration
GET /cameras/?code=my_camera_code
Return all instruments that are in the SCHEDULABLE state
GET /instruments/?state=SCHEDULABLE