Installing Tutor Nightly in Open edX

Yagnesh nayiYagnesh nayi
4 min read

Tutor was designed to make it easy for everyone to run the latest release of Open edX. But sometimes, you want to run the latest, bleeding-edge version of Open edX. This is what we call “running master”, as opposed to running the release branch. Running the master branch in production is strongly not recommended unless you are an Open edX expert and you really know what you are doing. But Open edX developers frequently need to run the master branch locally to implement and test new features. Thus, Tutor makes it easy to run Open edX on the master branch: this is called “Tutor Nightly”.

running Tutor Nightly requires more than setting a few configuration variables: because there are so many Open edX settings, version numbers, etc. which may change between the latest release and the current master branch, Tutor Nightly is actually maintained as a separate branch of the Tutor repository. To install Tutor Nightly, you should install Tutor from the “nightly” branch of the source repository. To do so, run:

git clone --branch=nightly https://github.com/overhangio/tutor.git
pip install -e "./tutor[full]"

As usual, it is strongly recommended to run the command above in a Python virtual environment.

In addition to installing Tutor Nightly itself, this will install automatically the nightly versions of all official Tutor plugins (which are enumerated in plugins.txt). Alternatively, if you wish to hack on an official plugin or install a custom plugin, you can clone that plugin’s repository and install it. For instance:

git clone --branch=nightly https://github.com/myorganization/tutor-contrib-myplugin.git
pip install -e ./tutor-contrib-myplugin

Once Tutor Nightly is installed, you can run the usual tutor commands:

tutor dev launch
tutor dev run lms bash
# ... and so on

Upgrading to the latest version of Open edX

To pull the latest upstream changes, you should first upgrade Tutor Nightly:

cd ./tutor
git pull

Then, you will have to generate a more recent version of the nightly Docker images. Images for running Tutor Nightly are published daily to docker.io (see here). You can fetch the latest images with:

tutor images pull all

Alternatively, you may want to build the images yourself. As usual, this is done with:

tutor images build all

However, these images include the application master branch at the point in time when the image was built. The Docker layer caching mechanism might cause the git clone step from the build to be skipped. In such cases, you will have to bypass the caching mechanism with:

tutor images build --no-cache all

Running Tutor Nightly alongside the latest release

When running Tutor Nightly, you usually do not want to override your existing Tutor installation. That’s why a Tutor Nightly installation has the following differences from a regular release installation:

  • The default Tutor project root is different in Tutor Nightly. By default, it is set to ~/.local/share/tutor-nightly Linux (instead of ~/.local/share/tutor). To modify this location check the corresponding documentation.

  • The plugins root is set to ~/.local/share/tutor-nightly-plugins on Linux (instead of ~/.local/share/tutor-plugins). This location may be modified by setting the TUTOR_PLUGINS_ROOT environment variable.

  • The default docker-compose project name is set to tutor_nightly_local (instead of tutor_local). This value may be modified by manually setting the LOCAL_PROJECT_NAME.

Making changes to Tutor Nightly

In general pull requests should be open on the “master” branch of Tutor: the “master” branch is automatically merged on the “nightly” branch at every commit, such that changes made to Tutor releases find their way to Tutor Nightly as soon as they are merged. However, sometimes you want to make changes to Tutor Nightly exclusively, and not to the Tutor releases. This might be the case for instance when upgrading the running version of a third-party service (for instance: Elasticsearch, MySQL), or when the master branch requires specific changes. In that case, you should follow the instructions from the Contributing to Tutor section of the docs, with the following differences:

  • Open your pull request on top of the “nightly” branch instead of “master”.

  • Add a description of your changes by creating a changelog entry with make changelog-entry, as in the master branch.

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Written by

Yagnesh nayi
Yagnesh nayi

https://discuss.openedx.org/u/yagnesh/summary The online learning market is getting saturated as the entire education industry is moving towards digitalization. Open edX software has been powering several e-learning platforms, by offering useful features that make online learning much more accessible and convenient. Since it is open-source. √ Open edX installation and configuration √ Course Catalogue Page creation. √ White labeling √ install various plugins (XBlocks) √ Certificate Integration √ on Experience with SQL/MONGO √ work on the production side with the Tutor and much more