Lentil
Lentil is no longer supported.
On January 30th, 2018, Instagram announced the release of a new Instagram Graph API in order to focus on supporting business and advertising use of Instgram content. The Instagram Graph API does not support the use cases required by Lentil. Instagram immediately removed their mechanism for requesting developer credentials for the older Instagram API and it is no longer possible to create new instances of Lentil. The older Instagram API will be deprecated over the next two years. Lentil will continue to work with pre-existing developer credentials until December 11, 2018.
lentil is a Ruby on Rails Engine that supports the harvesting of images from Instagram and provides several browsing views, mechanisms for sharing, tools for users to select their favorite images, an administrative interface for moderating images, and a system for harvesting images and submitting donor agreements in preparation of ingest into external repositories. Built according to the principles of responsive design, lentil is designed for use on mobile devices, tablets, desktops, and larger screens.
History
lentil is extracted from the My #HuntLibrary project at NCSU Libraries. My #HuntLibrary was created as a platform to foster student and community engagement with the new James B. Hunt Jr. Library via social media imagery and to preserve and archive these images as part of the record of the Hunt Library launch. Images from this crowdsourced documentation effort will be selected to become part of our permanent digital collections, allowing the NCSU community to contribute to the historical record of the Hunt Library through image submissions as well as the use of voting tools.
Project Maturity
Although we are using this gem in production, this gem should be considered an early release.
Installation
lentil is also available through the pre-packaged Social Media Combine for easier setup alongside Twitter harvesting software.
lentil requires Ruby 2.3.1 or greater.
Create a new Rails app with Rails 4.2.x
gem install rails -v '~> 4.2.7'
rails _4.2.7.1_ new --skip-turbolinks your_app_name
cd your_app_name
In the example above,
4.2.7.1
should be the version of Rails 4.x that is installed by thegem
command.
Add lentil and therubyracer (or another ExecJS runtime) to your Gemfile and run bundle update
gem 'lentil'
gem 'therubyracer'
If you would like to work directly from the master branch, use
gem 'lentil', :git => 'git://github.com/NCSU-Libraries/lentil.git'
instead.
Run the generator
bundle exec rails generate lentil:install
Start the server
bundle exec rails server
Visit http://localhost:3000
Upgrading
You may need to run bundle exec rake lentil:install:migrations
to incorporate any new database migration files.
Harvest Images
-
You will need to define your
instagram_client_id
,instagram_client_secret
, andinstagram_access_token
inconfig/lentil_config.yml
. You can generate these strings by creating an Instagram API client for your application and following the Client-side (Implicit) Authentication steps. -
If you haven't already, add an administrative user in development.
bundle exec rake lentil:dummy_admin_user
You will then have an administrative user with the following credentials:
-
Username: admin@example.com
-
Password: password
-
Login to the administrative console. Go to http://localhost:3000/admin
-
Go to http://localhost:3000/admin/lentil_tags/ and create a new tag.
-
Go to http://localhost:3000/admin/lentil_tagsets and create a new tagset, selecting the tag you just created. Make sure to mark this tagset as
harvestable
. -
Harvest some images by opening up another terminal and running:
bundle exec rake lentil:image_services:instagram:fetch_by_tag
You ought to see a message like: "15 new images added"
Note: The harvesting task currently does not utilize Instagram's result paging. It is important at this point to harvest images frequently in order to avoid missed content.
- Go to http://localhost:3000/admin/lentil_images and click on "Moderate New." Approve or reject some images. Once you've approved some, go to http://localhost:3000 to see your approved images.
- Congratulations! You're now up and running!
Harvest Videos
Video harvesting is builtin to the image harvesting feature. Only once a single task has to be run to migrate the existing data to accomodate for schema. After updating lentil to the latest release run
bundle exec rails generate lentil:install
bundle exec rake lentil:image_services:restore_videos
You ought to see a message like: "x record(s) updated"
Videos can be moderated like images. In the home page and animate views videos will autoplay, muted and looped
Scheduling tasks
There are several rake tasks that you should schedule to run on a recurring basis:
-
rake lentil:image_services:instagram:fetch_by_tag
harvests image metadata for all tags within "harvestable" tagsets. -
rake lentil:image_services:test_image_files[number_of_images,image_service]
checks that the image content for approved images is still available. After 3 failures, Lentil will stop displaying the images. After 10 failures, Lentil will stop checking. Defaults to checking 10 Instagram images. Images will not be checked more than once per day. -
rake lentil:popularity:update_score
recalculates the popularity score based on "likes" and "battles."
