Complete source of the Umbraco community site, our.umbraco.com.
Make sure to allow NuGet Package Restore in VS (Tools > Options > Package Manager). The first build of the project will take quite a while, please be patient, it will finish at some point.
Upon build a web.config
file will be copied into the OurUmbraco.Site
project which you can use in the following step.
If you're working on the frontend (the js/css/etc parts in ~/OurUmbraco.Client
) then you can either run ~/build/BuildClientFiles.bat
to build them and have them copied into the site. Or if you have npm/gulp installed on your machine you can run the usual commands in the ~/OurUmbraco.Client
folder:
npm install
npm install gulp -g
gulp
Download the SQL Server Database from: https://umbracoreleases.blob.core.windows.net/ourumbraco/OurDev20190430.zip.
Restore the database to SQL Server 2016 SP1 (won't work on earlier version) and update the connection strings (umbracoDbDSN
) in OurUmbraco.Site/web.config
.
All users and members use the same password: Not_A_Real_Password
To log in, try root
/ Not_A_Real_Password
for the backoffice and [email protected]
/ Not_A_Real_Password
for the frontend.
You will need to set requireSSL in the Web.Config
to false to login to the frontend.
<authentication mode="Forms">
<forms requireSSL="false" name="yourAuthCookie" loginUrl="login.aspx" protection="All" path="/" slidingExpiration="true" timeout="525600" />
</authentication>
If the projects area seems empty then that's because you need to rebuild the Examine indexes for it through the Developer section of Umbraco.
If the documentation area seems empty then that's because you need to download the documentation, look for the documentationIndexer
in the Examine dashboard in the Developer section of Umbraco and Rebuild the index. This will automatically download the latest documentation from GitHub.
Please read our Contributing Guidelines to learn how you can get involved and help with the Umbraco community site.