Materia is a platform and ecosystem for small, self-contained, customizable e-learning applications called widgets, designed to enhance digital course content. Widgets in the catalog can be customized by instructors to suit their instructional goals and objectives, then shared with students directly or embedded in an LMS through LTI.
Materia and its associated library of widgets is an open-source project of the University of Central Florida's Center for Distributed Learning.
View the Materia Docs for info on installing, using, and developing Materia and widgets.
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Materia is configured to use Docker containers in production environments, orchestrated through docker compose, though other orchestration frameworks could potentially be used instead. While it may be possible to deploy Materia without Docker, we do not recommend doing so.
We publish production ready docker and nginx containers in the Materia Docker repository. For more info on using Docker in Production, read the Materia Docker Readme
Visit the Server Variables page on our docs site for information about configuration through environment variables.
Get started with a local dev server:
git clone https://github.com/ucfopen/Materia.git
cd Materia/docker
./run_first.sh
The run_first.sh
script only has to be run once for initial setup. Afterwards, your local copy will persist in a docker volume unless you explicitly use docker-compose down
or delete the volume manually.
Use docker-compose up
to run your local instance. The compose process must persist to keep the application alive. Materia is configured to run at https://127.0.0.1
by default.
In a separate terminal window, run yarn dev
to enable the webpack dev server and live reloading while making changes to JS and CSS assets.
Note that Materia uses a self-signed certificate to facilitate https traffic locally. Your browser may require security exceptions for both 127.0.0.1:443
and 127.0.0.1:8008
.
More info about Materia Docker can be found in the Materia Docker Readme
See the wiki page for Creating a local user.
Tests run in the docker environment to maintain consistency. View the run_tests_*.sh
scripts in the docker directory for options.
Inspect the actual test command in /.run_tests.sh
for guidance, but as of the time of writing this, you can run a subset of the tests in the docker environment to save time.
The following command will run just the Oauth tests rather quickly:
./run_tests.sh --group=Oauth
There is a pre-commit hook available to ensure your code follows our linting standards. Check out the comments contained inside the hook files (in the githooks directory) to install it, you may need a few dependencies installed to get linting working.
Materia supports two forms of authentication:
- Direct authentication through direct logins. Note that Materia does not provide an out-of-the-box tool for user generation. If your goal is to connect to an external identity management platform or service, you will need to author an authentication module to support this. Review FuelPHP's Auth package and Login driver documentation, as well as the
ltiauth
andmateriaauth
packages located infuel/packages
to get started. - Authentication over LTI. This is the more out-of-the-box solution for user management and authentication. In fact, you can disable direct authentication altogether through the
BOOL_LTI_RESTRICT_LOGINS_TO_LAUNCHES
environment variable, making LTI authentication the only way to access Materia. Visit our LTI Integration Overview page on the docs site for more information.
Materia enables users to upload media assets for their widgets, including images and audio. There are two asset storage drivers available out of the box: file
and db
. file
is the default asset storage driver, which can be explicitly set via the ASSET_STORAGE_DRIVER
environment variable.