Additionally, there are three optional rake tasks that support image file harvesting for longer-term retention:
-
rake lentil:image_services:save_image_files[number_of_images,image_service,base_directory]
Lentil normally only stores image metadata, but this task will save the image file to a specified directory. This file will still not be used by Lentil, but the file retrieval will be noted in the Image model. Defaults to 50 Instagram images, saving to the path specified by thebase_image_file_dir
option fromconfig/lentil_config.yml
. -
rake lentil:image_services:dump_metadata[image_service,base_directory]
Extracts all image metadata from the database and writes them as json files. Defaults to saving to the path specified by thebase_image_file_dir
option fromconfig/lentil_config.yml
. -
rake lentil:image_services:submit_donor_agreements[number_of_images,image_service]
will submit a donor agreement (using thedonor_agreement_text
option fromconfig/lentil_config.yml
) as a comment on approved Instagram images that have been in the system for at least a week. Currently defaults to one image.
In order to submit comments, you will need to generate an access token for the user that will submit the comments. See the Instagram documentation and a discussion of access token expiration.
An example of a background task schedule using the whenever gem:
case @environment
when 'production'
every 5.minutes do
rake "image_services:instagram:fetch_by_tag", :output => {:standard => nil}
end
every 30.minutes do
rake "image_services:test_image_files", :output => {:standard => nil}
end
end
# All environments
every :hour do
rake "popularity:update_score", :output => {:standard => nil}
end
Customization
- A simple first customization to do is to override the about page by putting your own about page at app/views/lentil/pages/about.html.erb.
- If you haven't already you'll have update your
config/lentil_config.yml
file with your application name. - You can change the look of your site by including some variables in your application.css.scss before importing the lentil CSS:
$gray_text: #34282C;
$lentil_yellow: #DAB416;
$lentil_blue: #08C;
@import "lentil";
- In order to set image backgrounds in My #HuntLibrary, the following CSS is included in a file that is imported after
lentil
:
body {
background: image-url("background/fins3.jpg") fixed;
}
.navbar-inner {
background: #121212 image-url("nav/top_background.png") repeat-x;
}
div.header {
background: #0C1021 image-url("nav/example_08.jpg");
}
Special displays
Embeddable iframe view
This is a simple responsive non-interactive image grid that is intended to be embedded as an iframe. You can find this at http://YOUR_HOST/images/iframe
. Image sizes in the grid are determined using a range of possible image widths, with the smallest width defaulting to 64px and the largest width calculated as 1.5 times the smallest width. The smallest width may be configured by including an integer parameter to the iframe URL, for example: http://YOUR_HOST/images/iframe?smallest_width=40
. Currently, values greater than 320 may result in loss of resolution.
Large animated view
This is an example of an animated image grid that is designed for non-interactive displays. We have used customized versions of this on e-boards as well as very large video walls. This view will require some customization based on your project and target display. You can find this at http://YOUR_HOST/images/animate
.
Testing
- Install all of the dependencies:
bundle install
- Prepare the test database
RAILS_ENV=test bundle exec rake app:db:migrate
- Run the tests
bundle exec rake test
Running the Test/Dummy Instance
Sometimes you just might want to see what the dummy instance actually looks like. You can do the following:
bundle exec rake app:db:schema:load
cd test/dummy
bundle exec rake db:fixtures:load FIXTURES_PATH=../fixtures
bundle exec rails s
Once you load the fixtures you'll be able to harvest anything that has the tag "#hunttesting"
cd test/dummy
Edit config/lentil_config.yml
and set instagram_client_id
to the client ID associated with your Instagram API client.
bundle exec rake image_services:instagram:fetch_by_tag
Heroku
Documentation for deploying lentil to Heroku may be found in the doc directory.
License
See MIT-LICENSE
Contact
Submit a GitHub issue or contact lentil@lists.ncsu.edu.
Authors (in alphabetical order)
- Jason Casden
- Bret Davidson
- Aniket Lawande
- Cory Lown
- Jason Ronallo
- Heidi Tebbe
Additional project team members
- Brian Dietz
- Jennifer Garrett
- Mike Nutt (Product Lead for My #HuntLibrary project)