Update docs to remove SQLite stuff

I've decided to use PostgreSQL instead of SQLite because the UPSERT
support is available in versions of PostgreSQL we're alread running,
whereas SQLite needs a VERY new (3.24.0) version that is not avail-
able on any recent long-term support Ubuntu releases.
This commit is contained in:
Alan Orth 2018-09-25 00:55:35 +03:00
parent 8f7450f67a
commit 3327884f21
Signed by: alanorth
GPG Key ID: 0FB860CC9C45B1B9
4 changed files with 7 additions and 4 deletions

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.gitignore vendored
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__pycache__
venv
*.db

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The format is based on [Keep a Changelog](https://keepachangelog.com/en/1.0.0/),
and this project adheres to [Semantic Versioning](https://semver.org/spec/v2.0.0.html).
## [0.2.0] - 2018-09-24
### Changed
- Use PostgreSQL instead of SQLite because UPSERT support needs a very new libsqlite3 whereas it's already in PostgreSQL 9.5+
## [0.1.0] - 2018-09-24
### Changed
- Rename project to "DSpace Statistics API"

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# DSpace Statistics API
A quick and dirty REST API to expose Solr view and download statistics for items in a DSpace repository.
Written and tested in Python 3.6. SolrClient (0.2.1) does not currently run in Python 3.7.0. Requires SQLite version 3.24.0 or greater for [`UPSERT` support](https://www.sqlite.org/lang_UPSERT.html).
Written and tested in Python 3.6. SolrClient (0.2.1) does not currently run in Python 3.7.0. Requires PostgreSQL version 9.5 or greater for [`UPSERT` support](https://wiki.postgresql.org/wiki/UPSERT).
## Installation
Create a virtual environment and run it:
$ virtualenv -p /usr/bin/python3.6 venv
$ . venv/bin/activate
$ pip install falcon gunicorn SolrClient
$ pip install falcon gunicorn SolrClient psycopg2-binary
$ gunicorn app:api
## Todo

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# ---
#
# Connects to a DSpace Solr statistics core and ingests item views and downloads
# into a SQLite database for use with other applications (an API, for example).
# into a Postgres database for use with other applications (an API, for example).
#
# This script is written for Python 3 and requires several modules that you can
# install with pip (I recommend setting up a Python virtual environment first):